The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 January 1954 — Page 2
THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, FRIDAY, iANUARY 29, 1954.
Today s Market - ooo Uneven L.?g:ht i • . .u barruwj* nnrf • arty to :nj«tanc«» 21V a vie- weak: 17-240 lbs.. 0->26 50 2 4 0- 270 .lbs. v 2"i 75 270-300 lbs . $24-520-160 lbs, *22.50-124 -• ,f >r x rhntre 00-400 lbs
EXTRA!
killed Thursday when h-*- valk ;r*'i the pa f h of a Wabash liejph' ttar" afte* apparently fai'inir T bear its warning whistle. Engineer Russell Fansler, Peru, said he sounded the whistle epeatedly when he saw Fleetwood coming toward the count\ road crossing three miles east of here. An investigation show’ed Flee‘vood, who was throwm under t!it train and found under the 14th tar. was deaf.
SOriETY ^ ^
Monday C lub .Meets Feb. 1 Monday Club will meet Monday afternoon. Feb. 1. at 2 o’clock at the home of Mrs. Roy Hillis. Mrs. Wayne Hopkins will have the program.
AN Korea. Jan 2» ■ r disastrous fire
tUPi
the
1.500 refugee shacks lefr f 1 ViO Korean**
died
;. oped flames.
PERU. Ind., Jai
i Fleetwood
HAMMOKD Ind.. Jan. 2f* — flNS>—Harold Alzana. a circus ^ ! I aerialist. nursed face injury today and hoped that he would have no more experiences Idee i the one which disrupted his Ham-
1 reports said three -, on ^ performance
A marksman with an air gun fired from the audience at Alztna. high above on a high wire, •nd the pellet struck his cheek and nearly knocked him from his
! ofty perch.
Almost every resiihead of the wind-
29 <UPt
44. Peru, was
PENNY SUPPER SATURDAY, JANUARY 38TH. XMUJI AN LM.ION HOME inx at 4:4.5 to 7:*M» o'clock. Hi \MERIC \N EEr.lON AFXII.IAKl Public Invited.
V. F. W. DANCE Saturday Night, 9 To 12 \ MUSIC BY ' SNYDER 1 FAMILY from DANVILLE At The GEN. JESSE M. LEE POST 1550 HOME
I r all paid up members „ t jh,. Veterans of Foreign Wars, lies \ii\iliar\ and Fathers Auxiliary. ,
Historici.1 Meeting Al f>ld Trail Inn The Putnam County Historical Society held a dinner meeting at 'he Old Trail Inn on Wednesday evening. There were four guests. Prof. John J. Baughmann. Robert Farrar. Joe Clapp and Richard Crandall. The program was given by Prof John J. Baughmann. a graduate cf DePaww. whose ancestors were very closely connected with the University in various ways. Col. Aden Cavins. oldest son of Samuel A Cavins of Bloomfield, was sent to Asbury College in 1847 when the institution was ten ..cars old. At that time the school had one hundred seventy-five students. He was a charter member of the Betas and w'as a part ji Company L> of Asbury which later was in the Civil war. Prof. Buughmann’s great grandmother was a Mrs. Livingston who came here and kept students on Anderson street. Her oldest daughter, a Mrs. Josephine Troop w'rote a book of poetry in 1883 entitled • Youth’s History of the United States.” She assisted in writing the charter tor the ■ Rathbone Sisters.” Mr. Torr, former assistant postmaster was another relative. FILLMORE CHRISTIAN CHURCH Roland S. Rasar. Minister. Raymond Lisby. Supt. Bible school 9:45 a. m. Morning worship 10:45 a. m. Sermon: "The Final Triumph of Faith.” There will be no evening worship service at the church due to the fifth Sunday night meeting of Pne county churches at Bainbridge. The associate minister of (iobin Methodist church w:U be the special speaker. The young people will meet at 3:30 at the Bainbridge Christian church. Announcement* The Truth Seekers Class wdli meet at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Snodgrass tonight at 7:30 p. m. Choir practice will be held at the church on Monday night 7:00 p. m. Claude Phillips funeral sendee will be held at the church on Sunj day afternoon a’ 2:00 o'clock.
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OWLE STERLING Vc will help you to select the perfect gift from our complete stock of this proud solid silver, * gift that will say "I love you’* all the days of her life. ^ our gift can have great charm at a very small price: a teaspoon for as little as $3.70, a serving piece for as little as $4.00. ... and we’ll gift-wrap and ^ . - -kjEsrf* * deliver.
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DEEM—SHONK WILED
13 S. Indiana St.
DISTINCTIVE JEWELERS
Phone 1022
IMMALP CONSOUO*
DMlar act •t March 7. L87& Babaertptt— prt» 25 cento par week; S5.M pat pear by nail ta Petaan Oa—ty: ftwSe to «ie.M par rntaaat Caonty Trtepb—a M. 74 ar 114 a. r 17-19 Soatb Jackson
Dr. F R DettlofFs mother. Mrs Emma Duke is in the PutBin: county hospital recovering from injuries due to a fall. Past Presidents Parley of the American Legion Auxiliary will meet Monaay evening at 8 o’clock the home of Mrs. Irma Hurst \
510 So. JacKson St.
Roland Lane, prominent Monj roe township farmer and focm- ; er county treasurer and merchant of this city, underwent a major operation at the Putnam County hospital yesterday. His condition was reported good to-
day.
