The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 9 July 1949 — Page 2
Wt DAILY BAITER, GtfENCASTLE, INDIANA, SATURDAY, JULY 9, 1949. '
ERICH BRANDEIS A few weeks ago I wrote a tribute to the Alleghenies as seen from the porch of the Fort Bedford Inn after a bounteous b. eakla t. That column brought me a lot of mail indicating that people, after all, do not live by bread alone but appreciate the beauties of nature. So you will forgive me, I hope, if today I do a little piece about the Catskill Mountains of New Yolk State as seen with the eyes and the heart nf the Rev. F. J. Fiteh, Minister of the Lakeside Methodist Church, of Muskegon, Mich., an old Catskillcr, who went back there last October to visit his mother, “who had just passed the eightysecond milestone”. Frankly I had never seen the Catskills that way, although I had passed through them many a time. Perhaps they are too close to my own home. Perhaps I could not see the forecasts for the thousands of “she’s too fat for me" ladies who roam these mountains during the summer months, dressed in slacks thit would look much better on a bushel of potatoes. However, the next time I drive through the Catskills again. I shall try to see them as William Herbert Carruth saw them, according to the Rev. Mr. Fiteh, who quotes the poet as follow's: “A haze on the far horizon An infinite tender sky; The ripe rich tint of the cornfields And wild geese sailing high; And all over upland and lowland The charm of the goldenrod: Some people call it Autumn, But others call it God". And so I am back on religion, that subject I pledged myself to leave alone because it is so controversial, and yet a subject on which 1 get more mail than on any other one unless it be popovers. Only a few days ago a read 'r wrote: “Please don’t ever stop writing about religion. We.need living interpretation so badly. We need someone who can explain it to us and make us live it when so many happening.-', confuse us in these troubled days". But back to the Rev. Fitch and the Catskills. He goes on: ‘‘Words do not suffice to describe the indescribable beauty of the mountains. It is as though some winged giant had
j mixed the rainbow tn the I crucible of time and sprinkled > Nature with the contents. Harry ' Emerson Fosdick. in his book ‘A I Pilgrimage to Palestine', desI i Lb. s the flowers of lovely | Galilee as "beautiful to the ! point of tears'. I thought of , lhat as I looked across the hills and valleys; looked with a fascination that brought me back again and again to the out of doors. "I thought of the Psalmist’s words ‘God reignoth. He is clothed with beauty. I though of the song of Isaiah: ‘How beautiful upon the mountains’ and the lovely lyric of Ecclesiastes 'He has made everything beautiful in His time’. I though of the injuetion of the Singer of Israel: ‘Worship the Lord in the beauty of Holiness'." I wish I had space to quo’e much more from the letter. But I must leave you now; And May 1 leave you with this thought: If you falter in your religion; if you wonder whether your God is really your living God - come out of your shop, youi office, your kitchen and look at your mountains, your valleys, your prairies, your sea and your lakes. There you will find God, the God with whom to live every day ami every moment of your lives. There you will find religion unfolded in all its glory. ANNIVERSARIES Weddings Dr. and Mrs. T. A Sigler. Mr. and Mrs. Turner May an! children of New York City, ar’ visiting friends and relatives in Grcencastle. •Il-DAY’ Foil \ ETS Application forms have been sent over the state by the Bonus Division of the Indiana Department of Veterans' Affairs, official administrator of the bonus law. Major distributors of the application blanks are the county service officers of the Indiana Department of Veterans' Affairs. They will be aided by patriotic and civic organizations. Approximately 150 persons will be employed in the huge task of accepting, adjudication and handling the bonus claims during the next 18 months. Governor Henry F. Sehricker pointed out that original service discharges must accompany application forms. He said the Bonus Administration would take every possible precaution to handle the original papers in complete safety and return them to the veterans at the earliest possible time. The Governor praised the veterans' organizations and other civic and industrial groups for the assistance they are offering in aiding veterans to complete correctly the application forms. Cherry County, Nebraska. big enough to contain the states of Delaware and Rhode Island plus 500 average ranches.
