The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 1 April 1949 — Page 2
THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, FRIDAY, AFRil 1, 1949.
Our borrowers have a lasting satisfaction and confidence in our manner of doing business. Why Not Join Them? INDIANA LOAN COMPANY 13 EAST WASHINGTON ST.
PHONE 15
EASTER SPECIAL s 2 WEEKS ONLY HALLIWELL MACHINELESS PERMANENT WAVE WAS $6.50 NOW $5.00 REAL ART BEAUTY SHOP 3<M5 EAST HANNA STREET PHONE 477
FREAK STORMS Northwestern Bell Telephone Company reported that heavy snows had broken long distanrj lines in 500 places, isolating 50 {owns in Nebraska, Sc/uth Dakota and Minnesota. Five hundred farms were isolated. ! Highway and railroad officials ordered out extra crews to clear right-of-way and pavements covered by drifts up to six feM 'deep. Good progress was reportetl and traffic was expected to He almost normal by nightfall. A man and wife were killed in a collision during the blindin" snowfall in Minnesota and a Newry, Minn., farmer was killed when his tractor hit a soft •Shoulder and overturned. Western cattle ranchers sent their cowboys out to search for i^lves too weak to feed from their mothers. The storm struck at thf height of the calving season.
LOST: Boy's navy blue coat size 10 at Miller’s School. Finder call 742-J, l-3p. m' FOR SALE: Crosley radio'phonograph combination. W'ill sell for one half original selling price. Kersey Music Store. 1-21.
Flames Destroy 2 Planes, Hangar INDIANAPOLIS, April 1.— (UP) An exploding electric light bulb was blamed today for a flash fire that burned two light airplanes, destroyed a hangat and seriously binned one man at Schoen Field, Fort Benjamin Harrison, late yesterday. Officials said the light bulb, lying on a wing of one of the planes in the maintenance hangar. ignited the plane in a matter of seconds. They said the flames spread rapidly to the wooden framework ot the hangar. Damage was estimated at about $30,000. Sgt. Eugene Adams. Indianapolis, an Indiana air National Guardsman who was working in the hanger, was the only man injured. Adams received burns about the face and hands.
Barney H. McClure of Palo Alto, California, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. I^aFayette LeVan Porter. Mrs. McClure and chilUrerj have been here for the past month.
RAINCOATS A Fine Selection NYLON ZEPHYRS--$10.00 TRENCH COATS-ALL PRICES CANNONS THE MEN'S STORE
THE DAILY BANNER
and
HERALD CONSOLIDATED
tbe partofflM at
Entered In
ireencaatle, Indiana aa lana mall matter Bader act at March 7, 1878. Subecrtptlon pile# 20 oeata per Reeks fAM year by mall la 96.00 to 97.M par Putnam County.
■. B. Baridea. 17-10 Bootli
Personal And Local News B H 1 E f S Mrs. Orville Hill was released rom the hospital Wedhesday. Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Durban.. •’Ulmore, are the parents of a on born Thurday. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Harvey, iockville, are the parents of a laughter born Friday. W. S. C. S. of Clinton Falls ire to meet with Mr. and Mrs lev. Porter Thursday, April 7. Mrs. Mattie Cline, west Columoia street, returned to her home Thursday from the Methodist lospital in Indianapolis. Clinton Home Makers Ecelomics Club to meet at Mrs. Gerald Clodfelter, April 5. Don't orget April Fool pockoge. W. D. Wright, who has been onfined to his bed at his home n Fillmore since Jan. 1st, has been taken to the Putnam County hospital, seriously ill. There will be a meeting at the •hurch Tuesday night, April 5 .or quilting on the club quilt, all members come if possible, Manhattan Christian church, for Golden Circle Oub. Twenty-five employes of the G. C. Murphy sGreeneastle store attended the style show given by the Brazil store of G. C. Murphy Co. Before boarding the bus foi Brazil, they were the guests at dinner of the manager; Melvin Meyer. The Floyd Township Farm Bureau will meet at the Center . hool house Monday April 4 v/ith a pitch-in supper at 6:30 p. r.. for the township 4-H clubs. County agent Kenneth Harr's will present a program in relation to 4-H club work. All are welcome. Gen Raymond S. McLain, Chief 'f Information, Department ct the Army, will address delegates to the state convention of the Reserve Officers Association in Indianapolis, April 9-10, Lt. Col. Tied R. Donaldson, Lebanon, president of the association announced today. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Buis of near Belle Union have received word of a birth of a son, born to Mr an d Mrs - Dennis Buis of Lizton, at the Methodist hospital March 30th. Dennis is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Buis and Mrs. Buis is the former Donuis Bennett. Mrs. Buis and baby are ta return l ° their home Saturclay. General Jesse M Lee Post No. 1550 will celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United - tales during the week of April 3 ' B A P'tch-in dinner with the Auxiliary will be held on Sun<lay night, April 3rd, at 6:00 p. m. in the post home. All posts n the United States will celebrate the Golden Jubilee.
