The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 14 December 1948 — Page 1
tt t**»**** ♦ti tiif: WE/vniKR + 11,011*' \M» COI.DEK + +4- + + * + + ,i ’ + ‘ 1 'iJl
THE DAILY BANNER
IT WAVES FOR ALL
lUME FIFTY-SEVEN
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 14. 1948.
Slnglt Copy 5 Cents
NO. 50
ILL INSTALL | FiR E M xT^ L a E oo B o RI P N R G 1 s CES BOYD SPEAKS
ADiO STATION AI UNIVERSITY
|lUA V l<> HAVE FIRST 10V, \TT STATION IN' I Mi l l) STATES (. p.M clucational bruadcast station, the first 10-watt tin' country, has bci'n i" aaw Univenb . (I,, Kidcral Cooinuinica- ■ .. ..ion, it was an|r ,, i tll ; today by Dr. Clyde Wildman, president. (,(.,,,1 was taken on the uni .ipplication by the coni- , n v, nber 22. Station jMU . n ,, been tentatively („r March 1, with four hours i a ,ly bi c least mg time sche- : ,r the late afternoon and evening hours.
f
I:
mw station, given the live ill letters WDPVViias h' en assigned a place on ,1 201, and will be heard at
i!., on the KM dial.
.era: 11 . according to Dr. Id T Ross, speech departhead and director of the ,uw radio .station, will be f- in studios in Harrison on the campus. Pick-up
in to Gobin Memorial
Me ■ t ry Hall and BowMetnorial gymnasium. A 11. jit lo ,p will also connect pn ■ box in Blackstock
ium for |
ball coverage.
Dr. Ross said, will a iniuium of six miles i the c a npus and, under ■ oi.ilitinns, may uover most
’utnarn county.
s-eiit KM plans, he added, in no way interfere with De•v 5 I'r. -etit AM broadcasttwnc weekly over the faciliof WIRE, Indianapolis. led Recluses Perish In Fire HICAGt ■ Dec. 14.- (UP) A her and sister v. ho were vn to m ighbors us aged ec- • c n in es burned to death ly today when their ornate t"ria limne, filled with coslar'iijin was destroyed by
The Surber-Wimmer public farm sale held Monday at the Wimmer farm west of Bainbridge, was believed to have been the largest farm auction sale over held in Putnam county. The crowd which attended was probably the largest that has ever attended an auction in the county and the total sales run over $115,000. Buyers were present from scores of distant points and it •seers that Putnan county farm folks turned out in great numbers for the day. The weather made it impossible for many farmers to do any work and they took the middle of the day off f.nd attended the sale which was in charge of Alton Hurst and Albert Hunter auctioneers. State Police Get 47 Slot Machines Forty-seven slot machines which a state police lieutenant said were shipped to a Terre Haute tavern operator by a Chicago manufacturing concern were seized Monday at a motor express depot in downtown Terre
Haute.
Lt. Eugene St. John of the Futnamville State Police Post, said the machines had been shipped to Marvin Bland, the tavern operator by the Bell-O-Matic company
AT LIONS CLUB DINNER MEET
KIKE CHIEF INDICTED AS NEW .MEMBER MONDAY EVENING
Greencastle Lions enjoyed their monthly dinner meeting or. Monday evening. The twenty one members present participated it' the dinner that was served at tht V. F. W. home. Rexell A. Boyd gave an interesting talk on the life of ar attorney. Mr. Boyd discussed tht time required to become a lawyer. The duties of judges, prosecutors and other legal functunaries were outlined. Maurice Hurst was made a key member of the Lions Club by reason of his efforts in securing ! two new members. The Green- . castle organization h““ “even k Q v
] members.
Preceding the talk by Mr Boyd, Wm. A. Lawrence, chit t of the Greencastle Fire Department, was inducted into the club as a new member.
CROWE CHARGED WITH SECOND DEGREE Ml RDEU
DANVILLE, Dec. It I/C.stoi C. Crowe of Belleville, was indicted today on a second degree murder charge in the slaying last
Tuesday of his w’ife, Mrs. Gladys j $2,000 alimony.
Cl owe, 39.
