The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 8 January 1949 — Page 4
I
THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 8,
1949.
‘OH, WHY DID I LEAVE AFRICA!’
Till STUK'H Itr.rollT
'I'ow !).*>• hip trusts annual r**
Towl.MlIp
poll to t ho
port to mo Advisor Board of .j.h ks.m Township. I’utnani Counl\. Indiana. showing KocHpts. I »ishurp* :in*nIs and Balancos of u!i township rovtiiiues for tin* year
oiidiiiK I •♦*< - enilM , r •»l, 1 ‘.i4^ st.\ti;mi:nt itK« Kirrs
To%%iiM|ii|i liiml
Co. Auditor. J u Hr set nit. $ 7*'-7 I Co A idiior. !>«<•. sotmt. 704.•»« Tot Hepts. Twp Pund $1.4«J7.Lh)
Dou I'liud
Co Autlitor. surplus do^ S i - 1 (’la I ..i sles. d«K 1 1 ^ -0 I mi .1 \uditor. surplus ilo« Ci* ’1 T,,t ip ts.. I >o« Kutid $ ’I'll 11 Ion I'iiimI \ nil. of State, tall sup $1,447.12 Cm And . • oni?l. seh. fd int. i’m v h! .Mine set nil. 2.OK‘5 ■
killed Clyde Stewart, sup. kid. J. Hi nrs Olay, sumo •• Hiram Keek, lions khl. Frank Blayde*. shp kid. 'Pot. I>ish. Don Fund 'I llitioil |• , |lllll Hoy K. Blue. teacliinK D«da .M Loan, same |!»l .PI Kat heriu* Farlow. s une .laekson Twp Ti ns wild. < : Hoy Iv Blue, teaehinn -0 lad a M Bonn teuehlnn B** > Katherine Fal low, teaeh. 22 ..00 Jaekson Twp. Tins wild. *dl Hoy F Blue, tearhlng 202 20 Hula M. Donn, teaeliinn 104..h‘ Katherine Farlow. teaeh. 22VOO .1 aeksoii Twp Tins., wild. .■*:?.r.O Haul MeKeehan. transf .. 1.000.00 Hoy K. Blue, teaeh inn I.ola M Bonn, same . . 21 • 7* u*m t iioHn.. Carlow, same . 262.Kl
Otto M Stewart. tranH|>. Willie Kohhins, transp. Arthur Barker, transp.
Blayiles. transp.
J'lunkett. haul eohs
Bartlett. Ian. *er. Coleman, transp.
M. Stewart, transp.
Kohhins. transp
Kdnar Wa \ lie Otis K Haul .1
Otto Willi
Arthur Barker, transp. Kdaii Blaydes. tfiinsp. Vorth Salem <»rain t'o..
Otis 10. Han 1 I
-
Willie A rlhu Kdaai
Bartlett. Ian.
Column, transp. ■ • Stewart, same . . Robbins, saute . . .
Barker, s >me . Blaydes. same
Cities S- rviee Oil Co . kero Koliert Fallow, rep roof Hu\ !•: Bln* 1 , last it nte
Lola M l.oiix. same
Katherine Farlow. same
Bartlett, jail. ser.
Lola M l^uin. sail Katherine Fallow. Haul J. < ’olemaii. Otto M SI* wart. Willi* Bobbins, tr Arthur Barker, Koaehdale Bank Co., insurance has Hinsle. kero Sehuol Supply « Kitfer A Co. same Anierieaii KdUcatlnn Press. Iiie. reader Otis Iv Hnrliwt. ,t:ii \V |.' oiKi-r. supplii I'utnatn Or , l ,l,i ' KuKt-ne 1' lliilehins. Kii.iclid.i If Ivlfviiior. I’ubllc S<-i vlfe ' '<> • . ChM« llimn A S..i! v rep m anifh A Hlak. * 'ipl Tul IMkI'. SpffbiI o,.i,*1 |•’ulld ' ’ ' v'i:sTi{M'T UK r*' \vi. uism'iis^MKN i > Ti>nn«lil|> Hnl I in < Kfcetpi* Tul H.'l ii'». Hfftip* s I li si• II l‘Se n :»• 111 S Hatunce I • ;l linu I- I Hnlaliff Tan 1 Rfi.ftnt'i Tul Bui ami Kfffi ' 8 nis'iurs.-m.'lit Halaiif. nf :| , Tul*l**ii I **'** 1 Halnnei- .1 hi 1 H»M*eints Tnt Hal nil Hi ■. ipM i >|stiurs« , **en i s Balati" n ' - 1 . npeelnl K*el»tM»l i n Balance .Ian. 1 KoreintM Tot Bih a 'l«l H eipts I>ishurse units Bahtm-e Doe C \\ iC*hold*i»a Tn\ I B.itaoe. Jan 1 Receipts
-K .'
