The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 12 June 1945 — Page 2
THE DAILY IANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA. TUESDAY, JUNE. 1.2, J 945^
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’ rru T\„:i !t>er of Phi Delta Theta. Lt. and! The Daily Banner | Mr> stuek(y ate at hania at
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HURST'S DAIRY GREENCASTLE’S MODEL DAIRY
SOCIETY
8. K. Karlden. Publisher Entered In the poetofflce at Greencastle, Indiana aa second class mail matter under Act of
March 8, 1878.
Subscription rates, 15 cents per week; J3.00 per year by mail
in Putnam County; *3 50 to ^ Florence C(J Mrs Kall
$5.00 per year by mall outside on ,,
Putnam County.
>Irs. Yliller Hostess
To | Thursday Club % Mrs. Georgia Miller was hostess to the Thursday Club at its meeting on June 7. Twelve members attended. Three visitors;
17-19 South Jackson Street
THKEK PROMOTED IXniANAPOlflB, Ind., Jum l.! (Spci ill Colonel Austin R Killian, state police superin.t n l nt, ti lay announced th p-.imot n of three men to lab i ratory technician to fil v •nniea at the central stab I c.lirc laboratory here and the Seymour and Futnamville posts T' • a[ ntces have assume-: th ir positions. T clinician. Edward Replogle. n ! arapo]is, formerly of Riehn; no Michigan City and Chest. ton, was promoted from Sey.1 -nr j ■ at technician to the Ind mapoba laboratory as assistan - ; ’ Chief Technician Robert F riorkenstein. R pi 1" was succeeded a.t haic an at Seymour post b> Walt i S hi: Her, Brownstowi (formerly of Berne and North Manehestor) who was assigned t that post aa trooper. eh ne Tiowbiidge, Plainfield, II .rr.rrly if Martinsville) Put1 'mville post trooper, was apnt 1 technician at that post, ling T ehnician Gaylord Howerton, Greencastle, who has . ri'-rpil the armed forces. Th-- three men were selected i i basis of competitive ex:minatlon, Colonel Killian sa ri. Trowbridga and Schindler rer ntly completed a specialized ■i in p-Iiee laboratory pro- ( Ian- under T. ehnician Borken-
House To Act On Amendment
WASHINGTON, June 12.— 1! i Administration leaders loo: I hopefully to the House 11 • '■> kill a Senate amend-
\’i the pi ice control exten- . ; which they called "ridiculous” ml “inflationary.” nendment was a “rider," d thiouyh ty Sens. Ken-
• h S. \V a ny, R., Neb., and H - rlk Shlpstead, R., Minn., just I c the Senate approved a ■ yian ORA extension late yest.iday. It would outlaw any p. ' - ceiling which failed to give • it mi a "i >asonable profit” on
■ i ieultural commodity.
A" in i aniendment, introduc- < i : i : uy Si-mte Democratic
Allien \V. Barkley of
h ' - : ; a compromise move,
guarantee "profitable" ling; for meat slaughter-
rtead amendment, approved
the Senate 37 to 29, it was rec- and not faint
>gnized as a powerful bargaining v.'eapon for OPA opponents. It would establish a double standard for figuring agricultural prices—the present parity ; formula used to maintain the j normal relation between indust- j rial and agi ieultural commodit-j ies and a new cost-plus system. J Barkley said that the only; hope now is that the provision will be stricken either in the House or in conference between
he two chambers.
The proposal had seemed “so ridiculous nobody thought it was worthwhile to debate it,” he said in explanation of the amendment’s surprise passage. He called it “far more inflationary” than any other attempted curbs and said it woiid “create chaos in the administration of price
ceilings.”
House banking and currency committee members who have been considering the OPA extension bill declined to discuss the Senate amendment. They pointed out, however, that the Farm Bureau Federation. most powerful farm group, urged extension of the act for one year in its present form.
TODAY'S BIBLE THOUGHT
I
! There is a renewing power in j a great enthusiasm, but indlffer-c-nt interest will perform no miracles: They that wait upon the ’Lord shall renew their strength; I they shall mount up with wings j like eagles, they shall run and by ' not be weary, they shall walk ^ nmi nr»f faint -—Isa. 40:30, 31.
I^ersonal and LOCAL NEWS B1IIEFS
TRANSPORT GASOLINE
would price i
ers M.
n i p.ick< is. It passed 36 to
An amendment offered by Sen. p. ' it A. Taft, R„ O., was reyct I 11 to 26. II would have
tin i'i ORA after Oct. 1 to fix aii <.n which all piocessors ' .Manufacturers could recover uoduction costs plus their 1939 Margin over profit. Although the House is expectd to : jitirn the Wheny-Ship-
The Community Service Club of Bainbridge will meet Wednesday, June 13 with Mrs. Warren
Caywood.
