The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 11 September 1954 — Page 2

looking:: ...Al LIFE

By Erich Brandeis One of the things which we in this country will probnbly never learn is to WAIT, to take our time. Of all the people in t e%'.nrl‘i we are probably the most impatient ones. We must have everythiitj; TODAY not t /morrow, not the day after tomorrow it’s got to be TODAY. Go to any supermarket, to any department .st^re. Watch the women on their shopping tours. (M.nd you I have nothing {♦gainst women. As I have said before, my mother was and my wife is a woman and I love them both.) Hut just note how tho*w fhoppers are finagling for position, how each of them is surrepti'iously trying to get ahead of the other one. Five minutes extra? That would be terrible! Men are a little bit better in their shopping habits. But just watch them in a ticket li':’ at a baseball game or at the gate in a railroad station. Push, push, push. They may have reserved seats in a Pullman ear, so it doesn't make the slightest difference whether they get their NOW or a couple of minutes later. But that wouldn’t be according to Hoyle. Kvery fellow HAS to be the first one, just like every fellow has to win every game he plays.

I saw somewhere the other day that the new slogan of the airlines. ‘Fly now—pay later,” might better be changed to ‘ Pay now fly later.” I think it’s a good idea. Why Wouldn’t it be just as sensible to presume that a person ran SAVE <m the instalment plan as to BUY on it ? I suppose the nothing down and <1 PS a week idea is wonderful up to a certain point. It enables alj of us to live according to the American custom of never wanting to wait for anything. to have to have everything NOW, this very minute. II seems to me that to pay your instalment debts you will have to deny yourself some things anyway why not go without those things NOW and enjoy whatever ymi want to do with your money when you HAVE it rather than when you only anticipate it ?

I read about a firm in Chicago that has made a dam good living out of repossessing cars that have been bought on the instalment plan and whose owners did no! keep up the payments. In a few short years they reposses-

— - *

d

of these cars-- all the ‘ fly now pay

Some years ago. when I was still very young. I bough? one of the Old Essex roadsters on the "fly now —pay later” plan. It was a beautiful car in those days and I couldn’t wait to show it off to my best girl who lived .-.bout six miles or more out of San Franeisco. I drove to her place in my best bib and tucker nd inytted her for a spin. When c got outside the car was gone. I called the police department but the sergeant notified me that •he finance company had repos-c-sed it. tit seems that whenever they do, they notify the poice immediately. | I never saw :ne ear or the girl again.

Far be it from me to give you any advice. But whenever you ft i that you have to have something TODAY, why not pause and wonder whether you have i cached your buying limit or Ah ether perhaps the "pay now— fly later" idea may not be a metty good one?

—TK.EK < I BS rv plunged across the goal line .rom the 3-yard stripe. The next Cub game is at Plain- : .e!'i next Friday, Sept. 17. SOFTBALL RESULTS

Cloverdale edged Fillmore, 3 to 2. in a county high softball tourney game Friday night at Rabe-Ann Park. Nees and Lewis formed the winning battery while Ross was on the mound and Chadd was behind the plate for the losers. Russellville won from Reelsville, 12 to 4. in the nightcap. Osborne and England were the battery for the Bees with Query and Gillman doing the chores for the Indians.

(.KID SCORES

Washington 27; Brazil 6 Lebanon 6; Plainfield 0 Terre Haute Schulte 26, Gibault School 0 Mitchell 6; Jasper 6 Dephi 14; Sheridan 13

WINS FIRST PRIZE First prize in the 4-H Corriedale ewe lamb class at the Indiana State Fair was won by Barbara Joan Fry of Ladoga, Indiana, R. 1. She al.s,o placed 4th in the Indiana Cogrie lale Breeders show and 9th place in the open class. Barbara is 10 years old and the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Noble C. Fry, granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey C. Nichols of* Creeneaslle, Ind, R. 3, and Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Fry of Roaehdale.

School Days Are Here Again And don’t forget Sunday School at 10:90 A. >1. C1IUR< II or GOD — m*. Main Street A ('lass for every age and there’s a class for you. BE LOOKING FOR YOU! X, 0. U.FA3Y, Minister

HAMPSHIRES ANNUAL Km AND GILT SALE Monday, Night, Seotember 20, at 8:00 P. M 4-11 B1 ILDING. < RAWFYmnSYILLE CENTRAL INDIANA IIXMPSIIIRE BREEDERS I oi < al.ilog write. Donald K \\ iDon, Secy., Wingate, Indiana

