The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 22 January 1952 — Page 4
' 7;;: OAtlY BANNER, GREcNCAS E, K3JANA, TUtSDAY, JANUARY 22, i93/.
NF.W MAYSVIM.E Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Clarpnre Ward. Alvora Weller, and Ida Steward during; the week were. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Young of Indianapolis, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ward and daughter of near Morristown. Mrs. Hazel Graham and Mrs. Clotile Skelton of Bainbridge. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Leak and family, Orville Johnston, George Fitzsimmons. Stella Johnston and son. Bobbie. Rev. Jones of Kentucky, spent Friday night with Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Buttry.
Rev. Hoskins of Whitesvilk , ftt Coalpsv , 11(>f 8lindav afternoon, called on Mrs. Mali, oat at the | near Brick chapel raHed on Mr .
home of Mr and Mrs. Walter
Buttry.
Mr and Mrs. H. H. Hargis of New York City, visited with Mrs. Hargis' parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Forney. They were enroute to Texas to visit his parents. Mr. ami Mrs. Raymond Kiser of Indianapolis visited with Aunt Bell Keck and Pearl
Elliott.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Johnston spent the week end with Mr and Mrs Bill Robertson at Danville. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Reason called on Mr. and Mrs Frank Kittle Mr. and Mrs. Lee Keck of
Keck's mother and sister, Mrs. Bel! Keck an I Mrs. Pearl Elliott. The most frequently presented gift in the United States- is the familiar match book. Retailers of cigarettes, cigars and pipe tobacco give away more than flO', of the 12,500,000,000 match book- produced annually. One out of three American women boasts the ideal “feminine curve," according iu tne Corset ami Brassiere Association of America. The ideal is a waist measuring six inches less than the bust, and nine to 10 inches
less than the hips.
ARKANSAS QUADS DOING NICELY IN INCUBATORS
lOINO NICELY, quadruplets of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Ponder lie In Incubators In hospital at Nashville Irk . a'ter birth on the Ponder farm 20 miles away. Nurse Minnie Powers keeps closo watch. Ponder cat •ted tne bath s Into the hospital ir. Ids arm*, Mrs. Ponder, also doing nic“>”, .-aid she wasn’t stirpri.-' ince she cxpecteu twins. Ponders have eigne other children. (International Soundphoto
BIG VALUES BIGGER SAVINGS
rjjss:
SAVE ON FIRE KING WARE!
9c
ThU fumoiiH l ire King gluksivarc k bent resistant, sturdy! slave now! Cup and
aauecr, both for tie.
Plate-, and howls, each Ae.
Dressing Combs He Deft Nail File 9c Plastic Soap Bov 9c Needle Hooks He Howl Hrlltdics 19c •hdcc lilasscs, ,1 for 9c Men's Handkerchiefs, !*<• Each — <1 for 49c
EKCO KITCHENWARE
k Each
Regularly 15c to 25c
Choose o peeler, strainer, masher, whip, pie plate, meat loaf pan or teaspoon! Here’s your ehanee to
add te your kitelien utensils!
Crochet Cotton Ball I9e Glass Salad Howl 19c “Aerowax" Floor Wax 29c Enameled Head Hummer He Leaf Iton Hon Dish He
(Illy Polish Kcmnver Gum Ituhher Panties Salt-N-Ppppem, Knell Mustard Dispensers
9c He 9c 9c
Taft Challenges Demo Opponents BELOIT, Wis., Jan. 22 (UP) Son. Robert Taft today promised to beat any presidential nominee the Democrats could put up “if I can guide the campaign” for the Republicans. And he said he would lead the GOP to victory by avoiding a campaign of ‘'generalities.” The Ohio senator moved into the second day of his 48-hour tour of the dairy state with a half-dozen stops scheduled, including an open house at h! > Wisconsin headquarters in Madison and a meeting with weekly newspaper editors in Monroe. His tour is calculated to win Wisconsin's JO GOP presidential delegates away from Harold Stassen in the April 1 primary. Taft made his appeal to carry the ball for the Republicans last night at a box lunch attended by 4.000 persons at the Beloit Fiei I House College. His audience twice the size that was expected whooped it up when Toy ripped into t'le Truman administration on all counts the Korean war. free spending, "five per centers," and a drift toward a “planned econ-
omy."
