The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 September 1954 — Page 4
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PL'ULIC SALE of III health we are quitting the dairy bumine** and will tell orir herd of Jersey* at Auction at our farm directly arrow* from new I. B. M. plant on the Greenraatle-StUe^vHle Road, on Friday, September 17th, 1954 AT 12:30 O'CLOCK D. S. T. 14-DAIRY CATTLE - 14 WHITT, 4 years old with calf by aide, 4 gal. cow. DARK. S \ear old with calf by side. 2 gal. more than calf takes. BLO.\Dl£, 2 jt*. old with calf by side, I'j gal. metre than calf takes. MILKY WAY. 10 yrs. okl with calf by side, 4' j gal. per day. BROADY, 2 >ts. old to freshen soon. BILLY, 7 year old cow, milking 4 gal. per day. FAT , *0. 7 year old. milking 8 gal. per day, bred Feb. 1st. BEAI’TINA, 5 year old, milking 4 gal. per day, open. HIPPY, 6 year old, will freshen by sale day, a 5 gal. cow. HFIFER, 3 year old to freshen November 4th. This is a nice pure bred bunch of Jersey cows, T. B. and Bangs festal. FEED 400 bushel, more or less, good old Yellow Corn. 6 K) Bales more or less Clover with Wheat Straw. DAIRY EQUIPMENT DeLaval milker complete, motor compressor, pipe for 7 cows. 2 units, one wash vat, one milk bucket, 8, 8-gal. milk cans. etc. Also du :p rake in good shape, old mower. STERLING BOATRIGHT TERMS — CASH. Not responaihle in case of accidents. ALTON HIRST- Auctioneer. — CLIFF Me MAINS, Clerk.
PRESIDENT’S CUP REGATTA QUEEN
TERMS
WESTERN BROKEN CASH
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS CHARLES HIATT, Owner JIM VAUGHN, Auctioneer Allen Dreyer & Royston Watson. Clerks Lunch w ill be served by Smith's Valley I T . B. Church
SIGNS PACT, INSPECTS FORMOSA
SECRETARY OF STATE John Foster Dulles (bottom) signs a
Southwest Asia anti-communist defense pact on behalf of the United
States in Manila. Seven other nations aW? signed the pact. Dulles
then left for Taipei on Formosa for a report on Nationalist attacks on Chinese Red bases. Chiang Kai-shek hurled jet planes into an
air assault co-ordinated with naval bombardments. A British
freighter. Inohkilia, was damaged by machmegun fire from Nation-
alist planes hitting the Red port of Amoy (see map).
JOAN BROWNELL, 18. daughter ot U. S. Attorney General Herbert Brownell, will reign as “Regatta Queen” at the President s Cup regatta opening Sept. 17 in Washington, D. C. (International/
A DIFFERENT JOE ON STAND
Girl, 16, Swims Across Ontario
CLGSING-OUT-SALE As I am moving to Florida and selling m*- farm. I will sell it publie auction at my farm located mile west of Providence, I mil*-s south and west of Bargersville, 10 miles north and west of Franklin, on Wednesday, Sept. 15 AT 10:00 A. M. D. S. T. IMPLEMENTS — TRACTORS — IMPLEMENTS fwo Su|mt Famiall “H” tractor, 19,)3 model**; I Super “M” model I9.73; I 4-row cultivator; One 1954 Ford tractor .like new; 2-14” plow ami pull type dlse; 1958 Papee chopper, hay and corn attachment; 1 Papee blower with 43 feet pipe; 2 I II.C. M E. pickers, 1953, 2-row, picked 10f> acres; side delivery rake, >.».') model; one I.I1.C. power mower, 1953 model; 1 Red Jacket ; »imp Jack, p- w; 1 40-ft, Owatomna elevator; 1 Dunham cultiucker, 10-ft.; I Dearborn drill, never been used, 13-disc; 2 2-11” I IIC. plows, 1954 model; 1 3-14” I.H.C. plow, 1953, power lift; 1 4-row rotary hoe. like new ; 1 4-row Dunham caltipacker; 4 I.H.C. rubber tired wagons, 1 new, 3 like new, all have dump beds; I Bea'-e .. , *st, like new; 1 I.H.C. 4-row eornplanter, 1953 model, all kinds of plates; 1 9-ft. I.H.C. disc; 1 T-15 I.H.C. baler, twine tie, power take-off, 1 hay loader, green crop. 1 I.H.C. Manure Spreader, 1958 ; 3 800-gallon stock tanks; I Marlow 3-unit milker; I Surge 2-iinl! milker; 1 Westlnghoiise M-can milk cooler, 1953 model; 1 I.H.C. manure loader, 1953; 3 Hay Racks for cattle; 50 8-galkm milk cans; 2 sets Grade ‘A’ equipment; 2 water heaters. 