USED BOOKS NEEDED We have calls for the books listed below: TH!>. IS AMERICA’S STORY for 7 and 8th grade ■TORY OF IND1 \N A for 8th grade t.\\<.l \GE FOR DAILY USE for 8th grade AD\ KNTURE FOR KFADERS. Book 1 for 7th grade AD\ ENTl HE FOR READERS. Rm>k II for 8th grade GFOGK\PIIY for 7th grade: Our WORLD TODAY: ASIA AND LATIN AMERICA Geography for 6th grade: NEIGHBORS ACROSS THE SEAS SPORTSM \NI IKE 1>KI\ ING for Safety class !M grade science: I WONDER WHY 2nd grade •o ienee: SEEING WHY 3rd grade science: LEARNING WHY We sh ill be glad to try to sell any of these books you may hn\e for sale, if you will hrm^ them to the Bookstore in the High School building Monday morning, if possible. Greencastle Consolidated Schools Bookstore Greencastle High School Building.

THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1954.

THE

DAILY BANNER

and

HERALD CONSOLIDATED Entered In the pwxtofftee at Greencastle, Indiana as second ( laas mail matter under act of March 7, 1878. Subscription price 25 cents per week; So.00 per yepr by mail in Putnam County; #6.00 to St 0.40 per year outside Putnam County. Telephones 74, 95, 114 S. R. Rariden, Publisher 17-19 South Jackson Street.

RECTOR FUNERAL HOME AMBULANCE SERVICE Phone 341

TODAY’S BIBLE THOUGHT Think on these things.—PhiL 4:8 If we control our thoughts we can control our deeds.

Personal And Lotal News Briefs

ANNIVERSARIES Weddings Mr .and Mrs. Raymond Reed, Greencastle R. 4. 6 years today. St.pt. 11. Birthdays William Frederick Parrish, son of Mr. .n l Mrs. Harry Parrish, o years old today.

SOCIETY Brick Chapel (dub To Meet Tuesday The Brick Chapel Home Demmstration Club will meet Tue":lay. Sept. 14, at 2 o'clock at the lome of Mrs. A A. Huber. Mrs. Bee, the county nurse, will shov .dims.

Mrs. Leslie Stewart of Fincastle returned home from the Putnam county hospital Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Aubry Sowers and son Garry cf San Deigo, Calif., spent the week end with Mr. and ^L’ s - John Gough. Mr. and Mrs. John Myers, who formerly lived near Fincastle, purchased the old Batman farm one one-half miles northwest of

Bainbridge.

The S. C. C. club will meet at the home of Alma Grimes on Tuesday, September 14th, at 7:30. Ruth Stewart will be assistant hostess. Rev. and Mrs. Ray Britton and children from Roaehdale, Rev. Galliger of Rockville and Rev. Neal Kuhn of Terre Haute spent the day Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. John Gough. Mrs. Mary Heath and Mrs. Betty Thomas are in Columbus, Ohio attending a special meeting promoted by the Production Credit Association. They are expected back this week end. Jack Lyon, son of Mr. and M,ts. Arthur Lyon, Gillespie St. has recently become a member of the Rod and Gun Club of Fort Lewis, Washington. He is serving with Headquarters of the 6021st Service Unit there, attending the Cadre school and working in the Overseas Clothing Center, getting troops ready for overseas shipment. A number of his Greencastle school mates have passed through the lines.

Surgeon Reports On Cancer Cases

Send your nice cotton dresses to our dry cleaning department to be handled by our Sanitone Cotton Clinic. You will be pleasantly surprised. Home Laundry & Cleaners. Sat-tf.

STILL UNSOLVED for overseas service, or that he joined the Canadian forces. N > basis for these reports was ever turned up. Clark was a bachelor with no serious love interests. He left only a few distant relatives. He was sober, industrious, friendly and highly intelligent. While stationed here, Clark lived in the home of John A. Park, publisher of the Raleigh Times. A check revealed his personal afafirs in order and that he intended to return to Raleigh from Fort Bragg. Clark was born Nov. 15, 1910, and had lived most of his life in Hackensack, N. J. Before being commissioned, he worked as a reporter and a copy desk man for the Bergen County Evening Record in New Jersey. He was an officer in the New Jersey National Guard when war was declared. He was five feet, nine inches tall, slender, sallow-complexion-ed, wore metal-rimmed glasses and kept his dark brown hair close cropped.

NEW YORK, Sept. 11—(UP) —Surgeons took "second looks” and even third, fourth, fifth and sixth looks in the case of one woman, and reached a total of four in the case of another. The repeated operations may have cured both of cancers which otherwise surely would have kill-

ed them.

Dr. Owen H. Wagensteen, eminent surgeon and deviser of the experimental "second look” surgical procedure for certain types of gastro-intestinal cancers, delivered an intermin report to the profession. The second look is simply that. After the surgeon has removed gastric, colic, or rectal malign ant growths which had entered the lymph channels, he operates a second time, approximately six months later, even though the patient is without symptoms and appears to bo well. He wants to see if cancerous growth has started up again and if it has, to nip it while it is small. If it has, he operates a third time about six months after the second operation, and a fourth time if he found anything the third time, and so on in-

definitely.

