The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 18 January 1947 — Page 4
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mr DAItY CANNCR, ORCLNCAolLC, INDIANA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 18, 1947. YOU'RE TELLING h TWINS BORN TO POLIO VICTIM ME! By WILLIAM RITT Central Press Writer — A CALIFORNIA golf tournament wound up with one of the players socking the tournament I manager. Must be that Hollywood influence getting in its
licks.
! ! ! An Aleutian volcano erupts every lifth day. This is the first volcano we ever heard of J to so on a five-day week basis. ! ! ! ! The other day the planet Jupiter hid behind the moon, say astronomers. Oh, come, now, Juoie, we can't be THAI badl
King Is III *
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Daily Banner Classified Ads Get Results. BELIEVE HOTEL FIRE STARTED HERE
THE DAUGHTERS OF THE KING
XirAM lower limbs are both paralyzed. She is also mother of 6->eat-od twin girls and a daughter, HU. (International)
VONCASl LAST SHOWING TOfiJ
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I KINO CHRISTIAN. 7G-year-old 1 j monarch of Denmark, Is ill with! a cold and slight Infection of the j
lungs.
f Internationa!)
AT THE CHATEAU
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0. C. REfD, engineer at Atlanta's Hotel YVinecofT, where 121 died in the nation s worst hotel tire, examines remains of a mattress which was left on tlie building's third floor and is believed to have been the Starting place of the lue. (International Soundphoto) V GREAT GRANDMOTHER AT 48
A CHARMING NEW study of Princess Elizabeth, left, heir-apparent to the throne of Great Britain, and her sister, Pr.ncens Margaret Rose, u shown in tins portrait. (International)
Bruce cabot portrays the twofisted titular hero of Warners’ action-packcd film, “Wild Bill Hickok Rides,” at the Chateau Theatre Sunday. Monday and Tuesday. Co-starred with him in the exciting drama of the
WILL CONTINUE SENATE WAR PROBES
EMILIE LOMBARDI, 48 yrar-dd former opera singer and wife of famed b. ritone M no Lombardi, poses in Hollywood for one of the young* ert four _ ei t itiaits. Mrs. laiinbardi holds her greatgrandduug K >:iu Lie Monteil. daughter of 16-ycar-old Joycs Muntcil, rig ' The bahy s grandmother, Mrs. Lenore Lombardi, 30, is at left. (International Soundphoto)
SENATE REPUBLICAN steering committee has recommended continuation of the Senate war investigating committee for another year, with Sen. Owen Brewster, left, Maine Republican, as chairman of the group. Members of the important probing committee include Sen. Chan Gurney, center, South Dakota Republican, and Sen. Homer Ferguson, Michigan Republican. (International)
Daily Banner Classified Ads Get Results.
WASHINGTON Rio, Bogota Conference* j Powerful Machiniits Union Facing Long Postponement | May Re-Enter Federation Special to Central Press • WASHINGTON—Informed diplomats see little chance that the Imig-dcl.iyod Kio do Janeiro conference of American foreign ministers v ill be lick) in the foreseeable future. In tart, most of the western hemisphere nations do not want it now The reason—the Argentine situation is too ticklish and there is no desire to discuss hemispheric defense alliances with President Juan rerun's men sitting in. Furthermore, a solution of the Argentine situation seems nowhere near. The only hopeful sign is the continued student strikes which often in LatinAmerican countries end up in revolution. Some speculation exists, too, on whether the Bogota conference of American states will takf place as scheduled this year It, too. was to have been held in 1946. but was postponed because of the international situation.
. • • •
• THE POWERFUL Machinists Union of nearly 700,000 members may re-enter the American Federation of Labor in a few months. | Negotiations toward such an end have been underway in Washington for some time. They | may bear fruit when Harvey Brown retires as |
President president of the njachinist union. j early West are Constance BenJuan Peron Brown has been the chief stumbling block to nett and Warren William,
reaffiliation. He will be 65 soon, however, and the machinists' constitution will require ins retirement from otflee at that age. The machinists were suspended from the AFL in an old controversy with tiie carpenters over which union should handle the installation of machinery in a new plant. I The dispute dates back to 1914 when the machinists won an AFL I convention ruling giving them the work. However, the carpenters never observed the decision. Consequently. Brown stopped payment of the machinists' per capita dues to the AFL more than a year ago and the union promptly was suspended from the Federation.
• • • •
9 11 HAS LEAKED OUT at the Capitol that the GOP committee on committees put about a week's pressure on Senator Wallace H. White, Jr. (R) of Maine to sacrifice his foreign relations committee
| membership.
White, the new majority leader of the Senate and commerce committee chairman, was extremely reluctant to part with the foreign relations job. At least one fellow member on the committee on committees argued that if White would forego his second committee, the Senate Republicans could have cured all their sore spots except the failure of Senator Clyde M. Reed (R) of Kansas to get nia coveted comimrce chairmanship away from White. But everything's ironed out now and the Republican* ate off to a clean start in tlie Senate.
