The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 February 1954 — Page 3

*Ht DAILY BANNER, GREENCAjUL, !»4D*ana, »'JtjLv.!, htbkUAK! 2. \-f24.

NORV/ALK VFW TO REPORT REDS > Girl Killing

VETERANS OF FOREIGN WARS officers in Norwalk, Conn., pose t >. i.-’ ar nouncemer.t that names and addresses of residents will be forwarded to the FBI. Post Comi >1 ier Albert A- Bores (second from right) said the policy i. ■ rlyng the r .r/e was lard down in a VFW resolution of 19‘J6, \ t h ci i r g< J the membership with duty of reporting anyone » „ .yr-d in i .bver.-ive activity. From left: Charles Post, Coni'• Ik it dcpHrtm*nt commander, Mrs. Post, Beres, Mrs. Marion .1 * ii, N rwalk a i .iliary president. (International Soundphoto}

COFFEE AT VERY POPULAR PRICES

STATE POLICE said 22-year-old George Capps (above) admitted criminally assaulting and shooting to deatn Marta Gibbons, 15. after taking ner to Curtia lake near ner nome in Levittown. Pa Capps, a Korean war veteran who lives across the street from the Gibbons family said she threatened to tell ms u-le, Mabie. 21. about the assault. (International)

LOOKING... ...AT LIFE

By fcn<h

Over J .< ■ at* i!iy m u* Drought nm .'iindud- »>f IfH from jiai - nL.-- pm in ik.ii i\ ers compia n ng iboi younger g nrt.tlmn.

the I

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SonK't.i ii. . >ii.with the yo .lli >. general icno*- of 1 Children don I i n* ents Knv mo i Ththe church don't more inHucm < < . is nothing n o;;, o trtn do vVdh Cum. please v/iite a f r

-r 1c tiers, theii* parschool and to have any Lhem. There and fathers .Vouidn't I ilumns. tell-

ing parents v.iiaX to d i aud ’eUm ; the youngsC ti it they me driving theii eld* : ■ ■ -r/s Well, I f) I » lit;- . evei il columns about this mattei oi /.hat is so blithely < ail< d ‘‘juv ni*e delinquency. < Mil V I tie <»* i ei d i ■ i wi t| f nr aljout the" LS-year old boy v.'hu eomntilted soil ; a n«ii«nly ‘.new why. J meniiaii' d 'in mir view with the boy’s father who said: ‘Who could tell if ie \\ i troiihled ?

nCs would be the last to . *w of those things.” So now comes a letter from a b-year-old hpy in Ohio. He me not to mention his name. ' You know the reasons." he says. * gives the other side of the loiy. "Why must parents be the last ■ know 7 " he writes. "At last omeone has reached parents vith the real tragedy of this day. : A ery youngster and teen-ager owes you gif at thanks, and I want you to know wc know it. People even parents- often fail . > ee a truth when it is right in fmnt of them. "No person is perfect, and 'Ac don't expect perfect parents but • ais is a problem which, >f parents don't realize it soon, may : regress to rock the very foundation of America. “The job of being parents is t lie finest in the world, but it

requires application of the utmost effort to become the success and joy it should be. "Parents couldn't be more right in telling you what to do. because they almost always know what is best. But they fail to recognize your rapid growth towards adulthood, and there you a’e — left with a child's knowl olgc and a child’s status m Uie family. Your hopes for the future fade away and you arc on your own The reason? A fellow (girli counts on his (her) parents to know his (her) needs. When parents fail you in this, there n little to hope for. "A fortunate few know or are able to find God. but the many that don’t know Him or find Him really are lost. There are. no doubt, many reasons why parents fail this way. I don't know them, but there must be a reason.

But I do know that parents MUST awaken or be awakened by the all-too-suoiv adults whom they brought into the world. "We will have true success only when every son and daughter in America can say. T face my future with confidence because my parents filled my needs for the foundation of my life.” There you have it. I quoted t.i--

boy just exactly as he wrote it And then* is a P S "My parents are GOOD people, but this one problem still prevails.” Most parents are good people. But how many of these good people do whr.t my young frien 1 suggests “til! my needs for the foundation of my life"? The watchword in too many I amities is “DON'T!" But how aoout the "DO”?

ROYAL ROW OVER SALE OF CASTLE

YOU'RE TELLING ME!

