The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 August 1955 — Page 2
PAGE TWO WEDVE<iDAT. Arfil ^T 10. 1955. THE DAILY BANNER. ^REENCASTLE, INDIANA
DIES OF INJURIES P’jlpv.ood acrount." for about 17 INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 10 — per rrnt of the woc«J har\'estec (UP) — Carmen Smith. 20. each year in the United States. Owensville, died Tuesday in Long hospital of injuries suffered in A world stamp fair will be rar-truek collision at Fc/rtville held at Oslo June 4-—12 in conJast Thursday. The rra*h killed neotion with Norway’s postal
two other persons. centeniiary.
BACK TO SCHOOL MEANS MONEY We’H loan you the money for those big school expenses. It takes money to send the children hack to school with new clothes, shoe*, hooks, school supplies and all the < ther incidentals. Let us loan j'ou enough to send them off in the proper style. LOANS $10 — S5O0.
IS E. Washington St. Phone 15
NOTICE TO ALL WATER CONSUMERS Thursday, August 11th, 1955 rt approximately 8 P. M. Water Works employees will start draining the standpipe for cleaning and repainting. You will be on direct pressure from the pumps and i>u ne sections of the town will probably have low pressure for 3 or 4 days. You may also have some red water. Your consideration will be appreciated. ** DEPARTMENT OF WATER WORKS
Eitei's
Flowers
DOLLAR DAY SPECIALS
SPECIAL XMAS BOX ASSORTMENTS
2
Boxes for Price of One
2 - 59c Boxes for 59c 2 -- 70c Boxes for 79c
2
- $1.00 Boxes for $1.00
50c BUYS
S design* Pottery Ashtrays SUJM) Value Copper Skillet Thermometer $1.00 Value. Colorful Rooster Lamp Shades Choice of ’’ styles of Jardinieres. Desk Book Rack, $1.10 Value. /
$1 BUYS
5, Extra long Philodendron vines $2.00 Child’s Room Fairy Pin-Up Brass Wall Plaque with Fruit Pastel-colored metal and glass Bud Vase Cook Book Wall Planter with vine $2.25 Value 2 Styles of Brass Ashtrays Recipe Decorated Cocktail Shaker.
$2 BUYS
3 styles of pastel-colored metal planter with a lovely foliage plant value Up to $4. 3 pc. Magazine rack, smoking stand and ashtray, a $4 value. Large wall plaque with fruit, $3.49 value. Brass and Pastel-colored Silent Butlers. Floral Cages either black and brass or black and white planted with vines.
$3 BUYS
LARGE LEAF PHILODENDRON VINES GROWING ON ATTRACTIVE POLE *5.00 VALUE.
$4
Row I-O-BeautT Lamp with long lasting Red
BUYS
Rose $7.50 Value.
17 SO. VINE ST.
home Means morc with
• RUGS • CARPETS • LINOLEUM • WALL TILE 9 FLOOR TILE • CUSTOM CABINETS
S|»ears_ 801 E. W AS11IKUTON 8T. PHONE 1386 GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
THE DAILY BANNER 1
and
HERALD CONSOLIDATED 1 Ejiu*pn<f In tftr p«-tftotflc* at ] Grncncnntle, Indiana an acoonc dan* rival) matter under net ol March 7, 1878. Hahnertpttos price t5 rent* pm week; 06.00 per rear by mail In Putnam Coanty; I (6.00 to 010.40 ;«r year outaldt Putnnrn Coanty. Telephone* 74, 95, 114 S. B- Rariden, PobUnher 17-10 South Jackson Street. TODAY’S BIBLE THOUGHT | I was a stranger and ye took j Me in.- Mat. 25:35 -In these latter days millions jf refugees from Communist tyranny have i been cared for by the Christian I democracies. Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of these yc have done it unto Me.