1(> AC.iKS OF GOOD CORN TO BE SOLD BY ACRE. THIS CORN WAS PLANTED EARLY IN MAY 50 HEAD REGISTERED AND GRADE HOLSTEIN COWS Twenty-five 3 to 4-year-old cows on good flow of milk, 10 registered Holstein*, fresh and close springers, good age; 15 young cows, due to calve In November and December; 15 Holstein heifers from fi to 18 months old, some bred and some open. Most of these heifers are purebred out of good cows; 1 Bull, Carnation breeding, 3-year-old, a real bull; 15 young Holstein heifer calves, sired by above bull. BEEF CATTLE Thirteen good Hereford cows, with calves by side; 2 Hereford cows, close springers; 1 Hereford Bull, 2 year old, registered. ONE GOOD 8-YEAR-OLD SADDLE HORSE
TORONTO. Sept. 10—(UP) — lanlyn Bell, 16-year-old choit prl. touched the Canadian shn*-e >f Lake Ontario last night after catthng icy waters and exha us- ! •ion in a 32?mile grind from the ^ew York side, that eliminates ill her ccmpe'itors, including • ist Tn 1 "® Champion Florence j
Tiadwick.
Canadian National Exhibition | tficials said Miss Bell's feat set i new long-distance record by a uofessional swimmer. Miss Bell reached the break .vater at Sunnyside Beach, on*mile west of the Canadian Na i<>nal F.xhibition grounds alums' 21 hours after she entered the vaUr at Youngstown, N. Y. It was the first crossing of .ake Ontaiio and the longes* v.n ever attempted by a pro
essional.
It will mean close to $20.00* to Marilyn in cash and merchants;?. x h* 1 Canadian National Ex ilation promised her .$7,500 Most of which Miss Chadwick oifeited when nausea forced hci to give up at the halfway mark Han Vanishes In Channel Attempt DEAL. ENGLAND. Sept, in— A 14-year-old Englishman who I t iod te swim the English ChanJ ne| without an escort was given , rp for lost in the storm-swept waters last night. Authorities called off a 80hour air and sea search for Ted M iY\ fnthei of nine children, as heavy rain and fog closed down
on the channel between England
and France.
May was the first swimmer in j the 97 years since the 22-nule-1 wide strait first was conquered to attempt to cross it without
an escorting boat.
He apumed the pleas of
French police at < ' he faced “sure death
and
10 said waded
mto the waters off Cap Xez early Wednesday
Griz
Barefoot, Shooed
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MUCH MORE SUBDUED than the senator the television audience watched during last spring's Amiy-McCarthy hearings. Senator Joseph R. McCarthy (R), Wisconsin, volunteers few remarks and answers questions comparatively briefly as he counter-attacks censure charges against him. He is shown on the witness stand during a hearing in Washington of a special, six-man United States Senate committee, (International/
iW&WASHINGTO!*
MARCH OF EVENTS
President Eisenhower
JCS Authorized fo Deal j Manila SEATO Conference With Chi-Red Isis Attack , Involved Enormous Stakes Special to Central Press WfASHlNGTON — President Eisenhower has given his military T7 commanders complete authority to deal with any Chinese Communist invasion of Formosa or the “stepping-stone” islands between *he Nationalist stronghold and the mainland. < Rarely, if ever before, have the Joint Chiefs of Staff been authorized to deal so directly with what, in the final analysis, is a kind of political problem. It is a political problem in the sense that outright aggression by the Chinese Reds and outright interventioa against them by United States forces seem almost sure to bring on a retaliatory assault on China itself—and, very possibly, a third
world war.
