The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 4 July 1949 — Page 2
THE DAHY BANNEH GHEENCASTIE, IROIARX, MONDAY, Jt Y 4, 1949.
NOTICE TO TiXPWER* OF ADDITION 1ITR4*Pftl Not Ire ix n*-r»bv «i v n the* taxpayers of Marion Township. Putnam County, Indiana. hat the proper lesrai officers will at
This Week's Special 50 Foot GARDEN HOSE Only $4.79 GREENCASTLE HARDWARE
the offi~* of the trustee f sa. i 1 township on the 12th uay « July, j IMS at < 50 P. W . to eonsicer the follow in if additional appi ipria rions of funds and the tran-'er of funds which said officers i*o!isiifer necessary to meet the extra« rdinary emergency existing at this
♦ime.
srhool Fund
item No Hi I - ‘V0O Item So. 17 - O.od Item N*c» 22 2 » 00 I’ignrette Tax 12! 41 Poor Kelief" 1.40000 Tax: avers appearing shall hove the right to be heard thereon. The additional appropriations . nd rransfcT of funds <s finally made will i»e automaticnlly referred o the State Board of Tax Commi , ** > i sinners which Board will hold t further hearing within fifte* 1 « l *i I days it the court house . ‘Ireeneastl#*. Putnam County. Ind 1 nit. **r at such <>ther pla«*e .is »na h,, designated. At such hearing taxpayers objecting fnay l»#* h* or<i I md interested taxpnv. rs may
•inire of tic
i .... 1 .
in -
County Auditor when such hearing will be
THE DAILY BANNER and HERALD CONSOLIDATED Entered la me pMtoCflM at lirrencastla. ladlaaa m tmoomo Plata m-i| matter Bader aat at March 7, 1878. Subarflptton ,>rt« *0 rwata per fveek: M-M pai year hy nUl la Potaam U.M to r?JM par year Patnair. Uaaaty. a a Bartdea. - 17-19 Sooth Jaohaaa 81
day
June,
SHOPPERS SPECIAL FOB TUESDAY
MEN S LOSO M.F.KVK K %Vo\ SPOKT -illlKT $2.88 Tailored for look- and wear of I list r<m» soft Kay on. Tan, Blue, (ireen, Maize. S, M, MI,
MONTGOMERY WARD
ind ivhen*
held
Dated this
104b
11. B Pruitt. Trustee <«f Marion Township. Putnam County. Indiana. 27-irt.
Pehmi*\al And Local News B K I E F §
OPKV-AIK COC'KT HOI’SE YIKI.ns TO PKOftRESH SEIJMER. Tenn. iITPl M<Nairy county residents have built a i’cw court house. It wes not because tho old one wore out but because it was a traffic hazard. The old structure was built in 1891. in the days before automobiles. When ears came alonar. motorists approaching the court house sometimes rame over a steep hill too fast and the highway seemed to go right through the court house. When doors at each end of the building were open, it looked like an underpass. Kvery now and then a hasty motorist would drive right into the court house.
“I HAVE NO WORRIES • -. - - - I HAVE MY INSUR. ANCE WITH SIMPSON STONER ”
•Mrs. Amelia Flynn of Terre Halite spent the week-end with Mis. I.ura Crawley. -Miss Zel!a Farmer of Indianapolis is here visiting Mrs. X L, Hammond and other relatives. Mahon Eugene Smythe of Fill more who was admitted to the oounty nospital Saturday would | like to hear from his friends Mr. and Mrs. Kay Cline spent the w. • k-end in Hattie Creek Mich, the guests of Mr. and Mrs Johnny Morris and son. Mr. and Mrs. Forest Garin." and son and Mabel Walbring have returned home from a trip to the Tennessee ami North Carolina Mountains. The Clinton Falls W S. C. ,« Will hold their picnic at Rohe Ann Park July 7. All member and friends arc invited to come A pitch-in supper at 7 o'clock. DST). The Misses Jane and Dorothy Etter left by plane on Sunday tc spend their vacation with Miami Mrs. Allyn French at Lowell Mass. Mrs. French is the former Miss Edna Ferrand of this city.
