The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 3 December 1952 — Page 2

THE DAILY PANNFR <5REENCASTLf, INDIANA, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 195/

— PINl‘OIN J' III.... tvl or rlnmagofl nine air force positions, 12 bunkers and two caves in the low-level attacks with l.OQO-pound bombs, bullets and flaming jellied gasoline.

ANNIVEkSAKIkS Birthday)* Pat Rless.lt> years old today. Dec. 3. Kalph DeWee.se. today. Dec. .1 isephine DeWeese, Nov. ■ttb.

THt

hand ? In these maddening | quired some line thinking to dc-

DAILY BANNER

and

HERALD CONSOLIDATED

mm iirrv

Knlerisi in the postoffice at seven Neu

Tri Kappa

Initiates Members

aiunuav wcie the guests of lion- after — „ . , or. Those who enjoyed the de- interludes you may feel like giv- I feat Miss Brash a three no trump

Mrs. Elmer mg up the game on the theory i contract.

studying Ionr 0 f sptideb was open-

e-d ana Miss Brash won with | the ace. She played the ace and

USED CARS The following listed cars have all been reconditioned, ready to sell. They are all local owned cars and have had just one owner. As fine a group of usee cars as we have been ablp to offer for resale

in a long time.

1951 BUICK--6 Pass. Revira Coupe \ vrr\ low mileage ear that sells for better fhan SSHOtl. Car is fully equipped in ever,* respect. Cedin® cn this Car is S262ti Our Price S2295.00 S| | Till'- ( \K FOK \ \l.l 1 1950 OLDSMOBILE 88 Sedan Car is well tired. Ilydramatle «lri\e. liadio, Healer and lias the new famuiis ••’lorpedo Motor”. Car is ver* clean throughout. Ceiling $2939 Our Price $1845.00 1949 PONTIAC 2 Door Sedan Here i* renlh a (land* ear in ever* respect. Seeing is believing.

Ceiling $1643

Our Price $1445.00

1949 OLDSMOBILE 98 4-Door Sedan New tires, liadio Heater. 11*dranialii Drive. Car sells new for

heller than *37011

\ Iteal Value at Our I’rlee of

$1595.00

1949 PACKARD Sedan

This car is an eveeplionnll.* elenn ear ill ever* wu* — looks —

lire* — incfTialiicall,* — appearanee. \ real RarglMil at Om 1‘riee of

Oreencastle, Indiana as second class mall matter under act of

Mrs. Howard R. Youse presidMarch 7, 1X7*, Subscription price! rd 11 ,l "’ initiation ceremony of

?!i cents per week; $.7.00 |>er

.year by mail In I’utnam County: $0.00 In $10.40 per year outshle I'utnam County. Telephone Oft, 74 or lit S. It. Itarhlen, Publisher 17-10 Soutn Jackson Street

/

It were well if humanity feared to draw the sword, for they tiiat take the sword perish thereby. Reave vengeance to God - The youth drew not his sword: for he feared; because of his youth. Judges 8:20.

Tri Kappa Sorority at the Union Building on Tuesday evening. The initiation followed a dessert attended by active members as well us associates of Tri Kappa. Those inducted were Mrs. Wallace Graves. Mrs. Thomas Bitlies. Mrs. Jonathan Houck, Mrs. Don Tourtelot, Mrs. John Wittich. Mrs. Ray French and Mrs.

Carl Washier.

licious dinner were:

Jones. Joe Hinote of ReeRvilk : -Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Fredericks of Terre Haute; Mr. and MiHarry Tresner and daughte:. Kay Jean of Greenca.stle K i

and the host and hostess. Afternoon callers were Mr. anil

Mrs. C. A. Wilcox. Mr .and Mrs. Fred R. Wileox and son and Mr. Ed Roberts all of Plainfield, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Pitts and son and daughter of Lafayette; Mr. an I Mrs. Herbert J Wileox and son of Indianapolis: Mrs. Mary Skelton of Greencastle, and Hubert Hi-

note of Manhattan

H - D - C -

West

(Mr. New) S - Q 10 8 4 H - Q 8 4 2

D - 7

C - $ 7 ft 2

P^rsomil And Local News Uriefo

Delta Them Tan Alumnae Entertain Actives

of

' Pn uhvteriail Vionien ' To Have Meeting

The Women's Association

the Presbyterian church will have » Christmas dessert Thursth P ! day at 1:30 in the church dining ' room The Rev. Harry Walrnnd

will he the main speaker.

