The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 February 1948 — Page 6
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THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCa&UE, iNUiANA, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1y48.
CHATEAU TONIGHT and TUES.
Erich Branddf’ Last week * columns were written in n'.y Connecticut home. T!;c snow was almost knee deep ami every hour oi so I lookc j out the w ndo.v to see whether my trees were still standing or whi-ther the snow and the ;cc
tad destroyed any.
| We had just about aettled ; wn for u long and hard New England winter and, frankly, wi kind of enjoyed the prospect of being hardy pioneeis In an oil-heated house and shoveling our wa> out to tht slippery road with the help of a handyman
and his ass.slant.
Personally 1 just love pioneering. Particularly when the elec tricky an.i the telephom function well, when the oil burner is doing its duty and when the grocery man who delivers our provis ons does not get stuck in the snow, and leaves us to the trials and tribulations cf canned j goods and stored-up s-uff. | Yes. twentieth century pioneer-
ing isn't bad at all.
•• R«lnud bi PiOdiiCtn RiUiiJ'I CorpOKtiM PMTO—C'OLOK < AKTOON AND NEW S
t.KTS POST( \KI> UK LUXE Oolumbus, O. (UP)—Columbus post offie. employes sent Postmaster General J. M. Donaldson at Washington a huge postcard conta.ning the signatures of 704 employee of the office. The card carried congratulations of the local employes
On his appointment.
elephone rang. It was my wife's niece in San Francisco. "Father has just dropped h ad. she sa d. "Can you come >ut right away for the funeral ?'* Paul, the niece's father, was my wife's favorite brother. If there were ever a brother and Mster w ho were brother and sister in the very best sense of that reationship these two were the pitome oi i:a?a] kinship. So. naturally, my w.f e said -he would be- out as quickly as possible and just as naturally. 1 was to come along. So now here 1 am in a San Francisco hotel room three thousand null s awa 4 ♦rom use Connecticut ice anu suuw, looking out over a city, which to me, s .he most picturesque city in I the whole country, and in which 1 started ao a cub reporter many : years ago.
Bliznards and
tainly thank her for it now.
This is Sunday and I see by the papers that there is going to be a band concert in Golden Gate Park this afternoon. Mind you. an outdoor bano concert in the middle of winter! To you of my readers who live in California that means nothing, of course. But to the millions in many other parts of the country who are freezing and shoveling and suffering today it must seem like Paradise ,
Thousands of people will be sitting m the park and listening to the Overture from Poe t and , Peasant' and to "Tales from the j Vienna Woods' and other melodics that sing of Spring and love and youth and of all the things that make up CaLfornia i 1 wish we could go. too. But our hearts are not on concerts. This evening they are going to have a burial service for my wife's brother.
LET 15AN.Milt AOS SELL IT
REMOVE THOMAS TO PANAMA HOSPITAL
VONCASlll MONDAY & Tuesday
RESCUE SHIP NEEDS RESCUE
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But then, Sunday evening, the
Sno.v and ice howling storms?
Not here in San Francisco. The tc.i perature at this moment is sixty-three. The hud .s shining, and from my window I see green tree.- and flowers in
bloom.
Th- sky is blut and there is a gen.le wind. Las: evening my wifi put on her fur coat which she had need- \ rd ba ly when .?he left Connect!- i
cut.
She had to go back to the j hotel and diange it for a spring I coat which she had been cautious i
enough to bring along.
I. too, wore a 1 ght coa;. I • _ . -
had- t wanted t take it alomr ON RESCUE MISSION to dislodge the Albany (background), motor ( barn housing 60 head of cattle in
but -ui wife madi me and I ter- ! vcs '’ el causht in the ice - fi,leiJ ' vater * at Kingston. N. Y.. relief ship | ,* minutes. ' JU - ‘ SS Gentian suffers same fate as the stricken vessel. (International) j
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CHRISTOBAL PANAMA CANAL ZONE. Rep. J. Parnell Thomas 'Ri N J • is removed on a stretcher from the Ancon transport '’hairman of the House un-American activities comm. - tee"the Congressman was stricken with internal hemorrhages while
the vessel was 400 miles at sea. (Intel national i.
HERC ULES WOULD GO FOR ; GREAT BRITAIN SWAPPING BARNEYS MAGIC CLEANER BICYC LES FOR BREAD RUMNEY DEPOT. N. H. LONDON (UPl In a drive to
Part of a dairy farmer’s 1 swap bicycles for bread. British
JOHN m'sTAI • FIUWmTiiijii
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Ctsuif-iox
N EWS — \\ ITH HKIHIKS- MUP p.i |; N> SEA. ( KK\\ v \i f |) 1 ■■■nBaaBnagaaiM
g£S
j ;-up.
{ [v.ork has been eased by an iu- ) ■ vention of Joel K Barney of Plymouth, whose device cleans a
000 machines during the past year and their experts arc mov-
ing right along. v
The industry has more th.;-.
The only effort involved is doubled its pre-war export figui -
pushing a button. Barney’s;
es and sent about 1,400.000 ir-
Magic Cai|»et Gutter Cleaner" : cycles abroad to British Ir 1, dees the rest. the Union of South Africa. AiThe cleaner consists of a belt gentina and other major mark lying in the gutt-r where manure]during the past 12 months. Tradand bedding collect. When a sources figure that the world d- - switch is thrown, the belt is pull- mand cannot be fully met f ed by a cable onto a drum, do- many years.
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KILL THI
u vrs
On? rat can
*>0 poundi i
ft rain a year ;ui
W'lStf- ?hrw
times that niii<
The rat [J
•illation in th r
• i'-il Elates J
| estimated to i
i'i'PioximatH
| the sam as th
human ;n:.J
1 t ion. Every ;
i ts (I' stroyJ
j much as 260.0on
tarmoni jJ
| produce; yet ;i f
s iisnlc. i.kJ
pensiv eonliM
tSUlC8 U{
keep these ra'. i-
' lu-f-k l-J
nation on ciintio! id from the Kiss
Service at
an lie oM ami VVildl
Purdue Universal;,]
positing its load in a pit or sf-reader. Thi cleaner then is put in reverse and the belt passes through brushes for cleaning anJ back to its place in the gutter.
Every bicycle sent abrouU brings back the equivalent in wheat or one year’s bread ration
for a family of four.
| Nebraska ha.- ■IMWOi'l ! gistcred cattle brands. Grain future- tia-lmg conducted even in the i
ages.
GETS IKE’S “NO"
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"f t V
; arT'
iATIONM 10W m INTRODUCTORY OfFR
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SEE THE NEW 1948 CHEVROLET ON DISPLAY
LEONARD V. FINDER, of Manchester, N. H.. publisher, is picture of gloom in' New York as he announces receipt of a letter from Sen. Dwight D. Eisenhower in which Iko said that he "could not accept the GOP! presidential nomination even un- I der the remote circumstances [ that it wen tendered to me." t i International i
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| Patricia Medina is currently to jbe seen in “The Foxes of Harrow,” Twentieth Century-Fox screen version of the sensational j Frank Yerby best-seller, which co-stars Rex Harrison and Mauieen O'Hara today at the Voncastle Theatre. Patricia plays the role of the voluptuous Desiree who is forced to remain [ in the background' .of Stephen! Fox’s life. .■>--L
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