The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 3 October 1947 — Page 2
THP DAILY BANNER GREFNCASTLE. »DIANA FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1947.
14,176 vi i. r. BLCDMINGTON, Ind, Oct. (INSi The full-time enrollment of Indiana University reached 14.176 today, a pain of 1.066 over last year. There also were 11.156 parttime students in extension, makinp the grand total of 28,332 students, a record high. While the total of servica men is ah- ut the sa ;:e as la“t
., . .a void .n in the path we shouk take, t . th« fre hman class was less'than •our natures of tie- evils therein, a third of the total a year ago. •'Ihe Bible school helps. Men outnumbered women, two, At the morning worship the to or", the totals being 10,0% pastor will present rue Waifare men and 4,078 women. New stu- of Life
dents this fall total 14.218.
RIIK'K < HAPKL CHURCH A Lewis Meredith, Minister. Study the truths of God to relievo the mind of error, to lighten
Our first quarterly meeting will be held at Fillmore, Oct. 24.
CHURCH OF i HRLST clovkroalf.
SPECIAL SALE Here are five bargains of slightly soiled merchandise.
SATURDAY ONLY. Were $1.00 Now $ .69 Were $1.95 Now $1.0C Were $1.98 Now $1.39 Were $1.98 Now $1.39
. Were $2.29 Now $1.69
Sweaters, 1-3 Sweaters, 3-6
Flannel Pajamas, 2-5 Flannel Pajamas, 2-8 Knit Pajamas, 2-4-8
NURSERY NOOK
S) K\!ST WALNUT STRUCT
WS-M
Tailored to Perfection Tailored to You!
\\i could give you a lecture about th." fine qualities of this suit. Instead, we believe in the theory that seeing is believing. ( ome in today ami see how smart th 1 , suit looks on you, the quality ol th. material, the (H-rfert tit. That’s lesson enough. \\. know you'll take this suit and come hark again and again for more!
YOUR NEW
MALLORY IS HERE
HAT
A Beautiful New Felt For Every Personality!
CANNONS
THE MEN'S STORE
Clyde Peck. Minister Bible School 9.45 A. M.
* Morning Worship 10:45 A. M. | Evening Worship 7:00 p m.
; Each Lord's Day.
Clyde Peck of Sullivan will prea.ch both morning and even-
j ing. Sunday Oct. 5. New Era For
i Western Union ' On Saturday Greencajstle will begin to receive the benefits of the new era of streamlined pushbutton telegraphy Lines fiom the local telegraph office are to be cut over at 3 a. m. into the new central switching office at Ctnci i Hi, it was iinn .unceed today j by Hai !.l Edwards, locaj West-
ern Union Manager.
The new push-button system at Cincinnati will improve telegraph service in Greenoastle, and cthei points in a four-state area. By merely pressing buttons at Cincin, ati, telegrams to and
THE DAILY BANNER
and
HERALD CONSOLIDATED “It Wave* For All” I
-SOCIETY
Eisler Faces Deportation
delta Kappa Gamma To Meet Saturday
l Kpstlon Chapter of Delta
Entered in the postoffice at Kappa Gamma will hold the first WASHINGTON, Ort. 3—(UP^ Greencastle, Indiana as second inci ting of the school year Sat- -pne House un-Ameiii an < class mail matter under act of i.rday. Oct. 4, at 2:00 p. m. at j t jp s Committee today tlinu< March 7. 1878. Subscription price, the home of Miss Mabel Joseph over its file on Hams Eisler o 15 cents per week; $4,00 per mar New Winchester. the Bureau of Immigration for year by mail in Putnam county;! A report of the rational DeK i USP j n deportation procudiiw $5.00 to $7.80 per year outside Kappa Gamma convi ition will against the German-born Hoi y-
