The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 September 1949 — Page 3

COME TO CHURCH SUNDAY

PACL’S catholic C0CRCI1

prsnct*

w jlMSf* 8 00 and »:S0

LK diV 8

Lsions: Saturday aft*r[4.5 Saturday evening, 7*8,

Lore all Massea.

CHtWH or CHRIST

SCIENTIST

Anderson street jijgy school at 0:30 a. m. j -y services at 11:00 a. m. onlal services each

y fit 8 p- ni.

g room open Tuesday ursday afternoon from l o'clock. Ail are welcome. ANDREWS KITS( OPAL

CHIRCH S Locust St.

G Minton, Minister. 15 a. m. Morning prayer. na/akenk ( HIT« h Ia. Newby, Minister. Dorothy Birt. S. S. Supt. ft school begins 9:30 a. ,jp at 10:40 a. m. yors hour 7:00 p. in. jth Group 7 00 p. m. iag serviee 7:40. >eek devotional Wednes-

:30 p. m.

'tors always welcome. *EEN< ASTI.F. BIRLK CENTKK E Hanna St. JdOa. m. Sunilay school and ^lesson by Mrs. Douthitt. iMa. m. Morning worship. ;5p. m. Junior Flannelgraph 1 from Genesis. ' p. m. Senior Young Peop, m. Evangelistic service. ' p. m, Wednesday Bible and prayer meeting. Floyd Stocklebeck of Kowill again be our speaker Come and be with us. SBTTKK1AN (HCRCH Vy P Walrcnd, Minister, a. m Church school, is a class in our school for child ami adult. Grover Superintendent. 35 a. m. Worship service. ' Virginia Arnold, guest orSermon: “A Sermon on The Nursery will be during this service, for th<‘ of small children, p m.-j-Tuxis will meet in di parlors. Week-Day Meetings The Woman’s Aston animal pitch-in lunch»ill be held at 1 00 p. m. at "idence of Mr. and Mrs. L. ks The program will be ted by Mrs. J. A. Bam- • Assistant hostesses with Dirks are Miss Kthel MltehW B. Peek. Miss Neldt 'ke, Mrs. W. K. Umbreit. Dick J. Steele. Mrs. FTdith Mrs. Harry Walrond ;*rs, Predrieka Kocher. deacons will meet in the h parlors at 7 :30 p. m. CHl Rdi of < HKIST -1 Washington St., Green-

r e, Ind.

p H E Manchester. Minis^ces for Sunday, Bible fkAS; Worship 10:45 Be Thou An Ex-

"nmg Worship 8:00 pr will he our

Cary guest

ednesday night Prayer meetM Subject. '•The Gospel." 7 n, « ht «o<'ial get-togeth- ^ home of Ezra Craft, 109 •'berty n f Greencastle. is welcome to these «a. Raptiht cntTRon ,s Rissler, pastor , Sunday school. Kp rsey, Supt . S ' visher . Assistant, Johnson, Sect. . Lr Morning worship. Th '' Alphabet of Jfte^ntmued." Numbers by :8(1 * Quartet. ■ J' m Ba P tls t Youth Eelr J Hh Intl? rmediate and u Ps vili ln thelr •no v# rooms ^ P serv m o/; V h enmg WOr¥ttp W thr s ' n ‘or group " si nging Wl " havp ehar R e 01 ^ anno ' ,MC6 ' Strain, scripture.

Thomas, devotional

Delores

poems.

The message of the ewening will be concerning neglect. Text Heb. 2:3. FIRST C HRISTIAN ( HI R( |f Ralph H. Saunders, Minister. Lois Arnold, Chairman of th

Board.

Frank McKeehan, Supt. of Unchurch School. Morning worship, 10 o’clock The minister will speak on TinWorld Changer. Every memb r of the congregation is urged to be present for this service. Church school classes will meet as follows: Women’s BibiiClass, 9:15; Intermediate and Senior classes, 9:30: Nurset'Kindergarten, Primary and Junior classes at 10:00 o'clock. Church Board meeting 7:00 p m. In the dining room. This is -i full board meeting. Board members bring husbands anil wives Supper will be served. Week-day Meetings Boy Scouts, Tuesday, 7:30 in the basement social room. Choir rehearsal. Thursday 7:00 p. m. in the sanctuary. Don Marketto, director of music. Mi A. L. Meredith, organist. Women’s Union, Thursday 2:00 p. m. in the church parloi You are cordially invited t , attend all of the services of thi friendly community church. You will find the spirit of Christian fellowship permeating all of it services. ’COPTER SERVICE HOLLYWOOD (INS) Maurice Miller, owner of Hollyvv new Country Club Hotel, says an airport for helicopters will h. built on the hotel grounds and service provided from the Li Angeles Municipal Airport to th.-

hotel.

