The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 25 April 1947 — Page 2
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Vi: DAH-Y SANIES, GREENCASTLE. INDIANA, FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 1947.
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On Tirt's
We give highest trade-in on your old tires.
Get our price before you buy.
Used tires for farm wagons, priced right. s « o r i * *
FRANKLIN STREET GARAGE
mm: \m> i i: \Mil in
BANKER
THE DAILY
lUld
HERALD CONSOLIDATED “li Aaves For All” Entered In the poatofftce at i ^reencastle. Indiana as second ' lass mail matter under Act of | March 7, 1878. Subscription price, 15 cents per .veek; $3 00 per year by mall in Putnam County; $3.50 to $5.00 per year by mall outside Put- ' -vim Countv.
Mrs. Hariy Brc.wi. .nil Mrs Lester Conrad visited Harry Blown at the Veterans Hospital in Indianapolis Thursday. f l
SOCIETY
Mr. amt Mrs. Howard have removed fiom East
Buis Elm
street to their recently purehns-
Ihiingenc Bavin is Bride
8. K. Itarlden, Publisher 17-19 South Jackson Street.
I.AIJOH MEASI RES (Continual Vrom V'fltr* visit last .veek that the President would veto a bill like the House was preparing to pass. Mr. Truman said he had not discussed labor legislation with Cel I or but that the New York-r might have based the prediction nil speeches and messages of til. 1 President. Mr. Truman did not v whether he believed those .■ tiitemcnts justified Ciller's inference. .•••. •:* ^ ANNIVERSARIES -i- +
1*1.WT im.K
|*i:iiso\ai And Locat News B III E F S
1
Mrs. Lillie Reeves spent I Thursday in Indianapolis.
od home on East Poplar street.
Police Chief Russell Clapp and performed Saturday afternoon. Officer Grover Vaughan attend- April 19th, at three o clock .. ed the business meeting of tie- the Gohin Memorial Method!. . newly organized Putnamville church. Miss FJpiogeno D.i\ i . Lions Club Thursday evening at daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Chestthe Putnamville High School, ei L. Davis became the bride rf Mr. adn Mrs. Gene Clemmons .Donald Ray Fuller of Cloverof Indianapolis are the parents dale. The double ring ceremon.. , f a daughter, Kathleen Carol, was read by Rev. John Tennant weight 8 lbs. and 11 oz., born ii. the presence of the immediate
A pill 18th. The mother was families. The attendants ' vc ‘ l ' r | sc „ rar0i EluiVton, In.1.; Charlcn ! formerly Eleanor Miller of Mor- Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lewis., * - ‘ - --
1 ton. friends of the young couple. Funeral services were held at The biide was attractive in a Indianapolis Tuesday for Henry cutaway tunic suit of mist pmh
D. Arnold, age 76 years, of Reelsville, who died Sunday at the Robert Long Hospital at In-
FAIOl NEWS
Reports of the success of the five-sta.te rat eampai|rn staged luring early winter ur.der the * guidance of the United States Fisa and Wildlife Serv.ee ate beI ing reeeived by G. C. Oierkirk,
The Radio Guild at DcPauw agent of the service, will present "Mhile situated at Purdue University
the —, . .
i.adio drama by Frank 'V'’** ' Michigan, Missouri, ci Cleveland. Ohio, us its April ( Wisconsin.
2 5 program, t.roa'icast at 4:.:0^ .j-| le campaign was rarried on p n. from the WIRE studio on simultaneously in 23 Indiana
RADIO PROGRAM
Of , ’ ,dler . TTniversltV
In a pretty wedding re.im | ^ ppy' Sleeps,” and original f ; vo states were Indiana,
Illinois and
Miss Barbara Gerneth has re-, dis-J turned from St. Louis where sin !
rol- 1
DETROIT. Aprii 25 i I’F
Some 3.800 workers at ChryslerJ corporation's main. Plymouth plant were Idled today in a
put,, growing out of a fighl be-|M><'nt several days visiting
tween a union steward and a atives.
worker who refused to leave the; Mrs Hugh Hammond of Indplant to attend "save labor rally , in in poll.s, mother of Mrs. Emory yesterday. Thompson of this city, has re-
turned to her home rrom St.