—By WILLIAM RITT — Central Press Writer

D" E N OWNERS in t-'avenworth, Kan., cut price of a cup of

, > 4 c -it - ev n ill 1 11 me restaurants around the nat t ii ! it to 15 t i ls the cup. Customer Charles Brice ] i i the ri. v policy by owners Karl Stanton (left)

I (r . lit). Said Huge, "Naturally we ll lose money,” ul * hi), "... a public service.” (International)

SEA CREATURES reported to be jelly fish, got into the water valves of the U. S. aircraft carrier Bennington and put its lighting system on the blink. It’s a cinch they were not electric eels. f f • Europe today shivers under a severe cold u arc sweeping out of the Soviet Union. Those Russian steppes arc mighty slippery. ! ! ! According to latest reports that made-in-Russian cold wave is colder oven than the cold wor. i • t Reading that the poultry busines* is booming causes the man at the next desk to remark that, as far as he knows hens are the

only creatures that make a living just laying around. t i t Aflrr I'ii uing fight, night TV coning r< ials Zdiliik Puinkopf vanls to know uhy so inuiui athletes da their shin mg lirfon /»/<;- vision cameras. i i t A popular Colorado drink, we read, i* called UgM Made no doubt of Indian firewater. t • i You can't tcM a certain housewife in Syracuse, N. Y.. that Hying saucers arcn'l ir-al. She's suing a departmcgl .store, charging she was struck in the eye while shopping by a toy model of same.

FEATURED

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AT PENNEY S

BIG $1.00 CLEANUP There will In- many itemv nn thU l>i|; dmih’e table. All word miic'li mare bill they are <Klds and anils.

JAM STREET TO SEE THE QUEEN

FIGURES IN TRIANGLE IULLIMG

NEW ZEALANDERS jam the street In Christchurch as Britain’s (, k ' u F ilieth walks across Cathedral square escorted by the i r m traditional robes. The queen's husband, the Duke of l i,' : ur .; , follows with mayor’s wife. (International Soundphoto)

Banner Adverlisine Pays

SUMBODY STOLE DE WEDDIN’ BELL

I rank M.tgro .

j 4 ; I *. x no urdding. Olga Marcfiikow ... jailed.

I * NK MACRO. 7b. bache’or ami wel* to-do retired railroad fire- > ii . is s) "\vn waF hing as bis bride-to-be, Olga ’ '. FI away on their intended wedding day to •' * ' d on ct .trge of plotting to extort J1.000 from him. » v > 1 i u.-1keeper, Richard MacMillan, 24, was accused a- £ with Olga. (International Soundphotos)

John P. Lange in custody.

Mrs. Fstcll.- Jamieson.

JOHN f. LANGE, the Detroit milkman who adn' (led t’ning Mir deer rifle shot that killed steel executive John VV. M ,'i. n \ ! ilc he sat In his office, is shown after telling pclic in- . !n{ Mat' <o:i because Mattson took Mrs. Estelle Jamison fiorn him. Mis Jamieson, 45, mother of twm children, told her h ishand her . hFof the story, and police told him the shooting < mH n ( be blamed on her. tliitrrvatii.m.l

FLEES FIRE WITH POSSESSIONS

Franz Josef

A ROYAL ROW is being heard in a New York court, with "unemployed” Austrian Archduke Franz Josef suing his sisker-in-law, Princess lleana of Romania (formerly, but now of the U. S.) over sale of Hemstein castle in the Alps. The castle (above) is on Lake of the Four Cantons. He claims it was worth $1,500,000. She says she sold it for a tenth of that because it was threatened with confiscation by the Nazis. The archduke, in Spain, plans to come to the U. S. to testify if the case isn't settled by midFebruary. The property includes 20,000 acres of farms, forests and buildings. Suit was filed in 1949. (International)

lleana

Health Insurance (AND HOSPITALIZATION INSURANCE) IS DANGEROUS TO BUY AND ALSO DANGEROUS TO SELL---

I'N I .ESS — there is c'oso co-opera I inon Im-|\ic<-a (lie agent anil client. Do nol withhold infoin-ation a-- topic existing illness— Do not 'rt flu* agent by paxs any qticstiun. Answer (lr-ni all fairly. Insist on your ag- ii* n-conling thcs.c answers on your U|>|»licatioa— Kcinrmhrr, you sign I lie application. ('!r , <ji if. Don't xign a fraudulent statement. VOI R I’OI.H Y Wil l- BE IKOI’ARDI/ED. Take this ' ranee from soiinvuir you kmm or e.'ii find—Preferably with

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NOW AT YOUR OIDSMOSILK DIALER'S

FENTRESS MOTORS, INC—119 N. INDIANA ST.

HIS HOUSEHOLD GOODS on his back, a Korean fl -h fi-e , n Pusan which left some 1,800 homeless. Flames can t ?• ''n . ' iing into the (lark sky in background, (International ^ junapkoio)

WATCH FOR THE NIW NINETY-EIGHT

COMING IN FEBRUARY!

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