til'ITE A DOG OAKVILLE, Tenn. (UP)— Mrs. Ernest 8. Vrscovi's dog Mirkie cracks pecans with hit teeth and gets the meats out all by himself. ALIBI PEKECT
Consciously or otherwise, we all practice “Planned Spending." Every major appliance used in your home or / apartment represents planned spending. Such purchases involve saving. For the convenience you plan te buy, for the trips you plan t te make, why not I deposit part of each pay in • Central Savings account? Xp Central National Bank
CHICAGO i UP i—James D. Bell, 26. had an iron-bar alibi when he went to court on a charge of robbing a cab driver oi $40. He was m jail that day, he said. He was.
... . 1 i**m u » \i.k oi 1,1. »i. \ iM ii-oy .. •miiiim-:,, rt in rin rm «u •T'-E or w \ttiu M.ro\ row 1*1111HTATK UK INDIANA. SH' iTirNTy uk i>rT.\'AM, Non.-., |* li.Til.y given that tin Fnisfui- ( ,i WuMliifiKlcn IovviihIui Putii.Min Foimiy 1 iMliatm, will of l « r tur snie at public am t ion th» 1 <»l 1«iwiMg •lf«crih»-f| real •^ijitu it Bui'iim FiMinty, Indjatia, to-wit . A part of the Horlhettsi (inarter o. ih,. Montloast <|iiarler. anil par «»f tlie roui‘leant «murti$r of th, iiot tlo asi .m;n ter of Section 21. I ovvnxhip 1:{ north, range went desi riiieil ,im foUow.M. to-wit lh*gititiing at i point on tin* Furnherlj«ud fond .'I II iliainH eant of tinhoiit li west . orner of (ad N’o |v of tlo* low a of i'leaK.iiu (burdens, fheru-e north sj amt 2 :i ilegree.^ east 12 rodH; tlienee north MU (p. gr* •♦*>, west |;{ and 1 I rodH: tiiein e sotitli N2 iilld , degree^, west 12 rodn: tiieliee south N% f|e> Krees. *■ ■ iht i:: and I 5 rods t*» tlm plae,. of beginning. Containing 1 aere. more «»r less Also, beginning it a point on the north line of the Ctunherland road .1.11 chains cast of the southwest earner of |«»r No. 18 n til** Town of rionsant Cardens, it the soul h West eortler of the sehoo hoiiHe lot; thence north with the West line of the sehool house lot I*;"* feet; mence westerly parallel vvitii the north line of ihe Finn horlanil road t.Ttta ehiiiiis; the nee south iMt illel with tin- east line of said tract ltl'» fc*f t<i tin* north line of the Cuniherlnml road, thene,. easterly with the north lin* of said Furnhertuitd road Ut the place of Im ginning Being lot No I *» and a part of lots No. I! ,v 1G In tho Town of pleasant BurdenJ lieing the building and grounds purchas'd from Fred and Frances Wea ver. Also, th* 1 two school buildings located in the south part of said Township and known as th** Butler and No. 10 schools To he removed hy the purchaser. Also, tin* furnace in the Weaver building, st oven iron and otlvo per-onul property in said build logs Sa ill sale Will be hold on the premises of the Weaver Building in Pleasant Hardens. Thursday July 14. FM0 at 2:n0 o cItm k P M central stnndard time Terms; Fa*sh. Haymoti<l Rex Hammond, Trustee, Washington Township, 1 ‘5-1 -11 - Rt.
General Hauling Gravel, Sand, Stone and Coal. DON SEARS
PHONE 117-M Ml
ERICH BRANDEIS It was Saturday morning. The telephone lang. “Hell'), this is Ralph. I'm at LaGuardia Airport lust Hew la from California. I don't feel lik. spending the weekend -ill by myself in Ww York. I'd be bored to death May I come out and stav with you folks until Mon-
day'.’"
