The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 January 1952 — Page 2
THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, TUESDAY, JANUARY 29, 1252.
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CHATEAU Tonight Thru Wednesday
Two-Thirds of The World's Business is Done On Credit. Your Credit is Good For A Loan From Us. INDIANA LOAN COMPANY
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PHOM. 15
el „ RATHBONE • GUlf KIBBFE SPilf SIEPHiNSON • ROtitRI BARliJIf m:; ja J
are required. Much paper ino 1 .- t y i.-, beiu>{ spent. Only quality meiehandise is sold, but what with taxes and all. profits ate
not too hi^h.
Mrs Uixon's second grade has just completed a three weeks project on birds. Kxternal features. such as wings, feather-, bills and feet, were studied Special lessons and exercises i were given a trout the habits, | songs and ways of living of the biuejay, cardinal and crow. Cii '- 'Iren enjoyed writing stories, I building bird houses, drawing
MIIJ/KR S( IIOOI, MA\S Mrs. Kockhill's second grar
pupils wer. cue of Linda Nsi- j l'“ tuie.. and the movie shown on son to i • an important event on I lords. Each pupil compiled a television. ^ booklet on birds. The Uig Town i*ocery is nov. The next project will .leal witn in operation in Mrs. Rockhill’s ' ‘•Health and Coniiiiunity Helprooni. TIi.- business is so flour-i e,s - ishinK Hint t wo < ii.^ii m ^ihUhs Paul Han (»l<i has be n absent
LOOM 1952
MOOSE
WOTM 138
NOTICE
threi week! due to illness. We sure miss Paul. Barbara Biaek lias brought twenty-two books to school for use in the room library. Joan Callender is our librarian. There has been less confusion ns far as identification > cui.cerned in Mr. Clou's room in'" Garry Romingei h is been home sick. We are glad he has returned. Claiiy is a twin. Garry recently won a television set in a radio contest. Miss Curd, th' art -upei viam delighted the room oieinbiin by playing “Moonlight Sonata'' m the piano as the cities develop. I pictures about the theme. II was fun. James Perry and Sharon Krost are new pupils in our school iccently coining liom Indianapoli-. Founder's Lay i.. lo be lion u cd at this Friday's P. T. A ,u 2:30 p. m. We hope that parents will find lime to call nl school and look over Hie results of their child's uehieveuflnt lest which was re eeutly given.
As Mr, Hurst, Auctioneer, has donated his time and the Putnam County Sale Barn. The Moose BymCS Hdlls Auction Sale for the benefit of the Polio Fund will p t ft * * be held at the Sale Barn starting at 6:00 P.M. i ^OUTT UeCISIOR
Saturday, February 2nd.
I’leuse Peliver your articles fur sal* to .'i* Moose Home or call llli tor pickup service.
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COLUMBIA. S. C, Jan 2!l
(UP) South Carolina's Gov James F. Byrnes today hailed a U. S. Supreme Court ord. i r - turning the Clarendon county ease to a lower court as a victor v foi segregation of whites and
Negroes in public schools
“The Supreme Court has .1.- • i.led in our favor." Byrnes com-
mented in a statement.
The general opinion among I slate officials here was that the j high tribunal's action sets aside |au appeal tiled in the ease by tile j National Association for tile Advancement nl Colored People. In a short, unsigned opinion yesterday, the Supreme Comt said more mtoriiialion on th*' issue iias been filed in the lower
OPEN FOR BUSINESS George Young and Co. NEW JUNK YARD It \INBRIIXill, INI) Buying all kinds I arm Muiliinery, stoves, scrap iron, batterie* and metal, also old ears and trucks and tires, feme wire, rugs, magazines etc. Write or call fop estimates of prices or pickup. GEOK'.t; YOUNG A CO. ( all al Yanl at llaiiihrblge. WRITE! I. 4, (•rocneastlo, Ind. 4.KOKGK YOI'N'U A CO.
NEW TAX SETUP DIVIDES U. S. INTO 21 DIVISIONS
court at Charleston, S. C., since th*' ease was appealed and the justices needed the benefit of "these additional facts.” A special three-judge panel last June upheld public school segregation by a two-to-one decision, but said Negro schools in Clarendon county were not equal to white schools. The panel ordered that steps be taken lo set up equal facilities lot both races. Judge J. Waties Waring, who announced his retirement yesterday. dissented from the opinion that segregation in itself was inequality. The district court ordered Clarendon school officials to submit a progress report at the end if sin months to show wlutt had been done to equalize facilities. Meantime, the NNACP and Negro parents who brought the suit appealed t*. the Supreme Court. Th. progress report, tiled L>**< . 20. .tilled $278,500 already hud been -.pent in the Summerton district of the county ami dce*ibed other steps toward ,sfiialzution taken under the state's new *75,000,000 school improveue nt plan, which is supported by . three per cent sales tux. In Ids statement. Byrnes said tlie Supreme Court's action ‘ sustains the position of Clarendon county that the appeal was premature." U. S. Wii! Ask For Negotiations WASHINGTON, Jan. 29. - I UP I The United States soon will call for immediate neotiotions to end the bloody AngloEgyptian dispute over the Suez Canal Zone, it was revealed to-
day.
This country will uige the new Egyptian government to accept the proposal to prevent furthei violence. It also will announce its willingness to serve as a mediator. American officials hope the new government created Satutday by King Farouk will be more willing to negotiate than the lortuei regime of Premier Muslapha Nahus Pasha. U S Ambassador Jefferson Caffery is expected to submit the new American appeal for negotiations within the next few days. The United States will not advance a speeifie peace formula, reliable sources said. It will merely try to move the disputi from the firing line to the conference table. “The important thing." one ofliiial said, "is to get both sides talking instead of lighting. Once they start talking some kind of solution can be worked out.” Most American officials believe the long-range solution to the problem lies in sonic form of Middb Eastern command in which the zone would he occupied jointly by Egypt and other pow-
ers.