A Chrysler spokesman said the Ki . mv . is hospital
was forced to shut 1
BIRTHDAYS
Mrs. James B. Zeis, today, April 25. Rebir.a Ann Gardner. 5 years eld today, April 25th. Janies Harvey Poynter, Belle Union, 12 years today, Apiil 25. Riihard Russok. today, April 25. Mi Joe Sears, today, April 25th. Marion Hester. Greencastle Route 2. 5 years Id today. April 25th.
cm poration
lawn the Plymouth plant becaus:* of a strike of 158 workers in the sheet metal department. The men struck, he s.dJ, to protest a three-day disciplinary lay'fr handed the union steward. The spokesman said the man with whom the steward was fighting also was suspended foi
three days.
The making of models is one of th * oldest hobbies of mankind, the Encyclopedia Britanica says,
says.
FOR SALE: 1939 Plymouth 4 doe* sedan. Radio and heater Good condition. Phone 701-W. !
25-.3p
She is recover-
ing from virus pneumonia. Miss Virginia Dorsett. daught. i of Mi. and Mrs. T. C. Dorsett of Jefferson township has be ai
County hospital Thursday. Mrs. Thelma Greenleaf of Greencastle was dismissed from the Putnam County hospital
awarded a scholarship to Ball I hursday.
State Teachers College for the Mrs. Ruth Bell of RoachdaV* school year of 1947-48. Miss was dismissed from the Putnam
enter for th.* County hospital Thursday.
I Opal Higgins of Greencastle, R. 3. was admitted to tlje Put-
with matching accessories. Her corsage was of white carnations. Mrs. Lewis wore a gray suit .and a corsage of pink carn.' , -l tions. . ! Mrs. Fidler is a graduate of Cloverdale High School with til"
class of 1946.
The groom, son of Mr.
Mrs. Claude Fidler, is also a
of Cloverdale High
School with the class of 1943. He is a veteran of World War II
was dismissed from the Putnam having . sei-ved 50 months In the
the DePr,iw campus counties, when 14,715 packages The. "Living Music” broa'cast ^ 0 f frozen halt containing red at 8:15 a. ni. April 27 will featun j .quin , VPre distributed through Wrndell Osborn, baritone, Chi ,M U ,,ty agricultural extension ofcago; Richard Lewke, baritone,' f| ceSi t 0 approximately 11,300
Gary, Ind.; Constance Caylov, • farms.
Cooperating in the
Clrre, soprano, Indianapolis; | Veronica Bowen, Indiar.anolis.' and Helen Picken, Caledonia,
III.
were civic gn^, and loci concerns, and^u
One -f ,h.* 1:<r j
, w - Hftrr >s. couaty
tmal agent, report,,, lha " proximately 1000 ,|i ff „ r ' . sons us,a, ih,. prepji,,. , "V City ^nitai a
I
Ouy Hums, county astn( Marion, snd that, "Wv *,,,, ed n ne-thir,i t l ' A m«ri' pa« k:.y..s this y 1 . ;ir 'J1
the past. Howeve
•alien seemed to hg this increase, farmer"*
heater!
. - — W?fai e mg for th,. r„| s(|m llanj
program Iv ma e us,. ,, f it ^
dianapolis. Buiial was made in
Floral Park cemetery. HOSPITAL NOTES
Mrs. Sarah Pease of Greencastle was dismissed from th**
Putnam County hospital Friday ,, raduate
morning.
Albert Akins
of Greencastle
Dorsett expects to
fall term.
The office of the county service officer under the supervision of Don Meek will continue to be open six days a week from eight until font on the fourth floor of the court house. In a statement today Mr. Meek saut that some people were under the impression that his office was I cing i lose,!. The office that ( loses today is the Veterans Contact office.