Mrs. Crowe was killed and Wayne Bell, 42, was wounded critically in the Crowe home. Sheriff Leon Bayliss said Crowe admitted he shGt his wife and Bell after a drinking party. EEl/.ABETH's IV\RY TO HE ! CHRISTENED \\ I.DNENDAY
I
SUIT FOR DIVORCE
Mrs. Mary Lou Acton has filed suit for divorce in Putnam circuit court from Lawrence W. Acton. They were married Ap'il 2. l'.*47 ami separated Deccnibei 10. 1948. The plaintiff auk 1
NOTICE All county claims to be allowed by the Board of Commissioners at their last meeting of the year must be filed with the cmanty auditor before noon on December
22nd.
Committee Hears Former President
SEX FIEND IS SOUGHT AFTER WOMAN'S DEATH BEATING PKOVEO FATAL TO GUAM JUNGLE ATTACK
VICTIM
AGANA, Guam, Dec. J4. (UP) Military authorities questioned servicemen and sought a missing sandal today in attemptto solve the slaying of Ruth Farnsworth, 27, who died with
Boys Taken To Fort Harrison
Harvey Warner, 18, Robert I Thomas, 18, and Claude Nash, 23,
LONDON, Dec. 14 Princes
Elizabeth's four-week-old baby boy will 1m- christened by the j WASHINGTON Dec. 14 Archbishop of Canterbury in one (Ur) aakei| f , of the state rooms of Bucking- pnsif , ; , nt Hrrbrrt H „ ov ,. r , n ham palace Wednesday aftei-j S |, ( , ak fi. 0 m experience today on boon, a palace announcemen. i pay boost for President Truman. s.nd Monday. There haa teen no , lfonned aourcea prcdictcd M , hint as to What name will be | Koover wolI , d rocommon( , sub-
stantial raises for the president, vice-president ami other high government officials. The na-
I out regaining consciousness 21 hours after she was found beut-
' en in a Guam jungle.
x m oidi n l()r (jy me uen-u-jviauc company | ^ wete mjured baseball, track and | of Chicago. The officer valued | on the
A other sister was rescued by a he ran hysterically thi two-story frame!
ii the University
g" 1 ampus on the city's
kh side.
'iii ai l that Miss Celesta P ti: pparently died trying • ii i brother, Richard, 70, v ali I who had been confined * h i on the building’s see-
the machines at 16,450.
Lt. St. John and State Police Detective Berl Clark obtained a search warrant from Prosecutor John R. Jett and went to the Gerard Motor Express depot to seize the machines. Terre Haute (Mrlice and Vigo county sheriff’s deputies aided the state policemen. I The machines were turned over to the Vigo county sheriff to be held awaiting court action
as to their disposition.
Program Dec. 21
At High School
The following Madonnas will be shown at the Living Picture Christmas program which will be given on Tuesday evening, December 21, at 8 o’clock in the high school auditorium for the general public: The Flight into i Egypt, Fra Angelico: The Nativity, Fra Angelico; Virgin Adoring the Infant Christ, Correggio; Holy Night, Pompeo Batoni; Th
in an auto-
truck crash on the National Road near the Putnamville state police post Sunday night, were transferred from the Putnam county hospital to Fort Benjamin Harri
son Monday.
The body of Robert Lewis Sullivan, 19, who died instantly in tile crash of a fractured skull, was sent to his home In Elwood for burial by Charles McCurry, county coroner. The acicdent occurred in the dense fog that prevailed in this section Sunday night. The car the young men were riding in struck the rear of a semi-trailer driven by George E Danforth, of Alexandria, as both vehicles were going west. Soviet Farmers Reported Aroused WASHINGTON. Dec. 14 (UPI Farmers in some arrabehind Russia’s iron curtain havi murdered several Communist oiflciaU in a bitter struggl-
given the child who may one day
tule the British empire. jurists Honor Judge Sparks CHICAGO, Dec. 14. (UP)
Eighteen judges of the Seventh , Federal Circuit paid their re speets to Judge Will M. Spark.)
Kushvillc, Ind., last night.
Sparks, 73, will ret.ro Jan. 1 as senior judge of the U. S. Cir-i cuit Court of Appeals. H ■ succeeded Evan Evans, Barabo >
Scores of servicemen wen questioned, but all were cleare l i and released. Army and navy authorities ordered their officer, to continue examining all personnel for evidence of fresh scratches that might have been received in a fight with the victim. Miss Farnsworth, a navy civ-
I'arnswort h
lion's only living ex-president |'' lHM employe from San E ranri
will scheduled to testify before a Senate Civil Service subcommittee studying top level salary
increases.
