The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 4 December 1948 — Page 2

THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1948.

MORTON

Billie Newgent of Glendale C.il lornia visited relatives here last vc« k when enrnute to Dell lit for n new ear whieh he had pin i.iM-d His father. Bill New^ei ! arnmipanied him back to <«!' '.ds X<ji a visit. Bov. nad Mrs. Ome.od and tons were Sunday dimer guests f.l Mr. and Mrs. itussell O'Haver Mr. a.id Mrs. Donald Cooper and daughter visited Mr. and Mi 1' r. nk Cooper Sunday. A nmtiber ef people from Mor-

ten ennimunlty attended the .ui vral :.f Mis. Lizzie Obenchain in Greencastle on Sunday after-

i'»on.

Mr. and Mrs. Kd Stone entertained with a Thanksgiving dinner for the following people, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bolin of Danville; Mr. and Mrs. Earnest Siddons of Indianapolis; Mr. and Mrs Robert Garl and Mr. and Mrs. Vcrlin Jarvis and son of Greer.eastle. Cynthy -.ut Kaaiey is visiting her grandpaients. Mr. and Mrs Hadley in Danville.

CORN KING AND PRINCE

CHICAGO. JU,. —"That’S a lot of corn’ was the observation ol the ’ora King and Brince of the international Livestock Exhibition. New •on I. Halterman (lefti ol Rushville. Ind.. and his .on. I.air..

tt .iterman s sample of hybrid seed corn won the grand championihip over hundreds of entries at the exposition's grain and hay show, tnd to make it a clean sweep for the Halterman family. Lair won ■op honors in ttie junior corn showing. It marked the first time in the li iory of the show that a father and son won botti corn titles

SHOPPING CONVENIENCE

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Do your Christmac shopping in Greencastle and meei your friends here Before and after shopping. Cafe Royale

-sccmY.Vrt Needlework C hristmaK Party The Christmas party of the Art Needlework Club will be held at the home of Mrs. Minnie Hurst. 627 East Seminary street, Tuesday afternoon at 2 o’clock.

•I* •!*

Martha Washington Club Meets Wednesday The Martha Washington Club will meet Wednesday at the home of Mrs. J. F. Spurlock. There will be a Rift exchange. 4&+ + + + P + + + + + + +© ANNIVERSARIES e* -J- -1- -k i&i Blrthuay Mrs. Irene Cole. Roswell, New Mexico, Saturday Dec. 4th. Mrs. Charles Ray Hunter, S. Indiana St . Sunday Dec. 5th. Glenda B. Underwood, 1 year old today. Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Marlon Underwood. CLUB CALENDAR Monday Morning Musical Chorus re- | hearsal 7::i0 Miss Kathleen ■ Co ’ pheil. Current Literature Group of * AAUW Misses Anna and Mildred Dimmiek. Bloomington St. Fortnightly Club Mary Elizabeth Peck. Monday Bo k Club .8 o’clock Mrs. H. E. H. Greenleaf. Tuesday St. Paul's Catholic Guild — 1 Pitch-in Supper Chapel 6:"0 p. 5i. Tri Kappa Initiation 6:.'!0 Zink Fleenor Dinner at Old Trail Inn. Celta Theta Tau 8 p. m. Mrs. Albeit Williams, 422 Anderj son St. Wednesday P. E. O. Dinner Mrs. James | rente. 615 Ridge Ave. Friday Century Club 2:.'!0 Mrs. Lester Jones. Womans Study Club 2:,'10 - i Mrs. John Cook. IN MEMORY Smith In loving memory of oud dear husband and father, Cecil Smith, who passed away, Dec. 5. 1947. The years may wipe out many things But this they wipe out never The memory of those happy

days

When we wore oil together.

THE DAILY BANNER and HERALD CONSOLIDATED Entered In the postoffice at Greencastle, Indiana as second class mail matter under act of March 7, 1878. Subscription price 120 cents per week: $4.00 per • year by mall In Putnam county, S5.00 to $7.80 per year outside j Putnam County. S. It. Rarlden, Publisher, j 17-19 Smith Jackson Street.

