The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 9 April 1947 — Page 3
THfc DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL <?, 1 ?47.
A Little of ....
wnem
ook at these Spring Values
3795
airline farm radio (jrar, mellow lone will) nrw l''i|iiiliine speaker. I'owcilul reer|iliou. MoJern two-lone eabiuet. 5 IiiImv-..
POIIER SKATES pm, 045 ^ "ii II really wlii/; almig ^ mi lliese slurilv ball-lienring rkalei! I lie' re all le i- liiivo leallier sliap.
BOYS’ AND GIRLS’ STREAMLINED "HAWTHORNE" BIKES 39^ Tlicy’re atrcainlinril beauties . . . .mil tbry’re eensalionally low 1'iierd at NLanb! Have lull ^i/.e iliiublc-bar I’ranie. balloon tires, Ini)*^ rial lock ami bie torpedo beadlipbl. liny 's niudcl red aud while; girl s, blue and white. Don l wait! Get one NOW . Onh 10 e down!
HEIDER’S glove Endorsed hy "Peo Wen K' v V: Dodger ahi>rl.Hop! Treated cowbide with welted grains, laerd heel.
ARMY CAMP COTS ,_ 49 r.rainl iiew,snr|ilti- Army < nts . . . prieed low at Ward ! Hard* vkood’ legs rails with d>"k cover.
“COMET” RACKET •‘Wright & Ditsoii’!
feket for advanced plavers! ^niinatcj frame, strung willi
6.39
5-ply
nylon.
COTTON T-SHIRTS ^ (iool, comlorlalde, absorknt shirt for sporU, all-around w car! Crew neck, quarter length sice' e*.
THIS AND THAT By (J. It. /.)
|iiilo Ilia country with in wtlc I anil wp had a lovely jiar-tv vitli I about ten or twelve friend-I. I Not one nr ns w-rnt t|o tli
i i'ihlc of goingp to tlie polls. I >1'<ilit that any one of us knew] who wa.s being electrd (.ir what Vet, t kick like a st or these
pa'I few 11 w mi I tis bcenuac i«ir .■Icetiiicn (for whom T did not vote) liiln’t <lu a (I'.iciit siv .v plowing job.
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I lo vp you no I iip.l the new window Dick Sandy lias Installed til the Home Steam laundry? (Had to see Laurence tiruut has resumed custodian duties at the court house. Have you cast your ballot in regurds to Daylight Saving Tinein Oreeneasthi? Womler if '‘Hlnc Hole” is still us good 11 swiiuming place us it used to he. * Attention street force: Theiv are Bovtral spots in the down-' town sidewalks tliat need repairihK. Den Davis, our county treasurer, wants us to remind you that the deadline for paying Spring taxes is Monday, May 5. Les.-i than a month. The 1947 Potiinm Fair promises to he “bigger and better” than ■ever.
Overstocked! c “ e ' N o 0 p w t , KNEn PRICES SLASHED ON MANY 'SlflTS-COAIS-JACKHIS Now is the time to buy that new spring outtit AT OUR REDUCED PRICES
DoPauw will resume elaaswork next Monday . . . then conies Tiger baseball and track. And don't forgot the Tiger Cub athletes will also be busy for a few weeks. Sorry we missed seeing W. K. Bailsman when he was in the city the other day. “Bans” is now located in West Lafayette I after serving in the Navy during | World War II. He coached Oreencastle high school football and basketball teams foi several years, going to Frankfort in 1031. City fireman John A. Friend lias received a medal from the War Department for his service' with the Army of Occupation in Oerniany in World War I John served with the First Division j from 1917 to 1919. Although she is not familiar { with firearms, Etila Cooper, liv- I ing south ol Mt. Meridian, killed n skunk with a shot from a rifle. The skunk had been killing her chickens and Mrs. Cooper derided It was time to do something. Couldn't she classify as an expert marksman?
WOMENS SPRING COATS
$1500 AND $2O°0
GIRLS 1 COATS
CHILDREN’S COATS
$6<>0 and $9oo
$300 AND $5<>0
WOMEN'S SUITS $15oo and $20oo
WOMEN’S HATS $1oo
SPRING PURSES $200 AND $3 00
MEN’S SPORT COATS $10°°
BOYS’ SPORT COATS $500
MEN’S LEATHER JACKETS $1 5 00
J. C PENNEY CO., INC /
AS TELEPHONE STRIKE SPREADS OVER THE NATION prwpr| ..t- j Tv;
Erich Brandeis’ At a hearing before the House Committee the other day, Milton Murray, president df the Ameriran Newspaper Guilfl, denied that there is a targe Communist! membership in the New York or. 1 sis Angeles locals, but said that j the Hods dominate the units "be-; eauso they have been willing to j do Hi work.”
Jiiat this morning I myl hi:, item about a 102-year-old woman In Danbury, Conn. j Slie had never voted in ^tier | life and went to the polls this time only because those who were willing to do the work pi iietlcaliy dragged Ivor out of her house and took her to the polls. Now, please don't say that woman has only one vote. There are millions like her, including myself, and maybe y<wir-
self.
You can talk all you want about capitalists and bloated bosses and the idle rich. Remember that n vote is a vote and the millionaire's vote doesn-t count for a bit more than the janitor's or the grocery clerk’s Unfortunately, In politics, it is usually the fellows who want something for themselves who do all the work Oh, yes, we probably vote in a presidential year—but how about all the other elections? When we had our last local ap-ctlon. 1 took a nlea ride out
NATION'S first general telephone strike ties up long distance service as government conciliators seek to bring an end to the walkout. Scenes as that shown above witli a lone supervisor attending a row of switchboards in Philadelphia were common. In Washington conferences eontinued with these officials taking part. From left aie (1. S. Dring. assistant vie. president of the American Telephone and Telegraph Co, John W. Gibson. ■ assistant secretary of labor; William M.s.rgolis, U. S. labor conciliator, and John J. Moran, policy chairman of the National Federation
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