“Of course, you may,” I said, and told the wife there would be another guest over Sunday.
and tokl via
So Ralph came about, hift trip.
“Isn't it wonderful?” he said. “Twelve hours from Loa Angeles o New York and only one stop. , Arthur Brisbane certainly was .ight when he said that anything mankind - an imagine, it can do." So I pumped him a little. What did he see on the trip? Nothing. He traveled all night, iml they flew so hTgh that even f it hadn’t been so cloudy he mildn'f have .seen anything. How were the meals? Oh. fine for an airplane, hut .•Rurally not so good as they vould he in the dining ear on a
rain.
Was he comfortable ? Well, yes and no He- had a seat by the window, nit it wasn't anything like'u omfortable lounge ear or a ompartment. When did he have to tie in Vew York? fl knew he came lere on business.) Well, his appointment wasn't until Tuesday. Then why did he fty? He could iave made it by tram. He looked at me as if I were omething out of the last eenury to ask such a question. What. and waste two whole lays. ?” I showed him an article in ’.aturday s iwening paper. It was by Bill Corum. th" mted sports writer, who had town out West and who. by a j trange coincidence, had quoted j hat same remark by Arthur j Brisbane. But he also quoted Winston hurehill, who said in Boston ist Spring that “the airplane dels you there mighty fast but vou don’t see much on the way.” Corum was corning naek by train. j. Jl. Airplane travel is fine Speed is fine. But speed means something -nly when you are rn a hurry. A trip from California to New York, or from anywhere to anyvhere. is something like life it-
-telf.
When you are born you are finished with the starting point. From then on yon travel toward your destination. We all know .vhat the destination is. We also know tiiat there is . long, long time spend at man's - nal toitinntIon WTiat counts-’is what you seanil do or. the trip. If you hurry through life you "get there mighty fast, but you don’t see much on the way.” I rushed through the early part of my life on a fast plane. I didn’t see much, but it was exciting. Recently I changed to a local
24 HOUR SERVICE WHITE CLEANERS .109 N. Jarkaoa 84.
train.
I am n no bum' o g*t m >’ destination. My : a* appoint j mem can war as lon *' as * ( an I possibiv delay t ' But yuu'd bf surprised how I much wonderful '*’ e ti‘‘ry I lee | now as I dawdi, along with ever so many whist '- -*ps on the
! way.
SOCIETY Mrs. Fit . la F tker was hostess to Club t thy-Eight on June 29tli with' velv. members present. Roll cal was answered by telWng Whoa md Where I Was Married. D ing the business meeting itlias planned tei have a luneheoni:' the home of Helen Elrod forlr.e July meeting. Each mernb' may take a guest. After ihrf isiness meeting contests were ondueted by M-url Keller, priz* won by Nelli • Hurst and Helen Efod. Delicious refriR-nents were served by the h» ss and adjourned to meet ii July with Mrs. Elrod.
Indians were culB iting a variety of ‘‘butter b-a ' in New Mi.xico when the S iniards ar-
rived in 1540.
SELF-LAUNDRIES GIVE AMERICAN BUSINESS BOOST IN PALESTINE TEL AVIV, Israel (UP)—American business men have moved into Israel with a thousand schemes for making money. The latest of them to catch on is the self-laundry. Three of the automatic laun- ! dries where housewives let some- j body else’s machine do their dirtv j I work already are operating. A i | fourth will open here soon. One of the enterprising laun dry owners is Murray M. Nelson :i Brooklyn war veteran, who arrived with .'500 washing machines and a plan for opening 10 store with iO machines in each. It wasn't as simple as Nelson thought. To begin with, the city would allow him only 15 units to a store. That meant expanding his plan to 20 stores. At the first store tie found the sewage pipes were too narrow to carry off the waste water. He paid the city $600 to lay a private pipe for him. incidentally assuring himself of a monopoly on the business in that street. Then there was the hot water problem. Nelson’s competition were paying $.'i0 a day for electricity. He found an engineer who built an oil burner for him. It cost $2,400, hut Nelson figures it will pay for itself easily in the
long run.
