The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 27 January 1947 — Page 4

THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCA5TLC, INDIANA, MONDAY, JANUARY 27, 1947.

CHATEAU TONIGHT & TUESDAY

•fee*

ANN SHERIDAN ROBERT CUMMINGS RONALD REAGAN BETTY FIELD

mm

mm

CHABUf CIAUOI COBURN-RAINS XftHTM »IIOl»SO« MHO' COfXMi tjjjnn «siif • <tu ‘ a:'-: ftttt MvtNrar • ux noo*

((ion lignin this wi ck. Th<- complete county caul is as

.oltows: Tuexiay

Greencastle at Brazil Clinton Center at Bussellville

Friday

Franklin at Greencastle Fillmore at Belle Union Cloverdale at Eminence Avon at Bainbridge Roachdale at New Market Russellville at Marshall Clinton Center at Mecca Reelsville at Quincy

Saturday

Greencastle at

(InpU.)

' sf..ri- -buildiNJ'. 1 Pi.ysicir.n: said Mrs. Coover. ■Xur ot an Iowa State College prolessor, had a broken neck, a | broken left arm and a severe in- , jury to her left foot.

The jumper was David H. Gor-

NEU Bl SINFSS FIRM H Tm*mi rnac&* ••••rj

tU^it iirtpIcnieiilJB and parts are made, insofar as this is possible, in home-owned factories situated in the section of the country where they are sold and used. Many economies, among which

don. Jr.. 28. a war veteran and are greatly reduced transportaformer student at Harvard Uni- 1 jj on costs, are the direct result

of this system of small and localized manufacture, these economies being directly reflected in low costs to the farmer-user.

versity. He was the son of Mr and Mrs. David H. Gordon, Sr.,

Atlanta, Ga.

The accident occurred about 11 a. m. yesterday while Mrs. Coover was out for a stroll with h.*r

Washington sister. Mrs. Hazel Do Lapp No.--walk. Conn. The two had been 6

BOWLING

7:00

7:00

7.00

7:00

Monday

Zinc Mill vs. Midwest Wednesday V. F. W. vs. University B Thursday Home Laundry vs. Dobbs

Friday

Johnson's vs. Eitel's

reunited only a few hours pre-

vious when Mrs. Coover arrived count.'-

in New York with her husband. Marvin S. Coover. a professor of electrical engineering at Iowa

State.

Mr. Williams is a native of Putnam county, owning and op-

a farm at the present

time in the northern part of the

He is a graduate of

Roachdale High School, and for

HO«. .MARKET

.ATOMS m sv

H«.ga 6000. active; good and

active; good and choice barrows —(INS)—Members of the Gcnand gilts 160-225 lbs J24.5O-0 j eral Assembly began the most $25 00 top $25.25; 225-240 lbs ' strenuous week of their session

$24.25; 100-160 lbs $22 00-$23.00; | today,

sows strong, largely $19 00-$20-

to $20 50!

van4K the Scnatc-passcM bill to (arm the state convention sys-

INDIANAPOLIS. Ind . Jan. 27 tern, but the primary advocates]

today expressed annoyance at |

.00 Choice lightweight

and above.

Tiger Cubs Are Busy This Week

ball teams in the state this week. Tuesday evening, the local netters play at Brazil. Friday night Franklin plays here and Saturday the Cubs go to Indianapolis to meet Washington High.

IN .MEMORY In loving remembrance of our dear son and husband. Pvt. 1st. Class Kenneth W. Dickson, who gave his life for his corjntry two years ago today, Jan. 27,

1945.

We have not forgotten, or can we be forgetful of Kenneth, a kind loving husband and son. With deep regret and great

Vincent’s hospital, * ove - h£ > nor and dear 'y cherish

suffered our swe et memories of him. of a Memories of his sweet smile, the

I man leaping to his death from, wa -V *>e ■*“* ' Mom and Dad " the ! the kllih floor of the Emnire I ma ">- klnd thin « s he dld - aU

we can not farget but hold more

; dear each passing day.