tantUBfili RCLIGIOR KIRCH

“The Legendary Doctor of Siam,” who has been in tha. cotintry for the past forty years as a missionary of the Presbyterian church in the U. S. A., and for the past two years, as the only missionary doctor there has had the supervision of sevn hospitals and a leprosy colony, is now in the United Slates for a well-earned furlough. He is D . Edwin C. Cort. medical missionary, whose title was earned by his stupendous labors to briny health to the people of Siam. During the past two years, he has distributed to hospitals, dis pensaries, and clinics, over 10,000 pounds of medical and relief supplies received through Church World Service, has treated 145.000 patients in one prevince, and organized relief teams in nine others. Differences of opinion on th right of women to take part in Church of England services were revealed when the Houses of the Convocation of Canterbury met jointly to receive a report from a committee appointed to study the question. The committee declared that to allow licensed laywomen fo take part in statutory services such as Morning and Evening Prayer, would be a departure from “the age-old order of Christian life,'’ and would constitute “a hindrance to the runion of Christendom.” The Archbishop of Canterbury said. “I should not argue that a wornati is by nature of such a kind that she is.incapable of taking in church a position of lending prayers, reading the word of God, or giving an address.” No action was taken.

THE DAILY BANNER, GftEENCAStlE, IN0UNA SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER

10, 1949.

*\V

from

the forests and mines. Dr •M. O Williams. Jr., at 150 Fiftn Ave., New York City, is 1 charge of finding the buildei -

teachers.

Ralph A. Ward, in Shanghai China, is that all Christian missionaries and workers are welt and conditions are normal in that city now under communist

~~ j control. He says that mission-.uru-American tech n i q u e s j aries are now being given passe -:, and Euro-American social con- loiabling them to move from city ceptlcns have invaded th- to city in their work; and that

strongholds of self-sufficient native economics and social organ-

APOSTOLIC GOSPEL TABEItN \('LE K Washington St.. Commrrlal Place. C. W Rains, Pastor. Sunday school 10:00 a. m. Worship service 11:00 a. m. Sunday evangelistic service.

izations. and have created dissatisfactions, derangements, and demands,’’ notes Professor VV. a. Anderson, rural sociologist of Cornell University. «Thc.se have culminated in upsetting the total rural equilibrium which now expresses itself in the new nationalisms of Syrians, Indians, Ber-

">ese, Chinese, and others

The chief implication for Christian rural missions is that a real progi am must he developed soon or missions may take over those elements of Western culture that Ho y want, and omit the others. Tile process Will be through readjusting their own religious I conceptions or avoiding religious !

implications altogether."

45 p. m.

Methodist youth institutes ar- I Evangelistic services each being held according to schedule. | night 7:30 p. m. with Evangelist

I H. Harrington of Oshkosh.

There was an attendance of 200 at a youth institute in Nanking, and it was possible to hold u daily training conference for laymen in the same city. A cablegram from Methodist Bishop Z. '! ■ Kauug, from Peiping, gives the information that all workers ! are well, that the institutions o’ the church are continuing t serve; but that while evangelistic services are normal in the cit- >'- s . they are ‘‘not going so well in the country.” (He does not

amplify the phrase.)

Wisconsin. < \l{l> OF THANKS Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Gibson wishes to thank the ina*y friends and relatives for the ‘ \ely gifts and cards during their Golden Wedding Anniversary last Sunday. nd.

FOR SALE: Brown Swiss bull 11 months old. Build up your dairy herd with a good bull. Ralph Bassett, Road 40. First house east of Midway on south. 9-2p. FOR SALE: International combine engine: 6 row McCor-mick-Deering corn shredder. Arthur Cash, 2 miles southeast of Cloverdale on road 42. 9-4p.

FOR SALE: Nice sweet corn for canning or locker, 18c po dozen. Glendyn Irwin; R. t Grecncastle. 10-2t.

