The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 April 1947 — Page 2
THE DAILY BAN* EP. CREFNCASTLE, INDIANA, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 1947.
JOIN IN NATIONAL DEFENSE MOVEMENT The American I- R io n Auxilary Units of Indiana have he.-n inviU 1 by the Department of i'a A mcrican I- Rion to join them in making: the National Defense Can eremes to be helfi „v;r the State during: the month r;f April, n i.i 'cess, it was a,v noi meed today by Mrs Cecil Brown. Sixth District National Defense Chairman of The American Degion Auxiliary. Milt Campbell. National Direct i of ti Division of National Defense of The Am rican teRion • s in eha.ge of the National plan.a in the Conferenees. Walter H It •mly. Crawfordeville. A r.eric in Legion Department National i l .’nse Chairman, is making .ill arrangements for Uie Department of Indiana Tin- Con/erenee for the Sixth District is ,seh( • lileil for .S'.inday afternoon. April 20th. at Terre Halite. Earle Frewitt. Sixth Distri t Southern Vice-Commander the Legion, has been named Dislriet Confelenee Chairmir,
tharge of
thi I
and will be In
meeting.
Tin- Auxiliary Department President. Mr: Mahle Morgan Jonesboro, and tie Department Nati >nal Def• nse Chairnwi. Mrs .)(sale G. Hiush. East Chicago, .v.l! utter.,1 this Conference Meet•ng to be h Id m Terre Haute. Tiie Sixth District America:Legion Auxiliary is stan ing behind the D. p rtnu-iu of Th t Ami rican Legion in their pica f~r the :,ipport of hills on "The American Plan of Univ^rsn' Training for Natioral s curlty.' These bills are kne-.n as S G51 and H. R. 19.X>? All Units in tht Distriet have be-n r-onta.te, 1 by Mis. Brown and mgoit'i , write their Senate!':, and Cnngrc rm, • n giirding these b.;:s. A District Itmlio Broadeast ,vrr Staticn vV. P. O. W.. Terra H it?, pertail ing to these bills and Notional Defense will be eon t-jeted bv Mrs Brown. I'INf \STI,E t III It. II
THE DULY BANNER j
HERALD CONSOLIDATED •L Waves For AU” Entered in the postoffice at r-ericastle, Indiana as second , ss mall matter under Act of March 7. 1878. Subscription price, 15 cents p*r A-eek; $3 00 per year by mail in Putnam County; $3.50 to $5.00 per year by mall outside Putnam Countv. S. R. Rarlden, Publisher 17-19 South Jackson Street.
I’ERSOIVAL And Local News B It I E F S
Sunday S.hiol 10:00 Luther Steele, P, ipt. Everyone Welcome.
Joint VFW Installation GEN JESSE M. LEE HOME 1550 Sunday, April 13 2 P. M. Also Burning Of The Mortgage All Auxiliary Members Erin,3; Covered Dish. Pitch-in Dinner at 5:30 P. M.
FINAL FABRIC SALE ★ TAPESTRY ★ VELOUR ★ MOHAIR ★ IMMITATI0N LEATHERS Ail Colors Variety of New Patterns Grant RFDiiffp
ART FURNITURE CO.
NOISTIISIDE S({l \kk
THE SENIOR CLASS Presents
A DATE WITH JUDY FRIDAY, APRIL 11TH. 8:<Mt O’CLOCK HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM Gsneral Admission 40c
Pl . Frederick It. Hutcheson .,i”i\ :d last night to spend a few \- with his grandmother, Mrs. Jennie R. J hn. Mrs. John R. Cox and granddaughter, Linda, left today to , I id the week-end with the VV. K Bartlett family in Kentland. Mrs. Karl Knobel and dongh1 1. Christina Ann. of Nnppanee, I;, 1 - visiting Mis. Knobol’s parj Ml ind Mrs W. F, K,» n . ■ H H. Brooks, DePauw University comptroller, will attend thc nnnual conference of the Ameii- . , in Asosciation of College j Unions April 10-11 in Cham-l-aign-Uibana. III. Mrs Hugh Hammond, 2878 Carson Avenue, Indianapolis is rfinej to her hrme b,y illn-jss. Mrs H immond is a fonru-r rcsii' , Greencastle and would i . f.-reciate hearing from her Mr. ,.nd Mrs. O. L. VanCleave. Bainbridge, m eiv,.! a telephone call Tuesday from their sor, P.e. I Robert L. VanCleave. In We-i.s- . L : :, n. Germany. Pfc. VanCleave i ii.'.s seived in the army of oc ui ,ti< n at Weisbaden for the past ten mths, but expects to reI Urn to the U. S. A. soon. Funeral services for Caroline ! iune Morlan, 8 year old daugh- ; ter of Mr. and Mrs. Reeve Morlan, Main street, will be held , Friday morning at 10 o'clock at the North Union church in ! Parke County. Burial will be there also. The child passed -. way Tuesday, April 10th, at thv1. ley hospital in Indianapolis. HOSPITAL NOTES Miss Billie Black was dis- , charged from the Putnam I County hospital Thursday morn- | big. ‘ ; June Elder, Cloverdale, Indiana. was discharged from the hospital on April 9th. Emery Thompson, R. 4, city, was i.-ichargt-d from the hospi*a) on April 9. [ Mrs. Ray Burk and (laughter ot F'Utnamville were discharged from the Putnam County hos- | pital on Wednesday. Ira Masten of Coatesvillo was ; discharged from the hospital on
i April 9th.