He also drew cheers for a pat on the back for Wisconsin's own Sen. Joseph R McCarthy. He praised the Wisconsin Republican for raising the issue of Communism in the State Department, although last year Taft j said he could not agree with all of the McCarthy’s charges. He appealed to the GOP to give him the reins in this Fall's j presidential election, not only as j the GOP .standard bearer but ; also as the guiding hand in th | shaping of the Republican cam- ;
paign.
The Republicans, he «aid. will novel get into office “around a curtain of generalities.” Taft accused President Tinman of “pure hyprocracy" by campaigning in 1948 for a bi-parti-an foreign policy then tossing it aside after his re-election. MISSIONS HALLY Dr. Charles F. Golden, from the Board of Missions of the Methodist church, will be the speaker at a Missions Rally to be held at the Gobin Memorial Methodist church on Wednesday evening of this week. The service j will begin at 7:.'10 p. m. Dr. Golden is chairman of the Department of Home Missions work among Negroes, and will speak of this work as well as other phases of the entire Missionary program of the church. Members anti friends of Gobin church are cordially invited to attend the program. Other churches in the vicinity of Greencaatle have also been invited to send delegations. This meeting is one in a series being planned by the Annual Conference Board of Missions. HKBKON Mrs. Mary McGaughey an 1 Mis. Alma Gardner were business visitors in Indianapolis, Fri-
day. <
Mrs. Lula Clodfeltei left Sunday to stay a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Alvan ClodfeRer at Crawfordsville. HEAD THE HAN NEK ADS
ANOTHER ROOSEVELT TAKES A b0W 'I’l'jtMp.y-
HEBRON Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Clndfelter, Paul McGaughey, Mr. and Mrs. Otis Clodfelter, and Mr. and Mrs. Donald Hazlett attended the Farm Meeting and luncheon that was held at Greencastle, Friday the 11th. Mr. and Mis. Ray McGaughey were called to Veedersburg, Frl-
by the sudd l uncle, Fred Sl , ^ tened the funerau The condition on wasn't improving ’ taken to a Log a . Friday noon. f(J1 His wif <“ and so. eopanied him. t-J home Saturday
WfR$ILLINOIS PRIMARTRjf
Jk 1 MAKING her camera debut. Nancy Suzanne Roosevelt rests n the arms of her fattier. Rep. Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., of New York, and his wife, the former Suzanne Perrin. Nancy is the first child fo, th. couple. The son of the late president has two sons, Franklin III and Christopher, by his first wife, Ethel DuPont. (International)
52%
TAX BITE CLIMBING BACK UP
Federal Budget
EXPENDITURES
as a Percentage of National Income
FUcal Year*
PEAK WAR TtAt
1945
18%
1950
1951
25%
m
29%
1953
FEDERAL BUDGET expenditures as • percentage of national income an climbing back up again after falling sharply from the peak war yea of 1945. Budget for fiscal 1953 (beginning July 1) puts the budget a 29 per cent of national Income, this chart accompanying Presides Truman's budget message to Congress /hows. tInternational,
SENATOR BRIEN McMAHON, (D) of the Joint Congressional Atomic Energy committee, ment in Washington that he will campaign for the presidential nomination in the Illinois primary :ig.i.r.s| Estes Kefauver of Tennessee. McMahon said he - ,-e| (with Kefauver "will be carried out in good spirit. Xm | Douglas MacArthur. Harold Stassen and Sen tor Kob< ire entered on the Reoublican slate, t Internationa! i HOW FEDERAL BUDGET IS Dll
J5.4
The FEDERAL BUDGET
Billion*
DEFENSE COSTS TOWER HIGHEST
$65.1^
FEDERAL BUDGET EXPENDITURES
Major
National Security ' Programs
Billions of Dollars
$63
$9.8,
t 1L $
FISCAL YEAR 1953 ESTIMATED
$65.1 BILLIONS of th* President’* $85.4 billion budget for the fiscal year 1953 (beginning July 1) are allocated for military programs, thif chart accompanying message to Congress shows. (International/
GLASS TUMBLERS lt*‘g .-M each, S fur Hr Save here! 9 n*. sl/.e sparkling crystal glass in popular design Buy now!
