The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 27 September 1947 — Page 2
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THf DAILY BANNER. GREENCASTLE. INDIANA. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1947.
THE MILT HMEII ! -SOCIETY
HERALD CONSOLIDATED
“It Waves For AO”
Entered in the postofflce at
RORortlTV H.rnr.E^ 'Burner Mum I. V'ii'Inta Cun- - ((WtlnuiM fi.mi I‘uk<- I) i on. Rnckford, III.; rVuinn Cri : j l.inisIftR, MhJi ; M ity l»n ler, M.-trion; .Itmet Er.lm;m,i Downx, inRhlaml Park. Mich.: "CJioasi* Isle, Mich.; Diane Eor.it, 1 Jetty Hinckley, Hinsdale, III.; White-fish Bay, Wis.; Margery| Cynthia May, Indianapolis; Mar- Custon. Riverside, III.: Sallyj
Ian Merchant, Minneapolis. Lehman, Kansas City. Mo.: M:i’- . ( . ppncaj ^| ej Indiana as second Minn.; Beverly McNamara tha Nutt, Moline, III.; Pat DP* . Lj ass ma u matter under act of Kockford, III.; Mary McNeal, Chicago Heights. III.; Ann <)ll '.! i \j arca 7 i igig. Subscription price. Highland Park, III.; Janice Root, Greenfield; Julia Pctry, Hoops- Lj pe,- week; $4.00 per Clinton, Iowa; Boo Salt/. La- town, III.. Jeannim- Spangler,I y<ar by niai , in p u tnam county; Crosse, Wise.: Jane Seymour Decatur, III.; Nina Sue Streepy.' qq tf) go per year outside Hinsdale, III.; Joan Talley, Terre Clayton, Mo.; Patsy Wylie, p u f n a m County.
I'aute: Margaret Thomas, Min Bloomington; Marilyn Stevenson, la apolis, Minn.; Shirley Burdick. Danville; Susan Hughes, BronxSouth Bend; Natalie Kerr, Cold- Ville, N. Y.; Ann Hartshorn, Milv.atcr, Mich.: Barbara Whalen, wuukee, Wis.; Virginia Cordill, Chicago. Indianapolis; Mary Ann Asher. Alpha Omirron PI: Lois Ayde- Gary; Patty Meredith, Muncie; lott, Erie, Pa.; Barbara Bank.-, Connie Overesch, Grosso Isle,
Lakewood, O.; Alice Chandler, Wis.; Carolyn
Portland
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S. R. Rariden, Publisher. 17-19 South Jackson Street.
TODAY’S BIBLE THOI’GHT
IteeKville Chili Mel Seplefiilu r 'il
The Reelsville Social Service CT'iW met Sept. 24 at the home of .Mrs. Reggie McCullough. 20 membeis and 2 guests enjoyed a delicious dinner at noon. Mrs. Ida MeCullouggh off. red prayer at the noon hour. As this was th ■ birth lay meeting, a special table was decorated for the six members celebrating birthdays. At 1:30 the president, Mrs. Pearl Knight called the meeting to orJei. Mrs. Flossie Poe gave devotions which were tak-n from the 3rd chapter of James, after which the business the president
ST IDT PROPOSAL
r-iSAYS G0003Y TO FORRest]
Our religion is not a philos- ^
Schwcntkcr.i ophy but a way of life. You! a ,etter fra/!1 the Rlle > Hos - types
Put Capehart, Wash- Evansville; Joan Stephens Glen-' rius { travel on that way. James [ pita) Cheer (riiild, slating that, class!!i; ations named, as well as
II mii|I»ii*-*I fruSi l**lt«- UnM supply in some, if not all, of these rtitcgorics," Knowland
said.
”Why then could not this government offer to purchase for doila:.- iubslantial quantities of Uu’se commodities from the nations w .csite to help and who have a <i- sperate need for dol-
lar::?’’
Knowland said most of the materials could be .used currently in this country, but he suggested that any t surpluses could be si t aside for future use. 'The difference between having abundant stockpiles of all of raw materials in the
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Wilcox
1:22: Be ye doers of and not hearers only.
the
ington, D. C.; Elizabeth Davis, coe. 111.; Julia Jean Gicencastlo; Helen Deihl, Oak Clarksville, Tcnn.