Fathers Auxiliary No. 1 will meet this evening at 7:30 at the VFW Post IftftO Home. The December meeting of the Hrthany Fellowship of the Fir a Christian church has been postponed. Mrs. Effie Moore returned home Wednesday after spending several days with her husband, James Moore, at Fort Benning

Ga.

The annual bazaar of the Ru:ssellvile Christian church will he held in the church Saturday evening, following the usual dinner which will he served by the ladies

of the church.

I^ee Hamilton, 3ft, Durham. N. C., a penal farm escapee, was taken to the state prison at Michigan City today by Sheriff Joe Rollings to serve a term of

one to five years.

Mr. and Mrs. Donald Babb and daughter, Donna Lynne. ol Pekin, 111., visited from Friday until Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Earl Babb, 1528 East

Walnut street.

The Warren Township Lions Club will sponsor a bean supper nd card party on Thursday ov< ning, Dec. 4. at the Putnamville school building. They will start

| serving at 5:30.

Fay Thomas and Robert' H. Thomas have returned from Augusta, Ga., where they xtpen,t — I several days with Pvt. John | Thomas. John is stationed at

Demo» Hope to Regain Top Party leader. See Camp Gordon Georgia Congress Control in '55 1 Stevenson Nominee Agoin Twenty original paintings by i. Special to Central Press famous contemporary artists will

be on exhibit at the DePauw Art Center Sunday afternoon from 2 to 5 p. m. in a show sponsored by Kappa Pi. student art group, and the DePauw Art De-

partment.

Mrs. James V Birt received a

Bridge

rible dummy play, manage to beat your brains out on hand

deem - shonkwiler

• $1195.00

II RMS TO SI IT, ( \N Itl VltliAMHiD.

HOLLY'S FRIENDLY SAL ES& SERVICE

PHONE 297

^ud^WASHINGTOH

MARCH OF EVENTS

•tY/"ASHINGTON—Despite their landslide defeat, many top DemoW crats—with some Republicans ruefully concurring -are making

three rosy predictions these days. They're saying:

1—The Democrats **111 control the Congress that meets in January, 1655—because the minority party usually picks up strength in midterm elections and the Republican margin of control of the 83rd Con-

iM M P ress i» wry slim.

2—That Gov. Adlai Stevenson will be the Demo-, , „ . . cratic presidential nominee again in 1956- because ! telephone call tom he has, even though losing, demonstrated his ability I Pto■ James Birt, in Tokyo, J.t-

The Greencastle alumnao group of Delta Theta Tau delighlfully entertained the active

members at a dinner at

Union Building on Tuesday evening. The dinner was served at tables beautifully appointed with i

the use of colorful candles sur-I . » i i I iwi nding pcr-onaliged Christmas f DldCrlWOOCl

balls. | Following tile dinner, Miss Patricia Cliff, a DePauw Student of New Castle, gave several in* j teresting Christmas readings by Ogden Nash. John Williams of Peoria, III . displayed considerable talent in the rendition of vocal numbers with his own guitar accompaniment. WORE, DePauw’s radio station, broadcast a live program from the ballroom. The Christmas play presented was well done by mem-

bers of the WORE staff.

The committee in charge of arrangements was composed of Mi.- Howard Rockhiil. Mrs. Rex Haines. Mrs. Nathaniel Huckleberry. Mrs. James B. Zeis, Mrs. Sam T. Hanna and Mrs. Harold

Stewart.

Mrs. Alice llnstcs* In ( lull IX Club 48 met at the home of Mrs. Pauline Alice on Nov. 26. Roil call was answered with favorite table decorations for Thanksgiving. i The vice-president, Mrs. Freda ^ Owen had charge of the meeting, j final plans were made for our J annual Christmas party to beheld at Old Trail Inn on December 13 at 6:30 P. M. After opening her gifts the hostess gave a Thanksgiving story and two contests. Delicious refreshments were served and a pleasant social hour followed. The next regular meeting will be with Mrs. Lillian Arnold in Jan-

uary.

up

that ail your reading,

and practicing was a waste

time.