The series of major operations ends when one reveals no trew of residual cancer. Wagensteen and his colleagues at the University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis, have now had repeated looks into 103 patients. In the fii-st operations they did their very best to remove everything cancerous, of course, but second looks revealed resurgent cancer in 51. If there had been no second look most if not all would have been doomed. Of the 51, six “have finally been found free of cancer at some subsequent operation,” the report said. Four are alive and well, awaiting third operations. Six are living "with residual cancer,” and 29 are dead of the disease. Operative deaths account for the remaining six.

Mrs. Bock Hostess To Che/.-Nous Club The Chez-Nous Club met with Mrs. Jack Beck Thursday evening. Mrs. Bee. the county nurse, gave an interesting talk and showed a picture on polio. Roll call was answered by yovr favorite superstition and the ioor prize was won by Mrs. Joseph Campbell. The regular business meeting was held by the president, Mrs. William Keys. The October meeting will be at the home of Mrs. Ned Burkhardt, 831 East Washington. The lesson will be on basket weaving.

Club Met With .Mrs. James Goodin Club Forty Eight met on September 1 at the home of Mrs. James Goodin. The meeting was called to order by the president, Mrs. Raymond Arnold with members repeating the poem of the month. Roll call was What I do when I do as I please. Secretary and treasurer’s reports were given. The program was given by Mrs. Kendall Keller on people in the news. Meeting was closed by repeating the closing poem. Dainty refreshments were served to ten members and one guest by the hostess. The -next meeting will be on September 29 at the home of Mrs. Ross Alice.

Club Calendar Monday Boston Club—7:45—Miss Eva Milburn Monday Club—2 p. m.— Mrs. J. W. Herod. Tuesday New Era Club—2 p. m.—Mrs. Fred Pease. 521 E. Anderson. PresenKJ^ay Club Luncheon— 1 p. m.—Union Building. Wednesday Business and Professional Women's Club—7:30—Mrs. E. B. Todd. Thursday Gobin Memorial Woman’s Society of Christian Service •carry-in luncheon 12:15—Community Room. Associate Chapter of Tri Kappa Mrs. Reid Winsey—8:00 P M. F riday Emera Club—7:30— Mrs. T. G Yiuicker. Ootorie — Mrs. Ivan Ruark— 7:30 p. m.

LIFE - FIRE - AUTO KAROLC H. SMITH Phone 978 TV TONIGHT WFBM-TV—Channel 6 4:00 'Comedy Theater 5:30 Bill Hickok 6:00 Curtain Call 6:30 Beat the Clock 7:00 Stage Show 8:00 Favorite Story 8:30 Theater 9:00 Jack Paar 9:30 : Two in Love 10:00 Amateur Fights 10:30 Barn Dance 11:00 Theater 12:15 Night Owl Theater WTTV—Channel 4 4:00 Western 5:00 Feature at 5 6:00 News; Weather 6:15 Chandler Trio 6:30 Ethel, Albert 7:00 Terry and Pirates 7:30 Amateur Hour 8:00 Saturday Night Revue 9:30 Hit Parade 10:00 Waterfront 10:30 Hunter 11:00 Starlight Theater W R I G HT’S ELECTRIC SERVICE

Group Has Good Time At Kobe-Ann Park The folks from north Putnam county who migrate to Sebring Florida, or near, each winter for the last seven years or so, some only spend short vacations, some part of the time, decided to have a picnic and have one cf their good times at Robe Ann Park on Labor Day. Helen and Bob Robbins started it but on account of Bob's asthma had to return to Florida before the picnic. The Robbins own and operate a store at De Soto City. Claud and Mildred Newgent arrived home from Lakeland Saturday, Sept. 4. They like living there the year around bu the grandchildren cause frequent trips back for most of the bunch who might like to stay all the time. At noon a fine dinner was enjoyed and canasta and euchre games, as well as a watermelon feed in the evening before going

home.