' ANNOUNCING AIRPORT GRILL SOI 'Til BLOOMINGTON STREET I NDEK \EW MANAGEMENT Featuring home made barbecue sandwiches, like Koseoe Hurst niudi- anil sold at Midway. OPEN FROM fi A. M. TO I? P. M. RALPH HURST
NOTICE OUR CLEANING DEPARTMENT WILL BE CLONED July 7th - July Uth FOB VACATION Laundry Will Operate As Usual NOME LAUNDRY AND CLEANERS
TERMITES
CAN BE STOPPED
General pest control for Moths, Roaches, Ants, etc. PK1CEM REASONABLE — RESULTS GUARANTEED
THE DAILY BANNER and HERALD CONSOLIDATED Entered in the postofflee at Greeneastle. Indiana as scrond class mail matter tinder act of March 7. 1878. Sidiseriptlon price •JO cents per week; $1.00 l M ' r year by mail in Putnam county: $5.00 to 87.80 per year outside Putnam ('utility. S. R. Bariden, Publisher 17-l!i South Jackson Street
Society
PlItMIXAl And Local News IK II I i: F s
Mr. and Mrs. A L. Goodenough left Saturday for Three Lakca.
Wis.
The Practical Nurses 'Club will meet at the bandstand In the city j park Monday night All members | are urged to be present. , Tin- class »f 1835 “! the i'il!'| more High School will have i reunion Sunday. July 10. at th; home of Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Zeiner. There will be a called meeting of the Union Chapel W. S. C. S. at tnr home of Mrs Carr, Clodfelter Monday night, July! 9th. The community sale will be dincu&sed. The Brick Chapel Home Eco nomics Club will meet Tue.-fl iy afternoon. July 12. 2:00 1’. M. DST at the home of Mrs. Will Bain. All members please try to be present. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kapp of Indianapolis ate the parents of a daughter. Roberta Ellen, born July ‘Ith. Mrs Kapp ?s a niece of Mrs. Paul Sinclair of Fillmore r.nd Mrs. Venue Larkin of Cloverdale. Mrs. Grace Hurst and Mr and Mrs. Janies Haitsaw hu''e reuturned from a three weeks vacation^ spent at Monument, New Mexico, with Mr. and Mrs Donald Garrett Los Angeles. Calif., with Mr. and Mrs. William O. Cannaday and Grande Lake. Colo, with Miss Merle Butterfield. Mrs. Ruth Frye of S. College Ave., Miss Mary Raah of Center Point R. R.. and Stanley Hubbard of Sardinia, have returned home from a trip to Rochester, N. Y. and Niagara Falls. While in New York they visited Mr. and Mrs Neal Hawn. Mrs Hawn, was formerly technician at the Putnam county hospital. TO HAVE SECOND TRIAL NEW YORK, July 9 (UP) — Federal prosecutors expressej confidence today that they would be able to convict Alger Hiss of perjury when he is retried, prob ably next fall. The former State Department official’s perjury trial ended last night when Federal Judge Samuel H Kaufman dismissed a deadlocked jury which had voted eight for conviction, four for acquittal. A unanimous decision was necessary for conviction. The “no trial" outcome left undecided the basic question befor:the jury was Hiss of his accuser, Whittaker Chambers, a liar? The defense had described the ex-Comnuinist Chambers as a “moral leper” and the prosecution had accused Hiss, an ulvlser of the late President Roosevelt as “a Benedict Arnold a Judas Iscariot.” GOOD OLD DAYS Warren, seventy four thousand, two hundred and forty-sev < bushels; Jefferson, fifty eight thousand, six hundred and thi.-ty-five; Cloverdale, fifty two thousand, six hundred and five.”