CARD OF Til WHS We wish to express our sin.‘ro thanks to all of our friends md neighbors for their kindness ihown to us since the burning of >ur home. Mr. and Mrs Charley McCarty. pd. HOSPITAL NOTES

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TODAY’S BIBLE THOUGHT Some of us plan a day or a w. ( k or a year ahead. The cn - at >r planed countless ages nhoa l. We are a part of his plan. Let

: u. play < ur part. Whose goings

forih have been from of old, from everlasting. Mi. 5:2.

John Brattain of Greencastle R 4. was dismissed Friday. Beatriqe McCallie of Cloverdale, was dismissed Friday. Mrs. Margaret Overshinner of Greencastle R. 3, was dismissed

Friday.

Mrs. Edith Good of Bainbridge

was dismissed Friday.

Betty Ruhley cf Greencastle R. 3, was dismissed Friday Mrs. Blanche Dunbar of Gosport was dismissed Friday.

SEE INCREASE IN

| bushels with an estimated carryover of 7.000.000 bushels for a total estimated corn supply of 278.000.000 bushels. This is a 31 percent increase over last year which, based on the above ratio, would mean about a 15 percent ’ increase in the number of sows farrowing in the spring of 1949 over the number for the spring of 1948. On this basis, the estimated number of sows farrowing next

■’Nobody talks that way!" you may say, hut wrongfully so. Naturally, I wouldn’t tell a couple of terrible jokes like these if I didn’t have a reason. My reason is that people use a lot of ’’English’’ just as had as that above. The grammar needn’t neces. sarily be wrong, but the meaning certainly is. For inatanre, in my morning paper appears an editorial about

-l-re. 2 To suffer to be; uau,,. or permit by not preventing.-' ' Analyze these meanings You bear up under someth,*' that is unpleasant, disagreJj painful.

spring would be 590.000 as com-j that Phi Kappa Psi fraternity

pared t - 513,000 last spring. This' would be the third highest production in history, exceeded only in 1942 and 1943. and would mean the number of fat hogs coming to the market In the fall an winter of 1949 would be con-

that has suspended the Ambers* chapter because it has taken in a Negro over the national presi-

dent's veto.

The paper says in this editorial ’’It is a reminder that our country still has a long way to

siderably larger than the nuiiih>' ^ rgve j on road to tolerance.

IHltSOXAl And Local News ii it i i; f s

anticipated this year.

However, the Purdue eepnomihts adil the warning that these calculations could be conaider- 1

1919 I- \KROV\IN4«n U p gP t jf farmers in any con-

siderable numbers avail themselves of the corn loan and seal their cribs instead of converting

the corn into pork.

The way this newspaper and many thousands of us use the word ’’tolerance" is just as wrong as "I ain’t et yet.”

Erich

This is Saturday, and since

Wife and i hildren.

ch.

Indiana farmers will be back in the hog business on a larger scale than usual next spring if the number of sows to farrow in the spiing of 1949 follows its several year pattern <>f relationship to the fall corn supply. In the November issue of

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ray •‘Economic and Marketing InforHuntei and Mr. and Mrs. Buell mation,” Purdue University agri-1 Ross attended the Sonja Henie cultural economists point out i Ice revue in Indianapolis Sunday (here has been a close relationevening. ship in the past in the fall corn The F. A. H. Club will be held supply in Indiana and the numin the basement of Roachdale her of sows to farrow the follow-1 library the third Wednesday, ing spring. By‘‘fall corn supply.” I Dec. 15. Hostess Will be Mrs. they refer to the year’s producEthel Boswell. J tion plus the October 1 carryD). Clyde E. Wildmau. presi- over supply. From 1930 to 1947. dent of DrPauw University, wi.l th e economists state. 46 percent speak on ‘The Open Eye Informs 0 f the variation in the number of the Open Mind” before the sows fal lowing in the spring can | Greensburg Department Club at b e attributed to the influence of!

8 p. m , December 7. ; the past year’s corn supply, thusi you have all day tomorrow to get Tom Hendricks, Francis Lane,' constituting a highly significant over the bad taste today s^colWalker Reasor, Bill Hurst, relationship. umn may leave in your mouth I Walki i Reasor, Jr., have return- ! On the other hand, the ccon-, hope you will forgive me if I tell c i home after spending three omists point out that contrary you a couple of terrible jokes, days in Chicago attending the to the popular belief, there has Since this is the first time I International Livestock Show. I not been a significant relation- have ever done it I am sure you Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Shirley ship between the corn-hog ratio won’t hold it against me, par-j have returned from Terre Haute for the tall months and the num- 1 ticularly since I have a definite where they were called by the her of sows farrowing the follow- reason for doing it, as I shall exdeath of Mr. Shirley’s stepfathe-, mg spiing Only about 26 per-j plain a little later.