Mr. Hoover also was ex
EXTRA!
co, died in the army hospital at 12:10 a. m. (Guam time) today without naming her assailant She was found bleeding and lei pecte 11 conscious in the jungle yestei
to endorse, in general, the iec-^ day, She had disappeared Sal
ommendatoins of Budget Director James K. Webb to raise salaries of some 200 top officials be
i low the president.
Sen. Herbert R. O’Conor, D. J Md.. only Democrat on the subI i pinmittee, said the 74-year-old
unlay night from the jade shop where she worked part time. From the many injuries Miss Farnsworth received it was evident she had put up a terrific struggle against her attacker.
CHARGE TREASON IN PURLOINING OF SECRET PAPERS SOME DIM I MI:NTS IN slO CASE STOLEN WHILE I . S. WAS AT WAR
WASH1NGTONN, Dee. 14 (UPl Rep. John Rankin, R , Miss., said t'slay that souie ; secret documents in the House I UnAmerican Activities committee's possession were stolen from government files while the
i nation was at war.
I “Some of the documents stolen were taken after Pearl Harbor; we have the documents to sliow that the crime committed was treason,” Rankin said during committee interrogation of Marion Bachraeh, a writer attached to the national office of
the Ooml.nunist party.
This was the first indication that any of the secret documents involved were stolen later than 1938. Com rittce member; |Himted out that theft of secret docu
III NTSVILLE, Tex. Dee. II— (INS)— Texas prison officials were haffled today by the de- .
capUation of convict Otorenco mlents durln * w ' 1 ' William Redwlae whose head j rnor ' serious offense than peace-
was lei( on a dining (aide as In-J ‘""c espionage.
males inarelieil rom the retrieve prison farm near Angleton, Tex. Kedwine, 38, was Mstisl in prison records as “notorious.” Hi- laid spent most ot Ids prison life in solitary confinement.
"The crime here is treason,” said acting Chairman Karl
Mundt, R., S. D.
Rankin's statement came alter Miss Bachraeh, of New York City, refused to answer a long
Authorities were sure the marks |
Wis.,
I I'-van Ewi ih, B.i.abi i , rIm . r president's views would! of her defense still would show
a year ago when Evan I with hot), . a
I carry heavy weight with both
died ' t Democrats and Republicans. Judge J. Earle Major, who wa>, sllb( , mlmiU ee opened
hearings yesterday with Comptroller General Lindsay C. Wari en urging “substantial” increases in pay and expense allowances',
Da|£|jQ I lot the nation’s two top elective!
master of ceremonies farewell party, will
Sparks.
at the succeed!
Takes Own Life
! officers.
Webb appeared yesterday as
an official administration »Po k -j Farnsworth ha ,| bcen bu t ...... c,. «,r Mr I .....
on her assailant.
Lt Gomdr. Janies P. Hackelt, assistant chief of the Guam police, said he had been authorize 1 by the navy to offer a reward for one of the girl's shoes that had not been found and that might be a clue to her slayer. A navy spokesman said the" was “every indication” Miss
. sman after conferring with Mr.
O. K- Ellis, general
of the prison system, said no doubt Kedwine's was cut oft while prisoners were at thv even j meal. It was found last night as i convicts filed out of the hall j Ellis said (he murder was st, I quietly done that it was nver | before guards knew wha'
happened.
manager I .series of questions concerning
persons named in the spy healings. She remained silent on the grounds of self-incrnnination, and other constitutional grounds.
WASHINGTON, Dec. M.— (INS)—The Stale Depart mi'll t made it clear Inday that K< \
No Slumo In Bus
ermine<i ^ M
„!;:r r Hrr;;££ii
he said later under questioning j 0 ffj Ce r.
they should have “realistic" ex-1 pense accounts and a “lair sal-
ary.’
Greatest Birthday, F. Luis Mara.
r who was rescued.
l ' 1 ' 60, said she arose
1 or midnight and saw
in a stack of i brother’s room,
ame I to Celesta to get mi l • i of his room,’’ she “ i I ran downstuirs to
All hf the pictures are paintings of the great masters and are selected to emphasize the cultural anil religious side of education. The students in the Art Department, under the supervision of Margaret Boyd, are husy .painting the backgrounds and
P apor gettings for the tableaux and are
Also at work on the stained glass for the Gothic window which was designed last year by Harold Stewart, instructor in industrial
arts.