Classified Ads

All classified advertising must be paid In advance. Customers using classified ads are asked to send cash with the ad. Figure Hie first 15 words at 25 cents and each additional word one

A National convocation on the "Church in Town mid Country" will lie held Nov. 8 to 10 in St. Paul's Mi thnilist church. Lincoln, Neb., with ministers. Inym' •editors, and farm and rural leaders in attendance. The convocation will be uniier the Husp.ces of the Committee 0.1 Town and Country, of which In Elliott L. Fisher is chairman; sponsor, d by the Home Missions Council of North Aniei ca, th ■ Federal Council of th. Chun hi s of Christ in America and the International Council of Religion Education. The program will include Dr. Fisher, Douglas Kn smingor of the U. S. Department of Agrieultuii ; Miss Marjorie Minkler of the Woman’s Society of Christian Service, Methodist church, Gov. Val Peterson n r Nebraska, Prof Rockwell C Smith of Garrett Biblical Institute, Charles E. Friiey of Iowa State College, Dr. Mary A. DawIn t of the Home Missions Council, and Frank W. Peek of the Farm Foundation. Information may be see 11 red from the Committee hi Town and Country, 297 Fourth Ave.. New York 10. N. Y Word from Methodist Bishop

FOR SALE

l.Kr.AI, NOTICR or PUHIJC

IIKAItIM;

» Notice is hereby given that the Local Alcoholic Beverage Board <>t f’utnam County. Indiana, will, I •‘ , '' A M . <'ST, nn Hi.’ 21 day »»f I S* ptemb *•, |!*•!!• at t he i ’b rk’n <)f lice, Court Hou»e in the City of Creenoustle, Indiana in said County. begin investigation of the application of the following named j i" f>uii, r. «iuesting the issue to 1 11n* applicant, at the location here* j inafter set out, of the Aleoholl. i Lcv. rag*. I’crriiL of the class here in:• ft.•!’ designated and will, at ! said time and place, receive information concerning the fitness of j said apidicant, and the propriety j "f issuing the permit applied for 1 o such applicant at the premises

named:

| Koburt W. Orr, trestaur- ! *nt •. \V. Franklin St , <Ireonensj 11<‘, Indiana, bee r and wine retail-

er's permit.

Fail II Thomas. <17270. (Oror- ^ , , I ery». 727 Smith Main St. <!remi- J’tdw NALh: Metal bedsteads I .'SII- iiMii.iiia. beer 1111,1 Win.- , ameled kiudion sink 18 x 30'

deab i s permit. •

S\ll» JNVINSTIGATION Wild.' xin^ hot :.nd old watip fait .1

•ii: OFFN TO TH F rCBLIC, AND I f»r m.b- PARTICIPATION IS RF

Ql FST FD.

INDIANA AT.COHOMC B F V F R A OF C< )M M I SSI ON B> JOHN F. NOONAN

Secretary

BFRNAUD E. DOYLE

Chairman

3-10-2t.

FOR SALE: Children's used eluthing sizes 1- 14. Jack and Jill j Exchange 718 FI. Washington j s t- 8-9p. FOR SALE: Mixed clover and timothy hay. Baled with sllcei hal.-r. 9 miles east Greeneastl • on SUlesville road. Frank M. Hunter, Fillmore, Ind., R. R, 1, 9-5p.

FOR SALE: Gas range oven heat control, good condition. 307 West Walnut St. 9-2t

F’OH SALE: Several hundred sawed cedar and mulberry posts, as we are moving our saw mill; several thousand feet of sawed native lumber suitable for crib building, ect.; about 500 cord mill wood. Priced to sell Raines Brothers. Fillmore. Phone 355. Fillmore. 6-8-10-13-15-17 6p. FOR SALE OR TRADE Due to sickness 1 have for sale. White tractor 3 ton on contract clearing $120.00 to $150.00 per week. Must sell quick to hold contract. R. M. IFarrish. Quincy, Ind. R. 1. 10-2p FOR SALE: Davenport 1 Call 187-R. 9-21

FOft SALE: Medium sized Hciitrnla. Good condition. Vonif. Lawrence, 3 miles east of Gn 11 castle on Stilosville road.

9-2p.

FOR SALE: 1946 Four door ’nvu lct (mairioni Bert Whitb'l'k. Stilesville. Inquire a: Bud's

F’OR SALE: Upright plane. Mis. Stanley Davis, S. Jackson St. Road. 9-2p. FOR SALE: Enemel Home Comfort coal-wood range, good onditi.m, fine baker. 312 North Indiana St. Phone 396-R. 8-3p. 2 only: Servel kerosene Electrolux refrigerators. One $50 one $60, good condition. R. E Knoll. 8-3t.

