The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 July 1945 — Page 2
213
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THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, MONDAY, JULY 2, •
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| $£&
DO YOU KNOW that a complete job will lower the temperature, from 15 to 18 degrees. WHY spend restless, sleepless nights and swelter all day in a hot stuffy home. And don’t forget that fuel of every kind v/ill be harder to get this winter. Insulation of the right type properly installed will cul your fuel bill from 33^ to 50%. E. KNOLL PHONE 60 OR 673-J
The Daily Banner and Herald ('onsolidated “It Wave* For AU" S. R. Rariden, Publisher Entered in the postoffiee at Greencastle, Indiana as second class mail matter under Act of March 7, 1878. Subscription rates, 15 cent* per week; $3.00 per year b.v mail in Putnam County ; $3.50 to $5.00 per year by mail outside Putnam County. 17-19 South Jackson, Street.
TODAY’S BIBLE THorGHT
i\ » TICE WE WILL MAKE NO ICE DELIVERIES WEDNESDAY JULY 4
Plant Will Be Open
POLAR ICE and FUEL
l^ersonal and LOCAL NEWS BRIEFS
Miss Velma White of Belle
Norman Cha ld is a patient at the county hospital. Virgil Arnold, of Fillmore, entered the county hospital Monday. Miss Georgiana Hayes spent Saturday afternoon visiting in Indianapolis. Mis. Ruth Lagle of Indianapolis spent Sunday visiting Mr. and Mrs. D. E, Ruark. Mrs. Paul A. Campbell of San Antonio, Tex., visited today with Capt. and Mrs. L. L. Porter. Mrs. V. Earle Wiseman spent the week-end in Shelbyville visiting Mr. and Mrs. Howard Reed. Miss Carolyn Cooksey of Quincy was admitted to the Putnaim county hospital Monday. John Newgent of Clinton township, is reported critically ih at the Putnam county hospital. Mrs. O. H. Ernberg returned to her home on Walnut street read Sunday from the county hospital. Mrs. Ella McBride, Mrs. Nellie Williamson and Mrs. Bessie Van-
■ Frank A. White, editor of The , Hoosier Legionnaire, is en route I to the Pacific by air to become a war correspondent, William E. ' Biown, state commander of The American Legion, made known ! today.
War Measures On Way Out
Union spent the week-end visit-jCleave, employes at Provo's arc j ling with Miss Peggy Schulz. Itaking their summer vacation. ;
1 Mrs. Pearl Staley and baby |
Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Seyfried j son returned to their home, j I are moving to Terre Haute in the j Greencastle Rout? 2, Sunday j j near future. j from the Putnam county hospit-j
j Willard Wells, Franklin street,
> r eon MO- ,„r a , r « ,o» ,«r. =
j Clellan,- Alabama, for a twelve nessed Americas industrial
( Mrsj Otto H. Ernberg has re- day furlough with his wife and might to pull the weight of a . turned to her home on West 1 son. two-front war, were on the way
Walnut Street Road from the
are storing the fruits In their frozen form, but many home makers wish to can the fiuits., Purdue nutritionists recommend the following method of ham i g f Thaw the fruit just enough t 0 get it out of the containing and-in some cases-darkenmg of the fruit. J , 2. Break up the fruit and e< It slowly to boiling. No sugar need be added, since the fruit is already packed with 20 to . 1 P' 1
cent of sugar.
3. Pack the hot fruit into hot,
sterilized jars.
4. Process the fruit in the boiling water bath as for fresh fruit. This processing is important for preventing mold growth and fermentation in canned fruits. Recommended time
tables are as follows:
Processing time
Fruit (boiling water bathl Halved Apricots 20 minutes Sliced Peaches 20 minutes Berries — 15 minutes Pineapple 30 minutes Plums 15 minutes
S Y0U ^S!„all sp°eed? ESV $10 to $300 SERVICE! 1 ~ Months to Pay. INDIANA LOAN COMPANY
19 East Washington Street.
WASHINGTON, July 2.—
i a j j UP)—Iron-bound controls over Pvt. Donald G. Kerns arrived manpower and materials, which
I ; O \Lw i. ^ * ih jr . 'v r^/ h i A J y.ii
> f,
BACK ON THE JOB MR .BROWN He and dozens of returned veterans are getting back to work. We’re proud to number them among our customers, and we’re happy to assure each and every one the best possible service in expert dry cleaning.