f'hiles-Joiillsoll Wedding Sunday The marriage of Miss Norm i Jean Johnson and Robert Chiles will be solemnized Sunday afternoon at 4:30 at the home of the bride's parents The Rev. Cla - cnee Barr will read tne marriage vows. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Maynarc? Johnson. The groom is the son or Mr. and Mrs. Fay Chiles of Mansfield. + + 4' + Scotch Foursome To Meet Sunday The Scotch Foursome will meet at the Greeneastle Golf Course Sunday at 3.45 p. m. Following golf will be a picnic supper at 6:30 p. m. •!• •!• The Clinton Twp. Farm Bureau will meet Tuesday evening July 12th at 7:30. GST at the Clinton Center School house. There will be a speaker anti slides on the Riley Fund will be shown. This will he an interesting meeting and everyone in the community is welcome. Th* committee will serve light refreshments. + 4* I - + Four Leaf Clover ( luh To Meet The Four Leaf Clover Club will meet with Mrs. George Friend. Tuesday afternoon, July 12 at 2 o'clock.
FOR SALE: Good purebred Shorthorn hull, 15 months old. Willia n Wells, 1-4 mile northwest of Mt Meridian on airport road. 9-2n.
FOR SALE Registered Duroc male hog sixteen months old. William Wells 1-4 mile north west of Mt. Meridian on airpmt road. ;i-2p.
EOR SALE. Seven good milk cans, one set of brass mounted harness, extra good; one Lotz roughage mill in good condition, one John Deere corn binder. William Wells. 1-4 mile northwest °t Mt. Meridian on airport road.
9-2p.
Softball News LAST .\1GHT RESULTS White Cleaners, 12; Hurty’s
Gulf, 8.
American Legion, 2; Mt. Mer-
idian. 1.
Webb's Studebaker, 9; Lone
Star, 6.
LEAGUE STANDINGS W L American Legion 5 o Moose 3 o High School 2 1 Miller's Hardware .... 2 1 Lone Star Local No. 39 i 3 Fillmore 1 3 Webb's Studebaker 1 4 Mt. Meridian 0 3 Kittcnhull Hooligans 3 0 Clowns 1 j Tiger Rags 1 2 Cement Mixers 0 2 Jayeee League | Sportsman Shop 3 q Banner-News 2 0 Mullin’s Drug Store 2 1 White Cleaners 2 1 Culligan Softwater 1 1 Coan’s Drug Store 1 2 Putnainville 0 Hurty’s Gulf 0 3
FISHIN’ FUN Today's fair haired hoy in the Casting Lure department, Is the BOMBER. This halt has proved to he a fish getter -xtruordinury. The rascal will rest on the surface, and with varying speeds, will rtm to any depth desired. With a slow trolling sipeed. It will run about 2fl feet deep, and with * normal casting retrieve, will stay about four feet
miler.
New Books At Public Library New books received recently at the Public Library are the
following:
Fiction: Hunter's Horn. Arnow: The ensi of the famished Parson. Bellairs; Cannon Hill, Deasy The track of The Cat. Clark: Two Worlds and Their Ways. Compton-Burnett; Playtine is Over, Davis; The Cautious Husband, Evans; Intrude* In The Dust, Faulkner; If You Lived Here. Hotli; Evergreen, Holstius; A Diplomatic IncidctK, Kelly; My Heart Shall Not F ar Lawn nee; The White Fountain. MeNaughton; The Man Wno Made Friends With Himself, Morley, Laughter From Downstairs. Ormonde; Young William Washbourne Parkington; Largely Fiction. Palffy; Marshwood. Roberts; Tough Cop, Roebert; Go Fight City Hall, Rosenberg: The Deer Cry. Seholfield; Southern Cross, Sinclair: Father Ot The Birds. Streeter; Come Clea 1 ’, My Love, Taylor; The Last Miracle, Vollmoelk r; Under The Quite Water, Wees. Non Fiction: The Great Pie!pout Morgan. Allen; Tne Entertaining Lady, Bloom; The Green Roller. Bradford; With A Feather on My Nose, Burke; Till Fish Do Us Part. Cook; The ABC's of Old Glass. Un ppard; The North Star is Nearer, Eaton; An Outline of Psychoanalysis, Freud; Persimmon Hill. Kennerly; Irma and The Hermit, Materi; Death of a Salesman, Miller; Middle East, Morton; Tu Hell and Back. Murphy; A House on Th.; Cevennes, Saleil; Philosophy of Religion. Sheen; Low and Inside, Smith; Wild Flower Guide, Wherry; Woman’s Home Companion Household Rook, Gunner's Guide. Baekeland; Marmeo, Mothei of Little Women, Salyer. Reaches Japan For Army Duty WITH THE EIGHTH U. S. ArMY IN KOIZUMI, JAPAN- Recruit Robert N. Rogers, son of Mrs. Harry A. Parrish, who resides at R. R. 4. Greeneastle, Indiana has arrived in Japan for occupation duty. He is assigned to B Baycry, of the 77th Field Artillery Battalion, which is stationed at Camp Drew, Koizumi Japan. Upon his arrival at Camp Drew he was greeted by the Battery Commander, and a guide who assisted him by bowing him to his barracks, and
dining room.