Milton Rhyan. He passed away cent of the variation in the perWednesday at the Union hospit- iod can be explained by this al in Terre Haute following an jatio, thus establishing the corn illness of ten weeks. Death re- supply as superior to the cornsuited from complications caused hog ratio as a basis for long

by a broken hip. Burial was in range predictions.

Highland I-awn cemetery. i According to the records, a ten

i percent change in the corn

supply was followed by approxi- j niately a five percent change in the same direction in the number of sows to farrow the following

spring.

The October 1 estimate of Indiana’s corn crop was 271.000.000

Look up the word tolerance in

your dictionary.

‘•The act of tolerating, etc.

i tc."

Now look up “tolerate.” “1. To bear up under; to en- I

You suffer to be somethin

that you really don't like J

are willing to bear up under You can allow somethin* u

cause you have the 8 upe nw power or privMe ? e t 0 prevent or

forbid If you so choose. In other words, when w

preachers ami teachers an(1 statesmen exhort us to be tojer.

ant with minorities, wit*,

who differ from us in race, re.

ligion, color, they certainly

not mean that we just ’’bear up” under them or to "suffer them tu

be.”

What thnt paper really meaot was not that wo haw a long w» v to travel on the road TO toler. ance, but on the way FROM tolerance to brotherhood.

ENTIRELY DIFFERENT CHRISTMAS CARDS EITEL’S

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sill '£-•

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Remember the itory of the little Dutch boy who kept hii flnjtr In a leak in the dyke? Thu« h* loved his land from a discstrovi hood.

| FOR SALE-: Young man’s Glen plaid suit, excellent condition. Real value. Also gray flannel trousers. Call 440 or

I

, number 5. 4-2ts

Over Five For Under Five...

There was never a Christmas shopping list constructed that didn’t call for at least one gift for someone over five (years) for under five (dollars). To help fill in the blank spaces . a record album of old favorite melodies . . the very newest novels or non-fiction - - - a double deck of playing cards leather address book or date book - - - matched pair of pictures - - - box of stationery or note paper - - - matched cigarette box and ash tray - - - wooden salad fork and spoon set of 8 crystal tumblers or fruit juice glasses glass or metal sail and pepper shakers milk glass plates or compotes - - - handy silent butler - - - set of 8 initialed coasters - - - leather billfolds for both men and women - - - all for under $5 and many, gifts for just a dollar at

FOR SALE: 1948 GMC G ton pick-up with accessories and enclosed 7 1 ., foot body. See Emil 'oopei al H. & M. Sales Co., 319 North Jackson StS. 4-3p

FOR SALE; Bassinette and mattress. Rhone 728-M. 4-lp

Sunday - Monday DEC. 5 AND 6 “Best Years of Our Lives” M ith Frederic Mar.-h, Dana, Andrews, Myrna Loy, and Teressa Wright SUNDAY SHOWS START At 3:110 - 6:041 - 9 |». M. Monday shows 6:00, 9 I*. M. LADON THEATER KOACHDALK, IND.

PERSONALIZED CHRISTMAS CARDS EITEL’S

Here are the jokes from a volume called the "Thesaurus of

Humor.”

Y ju can find them under the heading “ENGLISH." 1 "Is it correct to say: You have J | et? j

No, it’s wrong.

Why is it wrong to say: You |

have et ?

Because I ain’t et yet.” Pretty awful, isn't it? Well, here's another one, even I

worse;

“Did you study your history ? “Naw, I ain’t had no time for nothin’ but my English."

We, too, are RELIABLE... it "A service that can he depended upon." That is the way this Prescription Pharmacy is often characterized by men in the medical profession, ■who realize fully the importance of careful and conscientious compounding. Many leading physicians uow direct their patients to bring prescriptions to us. Since our service costs no more, why not call on us with your *ex( prescription ? Your patronage is appreciated.