HOME LAUNDRY and CLEANERS
225 E. WASHINGTON ST.
PHONE 126
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TUESDAY BARGAINS At Murphy's Facial Tissues LIMITED QUANTITIES Flashlight Batteries
Unlimited Quantities
G.C. Murphy Co.
Dressed Chickens Fresh Dressed Young HensI)ressed On Our Farm — Available Every Day on Order -- Goulds Drive-In Market
312 NORTH JACKSON ST.
GREENCASTLE
Putnam county hospital.
Mrs. Glee Conyers and baby i daughter, Olive street, were released fiDni the county hospital
Sunday.
Dr. and Mrs. C. D. W. Hilde- out today as tne government put brand were in Williamsport Sat- into effect its program for grad-
urday attending the wedding of Miss Patricia McKinney and
[Rev. Vernon Bigler.
! Word has been received that ! Pfc. James G. Petrey, son of
Sgt. Paul Barnett and f amily j Oscar W. Petrey, 805 North have returned to Fort Knox, Jackson street, Greencastle, has Kentucky, where Sgt. Barnett is been wounded in the Pacific, stationed with the medical re- I Word has been received of the search divsision. Sgt. Barnett lirth of a son, James Allen, was recently awarded the good .Thursday, June 28. to Lt. Com. conduct medal and ribbon. and Mrs. S. C. Liedman of Clu-,
cago. Mrs. Liedman is the 1
IN MEMORY In memory of Sarah Minerva Minnick who died July 1, 1942. Oft we think of you dear mother, And our hearts are sad with pain, Oh this world would be heaven, CouM we hear your voice again. \,) U were a crown of patience As you struggled on and on, A fs.thful one so kind and true, Dear mother how we long for you. Her children. pd.
FORD MOTOR COMPANY PREPARING FOR NEW LINE
rally returning the country to a fme enterprise economy. The “grim race to pioduce” is over, War Mobilization Chief Fred M. Vinson said in a weekend report. But, he added, reconversion during the Pacific war must be dominated by the ••spirit of deteimination” to furi.ish the weapons needed to lick
Japan.
The War Production Board
Mrs. Susie Bitties received I word Sunday of the serious illof her son, Frank Bitties
of Russellville, Aik., who under- ^ tlirncc j troin Chicago where shelf 1X ed a watchful eye on their vent a major operat.on at Me- | s p ent Ule past week visiting her 1 c . )u tj 0ua programs for unwinding
, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. and the War Manpower CommisjHellinger. 'sion, afraid to jump into the rej Mrs. J. M. Hellinger has re-' conversion swim with both feet.
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Dermott, Ark., late Saturday. His condition was said to be
quite serious.
Mrs. Wilma Hamm received a telegram Friday from her husband, Sgt. E. W. Hamm, saying he had arrived in Virginia from the ETO and was awaiting transpoitation to Camp Atterbury. He is expecting to be home for thirty days with his wife and baby. Sgt. Hamm entered the service August, 1942, and was assigned to overseas duty in August, 1944. Mr, and Mrs. John Lyon, noith of Greencastle, received a letter from their son, Uuard D. Lyon, MM 3/c, that he had arrived safely somewhere in the Pacific. This is the second time he has gone overseas. He was in th? Aleutian Islands befoie coming home the first time. He also said he met one of Everett Moore's boys about two weeks ago. Duard is in the Seabees. Mrs. James B. Nelson and Mrs. Julia Steinbrecher of Indianapolis, along with the Mrs. Nelson’s chauffeur, were badly injured at Goshen last Friday when their automobile collided with another. A total of nine people were huit in the wreck. Mrs, Nelson and her party were en route to their summer home in Bay View, Mich., at the time of the wreck. The Nelsons lived in Greencastle until they moved to Indianapolis several years
ago.
daughter and family. Lt. Com. and Mrs. S. C. Liedman. Her little grandson, John Liedman,
accompanied her home.
during the second half
SOCIETY NEWS Eastern Star To Meet Wednesday Greencastle Chapter OES will meet in regular session. Wednesday evening, July 4 at 8:00 p.
m.