Those present: Marguerite Wiatt, Plainfield; Mildred and Claud Newgent, Lakeland. Fla.; Air. and Mrs. Russell Scobee, Air. and Mrs. Clarence Scobee, Greencastle, R. 3; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Giltz, Bainbridge; Mesia Giltz, 1017 S. Indiana St. Greencastle: Air. and Airs. Carl Darnall, Bainbridge; Mrs. Bessie Bressler, Greencaste, R. 3; Mr. and Mrs. Leland Torr, Center Point; Mr. and Mrs. Tom Howlett, Brazil; Mr. and Airs. Walker Ramsey, Russellville, Air. and Airs. Wit Wright and Ruth O'Hair, R. 3; Air. and Mrs. Harry Neier, R. 1; Air. and Airs. Tony McGaughey, Russellville; Mr. and Airs. Turner Harbison. and Air. and Airs. Earl Overstreet, Russellville. Everyone enjoyed the day so well they decided to make an annual affair of it and we wish to thank the Park attendant for arranging the table. HOSPITAL NOTES Dismissed Thursday: Airs. Ronald Fisher and daughter, Greencastle; W'ilma York. Indianapolis; Dessie Hood R. R. 4. Greencastle; Mrs. Charles Clark and daughter, Reelsville; Edith Arend. Alartinsville: Mrs. Robert Rollings and daughter. Greencastle and Gerald Stagg, R. R. 1. Greencastle.

II

FORMERLY SAM HANNA’S BOOK STORE BOOKS PLUS EATON’S FINE LETTER PAPER

Clirh Will Meet i With Mrs. Clodfelter The Clinton Homemakers Home Demonstration Club wil' meet Wednesday, Sept. 15, 1:30 CST, at the home of Mrs. Elizaoeth Clodfelter. Members who are going to make trays will meet at the home of Mrs. Clodfelter Tuesday, Sept. 14, 1:30 CST to start the trays.

DEALER 105 X. Jackson SL Phone 61 APPLIANCES AND TELEVISION SALES AND SERVICE

Funeral Home ttl Crg'^1 St Pn«n«M Ambul« »t« Scr d<«

MAPLcCRCFY flUTD THEATRE Just East of StilesvHle on r. s. 40 TONIGHT Dean Martin A* -Urry Lewis “LIVING IT CP” Rod Cameron \ Joan Dm “SOUTHWEST PASSAGE”

Sunday and Monday James Stewart A June Allyson “THE GLENN MILLER STORY” A Colorful Stor v of Alardi Gras “Louisiana Territory” Show Starts at Dusk. Gates open one hall houi earlier.

Banner Ads Pay

The First Phqslcian The first recorded f u A phqsician of history was Imhotep, who / practiced medicine ♦ under Zoser. king of > the Third Egyptian DvfnastQ, in the Qear 2900 B.G. As the Ebe»-s and other Egi/ptian papt/ri prove, materia medica and therapeutics were remarkably well developed by the early inhabitants of the Nile Rh/er Valley. Qreat medical progress has been made over the centuries. U/e are proud of our part in modern health service, and compounding and dispensing medication s -y are our contribution f ^ to your good health. COAN PHARMACY Putnam County’s Largest Drug Store Built On QUALITY, ACCURACY, and SERVICE

HOUSES JUMBLED BY CAROL IN NEW LONDON, CONN.

ip® ^ * AERIAL VIEW of New London. Conn., after Hurricane Carol roared through, shows many jumbled homes torn loose from their foundations. Cars were tossed from parking spots and many homes literally smashed by winds up to 125 miles an hour. (International Soundphoto)

NEW PRESIDENTS OF WORLD COUNCIL OF CHURCHES

'' ♦' « . /

mmi i ¥

m%mL A » AFTER PRESIDING over the closing session of the second assembly of the World Council of Churches, Bishop G. Bromley Oxnam of the Washington, D. C., Methodist church area poses with the six new-ly-elected council presidents. From left are Bishop S. U. Barbieri, Argentina; Bishop Henry K. Sherrill, New York; Bishop Frederick Dibelius, Germany; past President Bishop Oxnam; Archbishop Michael of the Orthodox Church of North and South America; Rev. Dr. John Bailie, Scotland, and Metropolitan Mar Thoma of the Syrian Church of India. (International Soundphoto J

r

They’ll Do It Every Time Okra didn't drive, akd quanted WAS ALWAYS too BUSY to &VE hER A LIFT IN TNE. FAMILY J.ALOPP""

1*9 <*erMl U. S. 0®e*

Bv Jimmy Harlo ’

Well-okra cot werself 4 LI CENSE'*'DOES HE LET HER DRIVE NOW? NOTOL’CONTRARY QU4NTRO •

iAvi-00 / AW, LAY OFF, H’MDRMNGOVER ) / NO"-BUT

\ ( mlVA? CAN JOW f, p TESLAS. ' ' ■

COULD >OU DRIVE yf CALL A CAB.-WHY

WEREN’T 60! N 3 To USE TME CAR,WERE,

you?.

3 LL DRIVE YOU OVER'-I'M NOT DOIN’ ANYTM/NO' WMAT time do YOU WANT /VIE TO CALL BACK

FOR YOU ?

.-r-N-k-Av v 0 - .O