The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 27 November 1948 — Page 4

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THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER '2/, 1V48.

Banner Ads Get Results

AT THE VON' ASTLE

Shorty' The Serviceman says:

S«c that all your farm etjuipment is cleaned and protected against rust before you put it in the shed for winter. Let us spray-paint your AllCrop harvester while it is idle. VTe use a special solvent to remove grease and rust before painting.

SPORTS

By Jim Zeis

Cubs Face Two Tough Outfits Mai tin.sville and’ Greensburg

will give the Tiger Cubs plenty

BOWLING NEWS

UPTOWN LEAGUE

W L

Monnett Donut Shop 22 8

Water Works Gas Co. Cities Service

22 11 17 16 16 17 15 18 15 18 14 10 8 22

f' flLUS-CHIILMERS] V SALES AND SERVICE J Smith Farm Machinery Co.

CLOVERDALE. IND.

Frances Gifford, starring in V-G-M's new Technicolor musical, "Luxury Liner," was born in Long Beach, Cal , gave up her law studies at the University o' California for nvjsic .and made her film debut in “Mercy Plane ”

l<> think about on the local high! Stop ’N Shop school basketball floor next j Public Service . week. Both teams always havel Olds-Pontlac tough aggregations and Coach Rotary -<• Tom Goldsberry and his net! Cities Service, lessors have their work cut out! Service, 0, 2587.

for them. Water Works, 2, 2815; Gas Co., the weather or if you don’t like The Artesian City basketeersl 1, 2786. I to have me interpret things out perform here Tuesday evening Olds-Pontiac, 2. 2561; Stop ’N ( j j; ic Bible in my own way, and the Pirates from Greensburg Shop, 1, 2669. I please move over to the next invade our fair city on Friday Monnett Donut Shop-Rotary, cf ,j u i.. n an j forget about me for

I night. 1 postponed. today.

Pet. .73" .667 .515 .483 .43.1 .455

A'* Let me warn you that this is • 2,i ‘ going to be a column about the 2743; Public weather and Job. So if you are not interested In

patient? Seven so.-s and three daughters.’’ Is it any wonder that Job was patient? Seven sons and thre’’ daughters. Ask any father whether that isn’t bound to make & man as patient as Job. But here is the climax. Chapter 42, Verse 11: “Then came there unto him all his brethren, and all his sisters and all they that had been of his acquaintance before, and did eat bread with him in his house:—” 1 believe that anyone who has never entertained house guests will sympathize with Job mid know ..hat I mean. v And I had the nerve to compare my little bad luck with what poor Job had to put up with!

LET BAN ,\ i It ADS SEE!

LAST SHOWING TODAY

. “Do all ricii women play games like this?’'

Her most re. , nt appearances j DePauw's Tigers, under the 0vt ''' 450: Peterson, 496; Hoovven :■ tutelage ol Coach Hal Hickman, er, 493; Slavan, 485; Goode, 47*: ‘ “Little Mister Jim At the Von ’ ’"’ 1 ’ 1

castle Sunday, Monday and

Tuesday.

also swing into action next week Lyons, 459; Goodman, 4.>5, Duel),I

Immortalized In the writing! of Elbert Hubbard, a soldier named ROWAN Is well remembered for "carrying a message to Garcia. ,,

We, too,are RELIABLE... ★ Physicians have come to rely upon this Prescription Pharmacy. They know that no matter how rare the drug—how difficult to obtain—we are most apt to have it, and can compound the prescription precisely as directed. Thus, many leading medical practitioners regularly suggest that patients bring prescriptions to us for careful and conscientious compounding. Since this professional service costs no more than you would pay elsewhere, wouldn’t it he prudeot to let us compound your next prescription?

Ex-Solon Indic'od

Crawley, 596,

469.

Over 500: M.

Long, 502.

High game: M. Crawley, 212.

lor the first time this season when Canterbury comes here from. Danville to clash with the

Old Gold.

Saturday, the Tigers travel to Bloomington to help Indiana’s Crimson squad tilt the lid on PUTNAM CO. PIN BUNTEKS their 1948-49 hardwood court LEAGUE campaign. i W All the Putnam county teams White Way 50 will be busy next week and tile Tractor Specialties 23

jl complete card is as follows

Tuesday

Martinsville at Greencastle Bainbridge at Belle Union

Wednesday

Canterbury at DePauw Reelsville at Stilcsvillc

Friday

Greensburg at Greencastle

Roachdale vs

at Ladoga

Fillmore at Btlnbridge. Qoverdale at Monrovia Russellville at Waveland Belle Union at Stilsville

Saturday

DePauw at Indiana

Culligan’s 18 Laundry Ease 14 Angwell Rufflers 13 Angwell Finishers 13 Angwell Panders 11 Angwell Cutters 10 White Way, 3, 2169; Panders,

0. 2034

Tractor Specialties, 3, 2011;

New Winchester Laundry Ease. 0. 1932.

Culligan’s, 2, 1799; Rufflers, 1,

1685.

Finishers, 2, 1580; Cutters, 1,

1549.