Mrs. Anna Winston Smalley, a past most worthy grand matron of the general Grand Chapter of the Order of the Eastern Star will be an honored guest. All Eastern Stars are cordially invited to attend this meeting. 4. 4. 4. 4. Maple Heights Club Meeting Post polled The duly meeting of the Maple Heights Home Economics Club will be postponed until further notice. Warren Township Club To Meet Tuesday The Warren Township Home Economics Club will meet Tuesday afternoon at the Community Hall.
, controls j of 1945.
j Local manpower officials henceforth will have the authority to suspend wartime regulations either In communities or i individual plants if they decide such action Will not interfere with war output. This means that a WMC official in the field can now decree that a certificate of availability a device used to discourage job-jumping—is no longer needed by a worker to get a job in any particular area or n a specific factory. These decisions would be subject to approval by the regional director.
JULY 1945 ' _ S T W T F S 1 2 3 [T] * 5 ,6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 '27 28
REMEMBER THEIR .... BIRTHDAYS ANNIVERSARIES WEDDINGS AND OTHER SPECIAL OCCASIONS WITH Gifts And Greeting Card.* FROM SAM HANNA'S BOOK STORE
HE WS WAR LOAN
ELKHART. Ind„ July 2 (UP) —An elephant sold $2,500 worth of War Bonds during the Seventh War Loan campaign. Burma, a six-ton circus b.'ast, offered a free ride to anyone who bought a $50 bond. Nearly 50 persons accepted the offer.
Officials estimate that unemployment now runs to about 750,000 and it is expected this figure will double by the end of the year. Service industries that have been starved for workers— laundries, restaurants, bus lines, railroads, retail stores- will probably absorb many of these woikers. Officials predict that the next few months will see a gradual disappearance of “experience unnecessary” in shop - window signs asking for help. To allow Industry to absorb some of the unemployment, WPB is relaxing its rigid contiols over most raw mateiials to enable non-war producers to gat started on peacetime work. WPB Chairman J. A. Krug ordered the giadual scrapping of priorities over a six-month period for “virtually everything except military
requirements.”
Under th s system, manufac- i 1 turers can obtain available maj terials on a fiist-come-first-serv-ed basis after the military has taken what it needs.
DEARBORN, Mich., July 2. Plans for the 1946 Ford, Mercury and Lincoln car and truck production and distribution program were discussed here this week by Ford Motor Company executives, regional and branch managers and assistants and branch plant superintendents. The meetings opened Monday in the Ford Rotunda with a talk by J. R. Davis, director of Sales and Advertising. Mr. Davis indicated that the postwar line of Ford, Mr - cury and Lincoln automobiles would be gieatly expanded to provide models and body styles to cover every price field from the lowest to the unest in style and performance in the automotive industry. The meeting was highlighte I Wednesday by a luncheon address from Henry Ford II. Mr. Ford spoke to the entire Ford supervisory family of approximately 200 executives and department heads. Mr. Ford covered the trend of the automotive business for the past 10 years and projected in detail the engineering, manufacturing and distribution plans of ne company that eventually will provide thousands of additional jobs. He outlined the company’s proposed 150 million dollar expansion program, designed to step up Ford’s share in the automotive business. Emphasizing however, that tne company stii; has a war job to do, Mr. Ford explained that “Many of our war contracts have already been terminated, ami more of them will be soon, because we were principally engaged in manufactuiing materiel for the European Theater. “As our services become less and less necessary to the direct war effort,” he said, "we will complete the shift from wa: work to mass assembly of automobiles just as lap dly as government restrictions are remov-
ed.
“We will do everything in on. power to shorten the transition period, and to prevent a seriou slump in employment which would result from a prolonged postponement of passenger car production for civilian use.”
4. 4. 4. 4. 4* + •!• + •l* ^ + anniversaries * 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4* “I* -;- 4* *1* V Wedding Mr. and Mrs. John Hiestand. Reelsvllle, seven years. June 24
nirtnanya
Junie Hiestand, Reelsville
June 30.
