The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 8 June 1945 — Page 2
THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE-, INDIANA, FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 1945.
In respect to the late Dr. Cassell C. Tucker, Vice-President and Director of our institution, this bank will close at 12:00 o'clock Saturday, June 9, 1945, for the remainder of the afternoon.
FIRST-CITIZENS BANK TRUST COMPANY
&
The Daily Banner and Herald Consolidated “It Waves For All" 8. R. Rariden. Publisher Entered In the postoffice at Greencastle, Indiana as second class mall matter under Act of March 8, 1878. Subscription rates, IS cents per week; 83.00 per year by mail in Putnam County; 83.60 to $5.00 per year by mall outside Putnam County. 17-10 South Jackaon Street.
TODAY’S BIBLE THOITGHT
MISS FLORENCE JOME BECOMES BRIDE OF LIEUT. FRANK DONNER FRIDAY AT HIGH NOON
Miss Florence Louise dome, v.-Uh white accessories and a cordaughter of Dr. and Mrs. Hiiani ftage 0 f p j n k roses. The groom’s dome of DePauw University, be- mother wore a brown and white came the bride of Lieut. Frank print dress with white accessorEdward Donner, U. S. M. C., son j es anc j a corsage of yellow roses.
of Major and Mrs. Wilbur S. Donner of Greencastle. in a ceremony at Gobin Memorial church on Friday at twelve o;ciock. Dr. dohn Tennani., pastor of the church, read the single-rimr ceremony before the altar, ifecoiated with palms, bouquets of white gladioli, and branch can-
Great saints seldom are devel- j I'elabra. The bride was given
eped without heioic tests: Beloved, think it not strange conicerntng the fiery trail which is to try you, as though some strange things happened unto
marriage by her father.
Miss dome was attended by her sister, Mrs. dames M. Houck of Fresno, Calif. Groomsman was Major Donner, father of the
you; but rejoice, inasmuch as ye i bridegroom. Dr. Van Denman are partakers of Christ’s suffer- Thompson, dean of the DePauv.
ings. 1 Peter 4:12. 13.
Hcpkins On Way To White House
WASHINGTON, dune 8.— (UP) Presidential envoy Harry L. Hopkins was hurrying homo today from what was reporte i to be a successful mission to Moscow. In his pocket were expected to 1 Russian Premier dosef Stalin’s plans fo: his part in the coming Big Three meeting, and eiso possibly the outline of methods for settlement of such questi .is as the Polish dispute and the control of Germany and Austria. The former "mission to Moscow” man, former ambassador to Russia doseph K. Davies, is alicady back from his latest journey to London. He has presumably already given President
some of which were “top sec- _ rets.” j A published statement said I that Philip daffe, one of those j arrested, had Communist connec-, tions. There was neither confirmation nor denial here, daffe, 1 a naturalized American, was I
born in Russia.
{Personal and LOCAL NEWS BRIEFS
Miss Ruth Dickson has returned after spending a weeks vaca-
But the State Department did' tion vis.ting with her parents in deny that it had requested sup- j Bloomington.
School of Music, was organist. Special selections were “Sweetheait of Sigma Chi” and “I Love
Vou Truly.”
The bride wore a gown of .white frosted organdy, with r j high roll collar, fitted basque ' waist, and long sleeves tapering to points on the hands. The ful 1 skirt ended in a short train. -She catried a cascade bouquet of white gladiolus blooms with n
white orchid.
The matron of honor wore a
Following the ceremony, a buffet luncheon was served at the bridb’s home for relatives and a few close friends. The bride and groom left immediately afterward for a short wedding trip. The bride’s going-away costume was a light blue gabardine dress with navy accessories and a white orchid. After June 27 the couple will be at home in Wash-
ington. D. C.
