The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 5 July 1945 — Page 2

176623 fans were in the stands vitamin pills quetly today and

for the bargain bills.

Baseball Records

Fall To Racing Doomed To D i e —

Starved 61 Rallies

XEW YORK July 5—(UP) — lajoi league baaeball set at 1043 tier* lance record yesterday, but is- ti ie on the horse still outrcw horsehide on a ball, with 6.428 Americans at seven ma■r rac. -tracks to 210.047 at the

then joined his family in a Texas

watermelon feast.

Ever since they tucked him into his own bed to await death from beri-beri tuberculosis and ' malnutrition, he has believed

* that he'll get well.

The Daily Banner

and

Herald Consolidated ‘•It Wave* For All" S. R. Itaridi n. Publisher Entered in the postoffrce

| SOCIETY NEWS NIK- Mary Lou Shoemaker Bride of W illiam J. A Nop

I

. Miss Mary Lou Shoemaker, daughter of Mrs. Edna Shoe- ' maker of Fillmore became the

Greencastle. Indiana as second ; bride of William J. Alsop, A. O.

FORT WORTH. Tex., July 3— (UP —Hometown doctor today gave Cpi. Jim Newman—an American GI who won't admit

l ICa^i

(D31

11 games.

even death

can Uck

him—a slen-

La-.; i

>vd of the eight at

der but fighting chance to live.

V -r ],

ubleheadeis was at

It was

a one-

in-a-thousand

45 376 jammed

chance for

the 2 j *

year-old hero

Briggs s

m to see Dave Fer-

of Bataan

who bee

ante a 6-foot

l ie of t)

Be

>-tOn P.eii Sox give

living skeli

»ton of

92 pounds in

up a he

un to Hank Gr.i-r-

three years

u r in a Jap-

Irg.

anese prise.

,n camp.

Large

St 1

(wd at the major

Cpl. Jim

, who

just grinned

tracks \

re estimated 63 000

Jvhen Arm;

,• doctors

> gave up his

who flo

eke

to Santa Anita to

case Mond;

iv and ?■

-t him home

t:y to

some money on

to die. figu

red the o

dds are really

Bu.«hir

e Santa Margarita

better

handica)

• TM GOING TO GET WELL.

Si wn

v betting records

he said.

were se

A

queduct. moving to

The lat<

»st medical verdict

B. Iniont

one day. handled

came fr"m

Dr. Jac

k Daley of

>2

rough the mutuels

Fort Word

“If he s

unives

two or three

nerican track Mut-

,i-3 icn£e

ight possibly

i.el har-

f $1,697,853 at Suf-

loctor sai t

folk I>o

md >1 499 740 at

Even then

i the cd

is 1

Del a war

k were ne w record ■

thousand t

gainst him—

for th' -<

ks.

and I hav,

?n’t give

n his family

It wa

mated that a total

any hope a

t all.’*

of $15 0

00.1

) wa? brt at all

The late?

t verdict

t didn't mean

tracks >

.cn

lay.

a thing to

Corpora

,1 Jim. whose

The b

3.55 €

11 attendance broke

composure

has been

perfect since

a mark

Si I

mt 10 days pre-

the Army

flew hir

n home from

viou fly.

i 205 106 attend-':

Bruns Gem

?ral Hosi

ital at Santa

Sunday

tw

bills on June 24

Fe. N. M .

and turr

led him over

and wa;

: ly 35.000 better

to his folk:

s as a d<

xmied man.

PRODUCTION REPORT (Confirmed from Pnxre One» dropped almost 1,000.000.

I r- - *— -

The important and astound- [mail in Putnam County; 53.50 to ir.g fact. Krug saU, "is that in I 53 oo per year by Trail outside

class mail matter under Act of

March 7, 187S.

Subscription rates. 15 centi per week; $3.00 per year bj

Putnam Omnty.

17-19 South Jackson Street.

lf*44. the year in which the crescendo of war was mounting to a thunderous climax, the Ameri-

an 1 r.s rner and his family re-j TODAY'S BIBLE THOI <>HT .r ained bv far the best-fed, best-j T! 16 very' act of striving to h u.- d and best-clothed civilians turn another from the error of a

.n the world.

• While all battlefronts were ablaze the American consumer

was furnished with

more goods J cover

1

sinful life will strengthen us in our way. James 5:30: He which converteth a sinner * * • Shall

a multitude of sins.

since 1941."