Phon* 36#

£?oan ^Pharmacy Formerly K*ll«r Co«in Pharmacy

PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST

L\

16 &. Washington St, GREENCASTLE, IN)-

m—

“How corny!” ■md rightfully nu.

you may say, I

PENING

OF THE

SAM HANNA'S BOOK STORE

* 1 LI’! U| UK SI, |.;m t a *0 .'•;•■••*. known an 5 "1 IM 1 r ""'- Sl,ll ""l .Ill 1 iiiilts north <• tsj *»|' <'|u\ 1-1,1 , i,. 111(11;' nil will I,,- mtlil 1,11 I , m'b, ' , *'[ . "" "" tl''’ l-r. nils.-s, ,l1 ' "''''I'lli Tln-i, ill" "mm lir.UM,.. will, hi,,,,.,. "’"'I'M. a | w.ll, -1 tix 'iUnh "* ., Elertrli'J, \ .Hi l ! 1 ' ' I ”" • bun In,If " lUaM" |K 1,,,.„„ „ ,, . Hurry .Ini,. roi,i,i,|H><ini,i<r Hi":l.. « w HiikIk m. Attiiriie.vM 4-il-T-::i. xoiti 1: or m%i,k or hi:a 1 Kw-rtT'K Jly s ir, a. a, an nnli ,- i,f , i,, I nin.-.'n I’in nii <’.,„rl. t|„. un ,|, , -ivni-.l, Kiiiirilini, „f i-liiii,,, |- S"-I" "..y. will I ,, w . i.ffl^K i Invli.s ft IlnaliiK. 1 i" i-ni-iiHl I.. ‘"’I""'", "ii Weilin Milin, ii,, innj •l,'"'Ullr>. IIMM, at till- Innn ” 00 I'" k I’ .Vi. and from ' "1 nax Ilii-ivn 1 ti,- nnlll Hoiil. nfr, ,- .' V'," 1 ' K; ' 1 ’' r '' , n, ’t 11*mm t Inti, " 1 ;l11 ‘I'I’I ■ MI-'I \ii(ik*. 11 rial,, ' “a' - Mlalr In lmiKini. in Halil ell, imi Iv Swi-crii.j anil iIi mi , iln .l a "Haws. «H„iit,,| |„ Putnam i',„ii 1 v. 1 ndinnn, 1 o-na it: t I'.14-*vi -n ncr? s off•tli,. Houtli oitil | ” •' I’fd I of tfi«- hoiiiIo’hnI J t" y r ^r t,o, i TowiiMhip is ! iH.i t »1. Kuniru wpst. Comin.-ni | 11 K • t tlii- hoiklieant « .if • s;ii<! sucilon; thi'tice wt-sf 11 uli lins 2»i links; thmiPu imrili | f., •I.’KI-. .-s W. Mt U clKlillH II II.I UJI.J Jhiks; tiienut* north H 1 ^ t i'ii rhniriH !»l links to Dmsue 1 ion ■ 11 nr- In-t vvu.n sni.l s.-.-tion and hi-.’lion 26; thi n. . hoiiUi with Haiti s. t-t ion lin,. ;» chnliiH •*-' -j links to th # . |j|n<‘»‘ nl l,i - ^itiiiin^. ronf.-lining II MuruM, mor,. or lusH. Hftlp wi|,l hi* inu(Ji’ siiljji-.-f to tho approval of said (’.Mirt, anil on tho following toriwa an.1 t-on-clillnrtH; T»rniH—T'.isli . No 420 Marvin N. Swoonov Otinrdlan ITnphos A- Ifu^hcH, Attornovs 4

APPROVED BEAUTY SHOP (IN HOOD BARBER SHOP) Saturday, December 4-12 Noon

Highly recommended operator with 12 yrs. experience, who has worked for leading hair stylists of the state. Formerly owned and operated a shop in New Castle, Ind. Qualified in all lines of beauty work.

THE SHOP HOURS WILL BE 9:00 A. M. to 5:30 P. M. Each Day - 6 Days A Week - Open Wednesday Afternoons SPECIAL CARE GIVEN CHILDREN UP TO ID YEARS OF AGE FOR APPOINTMENTS CALL 442-M

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MRS. VIRGIL DEEM OWNER

MRS. JOYCE WOLF DIXON OPERATOR

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