However, the Joint Chiefs of Staff have been told by the President it is up to them to decide which of the “stepping-stone” islands should and can be defended by American military might. As for an attack on Formosa itself. Mr. Eisenhower meant it when he said the Reds would have to run over the United States Seventh Fleet should they
embark cn such an adventure.
By giving his military commanders such extreme authority in such e touchy situation, the chief executive has departed radically from the Truman administration's policy during the Korean war, when the armed forces to a large extent had to take over-all direction from the
state department.
• • •
• MANILA TALKS—The United States generally sterns unaware of the enormous stakes that American government officials played j for at the SEATO conference just concluded in Manila. The very origin of the conference to create a Southeast As>a Treaty Organization stemmed from the air of crisis that accompanied the defeat of the Western powers over the ending of the Indochina war. SEATO was an emergency conference, hurriedly called to meet an emergency situation. It had none of the carefully worked out atmosphere of a United Nations meeting, or a long-anticipated international confab. However, the future of Western democratic influence in Southeast Asia was genuinely at stake. A good job of creating a mutual defensive organization, with sharp .eeth and firm commitments, should keep Communist aggressive designs at bay for years. A weak compact interspersed with “buts” ould have encouraged Russia and Bed China to continue their suc--essful probing south into the rich, densely populated areas that make up the SEATO area. It may not be apparent, but the next few weeks may tell whether Southeast Asia is to remain free or eventually meet the same fate as North Korea and Northern Indochina—another mystery area behind the Bamboo Curtain.
• • •
• STOPPING THE PRESSES—While the legislation to outlaw the Communist party got all the headlines in the closing days of Congress. a comparatively minor bill that received little notice may pro^e
to be the most devastating blow to be dealt the Reds.
This was the measure requiring Communists to register all print-
ng presses and equipment with the government.
The Justice department is preparing regulations to compel registra-
tion. Testimony before congressional committees has
established that the Communisms have set up secret Secret
printing establishments in Washington, New York City, Fittsburgh. Chapel Hill, N. C., and on the West Coast. i The new law win enable the FBI to launch a crack-
down on one of the Red underground’s major propaganda devices.
The answers to everyday insurance problems* By SIMPSON S I o.N EH .H
QTiESI ION: I have a personal f iond in the garage business. He also sells insurHn“e in the side am] he’s always telling me ho e in sell n\e r.hc sa ne insurance just as oh n {ip as f could gcT j) any^he) c c!.;p.,'J:< r am/ any g, • >d reaslon why I slpy^n'tfgct. (Oju insji -
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GIVEN a rousing greeting by her fans when she arrived barefooted in Rio de Janeiro, movis actress Ava Gardner finds her warm Latin welcome at subzero after she is ejected from her hotel room because of a noisy party. The hotel submitted a bill for a broken table, smashed pictures, splintered glasses, water stains on a wall and liquor. (International)
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Declared sane. Dr. Kenneth B. Small is kissed by his mother ns his hi sther, Robert, shakes hand, and his father, Jacob (center) watches. Then he walks from Circuit court building a free mas. FOUND TEMPORARILY INSANE when he killed his wife’s boyfriend, Jules Lack, a New York buslV)r Kenneth B. Small 31-year-old Detroit dentist, is declared sane by Michigan state psychiatrists* and made a free man after spending 27 days in the State Hospital tor the Criminally in ion,a Mk h. Ho ^ 75 days an U. A„e S an county ^Ju^aoujdJUm^ot guilty of murder by reason of insar.it> last J 1
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• STEVENS* FUTURE—Criticism of Army Secretary Robert T. Stevens voiced by both Republican and Democratic members of the Senate subcommittee which probed his row with Senator Joseph McCarthy (R>. Wisconsin, has inspired persistent new reports that he will resign his Pentagon post after the elections. There are strong indications that he will be appointed United States ambassador to Portugal.
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