The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 6 June 1945 — Page 2
THE DAILY BANNER, CREENCASTLE, INDIANA, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 1945.
The Little Red Schoolhouse
)D \Y, llironpli the Schools-At*Waf r I’rogtam, children all over the country are buying War Stamps and Bonds on a r liular ha>is. Many of these youngsters also have thrift accounts showing growing balances. Parents can increase the value of thrift lessons taught in school h\ setting a good example * for youngsters to follow. , Buy your W ar Bonds, and build a thrift account systematically. Do both at our hank.
Ccnira! National Bank Oldest And Largest Bank In Putnam County
The Daily Banner and Herald Consolidated “It Waves For All” S. R. Rarlden, Publisher Entered In the poetoffice at Greencastle, Indiana aa aeconil class mall matter under Act of March 8, 1878. Subscription rate*, 18 cents per week; $3.00 per year by mall In Putnam County; $3.60 to !$S.OO per year by mall outside j Putnam County. | 17-19 South Jackson Street
SOCIETY ENGAGED
TODAY’S BIBLE THOrGHT But we cannot become acquainted with the Lord by absenting ourselves from his house, !noi if we fall to imitate his love for humanity: Then shall we know, if we follow on to know the Lotd. - Hosea 6:3.
f’j+ + -{- + + + + + + + + *J|f ! I a vrvrTV7"PI>a A PTF.S t"
l^ersonal and LOCAL NEWS BRIEFS
—vr- —
French Claiming Two Nazi Cities
WASHINGTON,
June
lU
T!
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The Monday Book Club picnic has been postponed indefinitely. Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Deem spent Wednesday in Indianapolis. Called meeting Morton Lodge 469, Friday, June 8. F. C. Degree..
tend, however, that French oc-, Miss Betty Anee spent Mon-
cupation of Cologne would impair Belgium’s independence because French forces would be interposed between German and Belgium territory.
8. -
Flench claims to the of Cologne and Frankfurtilu are delaying final srtit of the occupation zones -(••in Germany, it was reI today. Bi itish ansertedly want ie and too Americans want
furl.
:>■ also is a less advertise i
bill possi : iy far more important d ; ff crence over the Ruhr valley j* with its rich industrial facilities end il coal deposits. Germany’s coal is one of her few remaining major lesources which could be
ci awn on foi reparations.
The British want Cologne within theii northwestern zone of Gel many, it was understood
The United States is
that it hold Flunkfult as a com-
1 it in; nutlet and an entry
t for American forces in
southwestern zone of the
ated country.
Denmark Takes Seat At Parley
day with Miss Dorothy Scott of
Belle Union.
Miss Janet Lynn Vaughn is in Indianapolis attending the 4-H
convention.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Smedley were in Greencastle on business
Wednesday morning.
Miss Josephine Stoner and Mrs. Virginia Perkins spent Wednesday in Terre Haute. Mrs. Roland Bannister of Ko-
Margaret Von Shock Margaret Von Sheok To Wei Capt. GoWsberry Announcement has been, mad ’ by Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Ellery Sh.ck of Arlington, Virginia, of the approaching marriage of their daughter, Margaret Von Sheck to Captain Walter Goldsberry, U. S. Marine Corps, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Goldsberry of Greencastle. Capt. Coldsberry graduated from Purdue University in 1940 and has been serving in the Pacific for the past thirty months. The wedding will tak’ place in j the mid-summer In Arlington^
Virginia
Miss Sheck attended th” School of Fine Arts at George Washington University in Washington. D. C. At present she is an adjutant lieutenant in the American Red Cross Motor Service of Arlington county.
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To Appear In Dance t'oneert
• ANNIVERSARIES
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Birthdays
Nina Ruth Goodman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jake Goodman, Greencast R. 4, 7 years ’Gc-'ay, June Sth William H. Scobee, Greencastle, R. 4, today, June 6. FACE RIOT CHARGES CONNERSVTLLE, Ind., June 6—(UP)—Six men will be arraigned today in circuit court on charges of riot. An indictment was returne yesterday against the men fol- .• wing a grand jury investiga tion of a disorder at the corner cafe on May 23, n which windows and doors were smashed. Reports of alleged discrimination against servicemen caused
the riot.
TEACHER DIES LAFAYETTE, Ind., June 6 - (UP)—Arrangements are being made for the funeral of Prof. Chesterton Caldwell, 42, who was stricken fatally yesterday while teach ng a class of navy students at Purdue University. WOl N'DED IN GERMANY Mrs. Clarence Bird has received word that her husband, Sgt Clarence J. Bird, has been wounded in Germany and is now in a Fiench hospital, Strassburg,
France,
W8MEN'38(o52 are you embarrassed by HOT FLASHES? 4^. A If you suffer from hot flashes. vet.k, nervous, hlghstrung, a bit blue at times—due to the functional “middle-age” period peculiar to women—try this groat medicine—Lydia E. Plnkhnm’s Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms. Plnknama Compound HELPa nature. It's one of the best known medicines for this purpose. Follow label directions.