Recruit Rogers has been interviewed by the Chaplain, Red Gross Director^ Army Education Officer, and the Battalion Commander in order that he might under stand more clearly the Education and Religious programs the Army has to offer. Entering the Army tn January lf49, Recruit Rogers under G-nt basic training a t Camp Br-ckinridge, Kentucky. After completion of basic trainir$f ne sailed overseas in April, 1943 loni Camp Stoneman, Cali- ! lornia. He will be trained in all j Phases of field artillery weapons and tactics, and will be i able to attend the Army Educa-
tion School.
High
NEXT WEEK'S SCHEDULE
Sunday, July 10
7:15 Lone Star v
School
8:30 Mt Meridian vs. Moose. Monday, July 11 6 00 Banner-News vs. Whitt Cleaners. 7:15 Cement Mixers vs. Tiget
Rags.
8:30 Fillmore vs. Miller’s Hardware.
4-H CLUB WORK In addition to the efforts of the 4-H leaders many .business firms are doing muen to SP"'-' sor and support the county 4-H club program. The Greeneastle Motors, n ‘-- sponsor the Safety Project, Drake’s Jewelry Shop, tropin toi the best pen of 3 Southdown e»' lambs; Tom Hendricks, trophy for the best record of arhie\e ment in the lamb club; The Putnam County Duroc Breeders, a trophy each for the Champi in Duroc barrow and gtlt; San Rarldcn, trophy for Grand Cha#ipion gilt, Glendon Irwin, trophy to the boy or girl wit? best record of achievement ih the Jersey Cattle Classes. I he Shorthorn Breeders, a show haltep to the exhibitor of champion Shorthorn female, comb and brush to the exhibitor of the reserve Shorthorn. The Putnam County Jersey Cattle Club, a wards for fitting and showman ship, Farm Bureau Hatchery, poultry trophy. National Spotted Poland China Re-ord will duplicate prizes offered by fair. Some of the 37 delegates who attended the Purdue Round-Up May 22-25 were sent by the following; Floyd township Farm Bureau. Russell Farm Bureau, Jefferson Farm Bureau. Monroe Farm Bureau, Franklin Farm Bureau, Marion Farm Bureau and the Putnam County Rurnl Youth organization Tom Hendricks, 4-H Club Agent in the extension office assisting V. W. Harris, county agricultural agent and Mrs. Katharine Benner, home demonstration agent. The pledge of the 4-H boys and girls is "To Make the Best
Better."
I. U. WORKSHOP sions devoted to the theme, “Children Come First.” Dr. W W. Wright, Dean, School of Education will give the vcloom* The two addresses of the morning will be given by Dr. E. T. McSwain. Dean, School of Education, Northwestern University whose subject !*. '•Childhood. a National Resource" and Mrs. Newton P. Leonard, first vice president, NCPT, Rhode Island, speaking on "Children At Home.” Discussion period leaders will be Mrs. Robert F. Shank, vice president of Region 4. NOPT, Indianapolis; Mrs. Frances Corya, Dupont and Supt. Lee O. Zieg, Boonville. board members of ICIF-T; and Dr. G. T. Somers of I. U.