Park, II! ; Judy Foster. Mil- Kappa Kappa Gamma: Betsy vankec, Wis.; Jean Lave, Ham- Arensman, Indianapolis; Julia mond, III.; Lois Loukes, South Avery. Columbus ;Barbara Britt Henri; .Marilyn On. Oak Park, Danville, 111.; Margaret Ann HI.; Lou Ella Smith, Fillmore; Burns, Gosport; Barbara Butler. Marilyn Davie. Onarga, 111.; Pat Marion; Clara Emily Clifford. Jacobs, Chicago; Yvonne Smith, Kokomo; Suzanne Currier,, Chicago. Grand Rapids, Mich.; Nancy' DHta Delta Delta: Nancy Dean. Palo Alto, Calif.; Mary Adams, Kokomo; Marjotle Denton, Evansville; Janet
H'oom, Maywood, 111.; Jane Gough, Hartford City; Marianne j M| . an(J Mrs ward a. Girtor. Bradburn, Chicago; Barbara Graham, Greencastle; Nancy J arKj family have returned to
Pkr§omal And Local News BRIEFS
word Lhe name Sacred Service h.td ■ been accepted as the name of ! the new guild which the club
has oiganized. Hemming hospital
towels for the Riley hospital was
the work of the afternoon. It was decided to have a family picnic at Big Walnut Bap-
tist Church Wednesday evening.
Oct. 1 at 6:30.
Mrs. Mosaic Trou^ will be the hostess. Everyone come and bring your family and a picnic
basket.
Coffee will be furnished by the
hostess.
The president appointed u nominating committee to nominate new officers for next year.
n
others, might be the'difference I between victory a/iJ defeat, ‘ should we be so unfortunate as to again become involved in a war wherein we were cut off from world supplies,” he said. Knowland suggested that a program such as his would 'commar.d more respect than, if we
IDENTIFIES LETTERS ON EISLER
Button. Chicago; Nancy Harter, Jones, Indianapolis; Anne Keen-. thpir home jn Abilene, Texas, afDelawarc, O.; Anita Henderson, ey Indianapolis; Lindsey Parker,| tpr V j S jtj n g yiis mother and Port Huron. Mich.; Eleanor East Grand Rapids, Mich.; Bar-j KrBndmothpr East F ran i<]j n st.
Hockey, Dayton. O.; Martha bara Pruitt, Chicago; Carol
Holman, Lakewood, O.; Joan Reiniuga, Oak Park, III.; De-j Mr. and Mrs. Ward A Girton
Holmes. Chicago. Eleanor Hue- borah Trees, Detroit, Mich ; upd family. Mrs. Nellie G Bunch The committee consists of Lulu liner. Chicago. Ann Hurtuk, Betsy Veit, Indianapolis; Maryjand Mrs. Maggie Rogers spent Huffmaty Ruth Craft nad Lee
Cleveland Heights, O.; Johanna Wall. Marion; Jean Wilcox,! Lhe week end with Mr. and Mrs. Lichviir, Cleveland Heights, O; Mountain Lakes, N. J. J Hex R. Girton and family, La vCinnie McCartney, Cincinnati. I’i Beta Phi: Louise Alston, renceville, Illinois.
O.; Anne Thornburg, Indianap- Hamilton, O.; Betsy Barth, Indiohs; Lots Toole, Chicago; Bev- anapolis; Nancy Bartol, South erly Baron, Oak Park, III.; Jane Bend; Wanda Beebe, Muncie,
Rissler.
As there was no program, contests were held with prizes go- ’ ing to Lucille Akers, Ruth Craft,
Miss Marjorie Smith, stenog- and Pranceg Zarlrp
Guests of the club were Mrs.
endeavor Lo r-un an internstioiul^ D^J ^ MPA. * I ••Mot ( .ven this untlon.” ' said, "as rich and powerful as we are. is in a position to do that.'' Early reaction to Know land s proposal was favorable.
WAR A SOLUTION
lC'nnllnuril friMii rnire one) There was no doubt that uv situation in India was drifting
from bad to worse. The foo*^
ministry said that the food situation in Hindu India was bad and that the people must prepare themselves for urastic cuts in rationing and even a breakdown of the rationing system. The food situation in India, seldom good, was worsened by lhe partition and by fighting. The partition cost the Hindus 65.000 ton of grain they normally would have got from what is
now Pakistan. Because of the |
slaughter ami the movement of
refugees, fall crops in many;
cases were not harvested. And
winter crops are not being plant-; „p |pED 0V£R THE sid(.< Secretary of Defense James V
' (left) leaves the Navy department for his new offlec j„ thV ! gon building accompanied by new Navy Secretary John L. Su'm | Walking between rows of "side boys,” the ex-NT--y boss'i s | traditional four ruffles by the U. S. Navy band. (IntemsroM Wanted Laborer!