We find comfort In the words

; of the writer who wrote:

"After the storm, the chill and waiting long shall come the time of birds arxd flowers and song." | Kenneth dear, how we miss you

Every mimite of each day.

WOMAN BADLY HURT BY SUICIDE'S LEAP

NEW YORK. Jan. 27.—(UP) —Mrs. Frances Coover. 51.1 Ames. Iowa was in a critical con- j

cition at St.

today with injuries

when struck by the body of a)

With three tough games on j the 86th floor of the Empire

tap, the Tiger Cubs will be one, of the busiest high school basket- j

Relief At Last For Your Cough

Creomulsion relieves promptly be»use it goes right to the seat of th<

Due to mid-year exams, the j SwnSS | >‘ OU U8ed t0 d ° f v DePauw Tigers will b<- idle until ] x) soothe and heal raw, tender, in-: And the things you used to sa>.

LATE NEWS (('•■(iniar'l from I'asr Oaei

for the Governor’* chair girded for a "Slowdown of streagth in the -Senate today. Treaourer George K. Hamilton meanwhile plaeed an airtight hold oa all

the past 13 years has been em- st4 , tr fumH pending a coart de-

cision «n the governorship. WASHINGTON. *ul Ti —

(INS)—The JuMice Depamaeat today urged the xuprruvr o-wirt to uphold the eon-titutk-aality of the "anti-Petrilki" saw pf cod by

the *9th eongrece.

The government filed an ap |M-al with the high court from a northern district court of Illinois tlecNion ruling the statute unconstitutional and diMuixeiag a violation charge agmia-t Janes C. I'etrillo president of the Ane-rimn federation of music-

ians.

In asking the high tribunal to reverse this holding the government said the law— "Represents the deliberate .judgment of eongre**. as to an evil affecting the broadcasting system of the nation and to the best methods of remedying such

evil."

the pigeanholing of the primary! measure by" the House elections

committee.

The precinct option bill, in

The legislators, in this third similar manner, is gathering dust

in the files of the House public morals committee, but the Gov-

V0NC4S MONDAY AND T||

week of their bienniel meeting, will hear Governor Ralph F.

Gates deliver his importat tirnor hag ann()Unced that the ad-

financlal message and will take action on the number of con-

troversial subjects.

ployed as a sales manager by the International Business Machines Corporation. j Mr. Greve attended Waveland High School and Wabash Col. lege. At present is residing in Crawfordsville. He is moving to] Greencastle in the very near

future.

ministration measure to divorce liquor from politics will be in-

troduced this weex.

The Senate elections committee prepared to submit a favorable report on the “skip election" bill to return mayoralty elections to eveh years.

The Governor will indicate just how many of the multitude of expenditures proposed will be approved by the administration vnd tbe lawmakers are expected, in the main, to follow his recom-

: mendations.

While the Republicans in Con- MILWAUKEE, Wis., Jan 27. gross are pruning the budget _ ( up)—The United Automobile

Workers’ union (CIO), which

Yuli Wynn Ik, CugatcmILombordjiK M-G-M for thoimcgitin-

CIO VICTORY

Americans use between 250 and 300 pounds of paper products of all kinds per person per

year.

• • •

Male prairie chickrns begin courtship displays in January. New Zealand has discharged from prison all Us conscientious objectors who refused to sJi v* in World War II

THE VONCASTLE

lamed bronchial mucous mem- Yoar L- tsteps we hear no more.

As we linger yet awhile.

February 12. aranes.Tell your druggist to sell yot With the annual Wabash Val- i bottle of Creomulsion with the un-

lev tournev which was won bv demanding you must like the way il! But from that brighter shore Garfield of Terre Haute out of mSne^" ^ We .seem to catch your smile, the way. Putnam county hard-W% III W] An( * we seem Vo hear you say.

wood court squads all swing into ^ IVEV/It* W JIVS IM

•or Couchs. Chest Colds, Bronchitis

KELLY CONNER GETS S602.49 FROM SIB INVESTMENT When Kelly W. Conner invested $18 in a plan to protect himself against the cost of sickness or accident he had no idea that only 12 days later he would crash his motorcycle into a tree near Newcastle, Indiana, fracture his vertebrae and be laid up in a plaster

cast for weeks.