Nelscn found his rivals were charging $1.50 for a tubful. He cut the price to $1.08 and finally
to 75 cents.
SPURNING AN ORDER of the Prague government to retu-n for other duties, J 1 n d r 1 c h Kotas, Czech deputy consul in Clev.Und, O., sent his government a note saying ”... I cannot return to a country where the pollen have supreme power..." He was sent to Cleveland, accompanied b* hi* wife, shown with him, in 2)47, by appointment of the late F-eai ident Edouard Benes. He salt he would stay. (Internationa
ynmq]
HSHIN* FUN Today S IndeiM-ndi'iM'e I>ny. Iiisl til show you We are treat believers of llldepend•IMe. Tiler,' will b, no eolliiiin oduy— Sportsman’s Shop
Displaced German Parlays S50 Into Wealth In Japan TOKYO (UPl A refugee Gorman artist who was 19 when he arrived steerage class at Nagasaki in 1940 with $50 in his pocket is today one of the biggest business men In post-war Japan. His name is Shnul Eisenberg, originally of Munich and, thanks to Hitler, of Geneva, Luxembourg, Strasbourg. Brussels, Paris, Antwerp, Rotterdam. Shangiai and now Tokyo. He started >y painting oil portraits of a few Japanese tycoons and wound up ■''coming a tycoon himself. I first met Eisenberg early in 1!*46. He had a small shop on he Ginza. Tokyo’s Broadway, vhere he sold cheap toys, nicknacks and curios. He still was taking commissions for oil portraits, a source of income which tided him over the war years. Irtist week he greeted me in the lobby of a Hong Kong hotel j and returned to Tokyo on the same commercial air liner. I learned that in three and onehalf years Eisenberg had become the president of three companies, owned two factories, acquired one-third of a seven-story Tokyo office building, a whole one in Osaka and had branches all over Japan. He also owns housing developments in which most of his 1.200 employes live. Twenty-sevi n-year-old Eisenberg is also the largest export agent for Japanese aluminum, enamel ware, copper and braes manufacture ami cnmmunieaJions equipment, and si lls the lion’s share of Japanese textiles
and textile machinery to India and southeast Asia. B Two months ago he n gineere ! a $2 500.000 sale of Japanese telephone and cable equipment 1». the Indian government. Soon hi will represent the Indian Bahral Air Lines, when it opens its Tokyo terminus. Eisenberg now is incorporated in New York ar
well as Tokyo.
Asked the obvious question how did he get the snowball roll
ing? he replied:
"Bathtubs. Aluminum hath tuhs and Chinese rugs.” He explained that in 1946 o ctipation officials ordered tli iapanese government to funds 20.000 bathtubs for armv depend ent houses. The only hathtu! laetories in Japan turned out en ameled iron tuhs by a stow am
costly process.
“With my portrait coinmis sions during the war I investo'' n Chinese rugs.” Eisenberg said ‘I sold the rugs after the sur render for a good profit am! bought a small aluminum plant Then I turned quickly nut a nic’ cheap aluminum bathtub ami showed it to the Army. ' The Army was enchanted and approved the model. With th< rnler as collateral, Eisenberg borrowed 2.500,000 yen from the Iapanese government and subcontracted the entire aluminum industry. Today nearly every American family in Japan takes a bath in an Eisenberg tub. “Myself, I prefer the eld-fash ioned Japanese tile tub." Eisen
berg admitted.
