The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 September 1947 — Page 4

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THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCAS7LE, INDIANA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1947.

CHAI tflU TONIGHT THRU THURS.

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DONALD DI C K \ NKU S

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Hungary Faces Cabinet Crisis

BUDAPEST, Sept. 2 lUP) — The resignation of four cabinet ministers in protest against election frauds confronted the Communists with a government crisis today at the outset of their

trol of Hun-

gojy.

President Zoltan Tildy announced that he -could confer with all parly leaders today in search ot a solution to the muddle into which the government was thrown by the resignations. The counting of the vote in Sunday's parliamentary elections and the post-ballot jockeying had done nothing to discredit the charge by American observers that voting was the "greatest vote fraud ever perpetrated. The resignation of the four members of the social Democrat party cracked open the coalition 1 upon which the Conunu.iists had c junted. Thee Communists won 18 per cent of the votes oast, and the social Democrats ran neck and nccy in the group of the first three parties after the Communists. The resigned ministers were Istvan Hies, minister of justice: Arpad Szakasits, deputy prime minister; Antal Ban, minister of industry; and Sandor Ronai, min-ister of commeroe. An. official party spokesman announced the resignations after Lasz.la Rajk, Communist interior minister, refused to meet the party's demands for measure to be taken against repeaters in the Sunday voting. The-Communists were credited with 1,082,597 of the 5.996,186 votes counted. Officials said the figures were final, although a handful of votes still might be reported. Tlie smallholders party, which won. 57 per cent of the seats in the last election, got 12.8 per cent. Six new parties had candidates entered as oppositionists. In 1945 the only opposition per- |

the smallholders anti-Communists

mitted was party. All flocked bo it.

Now the opposition was well divided, and the Communists were assured of domination. Th

present government will stay in office until a new one is formed.

The slate university of Mexico is at Albuquerque.

New

{MISERY LOVES COMPANY

a 1 Erich Brandos’ A great deal of commotion has been caused by the opening to the public of more than 118,000 hitherto unpublished Abraham Lincoln papers. In many circles there has apapparently been disappointment that nothing sensational was found that no great state secI rets heretofore hidden from public eyes have been revealed, and that, while many of yiese papers are of great interest to the historian, nothing was found to sate

the appetite of the scandalmorg- j cr. I read many of the articles published on this collection carefully, and the one thing that a.p- t pealed to me more than anything j else was that many of the Lincoln papers gave new evidence of the extreme simplicity of his complete lack of conceit, bombast, and pompousness. Take for instance, his farewell message to the people of Spring- ^ field, 111., as he left to take over j : the Presidency Can't you imagine any country’ boy leaving his home to go to the big city saying goodbye to his folks in the same- simple words ? Can't you picture any merchant or farmer or doctor or newspaperman, whom circum- ^ stances cail to another location,. taking his leave in just such 1 modest anil appealing manner? “No one, not in my situation, can appreciate my feeling of sadness at this parting," wrote Lincoln in the manuscript of his farewell message. "To this place.

ILSE KOCH GETS LIFE

STORY OF NAPLES, ITALY, Is depicted In the complete desolation this couple, huddled t igcther on a doorstep for warmth. Unlike the more fortunate ones who still live in the caves where they found refuge from the war’s t'.mbs, or in bombed-out buildings, the old man and his wife are two of the thousands that are homeless in a city where housing is almost non-existent. (International)

Look at These Tyifiid LOW Fares

Pea sis es WILL BE IN YOUR MARKET Next Week * Michigan quality Peaches are a little later this year, but they will be in supply next week and through most of September. .

