The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 22 October 1946 — Page 4

4

THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1946.

grades. No trading was report- ( as a protest against lack o# gym-1

ed in calves or lambs. Some lambs sold late Monday at $18 to $18.50 or $8 below the high

time last week.

To Stress Safe Transportation

fife/ T / TO

INDIANAPOLIS, Safe transportation

Oct. 22. — | of Indiana's

nasiuni facilities.

More than forty of the 100 pupils were absent from classes after officials announced it would be impossible to build a new gymnasium this year. Although Uie township has a special building levy, school officials said they learned that ma-

terials for the proposed struc- ed for an ture were not available now. education

The Legion chief nuggested that America refrain from telling the ItiiHNiaiis how they should live—and at the same time strenuously resist any Kussian attempts to interfere with the America way of life. He dc-! dared Communists are becoming an increasingly dangerous element in this country and call-

iutensive program of in Americanism to

Erich Brandeis* A couple of days ago I wrote a column about that new poison of which a very small dose can kill 180 million people in a jiffy. Jean, my secretary, who always goes over my articles for mistakes in spelling and punctuation, didn't like the column. “You usually give people a

The school’s basketball team combat Ked inlltiences.

borrows the facilities of neigh-

230,000 rural school children will jj or j n g sc hools during the hard-

be stressed in a series of talks

rw« H 4m fofenfi tit parr coooman . wham shom aw IM Mtotfwi anas NU0N DOT • ntt CMOMU mi Masai • rw kings min SWING H0U0WAT mi pib was Wmm* Ifcrwffc MO RADIO KlCtUlU, Ut

FOR SALE v Cement and road gravel delivered or loaded at pit, 3 1 ; miles southwest of Koaehdalc. Itiilldn/.cr Servil .• Clearing and (jrading

Thompson Bros. Koaididale, Ind. Phone .$ on 103

! by state police to school bus | drivers of 12 Hoosier communit-i ies Oct. 24 and 25, Col, Austin R. | Killian, state police superintendent. announced today. Meetings scheduled for ThursI day, Oct. 24, include Thomas J I Jefferson school at South Bend;| Indiana State Teachers college, [ I Terre Haute; Jefferson high ( I school, Lafayette; Central high 1 school, Muncie, and the Osgood ( and Puoh high schools. Sessions I will be conducted Friday, Oct. 25, at Bloomfield high school; j Crown Point Criminal Court building; Central high school. Fort Wayne; Tomlinson Hall, Indianapolis ,and the Peru and Princeton high schools. Sponsored by , the Indiana State Association of School Bus Drivers, Inc., State Department ol Public Instruction, and Indiana State Police, the discussions ire preparatory to an annua! police inspection of 6,500 school buses, tentatively set for Oct 28. Drivers participating in the program will be urged to maintain vehicles safe for operation ami will be reminded of theii driving responsibilities. Indiana school buses, the largest fleet of any, state in the nation, transport Hoosier youth 200.000 miles

each school day.

wood season.

LATE NEWS (Griffith r mphuM/jed that cooperation with the I'nited Nations must continue to be a basic part of American foreign poli< > | He said lliat the IJ. S. must not attempt lo withdraw from inter- 1 national affairs.

BOWLING Tuesday 7—University A vs. Coca Cola. Wednesday 6:30—Johnson's vs. Eitel’s. 8:30--University C vs Post Office. Thursday 7—Home Laundry vs. Dobbs. Friday 7—V. F. W. vs. University B.

enemy within you. There is no atom bomb to be victorious over yourself, no airplane, no submarine, no machine-

gun.

There is only your own power of will, your own faith, your own decency and your dignity as a human being.

HEBKON

Not one of the 180 million can be killed by the deadliest poison if every one of the 180 million will arm himself properly for victory over himself.

OBITUARY

Sarah Ellen Gibom was born near Srlmmerset Ky.. Dee. 7. 1876 gjhy was the eldest chiM of James apd Nancy Weaver Gibson. She was married on Jan. 2, 1896 to William H. York and came to Putnami county Indiana

THEY FOLLOW HER

SCHOOL

lift,” she said, “but this one lets early in their married life. They

INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK • H<>K prices today were not established in early rounds with buyers bidding steady at $23 for

all

SCHOOL WALKOUT

SEYMOUR, Ind., Oct. 22. Of-

MRS. URSULA SHAUGHNESSY, shorthand teacher in Loretto high school, Chicago, gets some very able assistance from her two-year-old son as she inscribes the day's lessons on the blackboard. And

weights and sellers holding ficials at Vallonia High School just because her back's turned, the students don't dare get out of out for $24. Cuttle trading also today expected full attendance line, for that's teacher’s three-year-old daughter keeping a sharp was slow but little change was after a walkout Monday of pup- lookout The children And themselves In their mother's classroom expected in prices on the better ils who stayed away from classes daily ’ because Mrs ' Shaughnessy is unable to find anyone to care