MODEL TO LEt'Tl'RE
Nelson Ber-ictt, ai lists’ >.r.odel, who has posed for such wellknown u lists as I), gas, Renoir, Rodin and Dali, will lecture at DcPauw University April 27 npi n l| pose for art classes the follow-
1 ing day.
A. Reid Winsey, director of the Department ef Art, said Bennett was the model used by Ro'in for the sculpture, "The Kiss,' an,] by Soil for murals in Rockefeller Center, New York. Benretl
m. Sunday
—.am he hat
the t m < i j u . or j Cvt , ant | technique of pos-
ing.
Bennett will come to DePauw from Drake University. Following his appearance here, he will lecture at Ohio State University.
pREFtft ethtmt s, •"
CBHHOHS'
i„ Fabric*
and Style—
nam County hospital Thursday, Mrs. Suzanna Gitfciey of Greencastle was admitted to the Putnam County hospital
Thursday evening.
The United States flag wmcu was planted atop Mt. Surabachi
U. S. Army with 24 months of]
this service being overseas. At I ^ spcak at p the present time he is associate 1 j ab( ut arti8ts for , v:iom
with his father in
business’.
Those attending the wedding I were Mr. and Mis. Chester L.' Davis, Thomas and Chester A Davis, Mrs. \V. R. Wheeier and Don Wheeler of Spencer. Mr.
ami Mrs. Floyd R. Davis amlj s>;t , MARSHALL
Joyce, Mr. and Mrs. Claude Fid-1
ier. Mrs. Donald Fall, Mr. and | four states. Mrs. Frank Gobel, Mary Rutti| Stalin was in smiling moo 1. and Elaine Gobel, Mrs. Albert He seated Marshall at his left Staley and Miss Anne Staley. I and Btwin at (pis l ight. Bidault The couple left immediately I and Molotov sat oposite them.
-giiin'*in , ' , t**
„ To put
SPOW COMS . H0 tOMW C° MS an d fabrics *«• P' MS! H '
CaNWONS
lollowing the ceremony on a|
—
Bevin drew a laugh from ti e
in Iwo Jima has been preserved ghort wei | ( ii n g tiip and on their 1 ‘>0 guests when in a plea for ini as an, historical relie in the 1( , turn w ju | )0 .,j home to their j ternational understanding ne
friends in Cloverdale. asked what would happen If q. .j. .j. 4. Stalin were president of th.* .Mather's Study Ouh Unitetl Stat V s an<l Mr * Truman
Maiine Corps museum at QuanUco, Va. I
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ANNOUNCING OUR NEW FLOOR SANDING AND FINISHING SERVICE We have just received several new floor sand ing and finishing machines. With this fine modern equipment and experienced workmen, we are in a position to do all kinds of floor sanding and finishing on both old and new floors. We use only the best floor finishing materials available and guarantee all work. We have had thirty years experience in this type of work and know what it takes to surface and finish floors to give you the most for your money. FOR THOSE WHO WISH TO DO THEIR OWH WORK. WE HAVE SANDERS, EDGERS AND POLISHERS FOR RENT. WE CAN SELL YOU ALL KINDS OF FLOOR FINISHING MATERIALS AND INSTRUCT YOU HOWTO DO A PERFECT JOB. We also carry in stock, all kinds of floor finishing materials including, sandpaper, filler, shellac, sealer, varnish, wax and all other ne cessary items for finishing floors OUR STOCK OF FLOOR FNISHING MATERIA LS CONSISTS OF SUCH NATIONALLY KNOWN BRANDS AS, BERRY BROTHERS, VALSPAR, BRUCE, S. C. JOHNSON AND SON AND OTHERS. WE HAVE STEAM WALL PAPER REMOVERS FOR RENT. You can remove old wall paper with this mach ine in a fraction of time required by fhe old soak and scrape method and eliminate the sloppy mess. For information and reservation of machines call Phone 235-R. or address card or letter to L. T. Snider, 122 E. Washington St Snider s Floor Finishing Service PHONE 235-R
M«*vts Monday Evening The Mother's Study Club will meet Monday evening at 8:00 o’clock with Mrs. Mildred Mason, 630 Anderson St. Mrs. Robe it Stoner will be in charg? of the
program. -j. .5. .5.