South dealer Neither side vulnerable North (Mrs. Keen) S - K 7 3

10 7 6 ft K J ft 4

A Q East

(Mr. Masters)

S - J 9 2

H - A J 9 3 D - G 10 2

C - J 10 3

Smith (Miss llrash)

S - A 6 ft

H - K

D - A P 8 6 3 C - K 9 6 4 The biding:

South West

1 D Pass

3 N T All Pass

Don’t do it. Take my word for it. sound bidding and play will pay off in the long run. When an opponent slops into a makeable slam whieh requires three successful finesses and two good

a ...... „ , m suit breaks, don’t jump out of Sound Bidding And Playing , ... . nr, , -ri . r> the window. There will he a romPay Off In The I^mg Run .... . .

. , pensating hand later when that Have you ever been in one of i .

same opponent, using the same

those streaks wheie your oppon- , . . .... . . „

I bidding methods, will hand you a

ents, m spite of atrocious bidding, i “ . ..

ii i , nice 1100-pomt penalty.

fantastic opening leads and hor- . , . . , v ^ i Not every defender would

have got a plus score in today’s deal as Mr. Masters did. It re-

■soVrcKi

king of diamonds and Mr. New I showed out on the second lead of the suit, dropping a small club A third diamond was led and Mr. Masters was in with the

j queen.

At this point Mr. Master? knew the contract could be de

feated. Do you see why?

He reasoned this way. Mr. New is far from the world’s best, but he religiously leads the fourth

highest card from his longest a ft er (he mor*v»'o.'

itraets I • • i ...'

suit against no trump contracts.

insure Your

Part loo

bums

note

Will tj)(> re t,,

ficient

IF YOUR

North

3 D

your

i

■ o - ■ivlt

is paid will there be su|.

T, ’ is Mr TesTad bcen'ied. The Ficient monty (rom tbe four , 0 Ivas > 'in dummy and Mr insurance lo reimburse Masters bad the deuce Th ■ * ^ ^ ^ ^

^T^rM^Nrhiah::;; eq..it y ?

f aTiJ«°" anal .. W ",“ ld ''; 1 >0 ", k ' "• button, truuv ^ b , ;ms | lieved to know that your that n,eiin ' had one insurance is adequate to

and Mias Uts“

So at the fifth trick. Mr. Mas- ) prelect yOU, tOO I

ter* laid down the ace of hearts,

dropping the lone king. Three InSUfC OOW With

m oiv heart tricks were enough

Z defeat the contract SllUpSOP MOM

Agency Phone; 6 -

First-Citir.ms Bank & Tnut' Hide. — Grewcaatle.

Who I.minder* sHircl* and ShirU

Oort?

Hume Laundry And Cleaners

Phone 126

to unify warring factions.

3—That he will return the White House to Democratic control because thousands of messages he received after his defeat from people who said they voted for Oen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, but felt that Stevenson had won the right to another chance and

indicated support in '56.

Busily attempting to pump new life into the Democratic party, its high strategists find consolation in the fact that the diversified nature of Ike's record vote makes it likely that at least some of ins supporters will become disenchanted.

• TAX PROSPECTS Truman administration economists say there is little prospect that General Eisenhower can achieve an early tax reduction unless be ranks to put the government further in the red. The way the Truman experts figure the picture: The deficit for the current fiscal year is estimated at 10.3 billion. Present military and atomic energy expansion schedules will result in a jump of four to atx billion dollars in the 1954 fiscal year. Revenue is not likely to increase much with present taxes, so if things stand as they are, the deficit for the next fiscal year will total $14-to-$16 billion. Fiscal filberts say the Eisenhower administration can slash only five to $7 billion from Truman spending plans unless military and foreign aid programs are sharply curtailed. Thus, their question is: Where would a tax reduction come from? One controversial levy is the excess profits tux on corporations, which expires next June 30, but unless the international situation looks brighter, leaders of the outgoing administration suggest that General Eisenhower may urge Congress to keep those assessments in

effect.

• • • • • 'T-DAY”—General Eisenhower has expressed a wish for an inauguration free of fanfare and bombast, but with the Republicans having waited 20 years for the great occasion, a spectacular celebration seem* assured. The inaugural stands will accommodate a record throng and arrangements are being made to make “I-Day”—‘‘I for Ike" as well as ”1 for Inauguration"—a truly memorable event. Joseph C. MoCarraghy, the Washington lawyer and civic leader who head* the inaugutal committee, has a Hair for the big flourish. He was responsible for staging the tumultuous welcome for Gen. Douglas Mae Arthur on his dramatic arrival In Washington last year. MeGarraghy’s subcommittees are expected to total more than 2.000

persons.