Apply
Lone Star Cement Planl
I
eu
Boyd.
The next meeting will be Oct. 22 with Mrs. Cleo Rissler.
+ + +
Reva O’Halr's
rapher in the Clay Circuit Court.
will go to Greencastle Monday H vn-r'.iiiniurh mri Mrs Fred
Messing, Indianapolis: Ann Rog- Barbara Brosmcr, Evanston, III.; tp spIV0 as ri ,p or t er i n the case K ° S ‘ g a - •
ers. Louisville. Ky.; Mary Lou Sally Conley, Baltimore. Md.; 1 g tatp vs pioyd Hemmer. Shi n r, Terre Haute. P< ggy Ednlinster. Washington,! formel . SU p 0r mtendent of the Delta Zeta: Dolores Anderson, IV C.; Jo Ann Givens. Columbus;'. u,at„ c-urm ehMi-e-i-il
r-.K M-e, n,, ra ,.,, in, sw
Kol-i Hills, N. Y.; Barbara Leo Hickman, Greencastle; Car-j,^. Rohcrt B . Stewart En „ alfenipnt . Xm) „„„eed
Bratton, Angola; Joverne Buhn- ol Holliday. Indianapolis; Mar- wj|1 servp as 8ppclaI judge . • ' ** . ** A ,. Up 0 , Hai ..
ci Highland Park. 111.; Margaret gery McDaniel, Crawfordsville Tim i M .
Cook, Norfolk, Vu.; Dorothy Patricia Otis, Glen Ellyn, 111.;! ^ j wish to announce the engageDnck, Paris. HI.; Ix>is Jean Ellis. Eleanor Ott, Port Washington,I l>I TV XU viik i iovs | m ‘' nt 01 tht>lr dau K htpr * Revrt ' to Chicago; Selma Kamphaus. In-N. Y : Pauline Rich. Decatur, j * ^ ' ‘ ^ , >IKKS Ron:,U1 C ox of South Bend. No
dlanapolis; Ijenora Larsen, Bay 111; Marv Robinson, Indianapolis; ilefinitc date lot th. w.-ldii - h
. ... . 1 The Putnamville Lions Club i,een si-t
Village, O.; Donna Lima, Okla- Gail Wagner, o..,«..„i,i» rn • men si i.
homa City:
Kirkwood, Mo.; Phyllis Luttrel!
Riverside, 111.;
Joan Wygandt, Chicago;
Mary B ' "
, • „ , .... dean of men at DePauw Univer-.
Lorain, O.; Joyce Mayer, Mav- MacKenzie, South Bend; Marilyn
»< ■ „ , . . ,1 sity, was the speaker of th.-
Mariam O May, Ash- Ott. Port Washington, N. 1 J 1
wood, III.
ton, 111.; Judy Rogers. Lansing, Mich.; Betty Jo Scarborough, Crete, 111.; Ruth Stark. East Chicago, Carolyn Waller, Tampa, Fla.; Jewell Weber, San Jose, III.; Beatrice Zimmerman, Dayton, 0.; Betty Frisbie, Chicago; Jacquelyn Swanlund. Coopcrsvllle, Mich; Donna Zeller, Val-
paraiso.
Kappa Alpha Theta: Elizabeth Armstrong, Indianapolis; .loa’i
Die Ruler, Glen Ellyn. III. HOSPITAL NOTES Mrs. Harry Black. Greenvastle. was admitted Friday. Mrs. Samuel Pratt. Roachdak was admitted Friday. Mrs. Francine Wright. Greencastle. was admitted Saturday morning.
W. S. C S. OF UNION CHAPEL MORTON ANNUAL SUPPER AND AUCTION SALE TO BE HELD AT MORTON SCHOOL BUILDING Saturday, October 4, 1947 DLI.K IOI S HOME CODkiT) FOOD. Served from 5 to 7 p. M. B\NI) COXCHJT B\ It UXBRIDGE BAND HAND M\DE ARTICLES. Everything remaining iiicm.IiI a t 7 I*. M. will be sold .it auelion l>> Alton liuint. BRING TUP, FAMII.V . Not responsible for lu-i-bli-nts.
h;.d a good dinner meeting
CU B CALENDAR
Tuesday
Present Day Club—2:30 Mrs.
evening. The Lions Club is spon- q q Tucker, soring a euchre party at the Wednesday
school house Friday night. OctJ Woman’s Club 2:30 — Miss
3. Everyone is invited to at- Jeanetta O’Dell,
tend. An enjoyable evening will Crescent Club 2:30 p. m. with
be had by all. .Mrs. Ward Mayhall. - — I Kappa Kappa Gamma Alumnae IN MEMORY J Club 8 F. M.—Mrs Jervis Ful-
Of my nusband, Ben Smith mer -
who passed away Sept. 27, 1945. J rklay Memories are treasure no one! Delilah Miller Parent Teach-^ can steal j ers pitch-in supper 6:30.