Hi ii P and ( leiId Study Club Meets .Monday Home a,nd Child Study club wil meet Monday at 8 p. m. at the home of Mrs. Evan Crawley, 712 E. Seminary St.
•5* -S- *1* -P
Mrs. Ralph Runyan entertained thirty guests at her home at 110 East Franklin street 0:1 Wednesday. Games and contests were played during the
head of the Soviet Union. The banquet menu included a cold fish appetizer, out-of-sea-son cucumbers; consomme ami cream soup; hot fish, including sturgeon, roust turkey, baked chicken, roast beef, suckling pig, parlait, fresh fruit. coffee,
candies and cognac.
Vodka was served throughout the dinner ,and each course was accompanied by red and white wine. Champagne was served j with the latter courses. Caviar was served with the cold fish as an appetizer, and a green salad was offered before the soup
course.
“THEY SHALL NO] BE FORGOTTEN.
afternoon, after nfreshments were
which dainty served.
LATE NEWS
HOC. MARKET
Markers and Monuments for every grave — Handsome in design, reliably installed their quality is everlasting. GENUINE BARRE GRANITE Finest Quality
JO,.
Hogs 6.000. Fairly active, few loads marrows and gilts mostly 160-240 lbs., 25c higher, bulk all weights steady to strong, sows steady, bulk good and choice butchers 160-225 lbs., $23-$23.25; 225-240 lbs.. $22.75-$23; 240-250
SAND BLAST EQUIPMENT.
GREENCASTLE MONUMENT CO.
NFTW President J<**-ph Beloit** «a* in conference with lop union
leaders and a meeting «f the 4»-> ]bs., $22.50; 250-260 lbs., $22.25;’
1100 SOt'TH LOCUST ST.
i'Hom: I
menih.T |M»liry committee of the federation was scheduled for
noon.
I ’ ’ ’ * 260-270 lbs., $22; 270-280 lbs.,j $21.73; 280-290 lbs., $21.50; 290500 ibs., $21.25; 300-325 lbs., $20.7;i; 325-350 lbs., $20.25; 350J
U*lbs„ $19.75; 100-160 lbs *
: }»19.5*-$40.50; bulk sows $17-
'jTS.
6*
P
NOVELIST DIES NEW YORK, April 25.—(UP) WlUa Slbeit Gather, famed American novelist, died at her) Park Avenue home yesterday at > the age of 70, reportedly from a cerebral hemorrhage.
THE CHEF'S CORNER
roftie mi
- - - - Come rain or c< shine - - •• we all love a steaming plate of (Tit SI’EY - - - - and that’s what we're having tomorrow as we’ve had so many calls to repeat this wonderful dish - - - - so come on - - - - get on the bandwagon and join the crowd - - - - Now how about somn NEW GARDEN FRESH PEAS - - - - sounds almost too good to be true, doesn’t It - - - - hut when you dine at Chet's you know you’re getting tho very be-t money can buy - - - - and before 1 forget 'it there fc, also going to he some BAKED BEANS --- ,** yes, you can get everything your heart de-
sires at - - - * CHET'S
CAFETERIA Arroas from Poat Office
CASH LOANS FOR ANY WORTHY PURPOSE Indiana Loan Co. 191} 12 Wa* hlngton Phone 13
Be Sure to PLANT NEW^I Sweet'
EITEL’S FLOWERS
17 South Vine Slreet.
DANCE
Saturday Night mil 26 HOLUND INN 9 .Miles E* t Rockville MUSIC BY MORGAN DANCING 8 TO 12
Grand Openini Of V PAUCE SATURDAY NIGHT, 9'TH-i FEATURING MONTEZUMA BAND No Liquor Allowed COUPLES ONLY ADMISSION 50c