The consumer spent more and got less for .h:s money, how- * ever. The report showed that • : .sumers spent $7,000,000,000 i more for goc is and services last >-’ar than in 1943. but in terms if 1943 prices, they d-1 not get that much rore in clothing or isenold equipment. i

Personal and LOCAL NEWS BRIEFS

M. 2 c in a ceremony performed by Rev. C. E Rodgers of the First Baptist church in Vero Beach. Florida Monday evening. Jure 25. at 7:30. The bride wore a white eyelet batites dress with a shoulder corsage of reo roses. They were attended by Miss Dorothy Northern of Indianapolis. Louis Bucco A. O. M. 1 c of Flushing. Ohio and William L. Johnston. A. O. M. 3 c of Hickory. North Car

olina.

+ + + +

K. J. U. Class Picnic ssupper The K. J. U. Class of the First Christian Church will meet for a picric supper at the home of Mr and Mrs. Ralph Bee. Sunday. July 9th. at 6:30 o’clock. Bring 'covered dish and table service. I + 4* + + (Lucille Colvrrt To Marry on Saturday

,-v, -i- + 4--!‘ + 4- + 4‘++‘l‘ ,5, 0 f anniversaries * « + 4. + + 4- •{• ■?• 4- -S' 4- • Birthdays Mrs. Mvrtle Reynolds, west Poplar street, Wednesday. July 4th. Evelyn June Newman, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Cecil Newman, Greencastle, R. No. 3, 13 years today. June 5th.

Japanese suicide plane bases on food board, said official, of southern Kyushu and along the those countries had been tola east coast of Honshu on the out- bluntly that "they'd brit -r start er fringe o fthe Tokyo metropol- pulling themselves up by their

:tan area.

Two of the main Kyushu bases took a terrific pounding from ani ,ther 120-odd American fighters and bombers, including a force ' of Mitchell medium bombers op-

erating from Okinawa,

They destroyed at least 10 Japanese planes on and above the Chiran and Kanoya airfields. ..leanwnile, blockading American planes ranged over a wide area of the East China Sea and the Yellow Sea. sinking or damE. ng 32 more enemy ships, in-

JAPAX BOMBED (OntlmuMl frnni Pnir* One) one of their neaviest night ami day assaults on the Japanese

homeland.

A ereat fleet of 450 to 500, - , . ^ 1 1^,1 I non 1 eluding two destroyers bagged

Superfortresses unloaded 3.000 , <- ,u '”*5

tons of fire bombs on the Shik-

DECA1UR. 1*> Police Chief H

av clung tc

July 5.—(UP) J. Schepper f -

an edict banning :-d in abbreviated alter top sur. suits >ng on downtown in taverns. He inutuation was “n bit no airosts hai

than

ist K urth-of-July, when

to k

ihn and his

i.ii.LN333£5.i.'9fc.3B

i Miss Betty W ninger of Or-

I leans is visiting Mrs. Edith Mof-, Miss Lucille Calvert, daughte • ett. ' of Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Calvert of

Muncie. will become the bride of

R l --rt Browning of St. Lou ' Vincent p allen of New York Sat- .£ visiting has mother. ^ Irs ' un i a y afternoon at 4 o'clock. The f ..z.ibeth Browning. 'ceremony will take place in the I Stated meeUng Fillmore O. E Jackson street Christian church 1

1 S No. 186 Thursday evening, in Muncie.

Th-.e will be initiation. I Miss Calvert is now professor

in -peech and dramatics and is I

« M:ss Annabel Stout of Louis- j-_ ea | 0 f t}j e department of speech 1

Ky.. is

Eva Rogers

Stout.

cku Island cities of Kochi. Tokushima and Takamatsu, and the Honshu port of Himeji. All four cities were brilliantly lignted when the giant B-29's arrived shortly after midnight, offering an easy target for thousands of incendiary bombs. Smok and flames shot 15.000 feet into the a r over the stricken citie' as the gasoline bombs caught hold in the flimsy buildings be-

low.

Hours later, two big fleets of 1 army, navy and marine pianos I struck in broad daylight at the

in an attack on a Japanese convoy off the mouth of the Yang-

tze river near Shanghai.

WARN FREED NATIONS TO GROW OWN FOOD WASHINGTON, July 5 (UP) —Liberated nat.ons of western Europe have been warned to sp -?d up their own food production because relief shipments from abroad may fall be- : v expectations, it was liac'.osed today. D nnia A. Fitzgerald. United States deputy on the combined

own bootstraps and use ev erv conceivable device to increase

their own production."

Fitzgerald has Just returned from London where offi?: a | s this country, the United King, dom and Canada reported a d' dining world food supply to representatives of Fran.'-e g,,. gium. Holland. Luxemburg,

Denmark and Norway.

The liberated countr.-s Fit,, gerald said, were assur- ! tha* vigorous efforts were bein’ made to give them all 1 tanc^ possible, but, he said, th. ywern also reminded that the United States ’’still has a full .*. - 1 Wlr in the Pacific” which will g e t first call on our own food

stocks.

Food demands are so great, Fitzgerald said, that U s civil! ian diets will be cut bebw p rp . war levels for the first time during 1945.