The biide was graduated fiom DePauw University in 1944. She is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma and Delta Theta Tau sororities. Since her graduation she has been a secretary in the university administration. Lieutenant Donner received his second lieutenant’s commission in the United States Marine Corps at the graduation exercises of the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md., or. June 6. He attended Purdue University before entering the service and is a member of Sigma Chi fraternity. Out-of-town guests included Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Jones, Lon-
gown of soft green starched I don, O., grandparents of the marquisette and canie I a bou- bridegroom; Mrs. Roy Eads and
piession of information indicat-j The west Floyd Home E C0 .|qi'et of Picardy gladiolus bloom- Miss Mary Eads, Indianapolis; *--- " ” " ‘ «Ushers w f eie Capt. LaF yeU. Mrs. Lillie D. Poiter, Indianap-
All members i
ing that some or all of the ar- nomiC8 club win meet June
rested persons nad been closely ^ .... , ... .. „ . . v/ith Grade King identified with the Communist , . .
I urged to be present,
movement. |
All six persons are American Mrs. Charles H. White was citizens, twm of them naturalized, called to Martinsville by the illThere is no law against an Am- ne ss of her sister, Mrs. Marion erican citizen being Communist Whitesell. She will stay indef-
ot a “fellow traveller.” Appro- jnitely. priation bills, however, forbid
government employment of per- Mr. and Mrs. Otha Hurst visions belonging to organizations ‘^ e< * Mrs. Hursts sister, Mrs. or groups advocating overthrow Laura McCollum in Plainfield and of the government by force. shopped in Indianapolis Thurs-
Last February a statement cla y-
den valley in the Oranje mounta.ns of Dutch New Guinea. They are 1st Lt. John S. McCollom, Trenton, Mo., Tech. Sgt. Kenneth W. Decker, Kelso, Wash., and Corp. Margaret J. Hastings, Oswedgo, N. Y. Filipirw) medical technicians parachuted into the valley as soon as the wreckage of the C47 was found. The plane crashed in the wilds on May 13 while on a routine flight. The announcement was held up until next of kin of the victims were notified.
THE NEED
For money In everyday. Our sendee In ready at INDIANA LOAN CO.
19! 2 East Washington St.
IdlODP 15
H. Kent, land in Jackson Twp. Nellie M.
$1.
Edna Curtis Mahoney etcon to Nellie M. Denny land in Greenrastle Twp. $1.
Denny to p „
Mahoney etux land in
castle Twp. $1.
Gre? r .
William H. Crawley etlK Sanford E. Siddons, etux i ot !
Greencastle. $1.
INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK Higs, 8,000; active, steady; good and choice 160 lbs. and up | and bulk 140-160 lbs. and num- j erous lighter weights $14.80; 100140 lbs. $13.50 to $14.50; good and choice sows $14.05. Cattle 400. calves 500 ; 2 loads top good mostly choice 1119-lb. steers $17.00; part load mostly choice around 1050-lb. steers eligible around $17.00; cattle odds and ends $14.50-$16.25; cow about steady; few good cows $13.25 - $14.00; bulk common and medium $9.50 - $13.00; canners and cutters largely $7.00 to $9.25; vealers rather slow, mostly | 60c lower, top $16.50. Sheep 150; fat lambs nominally steady.
BUCKNER WATCHES OKINAWA FIGHT
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Laura E. Williams etux to Lloyd Hunter, etux, land n
ClcverdM; Twp. $1.
Oscar S. Carpenter to Leo
LcVan Porter. James G. Hughes 0 !is; Midshipman Randy Mit-.| Torry ctu:< ,r,t ln iGreencastle .$1. and Sgt. James Hurst. Southworth and John Simison ! William T. O'Hair to Eiger L The bride’s mother wore a j West L ifayette, ami Miss Hilda i Yeager land in Monrge Twp. 1 dress cf green and white pri; ! ' Templeton, Mooresville. j Aetna Life Insurance Co., to I William A. Hughes, etux land in
I Franklin Twp. $1.
! Homer Tobin, etux to George
Truman Prime Minister Winston
riauehiii's ideas on outstanding j pa r tmcnt haJ instructed all com- ce ivHa‘telegram'from her“hus-
1 i_: ihree ssues and his a PP ,ov ' mands in the field that soldiers | )anf i ” of parley plans. | should not be denied advancehpecuiation turned to Berlin t ]Ilen t because they were Comtoda y as tt,e Possible meeting ,., unists There was immediate I lace for the three most power- congr e SS i 0 nal demand for a rend world leaders, as Mr. Truman port fronl the VVar Department, told a press conference the meet- , t is understood still to be in
was published that the War De- ^jra. Pauline Schonfeld has re-
egram £
Sgt. William F. Schonfeld, saying that he has arrived
safely in New York.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Phillips received word that their son, Pfc. Charles Phillips was wounded in
hi” would be held w’ithin 40 days., pyppm-a^jon but it was asserted action sometime in April.