.v. u—i i (International Soundphoto)

them during school hours

' you down.” | Well, I used the column, anyway, and I hope it did let you clown when you read it. ) You have to be down, you know, before you can be lifted. | When you get too high you (don’t need lifts any more, and it also is too hard to reach you. I I like to be optimistic, and I like to leave you with a smile and bTing you some cheer. But I don't want to be a Potlyanna or make one out of you. I am a great believer in hope. But you hope for things to be better. So, the worse things are the more hope you need to get through. Life is pretty grim right now, there's no doubt about that. You cannot shut your eyes to all the unhappiness and all the stupidity all around you. You've got to face facts. That poison of which I spoke is a fact a nasty, grim, fearsome fact. But in that very grininess lies

hope.

Human beings simply must realize that they cannot go on ci eating monsters of destruction without ever using them. There is hope that some day a new world will be born without destroying the old one. The very elements that are contained in the deadly poison may also contain the substance that will do away with sickness

and misery.

The very brains that create wars for power and wealth can and will some day create wars for peace and love and happiness.

And I mean just what I say: There must be a war for peace— only that war is not fought with

celebrated their golden weeding annaversary this past Jamiary. They were the parents of five children, Chester York of Coatesville; Claude York of _ Crown Point; George York of West Lafayette; Mrs. Oscar Knight and Mrs. Maynard Shonkwiller both of Greencastle. There are eight grandchildren ,fflrid five

great grandchildren.

She was a life long member of the Christian church and at the time o'f her illness was active in Section III of the First Christian church. On Oct. 13, 1945 she suffered a stroke and has been confined to her bed since that time. She passed away at Putnam county hospital at 1:15 a. m. Sunday, Oct. 13th. But we shall remember her as she would like to be remembered, a good and generous woman. The special qualities that made her dear to rjs were perhaps chiefly these. A sense of duty that held her faithfully to whatever task that she I undertook, a sense of humor that showed itself in quick reply and wholehearte,d laughter, an alert and selfless interest in everyone she loved, high standard of con duct from whibh she never deviated and according to which i she wisely reared her family, the giioi sense that saw through pretense and sham with healthy sureness, a natural intelligence that unerringly distinguished the important from the unimportant, the sensible from the foolish, the

right from the wrong

Wheat is about all sowed. Mr. and Mrs. Eustace Tilney and daughter, Joyce, and girl friend of Crawfordsville were Sunday guests of Fred Dahlgren and Mr. and Mrs. Byron Gegner. I Mr. and Mrs. Dick Perry and family were moving this week from Paul McGaughey’s place to the Paul Goff farm. Mr. and Mrs. Olin Leonard ajid family attended > a^ family dinner at the home of Mrs. Elsie Tthompson in Roachdale Sunday. • III Mr. and Mrs. Earl Surber moved from th^ Goff farm to a farm near Ladoga last week. Mrs. Fannie Sfeinnieier of Indianapolis came last Wednesday for a visit with her sister, Mrs. Hazel Clodfelter. and family, re-i turning home Sunday evening with Albert Steinmeier and Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Steinmeier who spent the day at the Clod- ■

felter home.

THE AIR CONDITIONED VONOSTLE LAST SHOWING TODAY

Bud Abbott and Marjorie Reynolds have hilarious romantic scenes together in Universal’s ‘The Time of Their Lives” in j which Costello is starred with 1 Bud Abbott.

MARJORIE REYNOLDS-BINNIE BAIlff JOHN SHELTON 1ESS G*lf - A ~ ». WITH NEWS HISS AND YELL WED. AND THURS.

IUCILIE Mil-CUfTH |(|| IIUILM BENDIX - MUI SKldi noDtHklttUQI 2a—

WITH NEWS SV ENGAU CAT ENCORE NIGHT THURSDAY ONE SHOWING ONLY BESIDE THE KEGILAR FEATUKE "Si. Louis Blues"

BANNER AOs GET REMT.P

CARD OF THANKS

We wish to express our sincere thanks and appreciation to orjr relatives, friends and neighbors for the kindness, sympathy an|d bountiful flnral offerings received during our recent bereave-

, , . , ment. We especially thank the guns and bombs and planes and ho8pital gtaff Dr / Tenni8i Dr .

submarines, but with the mind and the heart and the soul. Just as there has to be a will to win a war of force so there must be a will to win the war

for peace.