Death is a heartache nothing
can heal.
Some may forget you since you are gone. j But I will remember no matter . how long. I His Wife Pd
DURING House un-American activities committee hearing In Washington, former Undersecretary of the State Sumner Welles (left) Identifies for Chief Investigator Robert Stripling, photostats of letters written him by Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt concerning Hanns Eisier, Hollywood composer and brother of Gerhart Eisler, alleged leailei of Communist party tr. U. S (International Soundphoto) W^WASHINGTON
DRY CLEANING
Tie your finger, don’t forget, WE dry-clean with NO regret, You’ll be pleased, we guarantee, With cleaning done up to a “T”.
HOME LAUNDRY AND CLEANERS
FRIENDSHIP FOR U.S. IS CAUSING ITAUAN DEBATE
TCyASHiNGTON\V chairman of
+ t + 4* 4* + + 0 + ANNIVERSARIES + W + *k+- ,, + , l*+ + + + + + ®
Birthday
William T. Parrish, 77 today. Sept. 27th. Bill Sibhitt son of M
ROME. Sept. 27. (UP) Th main Communist anil loftwing Socialist argument for ovorj throw of Premier Alcide De Gas-
years. peri's government turned rftit to-
day to be De Gasperi’s friendship and with the United States.
tors lla’O-d Sibbltt, 11 years, to- > i n debate on three motions of
'The 6uj -fyb Ut l/ott/L^a/WC usttyz" • - r 1 ^ <■
i day, f-ept. 27.
j non-confidence in De Gasperi’■
Wedding (government, Communists and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Brown. U-ftwing Socialists loaders in th--Greencastle Route 3, 61 yean national assembly railed last today. Sept. 27th night against the United States. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Cash. 30th When Giuseppe Saragat, lea lwedding anniversary today, 1 et „f rightwtng Socialists. Sept. 27. j speaks late today his argumen'. Mr. and Mrs. Venard Johnson, jj) expected to be practically th100 years today, Sept. 27. 'same thing. De Gasperi, a
[Christian democrat, put thj Communists and Socialists oui of his cabinet four months ago. Now the Communists have lined up five leftist parties wi' .i j themselves to vote against D -
The Belle Union and Cloverdale Ga ^ ri when thc mn _ tio, ’ s
high school softball teams will clash in the Greencastle city
Anderson Still Seen No. 1 I Senator McGrath Possibility To Become Demos' Chairman | For Post at Party’s Holm Special to Central Press —Just who will succeed Robert Hanncgan as of the Democratic national committee will be settled in the very near future. It still looks like Secretary of Agriculture Clinton P. Anderson of New Mexico. Closest advisers to President Truman say he is the chief executive's^iirst choice. It is all up to Anderson, who is returning to Washington after a long vacation. If Anderson takes the Hannegan post, it is a cinch that thc job of executive director now held by Gael Sullivan will be continued with either Sullivan or a young politico from the east with a knowledge of city
politics in the post.
Those closest to the White House say reports that Judge James P. McGranery, of Pennsylvania, will become national chairman and also enter the cabinet as postmaster general are discounted. These sources put the ex-congressman from the Keystone state at the bottom of the list. Close on Anderson’s heels is Senator James McGrath of Rhode Island. However, at this moment in Washington, Anderson is still looked upon as the man who will finally head up the 1948 Democratic national campaign with the aid of someone from the east.
WHAT EVERY GIRL LIKES TO HEAR -
Clinton P. Anderson
B. U. • Clovers To Clash Wednesday
HORN-DRAULIC LOADER Handles the toughest farm loading jobs with ease and smooth operation. It’s nigged. Lifting capacity 2,000 pounds. Like two giant arms of hardest steel, the precision-built twin cylinders provide adequate power, whatever the load. No belta, chain* or gears to slip or break. All-steel, lever-tilted bucket, 16x40 inches, has special bottom plate attachment for loading dirt. Bucket automatically relets with lowering action. Simple to install. The Hom-Draulic Loader makes your tractor do year ’round double duty.
park Wi-dni-sday afternoon for thc championship of the southern half of Putnam county. Belle Union downed the Clov-
confidence come up. So much debate is on thc schedule, how-! ever, that the assembly probably
cannot vote for a week.