UTILITY BOWLS Regular I.V Hr Each Openproof stoneware; green, tan or brown glaze. I-pint tupar iiv, 5-lnili diameter.
POTTED NYASINTHS 9c pot 2 bulbs !n pot. parked in growing fiber; buy several pots!
C. H. HP C.
VARIETY STORE
BAINMIIDGE
ROACHDALE STORES
THE INDIVIDUAL FAYS MOST, DEFENSE GETS MOST
Where it comes from -
The BUDGET dollar n«e*l ’.Ma, 1953 K*tlmat*4
llttlllll WIKI W Tit rililtfit MNM M til NKIt
■IMCT TAXIS ON INDIVIDUALS I* largest aourc* of th* budget dollar aa divided la tht. gngng Pmldut'a budgat message. By far, graaUat £*rc*ntaf* |OM to military ayvtce*, /JrG.ma'k^
1953 Intipb tidrli
COIUMN AT RIGHT shows how the $85.4 billions federal 1933 is divided among defense, Interest, veterans and oth tures. Preceding columns Indicate division in three prec: vrars. according to this Dicsidential message chart, tint 135 Acre Fa Filling Station and Garage Building. War and Storage Building AT PUBLIC AUCTION Wednesday, Janary 30,195! F’arm to be koI.1 at 11:00 A. MLocated 12 miles south of rrawforrlHville, just ersliurg, Ind„ Hi inllcn north of CircencaMle, on siuG ll■ 1 • , ' , Farm improvements consist of 4 room house elw frame barn 24x32 ft., brick barn 38x39 ft., two stones It'E mns, 12 ft. sheds on two sides, concrete floor . throughout, houses, and other out buildings, practically all tilla ,, l { '- in good state of cultivation, the greater part of tillable luw cleared and is virgin soil only raised 3 and 4 crops, s<v in new alfalfa, all woven wire hog tight fence, water su; ished by driven well, running water in pasture furnish*” lasting spring. This farm mav be offered in separate ti* together to suit the pun baser. I'illing station anil garage building to be sold at 1 ^ eaieii at the northwest earner of intersection on biK* 1 " 4 ' Parkersburg, ind. ,. B'uMing 32x38 ft., has electricity, 6 in. well will, t'• t i L. R 71 ery ' sta,ion - garage or welding shop [ - o! f mately 99x100 ft., a real Motel location. This is the best W kwf,! Sb c rg ; as 11 is on the 8alne sid -' of the high"*)' F 'S Sprin * nnd ron<l to R' |s sellvilie, Ind. warehouse and Storage building to he sold at 2:00 p * J,,’."™' 1 * e ''^ of ‘"‘'rseHlon at Parkerahurg, Ind. Thii-‘ snare i«’r^° l K d , ' 1 ronverted into a dwelling, has 2.450 fh 1 mhir f. ge basenient ' one side has wooden floor for gn® u.,!,^ ment floo f «nd double doors, for nr, Kner)' ed by fe^ce y ' ^° <>d Wel ' and 8,tuated on about 1'^ acres s* balam'e^n’ao a P,ir £ hn,,er ,0 make reasonable deposit sale Km- fi.. ti, da ' VS 'J n8per *' on Inv'twi anytime on oi hefurt Rorkvilif. in . hp ^ n ^ orniatic >n, contact owner or the f d r hones offire 5M ' 368. a fieldman thejaim Saturday, January 26 from 9 a. m. to 4 p m. toB1 . t JOHN POYNTS, Owner BI SfAHARK and SONS. Auctioneers Kockvll* Not responsibi* for Aocidenta.