be given by Mrs. E R. Bartley woo d song writer and his wife, and Miss Minna Mae Bartley. The bureau has issued a war- + + •’.+ ren t f or Eisler’s arrest and pos1 Group Yi-ited Planner sible deportation. The action was
limise Thursday promoted by evidence of Eisler s TODAY'S BKtLU THOI GUT j Thursday aft moon the f d- Communist cor.nectioriJ, brought The finest gift that any' on* j wing members of th * Gobbi out at the House Committee s could desire is a great life There Memorial church visited Fiann-r open hearing here last week, is no limit to our' possibilities. House in Indianapolis: Rev. and t, B. Shoemaker, acting comWe can be as magnificent as we Ml s. John T ennant, Mu.v • Jell:- r.isaionei of the immigration serwant to be. The very babe of son , . tIll | Lydia Lou Stephens vice, said the next step was to Bethlehem passed his life in an Mesdames Fred Starr, J. E. "fj :1 ou t whether Eisler and his obscure province, and mostly Courtney, J E Porter, W. L. W if P are d P portable.” among very humble people. H* Hargrave, Hiram dome, Cha.rlcs After they are taken into never held any office, nor did ho B 1P beh. Hilda Wycoff. Joe -Me 1 custody, they will be given a own any property. Gal. 4:19: I cord, Hubert Nadzeika. Wayne chance to explain why they am again in travail until Christ T . Gray. Jeannetta Bills. William J .should not be sent back to Aus-
Hqui lone niili pyr ttsria
Putnam County.
S. R. Kariden, Publisher. 17-19 South Jackson Street.
be born in you.
Personal And Local News BRILLS
Mrs. Lottie Lane has move.! to th- Miller apartments on West
from this city will be automatic- Poplar St.
ally and swiftly transmitted to
their destinations.
A large force of telegraph expens has been installing the new central office at Cincinnati for nearly a yeai as a part of a, na-
tionwide network of Western Mt and Mrs. William H. Ur cn switching centers to flash Sco'roe and daughter and Mr. and telegrams automatically to and Mrs Frank Nelson, left Friday Horn all parts of the country morning for a trip, touring Kc
The Bainbrielge Methodist church will hold its annual homecoming Sunday, Octob" 5th. A basket dinner will be
held at the noon hour.
Shelly. Harold Zink and Mrs.
R< agan. -p u. * -j.
Mrs. J. B. Henry Observes Birthday A most enjoyable day was spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Henry, to celebrate Mrs Henry's birthday. Tii se present were Mr and Mrs F ank C. Brodhockcr. Mr. Alvir P. Shallty and Mrs. May Roach if Indianapolis; Mr and Mrs t John H. Webster and sons Norris and Preston of Coatesville. A lovely birthday dinnei was served. Everyone wisher Mrs. Henry many more happy , birthdays. Puliiam Speaks
irontlnued front l*Rirr One!
tueky, Tcrvnessei
and Georgia
with vastly greater speed and efficiency. It will speed telegrams to their destinations by the pressing of a button, where unucr the old system each message had to be manually retrans-
mitted.
The new u:it connects directly with similar highspeed telegraph centers at Philadelphia, rtienmond, Atlanta, St Louis, Dallas and Oakland, and .vith many other cities by direct trunk
lines. Western Union’s post-wav will spend the week-end mechanization picgram provides them and will return to
Carolina's ' ' ! -
The Communists in France attempted to control the country
t i rles Wayne Cla.rk, son o' py taking over civil service, poMi. and Mrs. Charles Clark who j,, ,, > itj njing. and other funchas been confined to the Riley • ,,. JS ^, sa j ( ] mentioning inI hospital for the past ten days aens of French peasants hav-
will under go an operation very
soon.