K I phone for help.” ( ^ ^
ca lied by neighbors. | folloWin g committee will < Lie running throughj ^ ln com p| pt i n g the
1,1 ' ilbor with a heax’y an-j 'a she had filled with
r to try to fight the flames ‘If They got her out uni'Ut it was too late to save !l >' r trapped on the second 11 c told officials that her k r had a hot jilate in his ' ! f she was not certain ‘ r' it was burning when the started. OVearsAjjo IN GREENCASTLE
plans for the program: General Chairman, Miss Walls: Publicity, Miss Boyd; Living Pictures. Mrs. Danforth; Costumes, Miss Stewart; Vocal Music, Frank N Jones; Ushers, Leon Snyder; Programs, Darwin Stevens Posters, Advanced Art Class. The program will be repeat'' !
at high school convocation en afl “voluntary;"
against farm collectivization foreign reports revealed today. One of the reports came from the official Soviet publication Sovlet-Lithuania. The publication’s Dec. 2 issue said “bourgeois nationalists" In Lithuania were resorting to “in-1 tlmldation and murder of Soviet folk” in an effort l<> “hinder the great work of restoring and expanding the people’s economy.’’ Soviet Russia only recently began efforts to impose collective farming on the Baltic states which it annexed in 1939. The official disclosure of the rebellion in Lithuania was coupled wth an unconfirmed report from Poland that approximately 12 farm agents of the Commun-ist-controlled government hav. been slain since Sept. 1 by ang. >
peasants.
Poland has described its at tempts at farm collectivization
en romance drove beautiful blonde Patricia Styles to turn a gun on her former fiance and then kill herself, police belnwcu today. ( Nathan N. Sugarman, wealthy) 44-ycar-old businessman, was , wounded in the shooting, which i began as he and the 25-year-old 1 actress sat in his Cadillac sedan | on a North Hollywood street yes-1
terday I Establishment of an annual Dr. Miss Styles was the daughter 1 an, l Mrs - frank 1. (ailt"n of Hal Styles, well-known radio j Award to the best De auw m .reduce, aad creator ot the ’help venity student majoring in eco rhy Neighbor " program of 1-1 announesd here to-
I day by’ Dr. Clyde E. Wildman,
mission days. j J J
' Sugarman told officers she president
grabbed a .32 revolver from the! ™<-' ” P roVi<lcS “ n annUHl
DePauw Offers Carlton Award
Carl Wall, American proprietor of the jade shop, offered a $1,000 reward for capture of the
slayer.
Miss Farnsworth's body was found only 200 yards from the shop. It was learned that the girl, a former WAC, had worked evenings to augment her m-
WASHINGTON, Dec. 14 (UP) A. P. Gjannini, founder and chairman of the country s biggest bank, i,aifl today Uicro are no signs of a business stump
in the making.
The west coast financier, who heads the bank of America and Trans-American Corp., said mllationary pressures are “lessening.” But, he added, he can sec no indication of a business set-
ed there would he no fiirthoi , ( ,
I back as long as the demand for Chinese rebel unless there was
, , , 'goods from abroad remains
a eoalilion liotween the (hlnesei"
when lie iflsell«ds#Ml liillii^’ t . S I polirv at a Shanghai news con-
ference.
Miehael VleDermoH, s|M'eia’ nssislanl l,o I In- seerelary of tile Stale Department, made the statement when asked about re ports that Hofl'iimn had indleat-
, 1 Nat oiia is governmenl and lh<
for the purchase of a trou i “
ars' ghivc compartment and shot him in the scalp and abdonen. She sent a bullet into her iwn head and continued filing wildly at Sugarman as he !l 't Phcn she slumped dea 1 besid<
the car.
"I used logo will* fat, but we broki up aLiut a >ear and a half ago,” Sugarman told officers. "Shortly after that she attempted suicide, and I lent her neither $200 for doctor bills." Miss Stlycs, a radio actress, was treated at Hollywood ree iving hospital for an overdose of sleeping tablets May 2N, 1947. Sugarman said he did not see he girl again until yesterday. SCOUT NOTH I
‘bur Clodfelter, deputy audi <*'m<)unced that he was re- ^ ln g to accept a position as man for the Federal Land
‘ °f Louisville.
lrr y Crawford and his three r *n were confined to their
; ky influenze.