I am mad this morning. For weeks we have needed rain and for weeks it has been dry as a bone around these parts. The water in our well is running dangerously low, there is hardly enough water in the river for the clucks to get their feet wet, and some of our friends and neighbors are turning to beer as an excuse. So, ordinarily we would have welcomed the rain that started to come down in buckets this morning and that is still pouring clown on us in unlimited quanti-

ties.

I should be very happy, but I am not. For two weeks we have planned to go to New. York today. My wife has to do a lot of fall shopping, and I have to go to the luncheon of the Banshees and see my friend Chic Young, creator

TURKEYS Free

Three high series; White Way.j^f “Blondie," being presented 2169: Panders. 20.<4; Tractor, W j t | 1 armua [ a ward to the Specialties, 2011. |j es j cartoonist of the year.

Phon# 38t

CHARGED with failure to register is a lobbyist, former Rep. Roger ' Slaughter of Missouri has been I ndicted by a federal grand jury I d Washington. Slaughter, who , vas "purged” by President Trunan two years ago, claimed the ' tharges were “false” and “frau- | lulent.” (International)

Colonial Hatcheries x Baby chicks x Purina chows x Sani fat ion. 106 North .lacPaon St.

High single gamp; Eugenia

Irwin. 174.

Ocer 400: Eugenia Irwin. 496; Louise Peterson. 487; Doris Hinkle. 470: Mable Monnett, 44..; Rena McCullough, 430; Alice

Tucker, 404.

£oan ^Pharmacy Formerly Keller-Cnan Pharmacy

PRF'TRIPTION druggist

to . ,?m<i«i&WASHINGTON

iwmm

It L Washington St, (?fcE£NCASTLK, INO.

PRESCRIPTIONS

YOU'RE TELLING ME! — By WILLIAM RITT Central Press Writer

SPACE SHIPS, a scientist warns us. would encounter an pndless swarm of onrushing meteorites. Just like in driving 4n the wrong direction on a one-way street.

i i t

Zadok Uumkopf says the reaton he gave up a literary career was because he never could get the ribbon properly into the typewriter.

III

At any coach con tell you, too tnony good blockers on the gridiron are blockheads in the class-

room.

i i t Dinosaur footprints have been

probably has every California press agent scurrying around trying to find bigger ones.

i i i

Crandpappy Jenkins wants to know what has Confucius got to say about the current Chinese situation?

i i t

Navy publication says we've fewer combat ships than at Pearl Harbor time. Attacked again wo m-iy sure miss those boats.

i t i

In Montana several cows ate dynamite which fell from a passing truck. If they weren't

MARCH OF EVENTS

Railroad Act May Be Model For New Labor Legislation

See Unions Making ■ Drive For Rotiromont Ray Program

Special to Central Press Vw rASHINGTON—Some union leaders are advocating that labor W legislation the ndministiation will seek in January be modeled after the Railway Labor act The toughest provision to write in the contemplated substitution for or modification of the Taft-Hartley law will be the section on national emergency strikes. Labor is dead set against the injunction process of the TaftHartley law and the administration share* this

opposition.

That is where the Railway Labor act comes into the picture This law, which applies only to the rail brotherhoods, provides for appointment of presidential emergency boards in a threatened strike and a 60-day cooling off period. There is no compulsion. Rail unions could strike if they desired. However, they nearly always delay strike action while the board is func'ioning and more often than not accept Its recommendations to end the strike threat entirely. Administration ofFcials are wondering, how-

Tonight we are invited to dinner. and, it being quite a nice dinner, we want to laog our best. So my wife is wearing a new rhinestone buttons, a pepium in black and the skirt exactly the dress, made of black faille, with

right length.

She has new shoes, new stockings and a new hairdo. As for me, I had the car washed, my shoes shined, my other suit pressed nad my hair cut. So it is raining, raining in torrents, spoiling all our fun. In my usual style, which, I presu ne is the generally accepted masculine style, I raved and ranted eround the house, cursing my bad luck, the meanness of Nature, and Jupiter Pluvius, the heathen-god of rain. But my wife took it calmly. “Have a little patience,” she said. “Have you ever read the Book of Job in the Bible?" Well, I had read it and, frank- j ly, Job and I never quite agreed, I being of a rather impetuous nature while Job, as you know, was the epitome of patience. But I went upstairs and read

WE'RE THE FOLKS TO SEE! iValch lor our Ad appearing in the Daily Banner Tuesday - C. H. and C. HARDWAKl BAINBRIDGE

m HAYWOMllB

WITH PARIS o>, l-l.VTt)

•U "T s( PPOSE LITTLE BL \BiiKi; M0I s|; SUNDAY, MATINEE & NIGHT - MONDAY 4 TUESDAY NIGHT. . mwCIU GEORGE BRENT JANE POWELL IAURIiZ MELCHIOR FRANCES GIFFORD MARINA KOSHETZ XAVIER CUGAT ! IND HIS OfCHIMlA NEWS _ WITH M0I1K POW Kr FOR BKKI.IN AIRLIFT I I'STWDINi, SITTKR