Charles was stationed in Czechoslovakia when last heard from.
Inc:e was nothing positive on at ^ tinle gome Communn hich to base thi^ speculation, ists bat | b een commissioned in
(xccpt that there have been offi- t |, e ann y
rial indications it would not be held either in Britain or the | United States. Berlin would be n convenient as well as psycho-
logically important alternative. The President made plain at bis news conference that he was thinking purely in terms of a Truman-Churchill-Stalin meet-
ing.
He flatly rejected a formal French proposal foi a Big Five <! scussion of the Levantine crisi; and other Near East problems in an answer so blunt that White House Press Secretary Charles G. Ross found it necessary to issue an explanatory statement after the conference. In discussing the Big Five proposal, Ross said, the President meant he considered such a meeting inadvisable now because of the imminence of the Big Three parley. “This! of course, does not mean that the United States would have any intention of disr ussing a solution of the Syr ian problem at a meeting from which France, Syria and Lebanon were absent,’’ Ross added.
Congressional Probe Probable
The five persons arrested in ac’dition to Jaffe were: Lt. Andrew Roth, naval reserve officer, boin in New York City; Emman-
Revival meeting Sunday evening at 7:30 o’clock at the Manhattan church with the Rev. Charles Ballou of Indianapolis pleaching each evening. Every-
uel S. Larsen. State Department one we , come an(i bl . ing a frjend
| employe, born in San Rafael.
Calif.; John S. Service, State De- ■ .
partment foreign service officer, born in China; Kate Louise Mitchell, co-editor with Jaffe of the magazine “Amerasia,” born in Buffalo, N. Y.; and Maik J. Gayn, born in Manchuria and
naturalized in 1943.
The policy of the United States government toward alien and citizen Communists in this country is considerably confused. Tire intimation from official sources
FOR SALE: 8 foot John Deere binder. Hay loader. Good condition. Andrew’ Sutherlin, 1 mile north of Brick Chapel on Road 43. 8-3p
ACCORDED OVATION
Culture Club
To Ment Wednesday
DINNER FOR ’IKE”
WASHINGTON, June 8 — (Ul?) President Trumar, will give a White Hous? dinner for G n. Dwight D. Eisenhow’er, Supri c Commander in Europe, on Monday, June 18, it was an-
nounced today.
On the same date Eisenhower ! will b honored at a luncheon on,
The M^em PnseiHa^Club pro-. Cap i t , „ „ „ t a joint session of
the House and Senate.
The Home Economics Culture Club will meet Wedne day, Jur. ■ 13, at the home of Mrs. Ruth Pell, South Jackson stnet.
Modern Priscilla Picnic Postponed
G. Hale lot in Green.astle. $1300 Silas Corbin etux, to Raymond
Lt. Gen. Simon Bolivar Buckner, with camera, com minder ,f the Tenth Army on Okinawa, and Marine Maj. Gen. Lemuel C Shepherd, holding walking stick, are shown as they watched tk< action in the battle for Naha, capital of the island. This is a Marine Corps Photo. (International Soundphota).
nic has been postponed indefin-
itely.
BREAKS DEADLOCK (Conllout'il rrom I'tiur One) agreed. Our policy has never been inflex.ble.” Behind the Russian change, however, was the story of Hopkins-Stalin negotiations said and the decision, of secretary of state Edward R. Stettinius, Jr., to have Hopkins lay the U. S. caids on the table with the Russian leader.
k
SOUTH BEND, Jn.d., June 8 (UP)—Lt. Col. Francis Garbe-
... . , , sk., America's top-scoring flythat all six arrested persons had , ‘
, ing ace when he was shot down
Communist connections may lead toward some clarification of tire
The Supieme Court now is considering a deportation case brought by the Justice Department against Harry Bridges, west coast labor leader. The government contends Bridges is a Communist and should be deported to his native Australia. Decision in that case may considerably clarify government
The three were in a group of policy toward alien Communists yix persons arrested this week and express judicial judgment on charges of taking or using on Communist objectives in genconfidential government papers, cral.