Palmlro Togliatti, boss of the Italian Communists, told the »s-
ers. 4 to 3, Friday afternoon to! scmbl y : “ We of lhp Communis!
'party are children of our country and children of our history and wr cannot accept the way of life
of Ohio and Missouri.”
, He boasted that his party conBoric arid, which in its dilute
throw both teams into a tie for the season. Each has won 4 tilts
and lost 2.
• EISENHOWER “THREAT” GROWS—The professional politicos, complexions already tinged with that smoky hotel-room pallor, are seeing Gen. Ike Eisenhower more and more as a threat for the Republican presidential vomination. latest hint to these - - vse money” men was Harold Stassen's “wouldn't say yes, but wouldn’t sr.y no” tc the question of whether he would accept second place on a GOi : ’ ticket led by Ike. Thirty seconds before, a group of ballot-wise Washington reporters had had no trouble eliciting from Stassen the crisp statemcHfc that he would not run on the same ticket with New York'a
Gov. Tom Dewey.
What the aggressive former Minnesota governor and navai veteran actually said regarding Eisenhower was: “I’d rather not answer that in deference to the general’s wishes." The liberator of Europe, soon to doff khaki for the educator's gown as president of Columbia university, has stated that he is not a candidate for public office. However, Slasscn and Eiuenhower conferred at length several weeks ago at the Minnesota state fair. Stassen insists that he is interested only in the presidency, but it Is believed by political experts that he sees in Elsenhower a progressive willing and able to unseat the GOP Old Guard, which the Minnesotan has opposed bitterly and consistently.
• » • •
© SENATORS SQUEEZED OUT—The Senate war investigating committee, founded on a resolution authored by President Truman when he was a senator and originally headed by him, has run into
a streak of bad luck.
uonc acia, wnicn in uuuie tro , leU 70 p «. r cent of Italy’s in- a strea,< of ^ lu ck-
i 'L U I!.“ V S „; C ^: U»trial workers. Ho said D- „ ' n \ h * ° P ‘ nl0 " 0f f™ 6 ob f rver9 ’ wlth the
Howard Hughes plane contract hearings during which the audience,
Saves time .*md labor In loading manure, dirt, gravel, rock, tinder., foal, rolls of fencing, baled hay, corn shocks, I'H tilo ditches, pulls fence pasts, •m! hundreds of other loading jobs.
rains boron, a non-metallic elc- \
ont used to help Increase the | G * s P erl ’ B P° lic y was dominate 1
’ by “quotation of thc dollar” and
H & M SALES CO.
INC
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
ha-denability of certain alloy
steels. • . •
Melancholia and other forms of insanity, headache and hysteria are given relief by masI sage, in a large measure by *ug> ; gestion. states the Encyclopedia Britannica.
* • •
Termites possess a highly developed "language.” using their I heads to rain rapid blows on tha ! head of a companion. I • • • If a man breathed pure oxygon all tha time he would dla.
that his party could not be excluded from a new government. LATE NEWS damage to corn wen- held mainly r«-s|»oHHlbte today for ttu- rise in grain prices on the Chicago
Board of Trade.
At tbe name time, greater de-
mand for butter and eggs due to 1 '> “Element of war contracts.
at least, sided with Hughes and other witnesses and ’against the committee In the face of widespread criticism, the hearings ware
suddenly discontinued until Nov. 15.
Later, Senator Owen Brewster (R), Maine, committee chairman, announced that he would not attempt to have the unit continued
beyond Us present life, which is due to expire Jan.
31. His announcement came as a surprise, since a War Probe
number of Republicans had counted on the commit-
tee functioning throughout the 1948 presidential Committee campaign year. 0 n Skid*
Thc third blow came with an announcement by a
(House subcommittee headed by Rep. George Bender (R), Ohio, that it was investigating the alleged squandering of millions of dollars
meat shortaire lifted iirh-i-s The Senale c ' omrnittee »»ad expected to go into this matter. But «f l r h , P , wilh the House « rou P ***** holding hearings. Brewster’s comm.t- ^ those < nnn Hlitii «^«^he nu r- tee decided to forget about the war contract settlements. It found
Usclf backed off the calendar for the first time.
.Motile exchange in Chieogo.
inviting her to
Her favorite man
dine here .... She knows she will find delicious food . • . . carefully
prepared.
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