The U. S. Govemmorr nejoii. ated a treaty with the 1 ;lnS j B 1795 for a plot of gi ind s« miles square at the meur of the Chicago River, Fort Dearborn was built there in 180:;-bot.

1 1 -

Misses Georgians ar.d Beatrice

f 4

(

r

visiting with M s * n • school of religion at Butler and Miss Orpha f; r:Vf . rS ity. For a number of

! years before going to Indianapolis she was a speech professor

esi , „ _ .at DePauw University, and nas 3i Haves, and Misses Connie and J .. , I i ’ „ , bee- verv active in recitals

% Vonda Lee Dunn spent Wednes- -

throughout the state. She is ' very well remembered in Green- ;

j) Mr. and Mrs. Frank Day. Mrs. j castle.

Virgil Blue. M:s. R sa Harcourtj T>.p attendants will be Mrs. j,.* d Mrs D : McCull ugh spent (Harold Trout and Owen Calvert:

I I We.mes'.lay evening in Brazil. ) 0 f Indianapolis.

i Mrs. Ethel Confer, who mov-j 1 ed to Indianapolis a month ago. I 1. has suffered a broken hip in a ‘ 1 i fall friends here learned today. | f j Sh - the Methci st h spitai. |

STILESVIIXE BAPTIST ( HI R( H

I

4)

Carl To

son of Mr

Wake up your family's appetite for breakfast by serving these cheerful good morning foods. What a break for breakfast they are -- good-tasting and good-for-you, these fine foods change mornin g grouches into sunny smiles. Serve a differsni menu every mornir.g - there's plenty to choose from in our vast variety cf breakfast favorites . . . eye-opener values that give further proof of the economy of buying ALL THE FOODS FOR ALL YOUR MEALS AT TREMBLY's

REGAL MARKET.

KELLOGG'S PEP, 8 oz. Pkg 9c SHPEBDED WHEAT, H.B.C. 12 oz. Pkg. ... 12c REGAL COFFEE, Finest blend money can buy, lb... 32c EGGS. Large Country, Doz 35c

1!

§ Clifford Torr. 402 SI strict air:ve<$ nc

if I after serving two years

§lland. ib.

B If

and Mrs. | vice

M. Page, pastor, you are’ not in church serthe Stilesville Baptist

to

*n Eng-

McC.

i)‘

M: s All-n Binkley has receivi word f: m her son. Col. Wilam T. Binkley, that he has ar:n the United States, from iolla. Germany, and will be in ret. rca=t!> Friday morning. C;. Ha: Id Bombert Cofflan is home from England on £ vrty-.iay furlough visiting hi: <other. Mis. Julia Ciffman. Cp! offman has hven overseas fo he past two years and nim

. -t Walnut Jchurcn invites you to woishipjX Tuesday (with tnem. jx

Sunday school 10:00 o’clock. ♦ Miming worship 11:00 o’clock 2 Young people’s meeting 7;00 x o’clock. ♦ Evangelistic services 8:00

o'clock.

Guests this Sunday well be a quartet from the Youth for Christ Rally in Indianapolis. Go to church somewhere Sun-

day.

gh. Mrs

>• a- i family. Mrs. O.

M -- s Garneth and

oia- McCullough spent

it Riverside Park at In-

is.

♦ ♦

j (anlaloupes

GW HEAD LETTUCE NEW CABBAGE t: * PEACHES', •» Bunches

APPIE BUTTER, ' 23c LITTLE sport PEACH PRESERVES 57 1 PURE 2 Lb. Jar Aorioot PRESERVES 58c PURE % i i. i GRAPEFRUIT JUICE 29c TE\Sl N 46 oz. can GirtTer Brrod MIX 19c DROMKD\RY POINT FREE 46 oz. tan ORANGE JUICE 45c DOLES I# or. can PINEAPPLE JUICE 16c LIFEBUOY SOAP bar 5c XRMOLR’S EVAPORATED MILK, 5^ oz. can 5c TEA, 4 oz. pkq. 24c ORANGE PEKOE. REGAL

Sweetheart Bread

L‘, tvf Loaf

f

TREMBLY’S “ N. INDIANA ST. -PNONE 740* EAST SIDE OF SQUARE

gj Wednesday dinner guests o' g I Mrs L E E iumunk and children g 1 of Reelaville were Mr. an ! Mrs g | John Blair. Mr. and Mis. Gay Neier and sons. Billie and David of Brazil; Rev. and M:Raymond R..-sler and daughter, Patty, and Mrs. C. T Baurnur.kl

f Greencastle.