Today s Market Hogs 1000. Weak to 25c lower than Thursday’s average. Good and choice 170-235 lbs., *19.75*20.50: 235-260 lbs., $19.25-*20; 260-300 lbs., $18.50-$19.50; 300140 lbs., $17.50-918.50; 100-160 lbs., $16.50-$19. Sows steady at $15.50-917.50.
HOTICK
\i>tIre Is hereby Riven "'■"id II Utley Hoyles has
that riled
her petition in the Putnam flreult ' omi to have the lime and place
of her birth determined.
Said petition Is set for hearlntt
on April l. 1949.
Dati'd this :llst day of March. 1949. Diner C. Akers, Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court. ' Seal > Din.
STARTED CHICKS Fed day and nfgtit. u. B. App. AAA baby WR, NH, BR, A-Wh, W. Is** sexed or unsexed. Tueft. A Frl. afternoons. Be sure, order ahead. Cane and Peat litters. DiscountN on feeds, brooders, batteries, farm supplies shipped direct to you. Herlngten Hatchery, W. City limits oa SM, Brazil.
lira. Cherry To Be Hostess Monday The Monday Club will meet with Mrs. John Cherry, west Walnut street, at 2:30 o’clock Monday afternoon. •p + •!■ + ‘Modern Priscilla Club To Meet MondayModern Priscilla Club will meet Monday afternoon at 1:30 o’clock with Mrs. Roy Abrams. + + + + Fortnightly Club To Meet With Mrs. Jones Fortnightly Club will meet on vlonday evening at the home of .Irs, Thad Jones with Mrs. Rex Phorlton as assisting hostess. Irs. L. H. Dirks has charge of the program. + + + + Morning Musieale Meeting Postponed The guest meeting of the ireencastle Morning Musieale has been postponed until May. + 4* + + Beverly Jean Cox Weds iordon H. Sandberg Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Rogers, •oad 43 south, have received an announcement of the marriage of Beverly Jean Cox to Gordon H. Sandberg. The wedding took place on Wednesday, March 23, at the Normandy Wedding Chap1 in I.zmg Beach, Calif. Mis. Sandberg is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Cox of Long Beach, former residents of easl Washington street. •!• 4- 4* 4-VVeinrichter-Whitehead Wedding to Be Saturday The marriage of Miss Barbara Ann Weinrichter to Walter Ruasell Whitehead will take place Saturday afternoon at two o’clock at the Gobin Memorial Methodist rhurch. A reception at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house will follow the ceremony. Miss Weinrichter is the niece of Mr. and Mrs. I^aFayetto LeVan Porter. ^4-4 , 4-4*4 , 4 , 4 - 4 , + TT+£ ANNIVERSARIES Birthdays Shirley Baldwin. Bainbrldge. today. April 1. Larry D. McGinnis, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. F. McGinnis, Fillmore, 9 years old today, April 1st. Wodding Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Craft, 199 west Liberty street, 16 years today, April 1. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wright, 34 years today, f \pril 1st.
OBSERVE 50TH ANNIVERSARY SUNDAY
Mrs. Cloyd Moss, who charge of campershipa if are needed.
COMPLETES COURSE
Miss Dorothy Ann Dreyer, R. R. 4, Greencastle who attended
Central Business Colley , apolts. has complete htf vate Secretarial” co Ur8( , Dr ®y*r was placed by school’s employment
as a
stenographer with ,,
nite Meta. Corpora,^; apolis, **
.Mr. and Mrs. Fred \\
Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Godjrd will observe their 50th wedding anniversary on Sunday. April 3rd, with a family dinner it their home at 922 north Madson street and with open house n the afternoon from 2:00 to
5:00 o'clock.
Mrs. Goddard was Miss Ella Skelton before their marriage on April 3, 1899. They were secretly married in Paris, 111. They have been residents of Greencastle for fifty years and have lived In their present home for forty years. Mr. Goddard was employed by the New York Central Railroad for forty-eight years and nine months. He retired July 31. 1937. Mr. Goddard is 75 and Mrs. Goddard 72. They have one daughter, Mrs. Luella Hardwick of Anderson and a foster child, Mrs. Rozella Gill of Terre Haute.
(iodilard
The official board of the First Christian church will have a special called meeting at the church Sunday evening at 7:30 o’clock.
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Gorham 612 Apple street, have received word from their son. Frank and wife of Monrovia, Calif., that they are the proud parents of i. son. Verlin Bryce.
24 HOUR SERVICE WHITE CLEANERS 809 N. Jackson St
FISHIN' FUN
Howdy Hopefuls. After a pleasant vacation from the job of bringing the truth to the Local Hopeful*, we are baek on the job, and have sworn to stick to the absolute In the telling of the 4lolngs of tttt- local nlmriMln. Our 627 operator are all in prime condition, the typewriter Is well oiled (a very pleasant condition to fln<1 oneself In), and we await the frantic-antics to begin. It is reporter! from usually reliable sources, that Audrid Fleenor, Harry Moore, and Fred O’Hair were actively engaged in gigging suckers In Big Walnut. We have just been told that the large turtle In the lake at Ohurubunco has Just been caught by Fred Pease, using a,fly rod, baited with catalpa worms. Sam Rarlden, L. C. Conrad, and Guy T. Wright have been named to lead the annual May Pole dance. We are happy to bring you the news that tbe Indiana Gross Income Tax has been abolished, and refunds for the laat two years will he marie. Oh Brother— APRIL FOOL
CHURCHILL SPEAKS ship of the West more than its
hostility.”