B-29s RAID JAPAN i Continued fmm Pair*- <>ncl said its Ka nikaz. pilots crashed nto a U. S. destroyer, a transport and an urn,tentified war- —-—
I’hone 15
ship. Admiral Cht ■ v v 1 itz’s Paci-c r J said only that three small J
raids on the Ok.nawa area urday cost the Japanese
plane.
{f—Gen. Joseph \y g ): new commander 0 f llle ( 10th Army on Okinawa, r ,, I ed that another is,000 j a , j ese had been iHlej or captirl there since tl.j I nounced "secij n j Une ]J That raised ’ji, ,1. n Vs
to 116.000 .ne.j.
6—Maj. Get. John B. Brook* former chief cf the Newfoundland Base Ottimand, took ov , r the command <u' the u. s n-j Air Force in the Aleutians and Alaska, wheice jittery Japa-. spokesmen h no been rx-
Minst their
ese
peeling new blow-
home island.
7—Tokyo -evv a ;; 3 pnpa . ganda line tlat < h war is evitable in tm F , boasting that Japan ould , :|, v ,- the tw ample of Cine and hold out for 20 years if ice try.
TRUMAN CHATS WITH LNDON
l
In another move to bring complete wkrtinAiinficnii ,n of the V i, President Truman chats with the 1936 »;>ublr Ihwsid.T.iil! candidate, Alf Landon of Kansas during I visit to Kansas City, Mo. (International).
STILWELL MAKES PLAN INSPECTION
nandcr of the U. S. 102 n AAF cub plane over tin
GEN. JOSEPH W. STILWELL, ri' new coi Army in the Ryukyus, prefllto 0y In 1
battleground on Okinawa nil' 0 '- William C. Bentley, air officer# the 10th Army as pilot. AfrAJr Forcefe photo. (Internatiow
Spurns Movies THE jrjjmANFIN INDEPENDENCE
SEWER BESTS HANDICAP | HAMMOND, Ind. (UP) — ! Blindness doesn’t prevent Miss Martha Hartman fmm being an : expert seamstress. The towels she sews show neater work than most seeing person's, her purchasers report. One day a week she also sews rag rugs for the Calumet Goodwill Industries.
TELL HOW TO CAN FROZEN
FRUITS
1 “How do you can frozen fruits?" That question—multiplied many times—has been reaching Purdue University ex-
Two U. S. Marines, Lt., George l ens *°n nutritionists in the past Thompson of Dorchester, Mass., tew days as many Indiana homeabove, and Pfc. Rufus E. Randall makers inquire for the nroner have retired to American lines me t ho< i P ^
ROSALIE HILL, 18-year-old Miami Reach, Fla., schoolgirl, is one in
have retired to American lines 8cno °'glrl, Is one In after telling an amazing story of . canning such frozen, A million. Almost every clrl being surrounded by some 350 ,nills pineapple, peaches, dreams a motion picture career
and has refused them all. The reason? She’s interested in a
Japs succumbed to Thompsons , HUp f ,y, " K Ule fruita cus-
offer of cigarettes and none tomers ln flv e to 30 pound con- rea . nn? OVl 'T—j " made any attempt to kill Thomp- tainers. Persons who have freez- ^ lntere » t « < son or Randall. (1NT.) er lockers or home freeiin^ „„t»„ U.? 4 "* 1 *tationed at nearby
or lockers or home freezing units | LyVeT i Ngnc^ San^Slscr^^^
PRESIDENT /R5- HARRY 1 TRUMAN and their daughter. Mj£ garct, cent *hown above In their car at Indepcmler . 1 where the nt i# spending the weekend at his boy ! 0 ?? rtrar el| celebrating th wedding anniversary. Mrs. Truman anil * J will remai‘dependence throughout the summer, but 01 4 ()|1 j| executive t -' turr ‘ Sunday to Washington, concluding a 1 trip durl ,ch vacationed with Gov. Mon C. W* n g °lympla,* and addressed the closing meeting of the 1
■ San Francisco. flntetnatio nil
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