The Putnam County Home Demonstration chorus will meet Monday, February 1st. at 7 o’- ! clock at the Christian church
TODAY’S BIBLE THOUGHT Wherefore rebuke them sharp- j ly, that they may be sound in the faith—Titus 1:13.—We hear much of Academic Freedom, bu
no One has freedom to destroy j 8nnex for rehearsal It is im _
the fabric of liberty and civilization under any pretext whatever. The test of any doctrine is whether it would help or destroy our loftiest hopes and ideals.
portant that all tend. Members
change in meeting place.
members itplease note
Personal And Local News Briefs
Tlie American Legion Auxiliary Unit No. 281 of Cloverdale will hold a regular meeting in the Legion Home Monday Feb. 1 at
7:30.
A called meeting lor Past Matrons and Past Patrons night will ex. held Tuesday evening Feb. 2 at 7:30. Invitations will be held with past officers presiding during initiation. Visiting members
are invited.
Funeral services for Mrs. Daisie Sample Riggin were held today at 10:00 A. M. from an Indianapolis luneral home. Burial was this afternoon at Van Wert. Ohio. Besides the husband, I Lawrence W. Riggin of Indianapolis, Floyd F. Sample of Cloverdale is among the four brothers surviving. Three sisters also survive Mr. and Mrs. Charles Brann of Greencastle Fk 2. will celebrate their 60th wedding anniversary, Monday Feb. - 1st. They are the parents of three childien, namely. Miss Ollie P-t ann and C. Qeraki Brann both of Bloomington and Mrs. Lloyd Fellows of Oreencastle R. 2. They also have four grandchildren and one great
grandson.
Small Fortune Is Job For Court
EVANSVILLE, Ind.. Jan. 29 — i INS)—Fifteen years ago Ferd Gumberts, an Evansville furniture company president, received some packages in the mail which contained $37,718.54. The money was mailed trom Trieste. Zurich and Paris Today. Vanderburgh county circuit and probate courts have the job of trying to determine who gets the small fotune. Gumberts assumed that the money was sent to him for safekeeping by unknown relatves of tne Rosenthal family, which had been associated with him in business. The money came at a time when Adolf Hitler and the Nazis 'Vere on their life-destroying march across Europe. Two claims to the money were tiled last February in Vanderbuigh circuit court by Carlo deCerma. of Trieste, on behalf of the heirs of Giuseppe Goldschmied and Enzo Milner, of Venice, as an idministrator of the estate of Giuseppe’s brother. Samuele. The two brothers were believed Lo have been in business in Austria prior to the 1938 anschluss, ind apparent Iv both are now . . •*’ ! : dead. Then this week, Giuseppe Goldschmied’s will was filed in Vanderburgh circuit court by a local attorney. Fred Bamberger, and
he qualified as administrator of
Tickets for the Lincoln Day' Uie e ' stale ' *”ceeeding deOcma.
,\ iio has died.
Also filed were records showing that in 1950 the magistrate court if Trieste had issued a certifi-Y-ate establishing the legal heirs of the estate, one of whom
si favors sought, genuine relief as promised." I w-s .-aid. Lewis joined other labor leaders in attacking Mr. Eisenhower’s recommendation for govern-ment-supervised strike votes. -Annual Meeting a real savings to the farm oper-
ator.
Roswell "Bob" Garst proved to be a most controversial speaker The Coon Rapids. Iowa man made several startling statements. Arguing that most farmers reduce then livestock loads for fear of drought and unfavorable pasture conditions, Mr Garst declared "putting up hay is as modern today as driving a horse and buggy." Having fed 15.000 head of cattle without using any hay. Mr. Garst insists that farmers can feed corncobs and cornstalks to their catt’e more cheaply and effectively than they can feed hay. To do so. he mixes the corn residue with molasses and urea, and increases the proteins that his animals get. and reduces drastically the costs of the weight the eatt!<' gain. He urged farmers to decide what part of their farms would make the best cropland and use it continually for that purpose, and leave the rest to permanent pasture.