Dr. and Mrs. T. G. Yuncker are expecting theii daughte*. Miss Barbara Yuncker, to arrive tonight from New York City. Sh
With New
it .' to sign agreements to vote Communist in order to get food •■But Russia got anxious, cocky, lik ■ the Japanese,’’ he said. “If the signal fiom Moscow had v aited a year or so, Russia could have tak n over all of Europe.’’ In G' rmany, h ■ continued, in-
for similar push-button systems York on Monday. -‘Lead ci trying to set the people in 11 other cities to comnlete' on their feet economically, we
th, ratio a! network. ' . r , ^ ‘ ’ " 1,1 'H'-inot eommunists before a«HiaU>
Until today, when telegrams '° 1 1 ^ ! ’ an,iua 'mecoming an i (q,, Nazis, and what they transmitted to and from Green- dimui on Sunday, Oct. >. W ,.,. P a fti>i was revenge. “We castle flowed through Ir.iianapo- 1 h ‘ ^ l ' Don rad CTearwaters, couldn’t have done a more stupid lis they were sorted by routing of the church, extends an thing, and we played right into clerk:, and earned by girls to op- div Ration to all. There will be Ei 1?s ia*s hands,” he added, erators, using typewriter-lik" morning and afternoon ; v- ‘‘Rusoa has stolen Germany, keyboards, who sent the tele- vic ' ls ' ^ lle ^' v ' K* wis Gray f)W1 , s Berlin, and extends her glams to their destinations. .8 ut ''' sl speaker. control even into the American Now the new pash-button sys- Mr. and Mrs. Henry Eubank Bric ' s h sectors.” lie said. He tern has eliminated all of these had as week-end guests, Mrs. ‘ huraet r > Zl ‘d Russia as a coun-time-consuming steps. Th. rout- Julia Eubank from Eubank Ky.. try whtch wo >>Licrated, to which ing clerks, skating girls and op- Mis. Virgil Dotty and laughter u " ^ avc *verything so that the ei a tors have been trained for from Miami Fla!. Mr. ,ind Mrs. Ku ' aaiHnH could save themselves, worli as switching clerks in the Ray Gooch and son, Mr. and Mrs. ”'" i a ,and "here Americans aicer.,'.cr where all of these opera- Clyde Goceh and son, Mr. and t ' , aU ‘ l1 liko criminals, tions now have lieen reduced to Mrs. Sherman, McMullin and “ Thl ' R,,hr ’ with its coa1 ' is the pushing of a button. daughter, Mr Und Mrs. Harold tho k<, y u> a recovered Europe,” Each telegram is typed oniv Eubank and son. Miss Craig Lit- “Ctording to the speaker. “Gen-
oi.ee, at the point of origin, l or troll, Mr. Walter Thompson md
example, a telegram sent from Mr. Gene Cook.
tria vFnerc they are naturalized citizens. Shoemaker said. Phis, he added, will be done at a heaving in tho district where the couple are arrested. | The hearing officer then will : submit his findings to the im migration service headquarters. in Philadelphia for final a.ction. | "The case will not be decided by sharp Judgement," Shoemaker .said. "It will be given careful consideration." If the Eislers are ordered de- • ported, they will have the right I tu petition the immigration, ap- | peals board for a review of their
case.
Denhem Stands j By His Ruling 1 WASHINGTON, Oct. 3 (UP) j Robert N. Denham, genera! ^ counsel of the National Labor Relations Board, was reported standing Dim today on his controversial anti-Communist ruling for unions despite indications that the full board woukj try to [
overrule him.
Denham himself declined to comment on the issue. B,’Jt sources close to him said he was I determined to enforce his ruling tha.t, under the Taft-Haitley law, a',1 rational officers of the CIO and AKL must swear they arc
Until production of automobiles increases in v o 1 u m e, many people w ill u-sk themselves questions like these? “How mau\ miles are left in mv pre-yvar ear?” . . . “Is it yvorlh repairing?’ It you need a ear for transportation and cannot he assured ol early delivery of a new one, L.'dk to the automobile mechanic yvho has sen iced your car regular!. . Ask him te> esti-
mate wli would it in running 11 > can vage a vear’s milea, $100 or $200, it Ina t° your advanta. make the repairs, though you „ lav foyer your exptn 0,1 a future trad loans to make ant hile repair,xareavaih our hank ii youneco’mc in and talk it with us, Ny (jljlja
Central National Bank SOUTHWEST CORNER OF SQUARE
Quality Meats On
Giecncastle and addrcsse.l to San Francisco will be received in the ’ Cincinnati push-button, center by a telegraph device known as a 1 printer-perforator which simultaneously prints the telegram a.nd punches combinations of tnles in a paper tape. 3.