NEHRU GETS WARM h !CITATIONS

And here, suddenly. I discover-

over. whether the great mass of unions are ma- j Job all over again,

ture and responsible enough to follow that pro- 1 cedure. Its success depends on calm, reasoned

Senator Robert leadership and well-disciplined membership which i ct ^ some thing that I had not parA. Taft stiikes only as a last resort ticularly noticed befope. Right in _ • • • » sec;)n( j paragraph of the first • PRESENT VS. FUTURE—Elsewhere on the labor scene, unions Chanter it said “Ai>rt there were PROGRAM to battle the high cost which heretofore stressed immediate ct«h increases in bargaining I v.

of living will be planned by Dr for new wage contracts are beginning to talk seriously of old-age ' bmn unto hlnl seven 90ns

Edwin C. Noursc, chairman ol benefits instead t three daughters.’’

President Truman's economic ad- When the fourth round pay boost issue comes up. management Is it any wonder tnat Job wi

anU ! WARM EMBRACE of Mrs. Sarojiul Naidu, gov. ■ ■ -r oi Provinces, greets Pandit Nehru in New Delhi o- fjnidu'i , . . ...... . . .. . .. rfi.. cIhI Inn iinc on IS

instantly converted into ham- visory council - Tho pres.dcnt has may find itself presented with these alternstives:

burger then the west must bo

found in Florida This news ; as wild and wooly as ever.

named Nourse as the top co-or- 1—Grant an outright pay hike to meet the continuing rise in the

dlnator to draft u> anti-lnflatloi cost of living.

minister's 59th birthday. The little girl looMiir, 11 1 ^otti) daughter. Padmaia.

proeram

(I ntfir'iiiinn-l]

New Look for Buick Convertible

E

HERE'S BUICK S

graceful new bumpers

spacious

-> | . --- ■ ---n„—*. ,.w.. .w .co. vl lower the Buick Super convertible fur 1949Jcompaitmcnt. The lower, wider grill-top, adjuot the front scat and raise aampletely re-atyled and atrcamlinedand distinctive hood contribute 11or lower all windows. Buick's ”nofrusj bumper to bumper. Note ilia Buick's styling individuality. Over-shift, clutchless” Dynuflovv Drive U igwjnt: full-length fenders with/all length of all 1919 Buick Superstandard equipment on 1949 Rcadfunclional chrome “venti-porLs” fonarul Roadmaslor car; is reduced matter models and optional on •oolirig the engine compartment, fullJlhrce inchis to f -d ! -■ ii,.;d,i r ■ d . i ;-s. Public c’i . y Vision curved windshield and reariand storage. A.l 19-”J Buick. con-of 1319 Buick models will begin in Window, one-piece wrap - aroin.dlvci tibles have hydraulic push.-but dc 'or -howreoms Nov. 26.

2—Or set up a retirement payment plan for workers who reach 60 or 65 years of age. Maybe labor will seek a combination of these points, but one thing is certain- It is going to insist this year more than ever before on retirement benefits. The CIO's union news service gives top editorial play to this theme It points out that a number of member unions already a-e studying the problem on the theory thst workers “have as much right to bargain for their future as for the present."

• * • .

• SENATOR TAFT’S PROSPECTS—Ohio political experts say that Senator Robert A. TaffSenate GOP policy leader, would hav« J

been defeated if he had been up for re-election Nov. 2 Many strong Dewey backers are blaming Taft for the New York

governor's failure to carry Ohio They say the Taft-Hartley Act

filled industrial Ohio against the Dewey-Warren ticket, and that Taft s speeches did not help. A Cincinnati politico said; “The big unions naturally opposed Taft, and the more conserva-

live workers who generally have gone GOP in Ohio would not

swallow Taft at this time.”

t Taft comes up for re-election in 1950 By that time the pendulum

nay have swerved. • * * *

• FEUDING CABINET MEMBERS—Commerce Secretary Charles Sawyer ami Agriculture Secretary Charles Brannan. who have never agreed on how much wheat the United States could afford to ship to Europe, are swinging statistics at each other again. Sawyer piously observed In a recent New York speech thst wheat exports in the next year should be held to 400 million bushels although he said they might go up to 425 million bushels if domestic consumption is held to 700 million bushels. »owy«r, Brannan and his aides contend that 450 million Ironnon bushels should he the minimum export goal, and that Esudino It might go higher, possibly up to 525 million bushels. 8 Moreover they think Sawyer should stay in his own bailiwick He has aroused the farm belt's ire by suggesting that the government might be a little cautious in supporting farm prices One question connected therewith is whether Sawyer will remain In the president s cabinet during his gecond term. Braimar. hm , lot of campaigning for his chief and Sawyer wag quiet.

1 the tr» n5 P° rt DISEMBARKING FROM A CONVOY of trucks on Guam, U. R. Min im s prepare •<’ 1 » l,i “ USS Bayfield for China. The Leathernecks will reinforce th Aim-i- an r - ,rn " '' i r jiop 110 "’ Chines* rlvil war rages between Nationalists, Reds. U. S. W .v; plw:o. (Intcrnattonm -•

MARINES LEAVE TO REINhORCE U. S. IN CHINA

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