You think of Germany or Japan as an enemy. But there is a far more dangerous enemy right inside every human being—that enemy is YOU. It is easier to lick an army of enemies than to lick that lone

Johnson, the singers, the pallbearers, Mrs. Rector and the Minister, Rev. Saunders. Harvey York Mr. and Mrs. Chester York Mr. and Mrs. Claude York Mr. and Mrs. George York Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Knight Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Shonkwiler pd. TRY BANNER ADS

VOTE FOR

E. C. ROGERS Democratic Nominee For Trustee of Franklin Township Election Tuesday, November 5, 1946.

Y/)l • wh«» A Gt®Y^° un ° 4

s

NOW! GO FOR PLEASURE! Today you're tree as the breeze to go where you please! Wartime restrictions are off, hotels and resorts have more space, vacation crowds have dwindled . . . and all America's lovely highways are calling you to carefree travel by Greyhound! At fares that have remained the biggest bargain in transportation, Greyhound offers cushioned comfort in reclining chairs, close-range sightseeing, frequent schedules, your choice of many routes. No matter if it’s a transcontinental trek, a visit to one of America’s great cities, or a week-end trip to cheer lor your favorite football team . , . go right now by Greyhound just hr iunj . Chicago, III. $3.80 Fort Wayne, Ind. $3.20 Detroit, Mich. $5.45 Miami, Fla. $1TS5 El Paso, T.‘x. $22.93 Phoenix, Arl/.. $30.80 Denver, Colo. $19.10 ^ Angelo**, Cal. $36.80 Washington, D. C. $11.15 Petersburg, Fla. $16.00 Above Fares |)o Not Include Transportation Tax

«• ' w ''

GREYHOUND TERMINAL 6 East Seminary st. Phone 328-R

GR EYHO U N D

PUBLIC SALE The undersigned Administrator will sell at piihlic auction at tin farm home of the late Charles F. Wilcox, located about 2 miles west of Stilesvillo and one-half mile south of Road 40 on Broatlpark Road, 5 miles south of Coate.svllle, on Wednesday. November 6, 1946 AT II O'CLOCK HOUSEHOLD GOODS Consisting of three rockers, 3 bedsteads, I buffet, | dining lahle, 6 (lining chairs (old); I wash stand, I clock, Ingrahams; I chest of drawers. Cherry; 1 stand table, wash howl and pitcher, sausage mill, safe, lard jars, good dining room suite, three-quart-er antique bed, miscellaneous. FARM TOOLS AND MATERIALS One box brace and bits, I sink, 1 pitcher pifmp, grind stones, and cans, etc,; I sickle, I lawnmower, half roll harh wire, one garden plow, I work henrh, kegs, 2 boxes, old chairs, I dinner bell, 25 gallon iron kettle, 2 .saws, 8 chicken troughs, 4 flat Irons, I disc harrow, 1 sled, I hay rake, I Jewel drill, lumber, | hog crate, 2 grain bins, I hrooderhoii.se, 1 feeder, 50 hedge posts and 5 st eel posts, s scoops, 3 forks, » bariVls, | double shovel, 2 .sets harnef-s, 300 grain and feed hags, (, scyder, 2 collars, corn shelIcr, 12 boxes junk, double trees, etc.'one break plow, 2 post diggers, 8 spades and shovel, | cross cut Raw , 2 scoop hoards, 8 hags mineral, 1 leather belt, carpenter ■tools, 1 level, I square '» saws, boxes, 0 tile drain, 2 hog houses, two good steel hog troughs, two rolls chicken netting. ^ GRAIN AND HAY Approximately 7 tons loose hay, 3 bales straw, It acres corn to be sold by the bushel. LIVESTOCK % 6 feeding h(*gs, I good milk cow, 16 ewes, 1 two year old buck 9 lambs. POULTRY 48 Hens and Pullets. TERMS — CASH. Charley A. Wilcox, Admr. VAUGHAN AND STEWART, Auctioneers. THEODORE MULLIS, Clerk. Not responsible for accidents. Lunch Will be served.

(Paid Political Adv.)

Your Representative to Congress Must Know He must know, from experience, how lo usf his voice and his vote to combat bureaucratic disregard for the will and the interests of the people . . . He must know, from experience, how interpret legislation, domestic policy and foreign policy, so that his voice and his vote represent the will of his constituents and help toward the restoration of a true democracy, a government by the people, under our constitution. For Experienced Representation VOTE FOR

NOBLE JOHNSON Republican Candidate For U. S. Congress 6th Congressional District