BUT that is exactly what happened. Naturally, his income stoppod just when he needed It most. Hospital and doctor bills piled up. Yet. when friends asked him how he managed to stay so cheerful in spite of all this, he smiled and replied. "I’m enrolled

in the White Cross Plan.’

So White Cross paid Kelly Conner $602.49. The checks kept _ coming through until Kelly Cornier was back on his feet, able to j Attlca ^"ent the week-end with be on the job. When interviewed. Kelly declared that the checks XI were his best medicine and helped him get well fast. '' r - arld Mrs. Otis Browning and This unique Plan which can pay your Hospital and Doctor Bills. Miss Grace Browning. pay for your Operations, provides “wage nsurance" if you're sick or hurt. New groups are now forming here. Write for details be- « f fore January 31 to White Cross Medical Director. Suite, G B-127. BANNER ADS GET RESULTS 4 4 34 I^awrc nee Ave., Chicago. 111.

and

Tis God's place of beauty

rest

Tis a land, much brighter than

day.

Don’t worry, God knew best. So away from this land of sorrow Into that land of joy, We'll meet Kenneth, on the mor-

row f

And be with our dear sweet boy. Sadly missed by wife, Mom and Dad and Grandparents. pd.

SHANGHAI. Jan. 27 (INS)— Search wax underway today for the wreckage of a Chine** National Airways plane, carrying 19 passengers and crew member*, believed to have crashed near Chungking.

with a loud economy cry, the state ia planning higher exporyditures. Among the proposals in the Governor's first message to the legisature which will cost much money are the followings: Increase in state payments for old age pension recipients from

$40 to $43 per month.

A comprehensive health program, involving construction of

a number of hospitals.

Augmented allowances for the teachers retirement fund by $5,000.000 for the next two years. Huge appropriations for the State Highway Commission. Additional funds for the financially embarrassed cities and

towns.

Construction of a State Office Building and (Plaza. The highway expenditures may be financed by an Increase of one cent a gallon in the gasoline tax and higher fees for trucks and the cities and towns may be authorised to finance themselves

has carried on a 273 day strike against the Allis-Chalmers Man ufacturing Co., was the apparent victor today in a battle over collective bargaining representation for the firm's 11,000 employes, i The UAW tallied 4,122 votes inj a special election called by the i Wisconsin Employment Relations Board, while the independent workers’ union, formed by i employes objecting to the! UAW's handling of contract ne-

gotiations. polled 4,015 votes.

Neither the UAW nor the in-1 dependent received a majority of the 8.303 votes cast. However, since the "burden of proof” was on the independent to show that it represented a majority of the workers, and since it failed to do so, the representation remains as it was before, in the hands of the

UAW. # The results, announced as un-

official by the employment re-

^UAVE,^

with KEENAN WYNN'PAT ILItt XAVIER Cl)GAT H iM, tlM , GUY LOMBARDO .it kisittiw

by a current Senate bill that en- lations board pending a final tabables them to do their own ulation. also included the votes special taxing. of 166 persons who wished to be But no definite plan has been represented by neither union.

NEW REGULATIONS

retermined for financing the remainder of the proposed outlay. A cigeratee tax, a sales levy and a slihgt increase in the gross in-

Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Carl of

Lovely Pat Kirkwood, who kept London laughing during the blitz, makes her bow to American screen audiences as the rad.o star of “No Leave. No Love." in which she appears opposite Van Johnson. Accompanied by two of Amei ica’s top bands —Guy Lombardo's Royal Canadians and Xavier Cugat's rhumba orchestra—Pat sings “Love on a Greyhound Bus” and other hits in the new M-G-M melody romance at the Voncastle today.

COPENHAGEN. Jan. 27 — !

tome tax have been suggested. An increase In the teachers

i UP ( Denmark today damped niininvjm salary fnom $1 2ao to

$2,400 a year Is popular with a

newDODGE

a lower limit on the loads Dakota transportplanes can carry in this country following a crash which took the lives of Grace Moore, American opera star, Prince Gustav Adolph of Sweden,

and 20 other persons.