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and the kindness of these people. ' I owe everything. "I now leave, not knowing when or whether ever I may return, with a task before mi= ‘ greater than that which rested upon Washington. Without thi assistance of that Divine Being who ever attended him, I cannot succeed. With that assistance, I cannot fail.” Why is it that Abraham Lincoln occupies such a distinct position in the hearts of his country nen, that people in all laiyJs know of him and honor his memory ? Others have had just as much courage, won victories just as great, were just as intelligent and just as keen as Abraham I Lincoln. You speak of George TYashington and Thomas Jefferson with pride and admiration, i But when you speak of Abraham Lincoln you speak of him with love and tenderness. Other national heroes appeal i to our minds; Abraham Lincoln J touches our hearts.

mciioit JAMES V.K WITH news AND| S 'l T WATER Ml

WED. AND THU

‘is;

mnmsmB with

PEGGY ANN RANDOM GARNER • SCOTT-

DEAR

STOCKWELL

\\ ITH NEWS RHYTHM AND \U0|

RED-HAIRED WIDOW of Buchemvald concentration camp’s former commandant, Use Koch, hears a U. S. war crimes court at Dachau, Germany, sentence her to life imprisonment. Frau Koch, who allegedly collected the tattooed skins of Inmates for lampshades, Is expected to become a mother next month. (International',

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• Not many years ago, before science had started on its amazing way, brewers were glad to dispose of their used grains, surplus yeast and spent hops by any method that presented itself—dumping in the streams, or sewers, or even piling them on the refuse heaps. Now, however, thanks to scientific research, the grains which actually are enriched in the brewing process go back to the farms and the dairy feeding lots as prized cattle and livestock feed. The yeast, too, has been found to be. not only a valuable livestock and poultry feed supplement, but, rich in vitamins, adds a healthful adjunct to the everyday diet of the American people. Even the hops are finding their way to the feeding yards, or as mulch in unfertile fields. Thus, by employing science, the brewers have enlisted in the anti-stream pollution campaign in a wholehearted way. Moreover, in addition to providing wholesome, refreshing beer, they have the satisfaction of seeing their by-products reach the table in the form of tender meat and rich milk. Beer Is a Beverage of Moderation. Buy It Only from Law-abiding Permittees.

INDIANA BREWERS ASSOCIATION 712 Chamber of Commerce Bldg, e Indianapelii 4, Ind-ana

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GENERAL OF THE AKMY Dwigh chief of staff, aclclri sea the 29th ■.mi; York’s Madison Square Gard< n, \v;,- ; , two great camps gn.upi T on on the other, democracy." LTainiu;e peacefully, "Ike" urged preparedm sions against rights of men are pai i i International).

VV&, / :*■ tk*' *a»ta i ifiiMor-wvdieiSr lie JEtf* 14. Eisenhower, U. S. Army i itl Legion convention in New .eg that "the world comprise ;idi* around dictatorships and * nflifting theories can exixsl "as long as deliberate aggresof the international picture.'

We all know’ that Lincoln was a deeply religious man. i None of his prayers have been published, but I can well imagine him in the still of the night, just before going to sleep and with folded hands, speaking thus to the Lord: "Oh Lord, give me the strength always to be humble and shun pride and conceit. "Never let me lose touch with the people of whom I am one. Never let me be .unmindful of their sorrows, never let me envy the great or despise the lowly. “Let me always remember that

life is short and that ’ end comes there is no d in class or race or ere let me never forget ltd heaviest cross is that! must bear alone." No matter how masj, Lincoln papers are pM they will not change hi j one whit. As long as there is irl can he will be each, ideal of the kind of inaal self would like to be.

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IN IOS ANGELES, John D Spreckles ITT, 36-year-old sugar heir, and wife leave court aRer paying $25 in fines. The couple was arrested and charged with drunkenness when found slugging out a domestic difference on Santa Monica boulevard. (International)

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PEDIATRICIAN Dr. Eleanor Hamilton, 36, undrr^ncs » 1 section in Chicago's Mercy hospital for the fittli baby, Dr. Gene C. Hamilton, congratulates bis wife- fTnjjl

If Attlee Resigns, Bevin, Dalton, Cripps May Move Up

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. Sir Stafford Cripps Hugh Dalton LONDON OBSERVERS report that Britain's Prime Minister CTemenT Attlee will resign "for reasons of health" as soon as the BritishAmerican loan revision talks m Washington. D. C„ pass the critiea) stage. The same observers forecast that Foreign Secretary

Ernest Bevin ( Clement Ernest Bevin is most likely to take over the primf that Chancellor of the Exchequer Hugh Dalton e‘gn post, and Sir Stafford Cripps. president oi Trade, will be elevated U> succeed Daltoa.

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