They emphasized, however, that the command plan advanced by tlie United Slates. Britain, France and Turkey was only a .suggestion. They said Egypt, which rejected it outright, could submit oilier ideas. Stull Department officials said they were “glad" about th" general calm which followed Farouk's action. But they declined otherwise to comment on the new government.
$100,000 Jewel 17 Met Death In Thief Hunted Minneapolis Fire
led their spotlight beams over the “clamshell" was warn*! 1 wreckage to pick out the bodies and crews of fi„. men of victims. chopping the k*. locM Whenevfi oiu* was sighted, th>' to roach ih u vietnu n
NEW YORK. Jan 29 (UPI . MINNEAPOLIS. Minn . I- 1 Detectives hunted today for a | 29. (UP) Numbed firemen well-dressed young thief accused day dug into an r "g J ot taking $100,000 in jewelry which had been from a stately Fifth Avenue tenement before matron in her elegant 13-room I killing 1" person.-
apartment overlooking Central
three-story ■ swept it,
LAST
PLAYING
TIME TODAY.
WITH \'E\\s
Four bodies one woman a'iu three small children had bee) removed from the frozen ruins nearly 24 hours after the fi’-'t raced through the structure a few hours before dawn yestei-
day. .
A fifth body, that of a man. was sighted, hut it was froz u
Park.
Investigators said they believed tlie thief, described by Mrs. Maysir Scammell as a polite, light-skinned negro, was just a “prowler who struck
gold."
Mrs. .Scammell, ftd-yeat-old
wife of
attorney, said the intruder entered her boudoir yesterday and gently touched iter back with a pen-knife as he ordered her to
ojien a safe.
She said she told the negro that crime did not pay and that he answered by putting more pressure on the knife which lie
had found in a drawei.
•You are very foolish and wii: temperatures of 15 below zc ■ get picked up," Mrs. Scammell chopped through the heap o> warned. timbers, furniture and clothing. But the thief told Mrs. Seam- The walls of the building we •' mell stie did not “have so long demolished down to about t.ie to live and I don’t mind hov i first tloor to prevent them Dorn
many people I kill."
Mrs. Seummell said the robber look the jewels and $150 in
lT Go to a Movie Theatre Tod
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prominent New York mildly into the wreckage. Fir-- £>
men moved in with axes 'FL crowbars to lice it aPa The body of one small boy was iff zK, jP'sT**
louud on a metal rot covered ov a sheet of ice He lay ns if D wen ■ Jeep imlii ding he m vr V, ^ was awaie of the blaze. V> Batteries o, floodlights ilium- /S^
mated the scene through the . tyrjfr f-f night as firemen, winking '' • .rilpB
kp: '\ Warner Tj '
Gary Coopei
eollapsing on firemen who enter-
ed the rubble.
A giant crane with n "chi' ishell" bucket whs brought mtu operation It lifte*J bucketful after Inicketful of debris out of tilt nuns and loaded it on to six trucks which carried it to * special dump where it was searched for possible bodies. Two spotlight, teams of firemen were stationed on the roots of buildings on each side of the*
"-mari aldon BUSCH‘“MAfiUNRACK! • UN!i[0 SWES PIClURtS "AAIMR BROS.
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cash. He overlooked $3 *9X1 worth of other gems in the safe. She said he lied her handt behind her back with a pair of her husband’s socks and lock-
ed her in a closet.
"1 began to yoo boo for help," Mrs. Scammell said. But bet three servants were in tiled quarters and did not liem her
call.- She said she slipped he i burned-out structure. They pla;
hands through tlie knots and l
forced open tlie door.
Police said the stolen jewels | were insured lor $86,400. Tlie 1* pieces which Mrs. Scammei) ! valued at $100,000 included a $20,000 bracelet with five large I emeralds, five round diamonds j and 53 smaller diamonds swr- ; rounded by 107 still smaller diamonds; a $12,000 pearl necklace. a .$12,650 platinum bracelet and three pearl studs worth
$12,650.
MASON If N OT Iff: Called meeting of Bainbridg, Lodge No. 75 F A A .VI January 31. at 7.30 P. M. Work in tile E. A. degree. Wm. Blue, \V M. MKNIOI TO ITUtSIUK WASHINGTON. Jan. 29 (UPi Dappei screen star Adolphe Menjou will be master : of ceremonies al the Republican I JBox supper and Lincoln Day ; rally here Feb. 4 Rep. Carroll D. Kearns, iR-Pa), production manager for the ral- ! ly to be held in the new Georgetown University gymnasium, announced Menjou’s latest starring
role.
BOMBER EXPLODES TOKYO, Jan. 29. (UPi A ! United States Air Force B-2!i bomber exploded in flight to- ) night seconds attei all 13 mem-
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INTERNAL REVENUE bureau lias divided the U S into 21 lax collection divisiuiia m a tentative new setup Divisions would be beaded by policy making district commisaioncrs ai light, Treaaury Secretary John W Snyder (left) and Internal Revenue ConiniiKHinner John Dunlap appear in Washington before a House subcomruill*e Investigating tax irrrgnianties as the comniitlre opens Hearings on President I ruman n pun for revamping the tax Collect inn sel up. The present 64 deputy commis■toner otheca would Continue to operate, but on a more consolidated r.asi* I he bureau asks 7,400 more employes to help with tax Uw enforcement. (International i
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