Section Four of the First Christian Church will meet Thursday evening at 8:00, at the beme of Mrs. Milton Kie-
bush.
Mrs. Edward Wendell arrived Tuesday morning from Rockport, Mass. She was called to Greencastle by the death of her mother. Mrs. E. B. Taylor. Dr. and Mrs. Charles L. Aker and daughter, Geraldine, and Mrs. Emma R. Stigler, City, attended the Aker reunion held in Forest Park, Brazil, Sunday
June 10.
Applications for the renewal of transport gasoline for the third quarter of 1945 are now being mailed from the local office of the War Price and Rationing Board. Applicants are asked to re;ord 1945 license number and to check the Certificate of War Necessity Number for accuracy. Question number 1 concerning the minimum amount of gasoline necessary for the next quartemust be answered, and for those having ration bank accounts question nu nber 2 should likewise be answered. The application must be signed by the applicant in the space provided. The application portion should be torn from the instruction part of the card and returned to the local office .on or before June 20. A later return of the application may delay the issue of the gasoline until after July 1. MISHAWAKA. Ind., June 12— (UP) Former head basketball and assistant football coach Raymond (Dutch) Struck, who was recently discharged from the navy, will return to his duties this tall it was announced yesterday by school officials. Struck j lined the navy in 1942 and was a specialist at the Sampson naval training center before being discharged. He will retain Ward Baker, Bloomington, as head baseball and assistant basketball coach. Baker had been filling in for Struck.
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JUNE 13TH
Starting at 2:30 P. M.
WOMENS FULL FASHIONED 51 GAUGE HOSE pair 98c
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Mr. and Mrs. Joe Oyler arvl daughter, Elizabeth Ann, and son, Charles, Tipton, Ind.ana, visited over the week-end with Dr. and Mrs. Charles L. Aker and daughter, Geraldine, and attended the Aker reunion held in Forest Park, Brazil, S'jndpv.
June 10.
Jimmy Clapp. 10-year old son of Chief of Police and Mrs. Russell Clapp came home from the Riley hospital at Indianapolis Monday well on the way to recovery from infantile paralysis. Jimmy was stricken last July and has been in the Riley hos-
pital since that time.
The Woman's Study Club has given the book, Angel In The Forest by Marguerite Young to the Public Library in memory of Mis. George R. Boyle. Angel In The Forest is a history-fable of New Harmony, Indiana and the two Utopias attempted there The author is a new (Indiana author who lived in Indianapolis. Word was received yesterday of the death of Mrs. Grace Munson of Indianapolis. Mrs. Munson has made her home with her son and daughter in Indianapolis the last few years but is known in Greencastle where she often visited her sister, Mrs. Fred Cock. Funeral services will be held in 'Indianapolis Thursday
morning at 10:00.
Mr. and Mrs. Otha Hurst have received word from their son, Lt. Wendell Hurst, saying he has had several hours visit with Conrad Ray Prichard, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bernace Prichard Trucks from Conrads battalion helped move the battery Wen dell belonged to, from Belgium to Ger nany. Thia was the first person Wendell has seen that he km’W since going overseas in February 1944. B9th toys are in
the Anti Aii Craft.
Copies of “The Old Trailes Echo” of Centerville, Ind., of last week have been receiver here and in commenting .oni the Mem orial Day exercises it says: “At the cemetery we heard John Bryan give Lincoln's Gcttys burg address. We listened to his clear, young voice, and remem be red that his father was in the First World War. H.s father was Lawrence Bryan and both Mr. and Mrs. Bryan are former resident of Putnam county and will be well remembered here by
many.
Mrs. Agnes Stuckey, Cataract Falls, returned Saturday from Fort Monroe, Va., where she attended the wedding. Fiiday, of her son, Lt. John S. Stuckey, and Miss Azelie Roberts, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence J. Roberta. El Paso, Texas. Lt. Stuckey, coast artillery, has been in the army three years. He was stationed in Trinidad and Panama for a year and Is now in the officers Replacement Pool at Fort Monroe, Va., awaiting reassignment. He graduate from DePauw in 1941 and is a mem-
Shreiner and young Tommy Shrcinrr, were alr-r present. Work on an afghan for convalescent serv.ce boys occupied the morning. A wonderful noonday dinner was followed by the regular business meeting and
more sewing.
Later in the afternoon Mrs. Miller called time out for a bit of recreation. Three contests were won by; Esther Cradick. Rosalie Allen and Ida Sinclair. To speed completion of the afghan, club members will meet at 1:30 on Wednesday, June 13, with Esther Crad i k to work on
it.