In six months, concentrating on first priority Army orders Eisenberg gained control of the aluminum industry, brought th< enamelware manufacturers to 'he point of ruin and then saved them by selling the Dutch Indies a 100.000.000 yen export order for enamel pots ami pan:In effecting the rescue. Eisenberg also took over the industry. This big. slow-moving, rather
pass th" Eisenberg
awkward Hortaio Alger charaet. er with lark brown hair ami bl ue eyes was declared stateless j ur . ing the war but now .holds » Polish passport which last 0c-. ober enabled him to leave Jap a , on a selling tour of the entire Far East and India. He had P e r . sonal interviews with the p r( ,. mior of Ceylon and Indian Prune Minister Jawaharial Nehru. Eisenberg speaks fluent Cerman. Japanese and English some Dutch and no Polish. His principal reading is American
comic hooks. “They lime on plane trips,”
says.
In 1943 he married a pretty Eurasian girl. In six years they had four 'laughters, whose hirthiays—like the number of Eisenberg enterprises- he has a hard Jme remembering. ’Tm sort of .he Eddie cantor of Japan." Eisjnberg said. Eisenberg insists he had to piit painting because of eye trouble, but he is reluctant to liseuss his early artistic caree. “I wish you wouldn't mention ibout it," he said. “If people renember me as an artist they naybe won’t think I’m such a good business man.”
MIT 11 I-'. OK VIIHIXIS'l'H vriog Notice Is here by given Hint ih* imlorsiKiitMl Jins h4.*en appointed hy tin* of tin* Flmiit Court of Cut mi in County. Htatn of Indiana. VdminiMt rntrix with th** will mnoxt'il of the **Htnt** of Florence It. Nhdiolrt Into of Putnam Coonty. doooa Mod. Said ostato i» supposed to he Molvefit. Anno fl. Niohols. Administratrix with th** will annexed No. M'.BIR. Oilier F. Akers. Clerk of the Putnam Clivult Fourt. Hoy <*. Suthorlln. Attorney. 4-3t.
\oTirr. o»*' %imiini**th \ rmx Notleo is here by given that tin* mtdersiKned lias been appoint' d Uy tho Judff** of tho Clreuit Fourr of Putnam County, fltate of Indiana. Vdministratri\ I >*• Bonis N«>n "f
East the estate of Hdwin B. Ni-ho4 l.C*
of Putnam Fount y, d« < • >* d fluid estate is Supposed to he
solvent.
Anne fl. Niohols. Administratrix Do Bonis Non
No. MT'.o,
Orner C. Akers. Clerk of he Putnam Circuit Court. Hoy *\ flutlwrlin. Attorney t-’.t
WE PAY FOR DEAD ANIMALS Pramirt, Sanitary Servlca. CALL GREENCASTLE 27t OR 97 CALL CLOVERDALE 30 OB PUTNAiWVTlXE SA 8AINRKID*.E I AO BOA* HD ALE We pay all phone chargee. JOHN WACHTEL CORP.
79R7
MILLERS SOIL SERVICE Restore and improve Soil Fertility Replace the phosphorous in your soil, the low cost way. USE Finely Ground Florida Natural Phosphate. Guaranteed 33% Spread on your young clover - and pasture. COATESVILLE IMPLEMENT CO. COATESVILLE, INDIANA PHONE Cl
CHINESE WAIF ARRIVES FOR ADOPTION BY EX-GI
TTSfiTIE GINGHAM . . . COOL AND CRISP—Black and white •becked tissue gingham collared ivith white organdy. Black patent belt is decorated with a rei flower corsage. (V. Y. Dress Institute Photo/
CULMINATING FOUR YEARS' effort, ex-GI Frank Chisarl hug* Ann, 6-year-old Chine** girl who** life he aaved to China, on her arrival to make her home with him in New York. Mr*. Chiskri look* on, pleased. They have two other children, Adeline, 6, and John, 2. In June, 1946, Radarman ChUarf stopped hi*Jeep for a passing train near Kunming, China. There was a splash i* a rice paddy nearby. Body of a ySong woman was ftohed out Then a bundle was found on the train track after the train passed. In it was a baby. Aim, bleeding from a severe slash on right side of her cheek and threat. After she was treated Chisarl nursed her back to health. Later she was placed la an arphanage. It took him four years to save enough to try to bring her to th* U. a (International SoundfihotoJ
