The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 20 September 1949 — Page 3
iHf- DAILY BAN.yCR, GREINCASTLE, INDIANA, TUESDAY, StPIEMBEK 20, IV4V.
epiat an old, old fable by the
,lse Aesop.
Aesop lived in the sixth cen.uiy B. C., yea. from his philoso- j it, phy, It seems that even in those ' incient days human beings were rwt much different from what they are today, and that their problems were quite similar to
day’s problems.
jliANDEIS counter rath-wtld-there ai-e ^strife t*** that managctwo different beings. (j er whether aged only in t of all the wer, all the ji* laboring defenseless red at "’illjie difference ie other? ,tji the same instincts, the ces? members of
be a remedy— remedy, a simple L vrill see. if I may
THAN JUST UD EYEFUL fresh, bright lor extra years. I gets farther, uats stal and «ly—giva the pretedion against tnd wear. This is great advantage. Nu-Da dealer.
^TIME
^ Only 1795 Morrison ? Co. S r,)r d P!#«.,.
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iiisnncE ISUtE ALL
ms 1 Appliances
‘ ,hi 9h in uninsunJ 1, ^ ea| leaks 7°»|eof fuel. 'Omily iuff er $ wi 'h Baldwin. Wo °l the guarfc f "*i t j° f ,ion i ha * ^ 0X K 60 C KNOLL
t*hune '.»H8
,.esc>p called this particular „l3 “The Belly and The Mem-
.jrs.” Here it is:
One fine day it occured to the .lembers of the Body that they | .cere doing all the work ant) the Jelly was having all the food. So they held a meeting, and fter a long discussion, decided .o strike work till the Belly counted to take Us proper share
. the work.
^o xor a day or two, the Hand, efused to take the food.
that one might apply to this constant struggle between l^abor md Capital, and by referring to T am not taking sides, one
way or the other.
It is the fable about the fox who tried to get at the grapes but couldn't reach that high, no
natter how he tried.
Me finally gave up, with his rose in the air, and said: ‘T am
are they are sour,"
Mr. Aesop ends his fable with this moral: It is easy to despise what you cannot get." BOWLING NRWS
_outh refused to receive it. and .e Teeth had no work to do. But in a little while the Members began to find out that they acmselves wefe not in a very ctive condition: the Hands ould hardly move. and th -outh was all parched and dry. .vhlle the Legs w’ere unable te
support the rest.
So thus they found that even the Belly In its dull quiet wa was doing necessary work for the ;ody, and that all must work together or the Body will go to
ieces.
The Girls High School bow 1 - ing leagues were formed Mondaj evening. Officers were elected as follows: President, Doris Elthe ' more; vice president, Diana Davison; secretary, Flo Ann MrGuffey; treasurer, Jackie Earn-
shaw
The leagues will start bowling Monday, Sept. 26, after school.
2 Young Negroes Kill Policeman
CinCAGO, Sept. 20 (UP)— A policeman was shot and killed today when he tried to question two young negroes carrying a
suspicious pacungc.
Ore or both of the two youths
:ired eight shots
David Keating, 30, at close range In what authorities called a ’Void and willful murder.” They said Keating never had a chance to draw his gun. He was pronounced dead at
Evangelical Hospital.
Tne gunmen were carrying a long, newspaper wrapped package that resembled a shotgun or
the workers from entering
plant.
Capt. George Barnes of the police labor detail and 24 officers
watched the picketting.
According to early estimates about 3,700 of the plant's 4,200
rornzed e Hoosier farm wife as they poked around her home
looking for a gun.
Lcib. serving a life term for murder, was described as a darkhaiud man of medium height and weigh up about 180 pounds.
Shelton, who was serving a long 1 workers failed to report for work sentence lor a Kayeva, Mich . as the morning shift began, bank robbery in 1933, was short, The union voted to strike last weighed 140 pounds and had a night. Such votes normally are
in policeman t-stoo on a finger of his left subject to the approval of the
hand. Union’s international board but The alarm was sent out after an International representative George F Gennara, 25. Amasa. ; said earlier that the board was Mich., telephoned police at the not in session and that the strike Lafayette post yesterday and would be called without the
told them he was kidnaped near 1 board’s action,
his home last Saturday night and j forced to accompany tw r o men on a wild trip to Milwaukee, Chi-
cago and Inn anapolis.