The raext regular meeting of the Club will be on July 5 with Stella Vickroy as hostess. Roll call is to be answered with patriotic quotations. q. 4 1 q. -F l linton-Madlson Home Ec Club Meets The Clinton and Madison Home Economics Club will meet Thursday at 1:30 p. m„ June 14, at Mrs. Elmer Sly's with Mrs. John S. Kelton and Mrs. Herbert Boswell assistant hostesses. Mrs. Jesse Scars and Mrs. Raymond Wright will give another lesson on “Psychology of Everyday Living.” Thcie will be a contest and also a book review. Dr. McClintock will also talk. v *1- -J- *F Past Matrons C lub To Meet The Past Matrons Club will meet wtih Helen Brown Friday night. There will be a pitch-in dinner, beginning promptly at 7:00. Each member please bring one dish of food and own table
service.
•1* *1* •!• •!* Section Three To Meet Thursday Section Three of the First Chiistian church will meet at the church Thursday afternoon at :30. Mrs. W. T. Handy, Mrs. Russell Clapp and Mrs. Harley Harris are the hostesses. Mrs. Clay Brothers will have charge of the program. Devotions will be in charge of Mrs. Emma Stig
lei.
•F -F *F •F Entetaln With Sunday Dinner Mr. and Mrs. Russell Rockhill, west of Greencastle entertained with a Sunday dinr.-r. June 10th, for their' son, Carl, who was home on a thirteen day leave from the Navy. Guests present were; Eva Herbert, Mr. ant! Mrs. Dewey Albright and daughter, Betty: Mr. and Mrs. Cyr.l Hicks and children, Billy and Ann from Brazil; Mr. and Mrs. Claik Herbert and daughter, Shirley, from Manhattan; Mr. an, I Mrs. Georg Shaughnessy, and sons, Larry and Jimmy of Tutnamville; Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Shinn, Leon, Eltanor, Ccnie, Keith and Dean; Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Clifford, Marvin, and Bobby; Mr. and Mrs Joy Cummings; Lawrence Rockhill and Joe Shinn. Several friends called during the day. Carl left for Camp Edicott Davisville, Rhode Island. He enlisted in the Navy on March 6th and was in training at Great Lakes and then sent to Rhode Island for tracing with the Seabees. Ho graduated from Greencastle High School with the Senior Class this spring. Mr. and Mrs. Rockhill have aether son. Russell Dallas, who Is with the Scabees, somewhere In the Pac.fic.
Florida Statute
WASHINGTON, June 12.— (UP) Leaders of organized labor today hailed the latest Supreme Court ruling as a victory over state efforts to regulate union activities.
In its busiest clay of the present term the court yesterday outlawed a Florida statute requiring labor unions and their agents to register and be licensed with the state. In another important decision the high court directed the acquittal of 24 former GermanAmeilcan Bundists convicted in New York of advising Bund members to evade the draft law. The court delivered formal decisions covering 17 cases and announced that it will meet again next Monday, three weeks past the date originally set for Its summer adjournment. FJteen cases on the docket are still barring adjournment. They include the government’s anti-trust suit against the Associated Press and the fight of Hairy Biidges, west coast labor leader, to escape deportation to his native Australia as an alien
Communist.
Justice Hugo L. Black, writing a 7 to 2 decision, held the Florida labor law invalid on the grounds that it conflicted with collective bargaining freedoms gianted employes in the National Labor Relations Act. The tribunal refused, however, to rule on the constitutionality of an Alabama law regulating vi. ons because a dispute had re er actually arisen over the
law’s operation.
Lee Pressman, general counsel foi CIO unions, declared that the ruling in the Florida case sustained the CIO position that “a state cannot pass legislation which interferes with the rights of labor under the Wagner Act.” Herbert S. Thatcher, assistant tc Joseph Padway, general counsel of the AFL, felt the decision shnuld piove “a very effective deterent to state interference with interstate industries operating under the National Labor
Relations Act.”
Both attorneys expressed the opinion that the court would follow the pattern by upsetting the Alabama law “if we can bring an acual test suit to trial.” Florida's^was the second state law to be nullified by the court at the present term. In January it ruled that Texas could not require labor organizers to obtain a state license before soliciting at labor meetings. The Texas statute, the court ruled, violated, the constitutional rights of free! speech and assembly. A Kansas law requiring unions to file annual statements and i legister their agents is now under fire in a legal action commenced by an AFL buddings trades union. This case may also eventually reach the high
court.