A clerk will lead the destina- Hoyland P. tion on the tape when the tele- Oct. 3rd.
gram arrives and will press a' Wedding
<*. + r -5 T •!- + -P -e t t v (gi + ANNIVERSARIES +
Birthday
James F. Zeis, today, 0.1 her
button, marked “San Francisco.55 Mr. and Mrs. Geiald Hope, 10 Tint is all that is necessary. The years today, Oct. 3. pressing of the buttvn will cause' Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shuck - the perforated tape to run * y et >r today, Oct. 3.
through an automatic transmit- 1
ter A’hich will flash the electrical g 4b VE lblE%A#C signals indicated by tho holes in! I C NfcWj the tape to the San Francisco brought into Haifa toriai. acter.ninal. There the signals Will 1 mined British sailors of “aitack-
eial Clay, who is feeding the Ce;mans, has decided that the ■Potsdam Agrectment was conceived in H.Tl and is not now paying much attention to it. But Russia protests daily that we are violating our agreement by failing io starve the Germans.'' Mr. Pulliam, from first-hand observation, mentioned Russian
Simison, t .day, tricks to control the govern-
ments ci Franbe, Italy, and other coartlies. "The only happy thing I observed in the Near East," he continued, "was the fact that j Russia didn't take Greece when she could have. Tho fact that Russia did not encourage Tito to send guerrillas in take Greece moap,s that Russia, lacking fool, is' ijol yet ready for a show-
unions can take advantage oi
NLRB privileges.
Both the AFL and CIO arc
protesting the ruling and the AFL's Brotherhood of Electrical Workeis has a.sked the full NLRB to overrule Denham. Sources close to the board indi- i catee it is split 4 to 1 against Denham's interpretation of the , law. ' , If Denhan remains adamant, however, the controversy may have to be settled by either con-
gress oi the supreme court.
Labor lawyers arc in disagreement ever whether th NLRB has any authority to overrule its general counsel’s interpretation Geiald Reilly, former NLRB member and one of the drafters of the Taft-Hartley act, contends that the board cannot
change Denham's ruling.
Whn you purchase meats here, you areassu FEDERAL INSPECTED AND GR MEAT DON'T TAKE CHANCES! Quality Meat Mar *22 S. Vine St. PI
MONEY
When you are money our service able you to get the you need quickly. INDIANA LOAN 19', Ea»t \\ iishinfteA
down.
be automatically received in' ing’’ them with tear ga». i The speaker flayed the misprinted form ready for delivery. | In an unusual news conference sif ' n which suggested the artificj Telegrams coming to this cit.. j the refugees addressed th,-. pi -v, al Partition of Palestine. He said the same fast and ■ through loudspeakers apparently fhat wc have not fulfilled our
rigged for Ihe purpose. The n-fn- P'omises to the Jews and have ! gees said they suffered casual- forgotten that the Arabs are
ti/s, including an infant P few human beings,
months old suffocated by gas. i "If the partition which has
will teceive
efficient switching. WESLEY CHAPEL
F. O. Fraley, Pastor.
9:30 a. m. Sunday school. Mrs. J. E. Ruuh, Supt. j 10:30, Morning worship. We,
, been suggested is put into effect, ' it will bring on a bloody war,”
he said. "American money bought the viole.-ce in. Palestine.
will join in obsei-vance of VVorld-| Xhin'tile Lattn rntm-'a nrevsiiro '"r- V ° hl ' ,n ' 1 indi< ^ l d for this ' wide Pnmtvumlnn vJ : Commenting on British social-
lne ism, Mr. Pulliam said it is ideai-
Thc name tgnstius has associations with tne Eastern Church, out occurs at a time
wide Communion. Sermon by the pastor, “A Communion Meditation.” Assisting with the Lord’s Supper will be the Rev. W. S. Racier who will also speak on “A Methodist Preacher’s Experiences’’ in the 2:00 p. m. |
meeting.