Gennara jumped out of the car
l* 10 ; turned out to be his sistei left Chicago several years
after learning that sh
Sin ag.
and Pa
omhi had been placed for adoption by the name family iri 1922. i.i;t b\nm;k ads sell r*
BANNER ADS PAV
WANT KKPKAI.
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mKam * '
AT PENNEY’S
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There is another Aesop fable
PLYMOUTH, Sept. 20 (UP) A double funeral was arrang. ed today for Mr. and Mrs. Walter M. Swan, Crawford.svillo, who were killed yesterday when theii automobile ,vas struck headon by a truck. Truck driver Clarence I, Ragon, Indianapolis, was being held pending an investigation.
rifle. Catridges from a foreign | vvhrn it stopped at a gas station
pistol of about .32 caliber were
found at the scene.
Two youths, Sidney Johnson, 17, and Roosevelt Bacuss, 16. were sought by police after they were reported in the neighborhood shortly after the killing. Ray Crane, chief of the uniformed force, said that Keating, the father of four children, had been questioning many of the youths in the neighborhood in an effort tio stamp out a wi
of burglaries.
Two Michigan Convicts Sought
at Montmorenci. The men sped
away.
Later reports were received that two men answering Leib’s and Shelton’s descriptions stole another car near Montmorenci, Abandoning Gennara’s. They took another car near Pine Village when the second ran out of gas. They abandoned the third for a fourth near Fowler after demanding guns from Mrs. James Abler, a farm wife, and searching her house after she told them
she had no weapons.
Gennara said the men threatened him with a knife and a meat , _
I cleaver.
CLEVELAND (INS) Moi than 90 percent of labor linin' members easting ‘‘tax ballots" i.i a poll conducted by Sehenley Industries, Inc., voted for immediate reduction of wartime taxe, on such items as cosmetics, alcoholic beverages and movie ad-
missions.
SEEKS SISTER
WEDNESDAY MORNING FEATURE Gome Early LADIES KNIT GOWNS nizks a > - to Assorted C olors $1.44 IN BASEMENT REMNANTS Vi Price
CHICAGO (INS) Edge , , Palombi, 30. of Chicago is tryin : to locate a high school .sweetheart, Rose Eileen Tully, who
SPECIAL NOTICE S0N0T0NE HEARING CENTER WHEN — Thursday, September 22, 1949. WHERE -- Hotel Commercial, Greencastle, lr»d. HOURS -- 12 Noon till 5 p. m. (Standard Time) Sonotone invites all our users to come in for service and supplies if needed — Also invite anyone with Tearing trouble to come in for consultation. No :!iarge. No obligation. Over 81% of our hiisinrsN comes from natisfinl users who can recommend our services. SONOTONE — A WORLD WIDE HEARING SERVICE SONOTONE OF TERRE HAUTE 1015 South Seventh Street., Terre Hante. Indiana, Tele. C-MMII BERT Y. HORNING, Consultant in Charge.
LAFAYETTE, Ind.. Sept. 20 j (UP) Two escaped Michigan | convicts armed with big knives I were hunted in Northwestern I
Indiana today.
State police radioed an alert for Sam Loib, 39. and Henry! Shelton, 42. who they said walked away from a state prison at Marquette, Mich, on Sept. 5. Leib and Shelton were identified as the men who kidnaped a Michigan salesman, stole four' automobiles in Indiana and ter-
Workers Strike Chicago Plant CHICAGO. Sept. 20 (UP)
CIO farm equipment worker: went on strike against the International Harvester tractor works today because the firm suspended 23 employes, including the lo-
cal president and 16 stewards About 200 pickets patrolled the
five gates of the plant and jeered at employes going to work. There were no attempts to stop ^
COMING
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Wee
Bonnie Baker (i Big Days starting Sept. 26th. For information tall Fred Helmsafter 8:0(1 p. ni. Crawford 1777. Terre Haute.
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