plUWHpi pd arno o FRi DERICI De CORI
WITH FOOTS5AI I* MAOIC — IJATTI.ia) HO0s|n, HO SKIN SKILL
Sunday Matinee and Ni'c ,*/! mm
- Men.-Tues. Kite
io
News With lli g }, Lights Of 1948
D* died homi Mr. eral
HILLS OF HOME UiDMIltlMIIHOW .LASSIE
He iofi Mrs. fomi
Protessor Tom
He Odd yean Big I
II HACK n San Krancisco zoo chimpanzee, could talk, he probably would he wondering aloud through chattering teeth why fate took him from his equatorial habitat to supposedly sunny California. Donning his long underwear and blowing on frigid fingers even fail to warm him during I hr cold wave that plunged the mercury below j the freezing mark throughout California. (International)
Try ctrsd Stop Me
Fu from tema 'of Ri ial V teme no ft
-By BENNETT CERF-
l<
''HERE’S a spry old fellow in Barnstnblche’s a day—who runs his business
Playing checkers in the said suddenly. “I think
rear
I
of the
ZIOST HEAVILY ARMED SINGLE-ENGINE CARRIER PLANE r ' 1 ’ i
./j. r , ... . .. « | hear a customer up front." JtlAl/lJll < il'A I I 1 “Keep quiet,” cautioned the
tv»v • Bewildered anil wondering about It* runsler’* tale, u dug guards her puppy in the splintered ruins ol what had been their home.
DEATH AND DESTRUCTION are left in the little Arkt.n as town ot Warren (pop 8.AOO1 when n tornado whirls through it. destroying most of lbe buildings find If" ring eon, E5 perrons dead. The tw stci also killed several persona in other c immunities (Inter nation-1'
^idi&WASHINGTOH
MARCH OF EVENTS —
NAVY'S NEW AM I MAULER, shown in test aboard carrier Kearsage off east coast. Is the world's most heavily armed single-engine carrier plane: three aerial torpedoes, machine guns, rockets, it weighs 52 000 pounds, nearly as much as prewar two-engine transport. Speed 375 mph. (International)
Un-American Probe Group Drops Plans for Expansion
Congress May Investigate Crash of $8,000,000 Plane
POOR PRESIDENT HASN’T HAD A RAISE SINCE 1908--
SO A BILL is shaping up to boost his $75,000 salary to $100,000 and his expense account from $40,000 to $90,000. Other likely salary boosts include vice president. $20,000 now, to $30,000 and a $10,000 1,000 to $25,000, and undersecret&riee, $10,000 to $22,500 (International)
f
up
Special to Central Press TT7ASHINGTON —Influential Republicans have abandoned a preW election plan to expand the House un-American activities committee into a joint committee of the Senate and House. Leader of move was Rep. (now senator) Karl E. Mundt IR). South Dakota, acting chairman of the House committee in its sensational Hiss-Chambers Communist spy piobe. Mundt had backing from many influential Senate Republicans He planned to introduce a bill broadening the com^0^%. mittee at the first regular session of the 81st
v. Congress
\ However. Mundt has reversed himself He says i that his plan originally was conceived before
R Nov 2 in anticipation that the OOP would retain
-*< control of Congress in addition to electing SgSV ~*a|, Thomas E Dewey president Now that the Democrats have regained Senate
F And House control. Mundt feels that his bill would
ips h< ' out of place
Senator Karl E
Mundt
| local John Wanamakcr. ‘‘Maybe he’ll decide no{body’s here and go away.” Another time he sought a loan of a thousand dollars from the town’s leading banker, who was somewhat hard of hearing •'fpesk a hit louder.' ordered the hanker, "and reduce the
amount a httlc."