j Mrs. Helen Houck, Greencas- , tie R. 2. was admitted to the Putnam Cfounty hospital. Thurs-
day morning.
j T E. Cox, 7.'i3 East Seminary . street, city, was admitted to the ^ hospital Wednesday evening. Rufus Cline of Spencer was admitted to the hospital on
I April 9th.
.y‘*. •> v -9 ’I* *1* -I* *»• -I- •!• jQ ANNIVERSARIES ^ -j* *i* -i- *1* ..•* Birthdays Clyde Newgent. 27 years t<--Jay. Aiinl 10th. Betty Lou Frazier, daught.-r <>l Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Frazici R. l 7 years old today, April 10 Joan Rightsell, dau ;htei o: Mr. and Mrs. John Rightsell, :* years today, April 10th. TRAIN DERAILED (Caatinoru Eram Pag - I) oe?ur in seven i'.:ivs. Bi-glnnir wilh the derail r ent of the Eui lir.glon Zc-phry at Downers Grove. 111., on April 3 there have bee: accidents on siiccc!. .ve days a' I.inwood, Kan. Ott.imvva, la Granger, Wyo., C > . unbia City Ind., Carton. O., and Raton. The train traveling at 75 mi!,an hour, was on the lev, 1 stretch of track when the acritier.’, occurred. NORTH AND SOUTH \T W AR IN IDAHO — V ERBALLV SANDPOIXT. Ida.. (UPI Jealous of its own lake which contains the only giant kamloops rainbow trout in the country. the Sondpoint Chamber of Commerhc has offered a I.5,00o reward to any fisherman who could produce evidence that he had caught a 25-pounder in southern Idaho’s Payette Lake, as stated in a national magazine
article.
The chamber advised southern Idaho to stick to its alleged 345.000 pound sea monster and leave the home of the world’s world’s record trout Where it belongs in north Idaho’s big lake Pend Oreille.
{Floyd Twp. Has Good Meeting
Floyd township Farm Furoau me.:.be:;’, turned out almost 100 per ci’nt strong in t.ielr regulai meeting M mday night, to cnuragi their keys and girls to m T in 4-H Club work. Over
80 persons attended.
{ Allen Clodiclt. r oi Monroe I ti hip: Fred Satherlin and •L ,ra Denny of Cloverdale an.
J.'vlaiy Frances Toir of
Groen-
Junii L e.dcr organization pre- , a.stle, icprisetning the 4-H : ‘cj the prr.g am alter a pitch-
ir. supper.
ires of the 19-.5 State Fail shown an-.l K. W. Harris
F-ic
were
TORNADO TOLL FEARED HIGH IN 2 STATES
• < onllniM-d rmsc onel Then the tornado skirled into Oklahoma on a straight line for Woodward, a county-seat town of about 7.000 population. At 9 p. m„ about an hour after it had derailed the freight train at c l oat of the western sky and e dout of the western sky and blew away almost half of Woodward. The known dead there
numbered 12. ’
Hospitals throughout the area were full of the injured, many of
them near death.
Hospitals at Shattuck, Okla.,
one or both terms.
Classes wilrb- <: vn to all men to women In Uie sophomore, junior and senior years, and t<:tn>l:nts transferring from th :■ s.bools. Miss Ver.eta J. K,inter, registrar, said students who expect to attend both term:-. o.r only the first will register rn June 18. Students attending only the second ter n will regis-
ter on July 21 i v " ari s R ta Tli sum ncr srss on h is boen'tinn i i< . 1 ’ ;:r:*ar8‘od provilo uninterrupt Fort VVavn(1 n| . 1
p«d university training for voter-
-n.; and for freshmen men whe wish cc lerate i programs.
' Vil1 a lunch. < f thl ' Kkiup ar.j tv Cha, -‘ ! '•"A -.J
crj Association’;, f 1 as un , .-ut
Ucnt tig lirst Hv llonal R "-k. Milw a . "’ill speak o n "a rt . sumer and install,„-n-J . 0the ' «P ak-iv a t o , "'ill include Charb s *
csiJent of the
' n Unna| I! >nk and Trii-t'
* Fort Wa
sociation
; ui Lucille Smith. Putnam end Canadian. Tex.