1S * Elizabeth Ward, LawCrump, Tod MoKeehan and
Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 for the high school students. Friends and patrons of the school will be welcome to this convocation. The invocation and benediction will be given by Rev. John Pennant. The musical program, 1 which will be announced later, is * supervised by Miss Wanda
Stewart.
gift of $50 to an economies student dee! red best qualified by staff members of the economies department. First presentation of the award will take place next I semester at the university’s an-
nual Recognition Chapel.
Dr. Carlton, former professor of cc'ino/iiies and head of the department at DePauw, at the present time is professor Emeritus al Case Institute of Technology, Cleveland, O. He was a member of the DePauw staff from 1919-27 and associated with
Case from 11*27 to 1944.
Author, lecturer and corrtribuI tor to numerous economic journI als, I-r. Carlton is the author of | “The History and Problems of j Organized Labor; ' "Economics,” ; and "The Industrial Situation.”’
come
neau. She planned to marry ! Marine Sgt Sterling Medium: In San Francisco next Spring. Her savings from her Jobs on the navy-administered island slso went to help a brother, Laurence. 21, who now is in Mexh i on a mission for the Mormon church.
Court Order Is Defied By Mother
buys restaurant The Bon Ton restaurant, located at 104 north Jackson street, has been sold by Mrs. Ralph Darling to Mrs. Robert H. Newgent. The sale was completed
this week.
r, .uu iHoxxee.mn =..<i The restaurant will be clos''t Ashworth were absent I f or several days so that the i.i the post office due to 111*1 ferior can be completely redecop
ated New equipment has been purchased and will be installed. Additional tables will be addetl An announcement will be made in a few days of the opening.
Irs ' W. r. Hutcheson was Uss to jJeetion Three of the ;s!i;) n,church. Miss Jane Kar-
Aaa assistant hostess.
Despite the difficulties er countered, there is every indication the Kremlin plans to followthrough with collectivization throughout Soviet - dominated areas. Marshal Tito’s refusal to speed up the program in Yugo-j slavia was a basic reason for th-.
Tito-Kremlin split. gets fifth STAY
FORT WAYNE, Ind., Dec. 14. - (UP)- Ralph W. Lohaugh, a Kokomo, Ind., graverigger who confessed the rape slayings of three Fort Wayne women, today had until May 26 to prove ho was under the influence of drugs when he pleaded guilty. Lobangh was granted his fifth stay of execution yesterday. H ■ first was sentenced to die last Fch. 9. The latest stay postpon,,,I thp execution scheduled Jan.
15.
All members of Troop 99, arc urged to attend an important meeting, this eveliirg at 7:30 r the Christian chinch basem -m. plans will he ma le for the Sco- ' circus and the Christmas party Any boys interested in being 3couta ate invited to attend. Local Boy Heads Deke Fraternity Frank Huostis, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Huostis, 1113 South College, has boon eleete 1 president of the Delta Kappa Epsilon
fraternity at DePauw.
Huestis entered DePauw with the class of 1946 and served in
the army during the war.
Other officers elected by the fraternity were Reid McCulloch, Ontario, Canada, vice-president
Cubs To Meet Delphi Friday
NEW ORLEANS, Dee. 14 i (IP) Mrs. Mary Snyder defied a court order today and said she would count on prayer instead of
.'•nrgery to restore the use of her I
10-year-old daughter’s paralyzed
legs.
She took the little blonde girl <„it of Foundation hospital here yesterday, Just a few hours before a scheduled operation, and said she would appeal the youth court ruling that ordered her to lot doctors treat her daughter. Little Marilyn Joan Moger was eager for the operation Whioh doctors believed would let her walk again. I But her mother called a halt
< 'mimiiinisls.
WASHINGTON, Dee. II — (INS)—AI L and (TO leaders as semhly in Washington t< day for |iost-eleelioii pow-wows *n |M»litieal and legislation. Kihor legislation was list, (| a key item on the | agenda id both nni ui groups. 'l Repeal of the Ta ft - Ha it ley law I is experted to top the list.