CftPTfilN OF
the men OF OEATH
CALLED MEETING There will be a called meeting : Monday night. 7:00 o’ctocK at th“ home of Mrs Carrie P-lodfelter concerning the community sa'e
July 27.
Every woman interested in helping please be present. Want to see all W. S. C. S. members and all others
APOSTALIC GOSPEL TABERNACLE Sunday School 10:00 a. m. Evangelistic Service Sunday evening 7:45 p. m. Bible Study Tuesday evening 7:30 p. m. Prayer, Praise and Worship Thursday evening 7:30 p. in. Pastor, Charles W. Rains. Everybody welcome. IN MEMORY Hurst In loving memory of our dear mother. Myrtle Mav Hurst, who passed away five years ago, July 7. Remembrance is a golden chain Death tries to break but all In
vain
To have, to love and then to
part
Is the greatest sorrow for one's heart, The years may wipe out many things, But this they wipe out never, The memory of those happy days When Mother and W e were alf together. > Sadly missed by chaldren. Emmett, Gene. Opal and Dennis.
r
Pneumonia is a disease which strikes swiftly and proceeds quickly and dramatically to a crisis. Until recent years little could be done to help the patient. The brief decisive struggl® between the infection and the patient earned for pneumonia the dreadful title, "Captain of the men of death.’^J In the parlance of the army, the captain has been •’busted.” First came antipncumococcic serum, which removed one bar. Later, powerful sulfa drugs teamed up with serum to completely break the captain. Both of these powerful weapons are kept in readiness in our prescrip, tion department, waiting only for the physician’s order, COAN PHARMACY PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS PUTNAM COUNTY’S LARGEST DRUG STOKE BUILT ON ACCURACY, QUALITY’ AND SERVICE.
“I HAVE NO WORRIES - - • -• • • I HAVE MY INSURANCE WITH SIMPSON STONER ”
NEXT TO HOME - NONE BETTER
IT'S COMFORTABLE
AT THE ROYALE Bring the family and friends in Sunday for dinner -• You will like our cooling salads and other
summer dishes - - - -
'••(afk: hoy ale
€
inner.
*«1 am
M H.. Halo who operates the Varsity Lanes bowling alleys in this city during the cooW months, writes The Daily Banner from Ely, Minn., saying it is nice and cool there, that he is getting The Daily Banner regularly. is catching enough fish to cat and appears to be entirely satisilied with the world, because he says “what more could one want?” Mr. and Mrs. Hale will return to Greeneastle in piuity of time to get the Varsity Lanes in shape for the opening in September. FOR SALE: 40 inch AliisChalmers used combine, goo 1 condition. Putnam County Farm Bureau Co-op, 9.3^
24 HOUR SERVICE WHITE CLEANERS SOU N. Jaeksoa Rl
FIRST NAZYKENE ( lit RCH I he revival, now in progress Is increasing in numbers and also in spirit. A fine crown attended the services last night. You jre invited to attend these meetings Sunday and all next weew. Services Nightly at 7:30. Sunday morning 10:40 Wonderful singing! Outstand in s Preaching!
< ’ome!
C. A. Newby, Minister FOR SALE: 1935 Plymouth 4 <io °r -sedan, practically new, motor overhauled. Jimmy Summers, Bainhridge. ‘ 9.;^ KlR SALK: Registered Jersey Herd Sires: Including Sylil’s Norman Xon (1 eared in Irwin held 1 3 years., Snowdrop's Observer 2 years old., and three young bulls-one ready for full service by early winter. Donald Ball, Brick House Farm-Road No 47-5 miles south of Crawfordsville. 8 . 4 p
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INDIANA ALCOHOLIC
BBVICRAOR COMMISSION
ny JOHN F NOONAN
Seorofsrv
nKRNARD E. DOYLE
Chalrmso
J-9-2t.
ONLY ONE PICTURE 1 but 316,800 of them to- i 'fy/.‘/ gather on a film form the great feature production i “Gone With the Wind.”
JpyiNLY A DOLLAR but many dollars, deposited regularly at this bank, can help you build security, and have the other good things you want.
First-Citizens Bank and Trust Co. GREENCASTLE
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