C aunty Extension agents, sum-1 than 200 Injured by midnight. By mar,zed the 4-H activities. Irwin je,cry means of conveyance they vt ill.ice and Mrs. Harold Sibbitt | c ouid summon, other injured
have agreed to serve
BANKERS TO MEET
INDIANA OL,IS, Ind., April 10 (INS) More than 300 Indiana bankers are rxperte 1 to at- ; tend a consumer credit confer-
treated more; enCe ‘P nn - sor0(1 b y th v ‘ndiana
bankers association, Thur.--da>,
April 17, in Indianapolis.
Lieut-Gov. Richard T. James
X x 1! A1 ' e: ' J b i.Ji: l: hard Tl • ., NVb. an: | K . I. }, g Pittsburgh, Pcnr.sviv» S4 |
A d
t’"'hniqu,. SH1llHprograin. Pa,; Indiana bankers.
o*i »x
as Floyd | W ere taken to medical centers in j
township 4-H leaders and Men- fornP instances many miles 1 day night's meeting indicated away. Emergency hospital fa that there would be a growii ; { .j|jtjes were set up at Canadian' 4-H Club in th? community. j f ,nd soon were overrun. . ; Serious fires broke out at
Woodward and Higgins.
One, a holocaust in a lumber yard and creamery at Wood-, ward, was visible for 20 miles over the flat countryside. Tue
light of fires was all that work*! DETROIT, April 10 (UP) ors had to guide them after the’ The body of Heniy Ford was Power lines were broken,' Carrie.: quietly t St. Paul's ns were telephone and telegraph'
Cathedral for final services to- | jnPS
day as industries husk. J for a Aurell formed a “human I minute’s tr hutc to the pioneer j, .teh’’ on a broken line to estab-' if a ass produ :l,t:n. ijsh the first connection between
Junior nev«r |, n8 ,
Z XT 01 ' ,
ho, a iho UWM l
n ' 0r *. “’"’ma, lav , d 7 Ptnniet P'Dsy bj
Services Held For Henry Ford
Silent ciowc's lined the streets Woodward and Red Cross hcad-
to glimpse The s ei vice M. Only a. rowd into
th funeral cortege, was helj at 2:30 P. few hun.Jrod could the Cathedral ' to
/y FARM NEWS
witness the last rites for thr man 1 who ... techniques rcvoVatkmiZ'.-ci American in-iustiy.
re
Alfalfa is coming to the froat rich and poo.', filed past the Bier on Indiana farms both for hay where Ford's body lay in state and pasture purposes, principally verier.iay in the recreation hall in grass mixtures, but sometim ■ of GrcenMeld village, his museun.
grown alone. * of c arly America.
Livestock farmers who need At 10 p. m., the scheduled high quality hay and pastui : cl: ring time, lines six to eight have greater assurance of bett u ' least, extended blocks from
(. larters at Oklahoma, City 200 miles^away. He held togethertlie dangling ends of the line! while a Red Cross official talked with the Woodward hospital. Aurell risked his life. Lightning! was striking all around. If it
M :- e than 109.000 persons, , , . , , ... had struck the line at any point.
the 200 mile circuit, it prob-
production from Alfalfa than the recreation hall waiting to file from other legumes. It 1km ] lust the simple bronze casket, proved its ability to make stand. • t'-ic- mourners were let through and produce highet yields tluurt ulR 'l 10:30. and then, stopped, red clover under drought condi-! Irafilc was jammed for mile:
lions. Alfalfa stands can be c; i - nr ound th- village, and sonn ...... „. .. . j
pel.sons parked as far as thr.'e <,<n tlal district. The residential riles away to walk to the hall, r™"™ "as left a shambles,
i C,mrds kept the procession in
I rrdcrly lines. i SUMMER SCHOOL
(Continued from 1‘nicr tine)
ably would have been fatal to
him.
Highway Patrolman Clifford Carrier sent a message from Woodward via patrol radio to his office at Clinton, Okla. It said: “Half of the city was blown a,way. The dead and injured arc
lying everywhere.”
The tornado came down the Woodward main street and veered off into the northwest resi-
i ied over into the third or fourth year whiU clover is not sine
after the second year.