• • • •

• cICft CHAIRMAN—Adm. William Feehteler, chief of naval operalions, is slated to be the next chairman of the Joint chiefs of staff even though he has only a nodding acquaintance with President-elect Eisen-

hower. It’s a matter of protocol.

The Navy claims that military custom dictates that Gen. Omar Bradley’s successor in the JCS chairmanship shall come from "the next senior service”—whfrh

U the Navy.

Although there is nothing In law to prevent Ike from appointing an Air Force officer to the Job, or

another Army man, like Bradley, his respect for service tradition Is well known and Feehteler appears to be almost certain of the post. Bradley’s term expires next August 16. At about that time, Ike Is expected to name Oen. "Al" Grucnther as Army chief of atsdf, Adm. Robert Carney as chief of naval operations, and Gen. Laurts Norstad

pun. The call was received here at 6:55 Wednesday morning, i: was 10:00 p. Yu there. Mrs. Birt, the former Hope Eriksen, said the call was very clear. Pfe. Birt was formerly stationed in the Unit Personnel Section in Korea. His address is: Pfc. James V. Birt, U. S. 55200120, U. P S. No. 8 Reni- Etchelon, A. P. O. 86. c o Postmaster. San

Ktimeisco, Calif

Doing the washing in the home i: becoming obsolete because it takes too much out of life. Phone 126 Home Laundry & Cleaners. Wed-tf.

TV - TONIGHT COURTESY WRIGHT ELEC).

WTHM-TY—Channel 0

5:00 .7:15 5:30 5:45 0 00 6:30 0:15 7:00 8:00 8:1ft 8:30 9:00 9:45 10:00 10:15 10 10 10:45 11 00 12:00

Tea Time Tunes Parent Education Cereal Theater Town Topic i Shady Ai res 8 porta Telenews Godfrey’s Friends Test The Pres., Tune iif the Day Man vs. Crime IRC Boxing Sports Arena WeaiherniHii News Music In Night Newsreel Charlie Chan Night Owl T'lieaie*

FtchuUr Nest JCS Cholrman?

u Air Force chiet ^

Friendly Circle Club To Meet Friday The Friendly Circle Home Demonstration Club will ine''i with Mrs Paul Albin Friday a’, noon, for the annual Christnin dinner. Bring food and tab!" service and 50c gift for exchange. A good program hn boon planned for the afternoon. Please remember a gift for se ret sister's birthday. Family Dinner Enjoyed Sunday On Sunday, Nov. 30, a family get-together and a pitch-in dinner was enjoyed at the home of Mr .and Mrs. John Hinote >n Manhattan. Their daughter, Mrs. Elmer Jones of Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada, who has been here visiting the pa*t three weeks and Mrs. Mary Skelton another | daughter, whose birthday was

A

&

*r<

FROM OUR

.VZS'/Jt OF GIFTS Want to put star-dust in her eyes on Christmas morning . . . make her heart skip a beat lor sheer joy^ Then choose here the jewelry gilts she .i treasure al-

ways! Ladies Dresser Sets Si 2.45 to S18.50 Powder Music Boxes SI2.50 Manicuring Sets $4.50 to S7.50 Rook Ends and Figurines SI0 03 to $14.50 CANDY DISHES, ASH TRAVS, VASES Imported from Austria and Portugal S 1,25 to S7.50

m

Va

jf

l

i »«

But it’s time right now to select the

C/FTS' OF RE. -H’l ’IF! 7, SIU 'ER PL. -H E

TUDOR PLATE service for six S23.00 ROGERS 1881 service for eight S4C.50 ROGERS AND SONS service for eight $49.75 1847 ROGERS service for eight S74.50 HOLMES AND EDWARDS service tor eight $74.50 COMMUNITY service for eight S77.50 MANY SILVER PLATED DISHES Mid

ACCESSORIES BABY SILVER HOLMES AND EDWARDS STEAK KNIVES

$4.50 and Up Si.00 and Up $3.50

Sis

WRIGHTS ELECTRIC NK.RYK lt Torn Tlfesan^hoiisa DEALER APPLIANCES AND TELEVISION SALES AND SERVICE 305 N Jackson Phnn*t 64

Shtai\<ur$ PEN $ET$

you will give tor Christmas! SAM HANNAS BOOK STORE si&'px'pwp&pai

We invite you to use our Lay-Away Plan.

Open Wednesday alteriiooiib tor yotr conven'ence.

DEEM-SHONKWILER

“DISTINCTIVE JEWELERS ’

13 South Indiana

Phone 1022