WASHINGTON, June 8. (UPi Congressional demands are expected for identification of officials w’ho hired three government employes charged here by the FBI with violation of the espionage act.
and taken prisoner by the Ger-
, ... „ . mans, returned last night to the positron of citizen Communists. | Notre Dame campU9 where hg If adherence to Communism, for wa8 a 8tudent bpforp thp war
Gabrrski, enroute to Prairie Du Chien, Wis., to wed Miss Kay Cochran Monday, was given a thunderous ovation when he ad dressed Notre Dame students
during the dinner hour.
instance, means advocacy of the overthrow of government by force, then adherents are not entitled to hold a government job. It was suggested here that information regarding the political leanings of the six arrested persons had been suppressed to prevent a bail public reaction during the United Nations conference now proceeding in San Francis-
co,
Rites Held For Murder Victim
FRIED CHICKEN DINNERS
Served with
2 Vegetables, Salad..
80c
CALL FOR RESERVATIONS THE Y PALACE Southeast Corner Roads 36 and 43
NEW YORK, June 8—(UP) — Funeral services will be held today for mysteriously murdered Albert E. Langford, 03, but the 'Park Avenue heiress who mar ried him for companionship said
she wouldn't attend.
Mrs. Marion Grimes Langford 70, rankling over police trespassing on her amazing private life, replied “on God no,” when reporters asked her yesterday if she w*iuld attend the rites at New York funeral home. Last night Reed Lawton, musical comedy baritone who police said got a lion's share of Mrs. Langford’s genoroaity, arrived from Chicago. Lawton. Mrs. Langford and Army Lt Alan Preston, Foster, describJd as a friend of the Langford family, were questioned until early today in the District
Attorney's office.
Asst. Dist. Atty. Jacob Grumet questioned them, but disclosed nothing. Grumet had four account books in which Mrs. Langford listed the names of some 900 artists, singers, night club companions and others with whom she had shared her easy income of $50,000 a year allowance from her father plus earnings on her own investments.
Bain bridge Christian church Frank S. Smith, Minister. 10:00 a. m. Bible school. 11:00 a. m. Morning worship. 6:30 p. m. Youth Fellowship. 8:00 p. m. Special Children’s Day piogram. We urge every person to be in the Lord’s house on the Lord' day. If you do not attend elsewhere, we invite you to our services. Visitors arc always wel-
come.
hospital notes Robert Allen Berge returned to his home in Cloverdale Thursday morning. Mrs. Ruth Pettit, Cloverdale, was discharged from the hospital Thursday morning. Mrs. Rose Buis, 511 South Indiana street, is a patient in the county hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Mull, Rockville, are the parents of a daughter born Friday morning. Donovan Shoaf, Bainbridge, R. 1, was admitted to the hospital Friday morning. Mrs. Henrietta Miller, R. 2, Cloverdale, is a patient in the Putnam county hospital.
{ v -I* 4* •)- -!* -I* 4* •I- ANNIVERSARIES :*♦. 4- •!- •!• 4* 4* 4- T 4* +
Birthdays
Pfe. Lloyd Chadd and iPfc. Floyd Chadd, twin sons of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Chadd, “somewhere in the Philippines, 24 years today, June 8. Mrs. Lorene Pritchett, Coatesviile, yesterday, June 7. Eldon D. Lewis, Route Three. 8 years today, June 8. Mrs. Charles Myers, today.
June 1 8th.
ALWAYS INSIST ON“There's a Difference"
QUALITY MEAT MARKET
22 South Vine Street.
Phone 42
TWENTY KILLED MANILA, June 8— (UP) — Twenty persons were killed when a C47 transport plane .; ■ h'd into New Guinea "Shangr la” last month, the army revealed today, but three aboard survived and soon will be brought out of the lost world. An officer, an enlisted nan and a VVAC- the only survivors of the big transport plane crash are under medical care while awaiting completion of an. emergency air strip from which they can be flown out of the hid-
7?^h7%C... '"' au
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