The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 19 March 1954 — Page 3
THE DAILY BANNER, GREEN CASTLE, INDIANA, FRIDAY, MARCH 19, 1954.
DKBATK TIRSDAY
A pair of West Pointers wiU march onto the DePauw University camp is i xt T :er.<lay, Mai 2h. to deh.it** v th a *lect DePauw duo the nierits of a free tiad*- pole y for the U. Z. The non-dec.* .n audience debate. jointly ; .nr red by Delta Sigma Rh ». h.rer rs honorary, and the Inter ...a! Relations Club, w ill lie ; eld «t 7 VO p. m. in the Stude * I' Scheduled t » r present DePauw are M r* * Berfield, Carlin. 111., and Clark Warner, Hammond. who. as a team, have won more than 5k) percent of their
debates this year in collegiate competition. DePauw’s debaters will tak' 1 the affirmative side of the question. "Resolved: That the United States Should Adopt a Policy of Free Trade ” 4-H CM B NKWS
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The Roach* iale Peppy Peppers opened ’heir first 4-H meeting March 11th with election of officers. They a e president. Lucy Howard; vice president. Dare!mg Shellings; secretary- treasurer Judy Van Vactor; song leader. Lillie Brittain Recreation leaders, Ua Whitley and Carolyn Van Vaster; health and safety leader, Barbara Goins; and reporter, Dorothy L. Hutchins. The meeting continued with voting for meeting day. It is every Wednesday, afternoon. Next we discussed the Farm Bureau dinner March 26th. Some girls from e”ery town in the county ar*- to be waitresses. The president then appointed a com mittee for the programs this summer. It is Dareling Shellings, chairman, Blaine McBride and Jranie Case. The meeting was then closed. MI SIC NEXT TIME ELWOOD, Ind., March 19 — (INSi Fred Adair, of Elw^ood, probably will turn to music the next time he listens to a radio in his garage. Adair had taken a radio along for entertainment while working on his car. He was startled by two young men who yanked open the garage doors, and yelled: "What’s going on in here?” Puzzled at first, Adair then
realized that the program he had turned up rather loudly on his radio was one in which two hoodlums attacked a screaming woman.
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AUBURN. Ind.. Mar. 19 (UPi More evidence was expected j o be weighed today in the big- i imy hearing of a Fort Wayne I pipefitter. Ernest W’eekly, 42, the defend- 1 int. pleaded guilty to the charge >efore DeKalb Circuit Judge Walter D. Stump. W’ednesday. Authorities said W’eekly originally married in 1938, then again under an assumed name without benefit of divorce last December. Investigators were called in when Delvres June Shull, St. Joe, his second wife, complained Weekly spent here $3,000 savings lining their short marriage.
Mat< AI DREY HAMMOND
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NOT SI BJECT TO TAX
INDIANAPOLIS, Mar. 19 — UP) Rental fees obtained by i motion picture film distributor ire not subject to Indiana’s ?ross income tax, the Indiana Supreme Court ruled today in a split decision. Four justices agreed on a majority opinion upholding a decision of Marion Superior Court 3 in favor of Warner Bros. Distributing Corp., which has area offices here and in Chicago. The high court ordered refund of $7,347.94 in taxes collected in the 1940-42 period on grounds the film rentals are interstate commerce. One judge dissented, saying the rental fees should be taxed.
OLD AND NEW SAGINAW, Mich. (UP)—The behavior of an auto accessory hief has Saginaw police baffled. V woman reported that the thief stole the outside mirror off her :ar. The culprit carefully replaced the shiny, new mirror with an old broken mirror.
Prodigal Banker, Wife Back Home
CLIO, Ala., March 19.—(UP) Penniless residents were jubilant today over the return of the town’s prodigal amateur banker although no one thought to ask him whether he brought back their money. Royal Reynolds, whose disappearance with most of the town’s cash thrust this farming comnunity into economic chaos, returned Thursday night with deposit records in his unehartered Merchants Exchange. Two warrants charged Reynolds, 40, with taking all the bank’s locally-held cash estimated at $85,000 to $90,000 when he quietly left town 11 days before with his wife Sue. Mayor Dan Easterling said the prayers of the penniless townspeople had been answered merely by the deposit records, which were placed under an all-night guard. The records would help restore
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cash to this community of 850 population by fleeing some $81,000 in cash that had been deposited with the First National Bank of Atlanta. Easterling said. The 4(V-year-old amateur banker who had faithfully handled the
town’s seed money, crop funds and merchants’ accounts for 17 years surrendered voluntarily to Solicitor Crew Johnston of Clayton. Ala. Johnston said Reynolds quickly posted bonds totaling $7,500 on three embezzlement charges
and returned to Clio and went to bed without telling anyone whether he brought back the money. Reynolds refused to talk to reporters who reached his residence by telephone bu this wife said they would "clear up every-
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thing” after they rested. "He didn't steal anything.” Mrs. Reynolds said. "It’ll all be cleared up.” Mrs. Reynolds said she and her husband returned immediately after reading of Clio's plight in Roanoke, Va.
J BIG SELECTION LARGE QUANTITIES REMNANTS 25c Big accumulation of piece ] goods of many kinds. Not all short pieces either, some full bolts. We axe cleaning up all our odds and enls.
"Our conscience was hurt,” she said. Easterling said that although townspeople had sought to guarantee Reynolds immunity from prosecution if he would return, the case had since been taken “out of our hands.”
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