Basket dinner at noon, for all
and by all.
2:00 p. m. (or perhaps 1:30) a meeting of about one hour’s
as much as Greek ones in Asiatic portions ot tho Roman empire. It is thought that the Latin word "ignis' 1 (fire) is the most satisfactory derivation of
the name.
A “bounty jumper" ir the U. S. Civil war was one who. upon payment ot bounty, enlisted in the army and afterwards deserted from the service.
UN Paralyzed By Deadlock LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Oct. 3 <U7) The United Nation;Geneiaj Assembly was paralyzed today by thi 1 * U. S. Soviet deadlock and long lists of nations wanting to use Assembly committee meetings for propaganda
sta tements.
Delay in getting down to real work threatened to prolong this Assembly meeting long past th? estimated two months duration unless drastic measures aye taken quickly to limit debate and ! break the stalemates which pre-1 vent the work from proceeding I
on schedule.
This is the third week of this' Assembly and as yet not one major issue has been disposed of. j The powerful political and security committee on which there are more than a dozen critical issues is completely
Wanted Labor Apply Lone Star Cement PI
istic ir. theory but that he has
seen th" results i f it in some 18 ' swam P ec l *"■ speechmaking. It is countries. Stressing England's i 8tiU talking about its first ma-J financial crisis, he said that the ! j° r issue Grecce and 21 nn - t only people who prosper under tions sti11 arp on fh e lis t 1° make I socialistic schemes are the lead- 1 g<>rM ‘ lal °Pening statements, ers. ' I None of the other committee;- 1 "When you think of American hav, ‘ made much rnore progress, freedom of opportunity," he con-1 ^' hu Pa Ie st ine com mittee hao tinned, "remember that this is' onl - v h, ard the Arab and
PUBLIC sy The undersigned will sell al public aiu'li''" " . * a* the Kay Dickson farm, located 3 miles '' ,l ' o| Koachtial,*’, on County Line Hoad, oil Monday / October 6,194 BEGINNING AT 11:00 A. M.. Till TP 1 ' HOGS, 100 HEAD ^ Consisting of 14 brood sows, and sows ami I’lP' shoat.s weighing from 50 to 100 pounds. SHEEP. 50 HEAD 50 head of Nativ,*« breeding Ewes. CORN | 0 V 100 hu. Of old porn; 500 bushels of g""d ' 1,rl ' 1 rd. Numerous other articles. TATTLE. 25 HEAD ^ ^ At the same time and place FKED ni | C»l v of Cattle, eonsiNtlng of 9 fresh Holstein " .pMiS. rang" in age five 3 yr. olds, two 4 vr. ’’ ‘ il»y. These cows ar> giving 7 to 9 gallons of »j on | In wishing to stay in the Dairy business can" vol inf opportunity. This is <mio outstanding nerii from one place and will he recommended er. niai'c- 1 TheH"* cows can be seen any time at m> I „i n iis. one yearling Holstein hull weighing arw,in, 1 r J i ooiin |h - 5 lieail ol nice Dairy Heifers weighing »><' 2 Black Angus Heifers, weighing „ U hIs. 8 Head of Butcher Cattle, weighing ->09 1
r? t o' ,*£ A r win careers; SS xzzjt
zl*z t o inboroKt T s z: r m “T u - i s, ej t t t siv ' '' v ' ry - 1 laieu quue a sum oi money or • thing they have to have what n A ft
wc have for free.” OdMlCf AuV. r8V$
th< the
Everybody invited.
money
waa caught at the game.
- t he TERMS OF SALE: CASH. No property’’ jn ^ eomplying with tenns of sale. Not respon
dent.
E. M. Lige’ Garre.
Cols. Miller and Ford, A nets.
Lunch by Ladies of Kaecon"
John WIIH*"’
(hurcl''