MR. AND MRS. HOMEMAKER ~ Spring house cleaning rails for many changes. See us for the money you want. INDIANA LOAN CO. 19 1 j Fast Washington St.
HOSPITAL NOTES A daughter was born. Wednesday morning to Mr. and Mrs. F.-'bert Hamblen, Gre meastle, R. 2, at the Putnam county hos-
pital.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Brattain of In lianapolis, are the parents
M,. Spicy o,
tie, is a dancing student of the' ^
SAN FRANCISCO. June 7.—j kom o,'is visiting with her moth- Might school at Chicago and has j Mr ‘ v[ola S(iars oRachdalt
today at the side of 49 other United Nations assembled here to fashion a world of lasting
icace.
The small Scandinavian countiy was invited to this conference without a dissenting vote
yesterday, the 96th anniversary * the birth of
of the promulgation of her demo-
cratic constitution.
Today, her thtee-man delega-tion-made up of a career diplomat. a professor of classical
mur
hit Fo
th the
insisting , philology an ,i a professor of sur-
gery—were in San Francisco, ready to take part in shaping the charter of the new world organi-
zation.
Hendrik De Kauffmann, Dan-1
less serious ish minister to the United States ! iv v unveiled Big .since 1939 and head of the dele-1
i v
I’ltinl machinery has he allied control council one temporarily the est--nt of headquarters in
ifflcials revealed,
he rubble of the Reich cleared away and sathousmg and office be elected the control ■ coordinating commit-
pr< Po
gation here, arrived by plane from Los Angeles last night. The two other delegates, Professors Hartvig Frisc and Erik Husfaldt of the University of Copenhagen. already were in San
Francisco.
De Kauffmann perhaps better than anyone else typified Danish resistance to the Nazis during
1 i v ton i Uol staff | the Euiopean war. Ignoring tne ' ill t up shop in lact that bis country was occui ui : ih ilmiit half an pied by the Germans, he took rei o fiom tne heart sponsibility in 1941 to sign in
Washington, a treaty giving tin?
id Slap is maintain- United States bases on the Dan- . K n .kfuit much ish-owned island of Greenland. ipiio tilment of France!
i ntain su- REACH VIENNA
I ! adtp Iitn there j PARIS, June 6 (UP)—Ameri-
t! ’ four-power German
in machinery has begun
SHAKF authorities t I y that headquarters -I ia- liquidated yet
i
ity. The
ailes DeGaulle was l that Cologne, which v. ant in their zone, is ^future Fiench secur-Cologne-Aachen raili directly to the Ardene in 25 years the Germck at France through
ion.
11' tish repoitcdly con-
can, British and French military missions arrived in Vienna Sunday to join the Russians in joint administration of Austria, the French foreign office announced
today.
Missions of the western Allies had been waiting for nearly three veeits in Rome for word from Russia that they could join the Soviets in Vienna.
NOTICE United Spanish War Veterans will meet Thursday P. M. at the American Legion Home.
International Harvester Company 5565 Brookville Road Indianapolis needs Production Workers with or without experience for Machine Shop and Foundry 48 hour week -- Overtime If not now in war work apply Harvester Representative U. S. Employment Service 257 W. Washington St.
(UPl Denmaik took her seatjer, Mrs. John W. Alice of Green-
castle and other relatives.
Mary Mabel and Virginia Parker underwent tonsil operations at the Putnam county hos-
pital Wednesday morning.
Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Watt have leceived the announcement of the birth of a grandson, Allen Eugene Nettleman. Motner and
baby aie doing nicely.
The Womens Circle of the Presbyterian church will meet Thursday afternoon at 2'.30 o’clock in the Church. Mrs. W. G. Mathers will be the guest
speaker.
Mrs. Rosa Harcourt and Mrs. Ralph Harcourt have returned from Monmouth, Illinois, after spending a few days visiting with Mrs. Wendell R. Harcourt. Mrs. Elsie Herbert, Mrs. Ro-f bert McCullough. Mrs. Lucille Herbert and daughter. Shiiley, and Mrs. Pearl Roberts from Manhattan were shopping in
Greencastle Wednesday.
Mrs. Ethel Confer has sold her home on south Indiana street to the Greencastle Elks lodge and will make her home in Indianapolis, having purchased property at 205 North Gray
Street.