The following rates of seeding
.1
FORD’S WIDOW AT FUNERAL HOME
l AKI) OF THANKS W, wish to thank all the ne'gh-, borg and friends who worked so
for alfalfa alone or in mixtures is given. Seed from eight to twelve pounds of strong, viable adapted seed per acre using Hi smaller amount where moisture and seed bed nn- most favorable. ! ^ u ‘Lv For late summer seeding of alf-alfa-timothy mixture, seed nine pounds alfalfa and two to t:-.r>-» pounds of timothy per air,*; spring seeding requires nin -
pounds ot alfalla and four to six Grosz said, pounds of timothy. The rat,- for ■■ ■ -
alfulfa-clover-timothy mixture y alfalfa four pounds, red clover four pounds, Ladino clover >, to L. pound, and timothy two
pounds per acre.
Spring seeded alfalfa usu d!v requires slipping to control-: weeds. It should be clipped low* prior to September 1. preferrably before weed seeds are form-d. Pasturing the first year is not
advised.
SUPPORTS CHANGE
Irom aim t all the university departments. Students will he permitted to enroll for eithci
I (in,! 1 „ «,4-tl from I’nur One, Marshall’s call for further
the Polish-German
frontier and probable change.coupled with Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin’s support of tin.American move, will have a definite political result in Poland,
Jlymn mi Wndil ' mlT /AT The PARKVIEW) Sophisticated spectator. Dramatic. I’eniininr. A Fil-Tested Cold ( .toss Shoe that will have you swinging along wilh the smail step "I ymiik SIIOI
AMIIICA'S UNCHAUINCIO SHOI VAUI
!
POJVTIAf - / ftm* cur ttmrfe finer
V
/
THE CHEF S CORNER - - - - Friday ean he a very spis-la! day ifHletv* . . . especially when It’. Fish Friday w itli FRIED PERCH with TARTER SAUCE - - - - and t;» go with mi tarly a hit * lei have some (Trip, cool, COLE slaw ... - but suit the taste of everyone - • - - for those who don’t especially ejrc for fish - - - - we have some delieinu , creamy MACARONI .AND CHEESE - - - -.Yes, you ean be suiv you are having the best a' Chet’s for everything 1 selected by experts. If you haven't already tasted the delicious flavor of these foods - - - - don’t wait - - - - conic and eat your fill right now. CHETS CAFETERIA Across from Post Office
FIRST—wear It “all-in-one” . . . batteries inside. SECOND —changi- to economy batteries und save up to s j on cost. “Appointments in the home
upon request”. S0N0T0NE Of Terre Haute
C. P. S.AYKE, .Mgr. 1015 Smith 7th Street
Terre Haute, Ind.
Phone C 4001
I: u:
TERMITES
STARIING
ARK NOW
v* wrv# .f ""v * i" r
Drive a Pontiac -and envy no one
THEIR SPRING OFFENSIVE Bicht now is the time to eoun-tei-sttaek and save your liome. Phone or write for free inspection or tree estimate. Ask abont >ur lifetime guarantee. , Phom 387 — Danville •Hen-inn yon Since it* .OR MAIL COUPON NOW.. Termite Control Co. — INDIANAPOLIS, IND. — 811’ West Main. Danville, Ind.
• dpuRC male# n Irf# inspfft.rm of ronertT lor Tern.lie,, with no obfldtion to in*.
STREET
Ohtr rONTIAC OfflftS THIS AU-ASOUHD VAlUt rtu-A.c tAntr tm.iMO —More positive control with levs effon. P oufUA At a a se.iwos-Mechanic.lly compensate for light or heavy loads; liners eliminate squeak. AU.ws4rwn fwotwt timhaatuai cowr.otPeak efficiency of operation under varying climatic conditions. ertMAWiwr on cisawh - Highly efficient, positive protection, no replacing Muin-siAi hyoaauuc aaakis - Protected against dirt and water for smoother stops, longer life. i-wfAO iwoiwfS-Si* or eight cylinderst smooth, powerful, long lasting •oor .r fishia — Big and roomy, with famous Fisher No-Draft Vencilation, custom-iype interiors, luxurious (rim.
Drive Cartlully
VC’c sincerelv believe that no c'a r ' s n1l>ri c "I satisfactory to its owners than a I , " 111 ' Year after year, Pontiac otters the of quality —plus outstanding tt operation and upkeep. It really t '*' ^ essential to be desired —in perfornu"| ^ ^ , fort or in handling ease. And, il "' 1 ' n(i ^ of the most beiiHtiJiil cars to he streets and highways. The 1947 Pontiac Silver Streak of what we mean. People who .ra 1 1 . ^ no one —and the same will he irut " ^Yl get their Pontiacs in 19-18. ^ reJ | after year, Pontiac is a fine car—i" ri 1 * * * i THF SOONFR YOU PI AFF YOUR ORP^J Hnnliiic. the earlier yon will K' 1 d. » P ■ < non- for future delivery.
•<tt xsm Out of Tom ii EunIhooh Soli( !lrd a
Holly's Friendly Sales & Servke
119 North Indiana Street
Greencastle, ln diana