t
Revolutions in the past twenty J conservationists T the H:*rvey ■,esrs in agriculture were term « Nichols family was iwa: ted the the hybridization and mechani- degre- of ’M tste: Conservation zation revolutions. However, he Family of 1953." Mr. Nichols predicted that the next ten yeais and his sons. James R Doyle inri would bring the ’’nitrogen" rev- Herschel each operate farms in Million into agriculture and in Putnam county m les active soil usted that it would bring more i conservation plans. To Kenneth jenefit to the farmer than th-’ M. Horton of Cloverdale went ither two combined. ; the Master Conservationist «' In addition, he cited the in- 1953 award. Mr Horton opercreased com productivity figures ates 152 acres south of Cloverof the United States showing j dale on which he has installed hat today we are producing more than 4000 lineal feet of te:more than 50 per cent more corn racing, and over 1400 feet of on 20 per cent less acreage than grass waterways He also was we did 20 years ago. He also | awarded the Baltimore and Ohio predicted that in another ten | Railroad award Both »f these years com yields would increase awards were accepted for hi n another 25 per cent while acre- yesterday by his wife and daugh-
age in production would decline J ters.
another 15 per cent. To Janies L. Myers of RoachWilliam H. Yaw, farm man- dale went the "M -fer Practiagenient specialist from Lafay-j tioneer of Profit from Pasture" ette outline.! ways in which Im j award for the vei \ "ffe. live use knew from experience that farm- ' that he makes of grass in his ers might cut their operatirg , livestock program, costs. Specifically, he recoin- Mrs. Hattie Sn.dley md Romended ill that farmers use land Neior of Floyd township
grass as much as possible to reduce feed costs. >. 2i buy feed .in>! fertilize! in larger quantities t reduce unit costs, and (3) carefully watch the reporting of live stock for tax purposes to Lai; advantage of provisions regarding breeding stock that are taxe on a capital gains basis. Fred L O’Hair presented "dtgrees” to several outstanding soi'
were awarded the ’’Master Land-lord-Tenant Conservation Team of 1953" degree for the conservation work that they have done on the 315 acres in Floyd township. They have adopted a very effective erosion control plan of their own without having fonnal'y been under a conse* vatien pla’ Mrs. Smedley was unabh to a - tend the meeting.
PUTNAM COUNTY FARMERS PRACTICE SOU CONSERVATION
dinner may he purchased from Mrs. R. R. Neal, Mayor Evan Crawley, Mrs. Florence Boatlight. ami at the local Auto License branch. The dinner will be held Tuesday Feb. 9th at? Old Tiail Inn at 7 :H() p. m. Congresswoman. Mrs. Cecil M. Harden will be the guest speaker.. Tickets must be purchased by Saturday
Feb. 6th.
Miss Nancy Barnany Is among the students oi Tudor Hall in Indianapolis who will be the guest; this weekend at the Mounted Services between semester dames at Culver Military Academy They will he welcomed by a cad< * committee at the Maxinkuck* t Inn on Saturday afternoon and will attend athletic contests a d other soeial events as the guests of the Culver cadets. Did you know that the larger percent of our customers own washing equipment? They have found it wise to send the Gat work and shirts to us. Home Laundry’ & Cleaners. 25-6t
James L. Myers, presented Master Pra.tioneei by Fred O'Hair at Profit from Pasture meeting.
Rolan i Ne;er gets certificate f > n Robert H. O’Haii as p rt <>t Tenant-La::<! <i . onsorvatlon team.
Ruth Berger, of New York’ City
- Raps President
would not remove the "discrimir. atory, punitive ami oppressive provisions" of the Taft-Hart ley law. He said some of the proposals were "pale palliatives, calculated falsely to soothe rather
than genuinely to cure.”
Lewis declared a bill introduced by Si iith to carry out the administration recommenda t ion. would tend "to increase ami compound the 'felony’ already perpetrated on the American people
in the original instance."
"A far cry, these amendments from the utterances of the presidential candidate in the summei and fall ,ryf 1952 when, for politi-
TV TONIGHT WFBM-TV—Channel 6 5.00 Western Theater 5:30 Indianapolis Symphony 5:45 Town Topics 6:00 Weather: Winn 6:15 Winn Trio 6:30 Sports Parade 6:45 Telencwi 7:00 99 Harmonies 7:15 Dream Time 7:30 Topper 8:00 Star Playhouse 8:30 Out Miss Brooks 9:00 . 1 Leri Three Lives 9:30 Wrestling 10:00 .. Weath r 10:15 News 10:30 Greatest Fights 10:45 Music in Night 11:00 Feature TheaP-r 12:00 Loretta’s Letter 12:15 Night Owl Theater WRIGHT'S ELECTRIC SERVICE
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DEALER No. Jackson Si. Phone APPLIANCE AND TELEVISION SALES AND SKBVICB
BARKER COMIC VALENTINES BOOKS PLUS FORMERLY SAM HANNA'S BOOK STORE
Mrs. K M. Horton an J daug.iters accept plaque for her husband who < from Pasture meeting Wednesday. Hi.- honot was for Mi-t ■ Cons •rv;itim presented by S >d Conservation Official .Norv«-| Co!b«-rt (:<•.. . i ;• awa* i.
LAUNDRY AND CLEANERS PHONE 174
The Harvey Nichols family is awarded the Fa trom Pasture meeting Left to right are Mi. an
mily Conservat d Mrs Nicitol
henor by Fr< ind sons
Profit