T-Sgt. Dennis J. Buis of Lockbourne Army Air Base of Columbus Ohio, is spending a 17 day furlough with his family at Zionsville, Ind. and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Buis of near Belle Union. Mr. and Mis. Robert McCullough of Manhattan, have received word from their son. Robert, Jr., saying he has arrived in Paris, Fiance, from Italy. An-
R. 1, was admitted to the Put-
been taking intensive training'
all this season. ^ r,am county hospital Wedn: sday
She is to appear in three solo I
dances at the Big Dance Concert i to be given at the Eighth Street \o i m i: ok kin vi. sk.tti.i:Theatre June 15th, Fiiday night. I notici; is hkkkuv civkn t«. One of the dances she is to per- the r . H; ■ ’ "i,i I..
of Willi un L. I>»’iiman. dueetiseri
form is an authentic Moorish to np. i in tiu> I'utnam ciivuii i dance which Miss Right brought Wi'i | back fiom Casa Blanca, Morocco, mid s c ins.. ir miy. win
, , . . i tIn' FINAL, 3KTT1.KMENT AC i v n. on j . i in 1939. Spicy is also doing a . (iCms with tin .mm. ,.r sui.i was opened by the 33rd Division comedv-rhumoa and a song-and- 'h < ' 'i shimi.i ihu i... ipprcvi d on highway 11, north of Baguio, •’ ; Old w. id heirs are notified to then i " — ’ “ top number. land theiv make proof of heir ship summer capital of the Phllip-
' "” ir ,lls ' r^,,,l I pincs.The .'13rd had reached a|
y nt about 20 miles northeast
Tigers Defeat Crimson Nine i DePauw took the Indiana University baseball team into camf for the second time this scasor Tuesday afternoon when the Tigers defeated the Crimson, 11 to 9. In an. earlier meeting, th. Old Gold downed I. U. 11 to 5. Bob Satler was on the mounc for the Tigers with Fred Schimm'dfenig behind th’ bat. Indiana threatened .seriousl> in the r.uith when Kluszewsk who obtained two doubles and r pair of singles in five attempts, an. 1 Kralovar.sky hit safely to open the inning, b it the uprising was quelled when the next three m n were retired on infielc
plays. Score:
IU .032010300— 9 11 7 DFU 4 0 1 0 3 0 3 0 *—11 12 £ Williams, Leaky and Cohen, Saltier and Schimmelpfenig. Yanks Pursue Japs On Luzon MANILA, June 6- (UP)—The Japanese were on the run in northern Luzon today, offering only small arms fire in opposi-to-n to the 37th Division which crashed six nvles along highway
No. 5.
The six-mile gain in one day carried the 27th 10 miles north of Fanta Fe, at the head of the upper Cagayan valley, and within 10 miles of Bayombong, capital of Nueva Vizcaya Province. To the west a parallel drive into the northern reaches of Luzon
northwest om Minta) in th* Davao area. The big bombers of the far 'astern air force again bucked iad weather to hit Formosa. Ivor 50 Liberators, escorted by Lightnings, dropped 250 tons of jombs on industrial targets in he Takao sector on the southwestern castal plain.
OCCUPY BAVARIA iContlnurfl from Pour One» »mpowered by his government to carry on further discussions until American troops had with-
drawn from the zone of Gem,;
assigned to the
any
Re <l Army.
The Russians had prepared 0 „ e
; toelr row - f
celebration of the signing 0 ,- pact. However D ‘ ‘ D. Eisenhower and M, trshal ' Bernard L. Montgomer- t " r American and British delegated said they had to return to thm headquarters t m.ht.
The meeting 1 befoer 7 p. m American and I drove back to
drome for their r
U P shortly the leadmr h delegate?
unpelhof j] turn flight.
It’s not easy these days, with Kodak Film so hard to get. But, the thrill your serviceman feels when he finds snapshots of home in your letter makes trie effort worthwhile. Don’t let the film shortage discourage you. We have limited supplies of Kodak Film from time to time. Keep asking us for it.
Mu
D
LLINS L/RUG .MORE
Miss Hight says that Spicy J X, has rxcigptional talent. Spicy?;
ami receive
ires.
Marshall 1>. Abrams.
will continue her studies all sum-) witnk.ss. tm- ci, 11;' ''Vr -'Vm , of Baguio. Highways 11 and 4 mer before starting her profes-! 1 ^'.'7 (ith tl '' lv < ’ 1 ■ l " ne - ' | eventually join at Pun toe in
i uner c. Aki-rs, Clerk Put mini | northern Luzon, but the two
sional career.
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Thursday Itcading
Club To Meet
The Thursday Reading Club l will meet with Mrs. Nellie Denny Thursday evening at eight o'clock. Each member please bring gifts for the white eleph-
ant exchange.
I Clreitlt Court,
j <5iil< n & Lyon, Atys.
a -2i.
other son, Joseph Delno, has been I overseas three years in the Pacific. He hopes to be home some
Uihe this fall.