Tavern.

9-4 p.

020 Highw.ood Ave. ;)-2p FOR SALE: McCormick Doer-

I me wheat drill.

mg

Norman Terry.

good shape. Belle Union.

9-3p.

Enjoy Fruit and Beauty PLANT STARK IMPROVED FRUITS, ROSES, SHRUBS Landscaping Plans Jt\ at No Extra Cost 4^®*- > See, Phone or Writ# Without Obligation W. R. Clark U. I Grecncastle, Indiana

FOR SALE OK TRADE 1936 Ford pickup. Finc.a.stle Garage. 9-3p

Headquarters for curveA raft era for barns, garages, machine sheds, warehouses, stores, factories. Black Lumber Co., 501 N. Indiana St. Phone 403 19-tf

ftxtt&WASHIIGTOI

MARCH OF EVENTS

Bridges, Von Horn to Qu'J Fund’s Board of Trustees?

Fear Deadlock May Tie Up Operations of Miners’ Fund Special to Central Press

YtyASHINGTOi-: Operations of the United Mine Workers WelW fare fund soon may be tied up in another deadlock like the one which brought on the real strike in the spring of 1948. ’'he reason: Prospective resignations of the three-man board of tri stces which administers the multi-million dollar program. Senator Styles Bridges (R>, New Hampshire, reportedly is set to step down within several weeks as neutral trustee. Coal industry sources freely predict Bridges will waste no time

about quitting.

These same circles also forecast the resignation of Ezra van Horn as the operators’ trustee. Th y say that if Van Horn, Who is disgruntled, does not resign lie may he replaced anyhow. Of courie,

■rdM-MW '

FOR SALE: 3 wheel tricycle.

the mine owners can quickly designate another j good condition. Phone I15-M.

DUTCH AUCTION: Starting Sopl. ‘ilh, i*i iii'V. rubbei tired wagon and one tilt bottom implement trailer. Will start si regular price and come down M 00 * ach day until sold. (Fully Guaranteed). Don’t wait too long, someone else might get ;•. Wagons in stock. D. Frank': Welding Shop, Brazil, h d. 9-tr.

FOR SALE: 4 to 5 room size Coleman oil heater, lik new. will sacrifice. 200 North Jackson St. Phone 895. 9-2t.

beds

FOR SALE; Steel bunk used together or singly, used short time; also two sturdy straight chairs. Phone 642-M. 9-2’. FOR SALE Westinghousi electric range. Cedar Crest Court. 2 miles east 43 on 40. 8-3p.

FOR SALE: Fresh cider, and apples, McIntosh, Grimes Golden, golden and red delicious, rambo, maiden blush, winesap. At Moore’s Orchard at Raccoon on state road 43. 1-tf.

FOR SALE: 1948 John Deere A tractor, cultivators, disc, and 2-14 inch plows. Extra good. Hubert Seller, 3 miles south Mt. Meridian. 5-6p. Ladies everywhere enjoy leg earnings daily. Sell guaranteed Maisonette Frocks. Write Box 453, Terre Haute, Ind. 8-6t.

FOR SALE: All kinds of hay and straw. Howard Moore. Phone 7^1- Snt.-tf

■LOST-

LOST OR STRAYED: Holstein heifer. Dewey Smith or. Lee Wood Farm, Grecncastle R L 9-2p.

REAL ESTATE

FOR SALE: A fifty acre farm about nine miles from Greencastle. Thirty acres tillable. Four room house with enclosed porch Large bain. Electricity. Possession in thirty days. Price $5000 .1 T. Christie 21 South Indiana 6-5’.

FOR SALE: Property of th late W. H. Evens on Tennesse street. See Elmer W. Evens. Route 3, Grecncastle, 10-3p

ttANTEO

FOR SALE: 25 ft. Universal house trailer, electric brake, electric refrigerator, gas stove, etc. Thornton Underwood, Stiiesville, Ind. 10-3p. GARAGE EQUIPMENT; Since I have gone out of business and have accepted a position at C. A. Webb’s, I have for sale all of my garage equipment practically all new. and auto parts. Pan! Cooksey, Cloverdale, Ind. See me at Webb’s daytime or at home after 5 p. m. 29-tf.