%
\\ \slll\GTON, Dee. I I — (INS)—Prrsj.dcnt Tnitenn is ex : peeled to ask the new Demoj eralie ( »llgress next month to |\nt<- extensive federal grants in
aid tor eel leaitlon.
11 in,11IIII•-,! nn I'"R' l''o,ir,
Fog Over State Causes 3 Deaths
INDIANAPOLIS, Dec. 14. (UP) The heavy blanket of fog which hung over Indiana yesterday counted a heavy toll of traf-
fic fatalities today.
State police reported thalj three persons were killed in ae
cidents over the state yesterday.• 0|lcs
Authorities believed that most of the mishaps could he blamed on
strong.'
Giannini blamed the slump in department store sales on higk prices. He said peopl' "are hav ing to dip dnto savings" to buy essentials. The west coast prolonged maritime strike, he said, explains why department storo sales there were especially low. NO MORE "< OOlxILS” KEN DALLY ILLE, Ind. Dee II (UP) There must be no cookie jars in Kendallvillo. Mayor Robert Moses ruled today. Charges will be filed against any persons who fail to cooperale with the no gambling order by operating “cookie i u punchhoards and other gaining devices,” Moses said. SECOND M \KKI HRII I GOSHEN, Ind., Dee. 14 (UP) Mrs. Eli Martin today buried the husband she remarried two weeks ago, 23 years after they
were divorced.
Martin died Sunday night at
j the age of 89.
Mrs. Martin, 82, said her last two weeks of married life win:
Coach Tom Goldsberry and bis at the last minute and took the Tiger Cubs will travel to Delphi girl back home to Long Beach,
Friday evening seeking their Miss. ”1 just couldn't go through , - ( th( ., r |)icK . Z sixth basketball win In seven, with it," she said. ' collided with -
starts at the ' «inee
We just thought we'd like to
- bo together again after all these
poor visibility beeause of the fog.' ycttrs .. jj,,, Ha j ld
Walter Foxworthy, 55, and his —- wife, i.elah, 52, Carmel, were; 0 {■.> ^ O O
expense of the
Oracles.
Todate, the px-al high si'hool
netters bridge,
Oreensburg and Crawfordsvllle while bowing only to Blooming-
Marilyn hasn't walked since
large
last April, when she suffered an
accident that paralyzeu both |
have defeated Bain-! legs. Since then her mother has Attica, Martinsville, resisted all efforts to give the
girl medical care.
„ "Religious and praysrful ' care ton and that was the night they of an "authorized practioner' of
I truck on Ind. 431 north of Indi-
missed 19 free throws.
Although it is reported that Delphi is- not quite as strong ss last season, the Oracles will have
the Christian Science Church would do her more good, Mrs.
Snyder maintained.
Marilyn's father, Norman
the advantage of their home floor | Moger of Carpio, N. D., finally and fans. i went to the courts to try to get Coach Goldsberry is expecting | me< fl‘' al attention for his daugh- _ t
Ontario 'Canada, vice-president; a st*ff tussle with the Delphi | ter The Harrison county . Miss.) . , lfte d partially in most of me Carl s’Sorenson Olivet Mich ouintet and is drilling ,his drap- youth court approved his petition stale yesterday afternoon. But secretary; ami Carl A Newliu’ try agitators at top speed this and ordered his ex-wife to allow a mist dosed In on many areas Hutsonville, 111., treasurer. week in preparation for the tilt. Marilyn to undergo surgery. last night.
anapolis.
Paul Fleck, 34, Martinsville, died in Indianapolis General Hospital lust night of injuries suffered earlier yesterday in an accident south of Glens Valley on
Ind. 37.
The Weather Bureau here said a cold wave, expected tonight after rain in some parts of Indiana today, would freeze wet pavements. The fog which slowed traffic to a crawl and grounded planes in the star yesterday
the
0
Todays Weather 0
and 0
Local Temperature 0
Mostly cloudy and colder today. Rain Wednesday, beginning in west and south tonight. High today 35 to 40 north and 55 to 60 in extreme south. Low tonight 32 to 35 north, to 50 extreme south. Minimum 46° 6 a. m 47 '
7 a. 8 a. 9 a. 10 a. 11 a.
ni. m. m. m. m.
47" 47' 47° 47“
12 noon 1 p. m.