Morris Shinn was taken to St. Vincent’s Hospital at Indianapolis Monday for X-ray and observation. He»is to be on crutches until Sept. 1st, at which time he is to return to the hospital. Dr. James Y. Causey, Assistant Professor of Span.sh at DePauw University, has been invited to teach as visiting Professor ih Romance Languages in the summer school of Florida. Dr. Causey will be accompanied
by his family.
Sgt. Voris Anderson Eteheson is visiting friends and relatives in Putnam county on a 45-day furlough. Sgt. Eteheson has been in the South Pacific for several months and this is his first furlough since entering service. Sgt. Etcheson’s wife is the former Miss Helen June Gibson. Guenther Gruenlnger of Greencastle is among the veterans of the present war enrolled at Indiana University for the summer semester. In announcing the names of medically discharged veterans. Director W. W. Wright of the I. U. office of veterans affairs, say that approximately one out of each five men students en-
Jim O'Hair Now Captain In Army -
PENINSULAR BASE HEADQUARTERS, Italy Capt. James E M. O’Hair, 24 VV. Washington street, Greencastle. Indiana, has recently been promoted from 1st Lt. He is a Supetvisory Officer with a unit attached to this Base, responsible for the important operations of Italian Service units (formerly Italian Prisoners of War captured by the Americans in Africa and Sicily). These are important Service and Supply Units in that they augment American units in the Mediterranean Theater of Operations. Husband of Maltha L. B. O’Hair, New Orleans, La., and son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred O’Hair, 24 VV. Washington St., Greencastle. Indiana. He has been in the army 4 years and overseas
24 months.
Prior to entering the military service, Captain O’Hair was a bank clerk. He is a graduate of Culver Military Academy, Culver, Indiana, University of Illinois. Champagne, DePauw University, Greencastle, Indiana. Captain O’Hair entered the service as an enlisted man and attended Officers Candidate School, where he achieved the rank of Cadet Colonel. His overseas service has been with the 1st Armored Division and Liaison Officer with the French during the Rome-Ai no Campaign. He has been awarded the American Defense, American Theater, and Mediterranean Theater Ribbons with Bronze Service Stars for the Naples, Foggia and Rome-Amo Campaigns. He has also received from the French
NOTH K, OK Kl \ il. SKI I I.K.MI'.NT Ol K.vrvTK. NOTICK Is 1II0RKHV (IIVKN In the (■ ixiitors, Jh irs and Legatees o: Ann Nora Walker, deceased l” pear in the Putnam Circuit Court, held at Greeneastle, Indii.tn.i. on the 30th day of June Pit'., and show cause, jf anv, why I lie PINAL SKTYLPMPNT ACenrNTS with the estate of said dee. dent should not he unproved; and said heirs are notified to then mid mere make proof of heir ship, ami receive their distributive
sh i res,
Ralph MeGaughev, Admr.
WITNKSS, tlie Clerk of s»id j Court, this ath day of June. P.GV j inner C. Akers, Clerk Putnam
ii it (’ourt. •; 21.
eventually join Putnnm | northern
columns still were far from a
lirJtuh.
Mitchell B-26 medium bombers and Lightning P-58 fighterbombers mad? another milk-run the length of the Cagayan Valley to drop 2M tons on the retreat ng Japanese and their supply dumps and bivouac areas. Most of th'- bombing was in the Gattaran area in the northern, part of the valley. On Mindanao, American troops gain-id another five miles
Summer's fragrant breath...
HOT WEATHER COLOGNE
... the essence of gardens and woodlai 1 to won your senses and cool your brow in these crisp Dor. ;i:y -ray Hot Weather Colognes. Scented with Jasmin l uqitt, June Bouquet, Sued Spice, or Snon fh ' Large 10-oz. bottle, SI, plu tax.
PREVIVS
The latchstring’s out...Have a Coke
, Expeditionary Corps, the Croix
rolled in the university for the de Guerre with Bronze Star, for current summer semester is a meritorious service with the veteran of the present war. French on the field of battle.
...or drop in for Sunday supper Home sweet home seems twice as sweet when friends drop in—with fun and food and good refreshment. That’s the time when Coca-Cola, served icy-cold, is not only a delicious treat-but a symbol, too, of good fellowship. Be sure to keep Coke in your icebox. There’s no more cordial way to show gracious hospitality and make young folks feel at home than by offering guests the invitation Hate a Coke. BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY Of THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY COCA-COLA ROTTLING CO.. Inc. oreencastud,um
•‘Coke'-Coca-Cob You naturally hoar Coc^ i called by ita friendly a bb « , ^ke.Bothnuan.h' ,- I uct of The Coca-Cola Co»P
, O 1B4S Th. C-C Co..