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• A NEW ' DISEASE" lias developed as a result of tliq growing popular interest in world affairs Even you may have it. * * Its discoverer, S. W. Boggs, the state department's geographer, spends most of,his time trying to win new secrets out of maps.
Boggs finds that the disease—"cartohypnosis"—is
growing. Translated loosely, tlie term might mean Mop* Don't
being hypnotized by maps rather than by their
meaning. Moon What Trouble is, Boggs says, that most maps do not They "Soy"
show the real distances between points. Mercator’s
projection, which most people studied in school, he says, is bad because Greenland, though smaller than Argentina, appears larger
than all South America.
Boggs’ idea of the most deplorable use of maps—the uae to which they were put by Hitler and Mussolini to get propaganda out to
the people.
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cr tonMal iMNkMMB •wW If SSWMSMID
with mvstko kox .MINSTREL DAYS
COMING •• SUNDAY MATINEE AND NIGHT MONDAY ~ TUESDAY NIGHTS.
gallant BESS In Action Color
WITH NEWS ELECTRONIC Mill SK.
S. S. AMERICA PLOWS IN FROM ROUGHEST CROSSING THEY WERE AB OARD PLANE MISSING IN ANTARCTIC
Up-and-coming M-G-M player,) Marshall Tb mpsotv makes an-! other step toward stardom with) his role as the heroic Seabee in > “Gallant Bess." new M-G-M Cine' color production, opening at the Voreastle Theatre Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. Thompson recently scored hits in “Bad Basconib,” "The Cockeyed Miracle' .
and “The Show-Off."
Hale Help NOTICE: Electrolux Franchises open to residents ef Greencastle or vicinH) who is interested in be* ing in business tor sell. NO INVESTMENT NO SHORT\.E Call or Write Electrolux Corp. 0»4 Lafayette A'*'. T. Hauk Phone: Craw ford 'U'W
LUXURY LINER S. S AMERICA digs her boi. under as she pounds along New York-bound to complete an Atlantic crossing described by her skipper, Commodore Harry Manning, as the roughest in his 34 'years of Era-going Thu b.g ship was delayed Iwj amd one-half days by ths gales which were near Uopical humcant violence. (loternadoiu! SoundphotoJ
WITH ONE EXCEPTION, these are crew members aboard the seaplane missing for more than a week In the Antarctic where it was attached to the Byrd expedition. In place of man Identified at left of front row. identified only as Dickens. Frederick W. Williams of HunUngton, Tenn., 1* with crew Others left to right, front row. are William G. Warr of Reading, Pa., and James H. Robbins, San Diego Cal Rear, left to right, Ower McCarthy. Sonoma, Cal.; William H. Keanu. Jr., Boston. Mass • Ralph P* Leblanc, SL Martinville, La ; Maxwell A. Lopez, Newport, R. L, and Wsndel K. Henderson Ports.* mouth. Va. U. S. Navy radiophoto. (Infruational)
CLOSING OUT SALE A< I am quit ing fanning. I will ncM at Auction ml l ! l f farm known as Ih- Luke llcaman farm, locatcil '! mil'"' , of l^'wlHvillc, I miles caxl of tfuincy, or 7 miles north".'* Paragon, I hr following iKTsoual property on: FRIDAY, JANUARY 24«h, 1947 Starting al II: oYloek A. M.
3—UORSKN—?
Team of sinoolh mouth gray horses, real workers.
li—CATTLE—«
One Holstein cow ; One Jersr-y row, 7 years old; One J, f Shorthorn cow; One Hereford-Shorlhorn heifer; One II 1 ' rail, 3 months old; One hull ealf, 4 months old. II—HOGS—12 ,| One Hampshire sow lo farrow In February. Eleven hriw.
feeding shouts, weight 00 lbs. CORN and HAY , ,
300 bushels of good yellow eorn;4 Ions of Lillie. Red rlo'cr ■*|W
I ton ol Timothy and Alsike hay. CHICKENS and EQUIPMENT
10 White Rook laying hens, laying good now; One ce
brooder, water fountains, feeders and etc. FARM IMPLEMENTS and MISCELLANEOUS
International mower, runs In oil, good one; John ,„ r planter with fertiliser attachment; John Iteere horse ridlh* ' one horse wheal drill; John Deere endgate seeder; 2 s "i p „; ’I.M.Ui harrow; hay rake; John Deere walking breaking P ' I new rubber tired wagon with flat-top, used very IHHf! with h.ix-hcil; two wheel trailer; hog house; troughs; l ''‘ plow; litres; forks; shovels; saws; collar.; I set breeching ess; haliers; barrels and many oilier articles too nuinen""
list.
HOUSEHOLD Sofa bed; 3 rocking chairs; vlctrnla; electric I’hllco rad I"; r . cabinet; dining room suite; cm.king range; bed, .spring'"^ . mat tress; hed and springs; dresser ami many mtsc'lla" articles. TERMS—CASH ■Not responsible In ease of accidents. ^0 K. J. RICHARDS, Owner WANYR BRANNEMAN, Auet., ( lovcrdule, End.. I’h- 142-R'*® Dinner will he nerved.. f