A BIT
icozeG —■
mety-fin 1
in ,1ns own n j
store, his opw M
:harj ,f Lh :eive<
/hiorni
/A :
Uni
'harg
ard
itreet
William A. Brady, veteran producer and husband of Grace George, recalled. "To 1 < op i*p
s
r;s i Lt - v u T jr * or tl
morale in my staff, and to fr.M rival producers and theatneal r j| M | e rs. 1 always instructod : aina-ers of my road compnr.M tea hundred .ollars to their nightly r ports of hox-o'he. r,..:!' system worked fme until ore of them wired. "Only Hr tn ’ turned to the ground tins afternoon. No performance. Krre|pt*|t8€ •> Coiivn^bl. ISIS. t»i Itvnnrtt Cert Uu’.iibulKj l.v Kina K.-atur SinJIcu terveti
Hate
tame riend
FONGRESS’ YOUNGiiST AND GLl)Ui°
fe rei
George \\asliington drew I nder t lysses S. Grant Last raise raine under Truman says he ran $..i,<KI() a year. Haul came first raise, to Salt.- Theodore Roosevelt in save only a few thousealed 22 cents a pound ooo in 1873. Ham was 1908, to present S75.00'). sand. Ham, for instance, * n down to 11 cents pound. Ham was only 12 cents, is six times 1908 price*
FOUR NEW SENATORS SWORN IN BY VANDENBERG
FOUR NEW SENATORS are sworn In by Senator Arthur H. Vandenbeig of Michigan during Congress ceremonies: (from left) Lester C. Hunt (D) of Wyoming, Margaret Chase Smith (R) of Maine, Robert C. Hendiieksnjj (R) of New Jersey, Andrew F. Schoejipel (R) of Kansas. (International Soundnhoto)
0 ANOTHER PROBE? The new Congress may look into the mysterious crash of a new. eight-million-dollar bomliet-photo reconnaissance plan* after Air Force materiel headquarters at Wright Field. Ohio. OK’d the craft The plane was one which figured in Air Force defense planning
There were only two of the four-engine Republic Ft-12s. A Wright Field crew took one to Egdin Field. Fla., tor further testing Reports have it that the Eglin Field staff declared itself "checked out" on the complex craft after a two hour familiarization flight The Wright Field experts departed On the R-12 s next flight, the crew bailed out when a fire broke out aboard and the expensive
giant was destroyed
Charges were heard that the crewmen abandoned the ship prematurely. that the danger was not acute and that the lire could have been brought under control. The Air Force said the crewmen
behaved properly
In any event, several air-minded legislators are thinking about inquiring into the matter to see if a more thorough indoctrination by the Eglin Field personnel might have prevented the loss.
FOR RESORT WEAR . A dress of blue chambray trimme. with dozens of small white p> 11 buttons . . a row around th> waistline and two more rows *>' ihe full skirt Sleeves are preK.A stitchfolded (N >’ Drrsa Itratitulr Phr.tn)
Probe Figure gf ri
0 ON THE WAV—The five-year job of rebuilding United States military airpower is well-started. Congress voted nearly three billions last spring for new aircraft procurement as the first step in the program Air frame and engine production should be tripled by 1950. Employment figures, dug up by the United States Employment Service, are a good indicator of how the expansion is progressing Aircraft employers forecast an addition of 18000 workers is their payrolls during the six-month period from last August to next February By the latter month, total employment in the industry is expected to near 225,000 This is a far cry from peak aircraft employment during the war —over two million—but it is a substantial gain from the low point after VJ-Day when the bottom dropped out of the aircraft market.
• OIL FOR LAMPS OF PEACE- President Truman hopes to do In his state of the Union message what the Supreme Court apparently has failed lo do—fix once and for iUI in the minds of the coastal states the fact that oil-beanog tidrfands must remain in
the hands of the federal government.
The high court has ruled to this effect, but the coastal states and
those with large underwater areas on which oil might crop up will make an attempt in the next Congress to pass legislation which would give these
rich properties to the states
Mr Truman actively is opposed to this thinking He Will point out that the United States is using
more oil than at the peak of the war effort, that much of it comes from such far-off places as Saudi Arabia, the Weal Indies and
South America In case of war this supply would be cut off
That means the nation must maintain its oil reserves in the coast lands and the president will ask that the oil he preserved for the
lamps of peace ,
States
Seeking
Oil lands
me
YOUNGEST MEMBER of 81st Congress, 27-ycar-old Rep H>‘C 0 (D) of South Carolina, gets a few tips from its senior in< n'! ,r Adolph J. Sabath (D) of Illinois, who lias served contu 1 1906. Sabath is nearing 83 years ertd. (International Sound; 2) el
omin
~ dect
*:0'J5c GROUP CHIEF NOW SENATCI
dect
NEWEST FIGURE In a New York | federal grand jury probe ot Communist espionage Is Felix A Inslerman. pictured after appearing before the lurv tnslerman was Identified as an engineer who worked for aviation companies during the war and recentlv was rngaged in secret work for Gen•raj Fllertrie. (Internotion; IS
SENATOR KARL E MUNDT
of South Dakota, prepare*
gena'.'r
"poll ot the House un-American activities committee of
Buslifield' 8 '"l
■i - .uting chairman when he received appointment to the ti I out remainder of the late Senator Harlan J. Bushfie Mundt would have become a senator in a few days anyway.
n elected last November.
(International Sou
ndpW