FOR SALE: Good gentle 15 months old Guernsey bull. Claude Crodian, Clinton Falls. 10-2p.

Indicative of the advance program of missionary service which the Methodist church 1* projeeting in Africa, the Board of Missions is seeking five ex- | perieneed ymmg builders an 1 j construction engineers to plan and supervise the erection of new schools, hospitals and churches in the Belgian Cong •, Mozambique, Southern Rhodesia, and Angola. They are being recruited for three years of servlc ■ each. According to Bishop Newell S. Booth, of Elisabethville, B C., they will need to Ira n African natives as masons, carpenters, hrickmakers, and makers of furniture, as well as find and haul much of the raw materials !

representative.

John L. Lewis, as the representative of his j __ powerful UMW, appears certain to remain. ’; The resignation of Bridges may cause trouble.

4 If Lewis and whoever happJns to be the oper**'*>81? '''i-p'- a < ors ’ trustee, arc unable to agree on a neutral

s- member, then the administration of the fund ia

stymied.

•Washington a majority of two out of three trustees

to make decisions.

Since Lewis and the industry representative usually are on opposite sides of the fence, they can’t operate the fund. Van Horn quit recently as chairman of the Northern Coal Operators’ negotiating committee and he may be replaced as trustee as roon an the 1949 coni contract is signed. Meanwhile, Van Horn and Bridges have engaged in bitter accusations against each other. In reply to Van Horn’s accusation that Bridges and Lewis had set up an "unsound" fund, Bridges has charged that Van Horn tried to ‘'hamstring” the fund.

* * * *

• CHRISTMAS ADJOURNMENT 7—The seemingly inexplicable failure of Congress to wind up its work and adjourn is easily explained the Republicans and southern Democrats are carrying on a silent ' filibuster" against President Truman's program. # The GOP knows that if it breaks the logjam on appropriations and thereby permits adjournment, Mr. Truman will call them back in special session after lambasting them before the country as a

failure.

Meanwhile, the Republicans are trying to make it look—and maybe succeeding - like the Democratic majority is unable to pass

Its own program

Democratic congressional leaders have decided to let the opposition stew in its own juice. Literally for this has been the capital’s hottest summer in 20 years—the Democratic leaders mean the

“stewing” phrase.

Senate Democratic Leader Scott W. Lucas of Illinois is threatening the OOP-southern bloc with Thanksgiving in Washington. Actually, the tieup might hold Congress in Washington until Christmas, with the next session due to start the first week in January.

• * • *

O HOUSING Housing Administrator Raymond Foley is directing the government's multi-billion dollar housing projects into areas of high unemployment in an effort to slow down the business recession, but the program is slow getting into operation. With administration economists predicting a business upturn In autumn and next spring, the housing program in fact may function to stimulate business recovery rather than cushion a decline. Th.it would be contrary to what the admiinstratlon intends. But, after all, that sort of thing not infrequently happens in a govern-

ment as big ns America's Ids grown to bo.

Housing officials admit that construction will not start until

next spring on the first public housing projects authorized by the legislation passed by Congress in

8-3t.

FOR SALE: California dual tone mufflers, singles and dual j sets for alj cars. Bob Smiley, 4G miles cast on Stilesville road. Phone 16F2. 9-2p

FOR SALE: 32 volt Wincharger Deleo sot, 180 hour, 1 i plate batteries, 1-4 motor, pump, small grinder, several bulbs, good radio, all in good condition. 8 miles east. Oran E. Buis. 5-7-10-3p FOR SALE: Washed concrete and pea gravel. Washed coarse medium plastering and fine masonry sand. Clark & Son Gravel Co. Pleasant Gardens. Tues-Thurs-Sat-tf

FOR SALE: 1934 Chevrolet sedan, good tires, heater. Mrs. William Shelley, 220 Hillsdale Phone 572-R. 6-8-10-3p.

WANTED: To near the hospital.

rent a garage Phone 800. 9-6t.

WANTED: Reliable woman for housework and ironing in home two half-days each week. Grceneastle Postoffice Box 266. 9-3t

WANTED: Second cook for sorority house. Apply at 509 So Locust St. Phono 551. 3p

WANTED: Vault and cesspool cleaning. Free estimate. Jess Rumley, Air Port road. Phom 15F6. 8-3n.