Justice Owen J. Roberts read the 5 to 4 decision in the case of the 24 ex-bundists, declaring j that the government’s case was i lacking in evidence and that merely counseling evasion was not a crime under the 9elective Service Act.
(would create an international council to promote solution of economic and social problems. Several other committees are ready to report to their parent commissions, the one on regional arrangements having approved its report late yesterday.- Conference officials are leaving no stone unturned in their effort to complete the work here by June
20.
The Big Five met late yesterday for one of their last meetings in the Nob Hill apartment of Secretary of State Edward R. Stettinius, Jr. They agreed to oppose mention in the charter of the light of withdrawal of a member from the organization. They contend the right is implicit and that introduction of it at this date would have a bad psychological effect on world
opinion.
® + ANNIV£ESARIES h * i£j -F -F -F *F -F -F -F -F *F T *F +
Birthdays
Miss Helen Foster, 20 years
today, June 11.
Betty Jean Campbell, 313 North College, 11 years old to-
day, June 12.
EM 1/C Durwood G. Twigg.
today, June 12.
(ACM ONir BFPRfSENIS ID 8IUION D
mmmt
RESEARCH EXPERTS of the American University in W ; n „ tr estimated that on June 1 total war expenditui, si. . Vl lion mark. For the U. S. June is the last month < f 'ti ' fi --^ * and, it Is estimated, by July 1 we will have spent . ^ : 000 in the past year—and then the figures will start going,; . ' Banner Ads Get Results
CANTEEN ELECTS
The Teen Canteen of the Greencastle high school has elected the following officers to serve for the ensuing year:
President—Gene Hedge
1st vice president—Marion
Greenleaf
2nd vice president—Mary
Moseley
3rd vice president—Mildred
Greenleaf
4th vice president—Jane Rit-
chie
Treasurer—Richard Fulmer Snack-bar chairman — Betty Ann Hall . House committee chairman— Jimmy Flint Board members—Joe Clapp, David Smith, Betty Scott Advisers will be announced at. a later date. JAPS RETAKE ISHAN CHUNGKING, June 12 (UP) — Counter-attacking Japanese forces recaptured Ishan, 43 miles west of the former American air base of Liuchow yesterday, an American adviser to the Chinese cambat command announced to-
day.
Ishan had been occupied Sunday by one of three Chinese columns closing in on Luchow.
LODGE NOTICE There will be an I. O. O. F. District meeting at Central Lodge No. 859 located at Mt. Meridian on Thursday evening, June 14th. All brothers Invited. Mrs. Sarah Wiley, R. 1. was admitted to the hospital Monday afternoon.
Remember Dad ON “HIS” DAY Nice Selection Of WRITING DESKS
Waterfall and Hat 0(1 top kneeholp VA / (Jp
$29
ART FURNITURE CO.
North Side Square
Opposition To Veto Dwindles
SAN FRANCISCO, June 12.— (UP)—Little nation opposition to big power veto rights in the world security council dwindled today as the Big Five confidently sought an early vote on this last major issue at the United Nations conference. The committee on the Yalta voting formula scheduled two meetings today in an effort to complete debate and begin voting on amendments. Only six little nations have spoken against the voting formula during two days of debate. Others will speak today. But the big powers are confident of mustering the necessary twothirds majority for writing the formula into the charter. The conference Itself, meanwhile, virtually leaped toward* adjournment. Another commis-1 sion will hold a public meeting today to approve the section of the charter which will provide the new league’s “teeth"—the chapter on enforcement arrangements and military agreements , for providing the security council with armed forces when needed. That chapter is designed to prepare the organization for armed intervention to keep the peace. Another chapter—designed to eradicate some of the economic and social causes of
A BREAK FOR DA
/W*'\ ■W £>
Once a year we show our respret c* d -■‘rth# j to the good old “Pater” by procSal’ net a !7?(' ial day for him and showering c' >w 1 o ^ ^ f present of some sort. This is a g
custom and lends a little color to
drab existence- of a lot of young, ' and»«T
ole* citizens.
Whatever your father’s likes may be, you’ll ^ many nifty things to choose from of end surely what you select here f ) wl warm the very cockles of his hear I — on jjnaofi June 17th - FATHER’S DAY.
BILLFOLDS . . TOILET SETS . UTILITY CASES
TOILET (ALL PLUS
SHIRTS. . . STRAW HATS RAINCOATS. SPORT COATS
. $1.50 to $5.00 to SliM . $4.00 to articles FEDERAL TAX)
. . $2.00 to
; . $2.00
$8.01 ,0
. $10.00 to S16.<5 . $12.50 to Si 8 ’ 5 ®
IF ITS FROM CANNON’S ITS CORRECT.
CANNON’S