Danish air traffic authorities

announced that effective now no | r C f eren dum on

Dakota will be allowed to leave an airport in Denmark with a load of more than 25.168 pounds. The Dakota which crashed and I burned on a takeoff from Kastrup airport here yesterday was reported to be carrying 26.620 pounds. The previous Danish ceiling weight had been 25,410

pounds

Many votes were voided, and 50 were challenged. Even if all of the challenged votes were decided in favor of the independent

EDWARD ARNOLD • MAIl| LEON AMIS Original Strnn PI,, J, Cnorl#$ Martin end DiiMltd by CHAtlEI Praductd by JOE R WITH NEWS

results. R. J. Thomas, vice-piqj) the UAW-CIO. termed U| a “clear cut tnnmph !# ganized labor,” ami ciisi the company to meet d* ers’ demands for “fair, wages, fair grievance pf ajul security for (In

union, they would not change the' ur ‘* on -

number of legislators and may pose an additional ‘financial prob-

lem later.

It seems to be the adminis- , tration policy to sidetrack the . costly soldiers’ bonus legislation. I po.ssibly by means of a voters' —— A — — the question in

The Senate this afternoon was expected to pass the anti-hate bill of the administration directed at the Ku Klux Klan, Columbians. Inc., and similar groups. Eight other Senate bills were on the slate for final passage in the

upper house.

The House this week will ad-

Need Furnacft Repairs?

IIIILLIAMSOM VV FURNACES

Furnicit Cleaned

We repair and clean all makes of iur Best materials—trained workmen. All based on actual materials used and Phone us now.

Even heat all overh

“The Williamson Heater Company: We are delighted with our Witliimsni It kept us very comfortable, with evta tal over the house. We used less fuel and iti very well. It is a good-looking plant, proud to thow it to our friends." Signed—Jessie B. Jarrell,

Ace Heating and Ventil

Company

$5.00 Up PHONE 7HG

MONTH END SPECIALS

MEANS SAVINGS TO YOU

POULTRY NETTING $2.50 and np in roll* A good grade copper alloy steel fencing with galvanized finish.

RUBBER DOORMAT $1,85 Back at long last — those durable sturdy mats that give years of satisfactory wear.

16-0z. HAMMER SI.35 A well-balanced extra quality tool, with polished, tempered head and doublebeveled claw.

The car that is really new; leads its field in sales and demand. Smoothest performance in history. Lowest priced car with Fluid-Drive.

POT HOLDERS 7c Replace your worn out pot holders with these smart colorful new ones.

ms

WASH BOARD 95c Well constructed hardwood frame, 10 x 10<-j - inch brass scrubbing surface. Has "Soap _ saver" rack.

ihopo'KW _

• FLOATING POWER • ALL-FLUID DRIV

Blow TORCH $5.25

CLOTHES HAMPER $6.75 A serviceable, good-look-ing hamper Ventilated frame bottom, hinged lid. An EXTRA value.

m »ii y value featiW this torch. 1 p r n o f P and valve 1 < Iiuirantffd-

SOOT REMOVE! 98c The inodcm to remove ! Simply *P on fire a3 reeled on age Clcana onghiy. a*W

Stop and Waste Valve He MR Yi” la 3” Quality stop and waste valve. Cast brass body Wheel handle. Will not leak. Lasts years.

Farmer's Specials

t inch Mirvcy Hammermills 91m 11 Itch at ... 4 Point Barbed Wire, Spool Nag Oilers, $10.25 IB” Disc Blades

. . . $125.50 • . . $132.75 • . . $4.85 No. 9 Brace Wire Field Harness. .

FLOATING POWER • ALL-FLUID DRIVE

•FULL-FLOATING RIDE

PUTNAM MOTOR SALES Phone 648 118 North Indiana St.

CJLanJ C.

HARDWARE

TABCrTEWiS SET Includes regulKt'"^ n - durk green with * h ‘ binding; screw bra™ rnbber faced paddle* balls. Complete ${

BAINBRIDGS

/ l‘Ht* i/(

INDIANA