WANTED: Digging work of all kir.ds. Spetic tanks, oil tanks, basement ditches, water lines, fix downspouts. Contract work. Free estimate. Everett Shepherd, Reelsville Route 1 Phone 480-M after 6 p ,m. 8-3p.

WANTED: Well drilling. Donald Pell, one mile east of Floyd Center School House. 7-5p

MALE HELP WANTED: Immediate opening for man over 30 to become permanent local representative of old established firm. Pleasant contacts among home owners, farmers and small land owners in semiprofessional eapaeity. Car necessary. Complete training by successful company representative. Excellent compensation discussed at interview. Write D. J. Gillis, Box 202, Newark. Nev York state. 8-8p WANTED: Curtains to wash and stretch or laundry, no ironing. Phone 329-J. 9-2p.

FOR ftEm

FOR RENT: Modern sleeping room. Mrs. Burk. Phone 101-VV. 9-2p Band instruments for rent Kersey Music Store. 1-t/

FOR RENT: On shares, very good 400 acre cattle and hog farm, two modern houses, good proposition for a long program to a man with successful record and reasonable finance. Address Box 10. Daily Banner. 8-3t.

FOR RENT: Modern 2 room apartment, unfurnished Employe,1 woman preferred. 423 E. Franklin. 6-8-10-3p.

FARM FOR RENT: 240 acres grain and stock, large barn, house, electricity. Box 301 '/< Banner. 10-^p

MISCtLLANEOUS

Remember: Proper aceounting is necessary for a successful business. IPhone 826-R Byrne W. Hall. Public accountant. 9-3t.

Cesspools and septic tanks, toilets, vaults, vacuum cleaned, also sewer lines, basement drains, cleaned with electric cutter. Work guaranteed. State Sewer Cleaners. Phone 377-R. Free estimates. 7-tf

vruflcal Breeding: HolstMo. Guernsey and Jersey urea. AV proved transmitters of high mll> and butter production. Call before 9 A. M. Indiana Artlftcal Breeding Association. Phone 24F3, Grecncastle. 26-ti.

For highest grade upholstering, repairing, and refintshtng, all work guaranteed, call Art Furniture Shop, 7 W. Franklin St. Phone 299. 30-tt.

NOTICE: All members and friends of Clinton Falls Methodist church please he pfesert Wednesday morning, Sept. 14tn, to finish basement floor. Dinner will be served. 10-2.0.

YOUNG ANT) old find som - tiling they need at a savings. C H. and C. Variety Store, Ba nbridge. Sat.tf.

Come In And See This excellent selection of uscid ears from very good to just good transportation. 1948 Chevrolet Tudor 1940 Chevrolet two-door. 194* Cord 5 imssenger, coupe, OvordrH e. I94'> Studebaker, 4 door 1941 ( hevrolet Convertible. 1946 Ford Tudor, | 1939 Olds Coupe. , 1936 Olds Coupe. 1936 Pontiac Coach. 1935 Stmlehaker Tudor. 1935 Plymouth. 1935 Chevrolet Mst. l*j ton Truck, (2). 1931 Plymouth Sedan. 1934 Ford Coach. 1935 Buiek. 1932 Studebaker, Commander Convertible. 1931 1' i Ton Ford, Model A Truck. 1939 1 1 2 Ton Ford Truck. 1929 < hevrolet Coupe. 1928 Chevrolet. 1937 Dodge hall ton Truck, 1947 Indian Motorcycle. ALL CARS LISTED CAN BE FINANCED. C. A. WEBB, Inc.

tLONOlE

By Chic Yoim*

July.

Cenitruction Won’t Start Until Spring

Of course, the program will not get into full swing until later. Congress authorized subsidized construction of 810,000 public housing units in six years.

The vast slum clearance and urban redevelopment programs authorized by the legislation v. ill be even slower in getting under way.

FOR THE BEST IN DELICIOUS HOME COOKED FOOD SMITH’S CAFETERIA TRY OUR DELICIOUS PLATE LUNCH ONLY 50c

1

JOHNNY HAZARD

THAT? RIGHT. VELVET... TME •SHAM IG INTEFEGTEP IN VOU / A FEW WOKP« FROM GROB ANP VOU COULD 3E TWE NEXT C'JEEN OF Tu:<3 FABULOLS STATE/ WMAT TO VOU SAY ?/

Bv Frank Bobbin