The 74-year-old Churchill rested in his hotel room today, planning to attend only two private functions, a noon reception and an evening banquet. Tonight he will accept an ’’honorary lectureship" from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. A capacity crowd of 13,900 cheered Churchill’s address which was broadcast to a worldwide radio audience and to television spectators as far west as St. Louis. He spoke at the first of a series of M. I. T. mid-cen-
tury convocations.
Churchill said he did not believe that ‘‘violent or precipitate action” should be taken now against the menace of Soviet Communism. He added his belief that ‘‘war is not inevitable.” Avoiding a picket line of 100 leftists marching with placards accusing him of warmongering Churchill entered the vast sports arena to be greeted by a stand-
ing ovation from the crowd.
President Truman, who had been scheduled to be present, sent his regrets in a letter rea l to the audience by retiring M. I. T. President Karl T. Compton. Churchill said that in the was of nerves between East and West, “It may not be our nervo or the structure of our civilization which will break—something else will break —and peace
may yet be preserved.”
“Thirteen men In the Kremlin.” he said, “holding down hundreds of millions of people and aiming at the rule of the world, feel that at all costs they must keep up the barriers. Selfpreservation, not for Russia but for themselves, lies at the root and is the explanation of their sinister and malignant policy . . . “We are now confronted with something quite as wicked but in some ways more formidable than Hitler . . . These 13 men In the Kremlin have their hierarchy
a church of Communist
and
adepts, whose missionaries are In every country as a fifth column, awaiting the day when they hope to be absolute masters of their fellow-countrymen . . . They have their anti-God religion . . . Behind this stands the largest army In the world ,in the hands of a government pursuing imperialist expansion, as no czar or kaiser had ever done.” BLAST TREATY motives of the North Atlantic Pact because It la known to all that the Soviet Union does not intend to attack anyone and In no way threatens the United States, Britain, France or the other parties to the treaty . . . “Among the participants of the North Atlantic treaty arc also countries whose governments expect to benefit at the f xpense of richer parties to this treaty and make various plans wlh regard to obtaining new credits and other material ad-
t 4i) n(drW<f^ c .i Hfti/ultMtu*
1!
i
vantages.
The Soviet note charged that the Atlantic powers were carrying out extensive military measures which “ran in no way be justified by the interests of self-
defense.”
It said these measures included increasing the armed forces, stock-piling atom bombs, building a network of air and naval bases, preserving the war-time combined Anglo-American staff in Washington and establishing a western union military staff at Fontainebleau, France. “Of the groat powers,” the Soviet note said, “only the Soviet Union is excluded among the parties to this treaty, which can be explained only by the fact that this treaty is directed against the Soviet Union. •’The fact that the North Atlantic treay is direced against the U. S. S. R., as well as against countries with a people's democracy is definitely pointed out also by official representatives of the United States, Britain and
France.”
The note flatjly rejected western arguments that the Atlantic treaty is comparable to the series of firendship and mutual assistant pacts conclucdod by Ruasia and eastern European coun-
tries.
HOSPITAL NOTES Hollie Rhea, Martinsville, was admitted Thursday. John Bloomer, Greencastle. was admitted Thursday. -4 Donald Aubrey, Greencastle, was admitted Friday. Wallace Yoder, Greencastle, was admitted Friday. GIRL SCOUT NEWS Applications for camp may bo obtained from Mrs. Evan Crawley, program chairman. The dates for camp arc Scouts, June 26 to July 9; Brownie July 10 to July 16.Initial registration is due by April 10 to Mrs. Walter Ballard, 1 Seminary Court. Leaders please contact
mmwM
KING MORRISON FOSTER COMPANY Your Friendly Ford Deafer
Since 1910
Phone 268 114 W. Washington I
this It a PRESCRIPTION Pharmaty • Wo havo no quarrel with the store that sell) food, flowon and fol-de-roli. But all of ow talent* ond time are centered on the businen of carefully compounding prejcriptiom. If you’d like to have your Doctor'* order* executed in thi* "profettional atmo»phere" we ihall court it a privilege and a pleature to terve you.
Mullins Drug Store
N. L. D0NELS0N
NOTHING SO GOOD AS A THICK JUICY STEAK
And you ean buy the very T-Bones and Sirloins here • • and thay’re Government spoofed and graded —
Quality Meat Mark
22 S. Vine St.
Phone
at Penney^
BUDGET FIND AT
RAYON-AND-WOOL GABARDINE And It takes an expert to tell that careful of rayon>and>wool* from pure wool.. • >* 4 good •looking I Tailored with care, t 00 • huyl Gray, skipper blue, jade green, chm red, beige, aummer brown, black. Size* 8 to "See tag for fabric content.