Mrs. Will Glidewell left re ter. Mrs. I. L. Patterson, Mr Patterson a:. I so - Joe an Jack . Ok -. : City. Ok She will accompany Mr. a Mrs. Patteison and sons soon tc Houston Texas, where the Pal teraor.s will make their new home. While in Houston, Mrs Glidewell will also visit Mrs Henry S. Renick, a cousin, wh will be remembered here b. many friends as the Renick.formerly lived in Greencastle. En route they v.:Il v sit in Dai: iTexas. They also plan to visit Galveston on the Gulf of Mexico a*. 1 * San Antonio, Texas tr. summer. Mrs Patterson is the I'luer Lueile Glidewell ar.d taught in the> local city schools

MANYNEVER

SUSPECT CAUSE OF BACKACHES This Old Treatment Often

Brings Happy Relief

Mstit raff.ren reUcre nseirirr batkatke mrieklr.osee they discover that the real causa of their trouble raay be tired kidneys. The kidney J are Nature a chief way of taking the excess acids end waste out of the blood. rhey helpmost people pass atoutJ pintsaday. When disorder if kidney f unction p-rmits poisonous matter to remain In your blood, it

j.may same nag-.r.s Uccache, rh. umaric '

HOSPITAL NOTES Miss Marcia Ann Drake. And- • i son street, was admitted to the Putnam county hospital Ttturs-

»y.

Keith Hatcher. 415 Elm street as admitted to the Putnam ar.ty hospital Thursday. Mrs Dorothy Cummings. Clo- • rdale. R. 1. is a patient in the Putnam county hospital. Miss Kay Bateman was releas1 from the Putnam county hostal Wednesday.

British Voters Go To Polls |

♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ : : : : : ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦

w :

LONDON. July 5 iUPi—An it <t»rated 27 000 000 voters went it ’.a the polls for Britain's first -eneral election in ten years to-i^ »y lit v. • • - saw a It oMibil.ty of a swing to the j ft that could unseat Prime j •Iinister Churchill's conserva-i*

.ve gevemment.

All signs pointed to one of the I losest on tests in British bis-it ry, matching the bitterness of (♦

the campaign. Church.ll himself laid down a lunt ideological challenge to ' he opposition when he invaded .ie Laoorites' southwest Lonon strongholds last night for iis final speech of the campaign Ignoring catcalls and explod- j ng firecrackers tossed by heck-1 >rs in the crowd, Churchill de- | clared that the course of all | Europe hinges on the British

election^

“They are looking from tha continent to see which way Britain is going to go.” he said. "II there should be a landslide to the: left, many countries on the continent would slide not into decent social.sm but into the violence of comnurJsm. If w* go down, all the ninepins ol j

Europe will fall."

, , . , Looking old and tired aftei ; tin* up^mL-t-s.'Wvi 'n*.'p r i*ii,M r ’undvr'tiie the moat atremyous of his 16

“ I campaigns, the Prime |

wroB « ; nevertheless radiated

Don’t wait! Ask >r»ur dnigjfin for Doau a belligerent confidence at each of

his many street corner stops.

Iwtppy relief and will help the 15 mi lea of

kidney tubes flush out ; • r«< your blood* Gi; Doan's P»Mf.

BANNER ADV. pays

GOULD'S DRIVE-IN

♦44 4 ♦

SELF SERVICE VALUES

DRINK FRUIT JUICES

TEXSUN

GRAPEFRUIT, 46 Oz.

DONALD DITK

ORANGE JUICE, 46 Oz.

RED BEANS

GARDEN

NO. 2

CITY

EGGS

SELECTED DO/.

COUNTRY

DRESSED CHICKENS

53c

FRESH YOUNG HENS. DRESSED ON OUR FARM AVAILABLE EVERY DAY OX ORDER, LB.

“Gocd To The Lost Drop’’

LB.

28

For Better Baking - - - 25 LBS.

PUKE

LB.

BUTTER MILNOT

BLEACH Q, ART

( REA MERY

NOT

RATIONED

2

LARGE CANS

SI/E

i

COTTAGE CHEESE

FRESH

49c 15c 10c 13c

REGULAR

SIZE

WHEATIES KITtHEN QUEI

SALAD DRESSING

2

PKGS.

PINT

SALT _ FINE FOR SEASONING SIDE PORK

23c —

, FRUITS KHMHB I pomoES California No. 1 fft. 1« Uw. d#V

APPLES

New Transparent OCi* s Lbs aJC LEMONS For Summer Drink, -OCp De*. HEAD LETTUCE Large Crisp Heads IT* Head Ivt GREEN BEANS New t rop j WATERMELONS

Sweet Juicy

TOMATOES Fancy Southern j th

ONIONS New Texas

8 Mm. —-

I

^ ar ket price paid for eggs GOULD'S DRIVE-IN The Convenient Super Market 312 North Jackson St. ** THE RESTW CTB0 DOWNTOWN AR€A”