Personal And Local News Briefs
Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Naylor have returned from a visit to Milwaukee, with their son and family. The Cloverdale O. E. S. 369 will hold its regular stated meeting tonight at 8:00 p. m. Jane j Danberry, W. M. West Marion Demonstration ! Club will meet with Mrs. Howard McClellan Friday for a picnic. Meet at the Fillmore Christian church at 11:00 a. m. Harley Fender received word of the death of his uncle, Emery Fender in Wallace, Ind. Last rites will be held Thursday at 1:00 p. m. in Wallace. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer McFaul will leave this week end to return to their home in Wellington, Ontario. They have been the guests of Mr. McFaul’s aunt, Mrs. Earle Boyd, and Mr. Boyd for the past several days. Jackie Curtis Leonard, 20, son of Mrs. Lester L. Leonard, R. 2, Greencastle, and Maxvin Lee Huber, 18, son of Mrs. NelLe Huber, Ave. B, Box 15, Greencastle, have enlisted in the Un.ied States Air Force for four years. They are taking their basic training at San Antonio, Texas.
hospital notes Dismissed: Linda Rogers, Greencastle; Hazel Buis, Stilesville; Mrs. Wilbur Cassida and son, Quincy. Births: Mr. and Mrs. Lorin Bowman, Cloverdale, a son; Mi’, and Mrs. Wallace Parker, Stilesville, a son: Mr. and Mrs. Frank Orr, Cloverdale, a son.
ANNIVERSARIES Birthdays Miss Jean Johnson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. V r nard Johnson, Greencastle Route 2, 17 years Did, August 10th. Mrs. Richard Cline, 19 years ild today, Aug. 10.
RECTOR FUNERAL HOME
AMBULANCE SERVICE PHONE 841
SOCIETY
T I
Miss Virginia Pingleton
Mr. and Mrs. Luther Pingleton, 800 North Madison street, announce the approaching marriage of their daughter, Virginia to Robert E. Collins, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Collins, Greencastle P.. 2. The wedding will take place on Saturday, Aug. 27, at 4:30 at the First Christian church. Friends and relatives are invited.
Miss Prances Frazier
Mr. an|d Mrs. Cyril Frazier wish to announce the engagement of their daughter, Frances, to Jack Sutherlin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Courtney Sutherlin of Russellville. No date has been set for the wedding. Kidnap Story A Hoax, Says Girl FRANKLIN, Ind., Aug. 10 — (UP)—Barbara Meek, 16, who told of being kidnaped and taken 650 miles to North Caroline, has admitted the story was £• hoax. The Bargers ville farm girl, missing since last Thursday, turned up during the weekend at the Rutherfordton, N. C., sheriff’s office. She said three men kidnaped her at the Johnson County 4-H Fair and brought here there.. Back in Indiana, she admitted to State Police that a’ctually she and a man named “Bob” hitchhiked east to get a job. She said she made up the kidnaping story because she “was afraid they would be maxi at home.” State Police Det. Sgt. Harry McMillin said a 28-y’ear-old man had been identified tentatively as the girl’s companion. He said he would get an arrest warrant
today* charging him with contributing to the delinquency of a minor. EXTRA! form a new Pakistan cabinet. Ali served as finance minister in the cabinet of former Prime Minister Mohammed Ali. INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 10—A 40 mile an hour speed limit for some streets in Indiana cities had the backing today of the Indiana Legislative Traffic Study Commission. The commission voted Tuesday to recommend changing the law which required speed limits erf 20 or 30 m.p.h. on streets used as state highway routes. The higher limit would apply to streets deemed capable of handling it. Rep. Phillip Johnson R., Mooresville, commission chairman, said the changt would help do away with the fallacy that traffic safety means slow driving. The group a-lso pledged support to a committee named to study abuses by justices of the peace and recommended laws to correct them. INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 10 (UP)—William B. Trigg, 33 Memphis, Tenn., faced a long prison term today for the armed robbery* of $15,500 of an Indianapolis loan company. A jury met for 45 minutes late Tuesday to find the dapper, bespectacled gunman guilty of joining an accomplice in holding up the Medias Loan Co. of $11,500 in cash and about $4,000 in diamonds in October, 1953. Trigg was sentenced to 20 yeasr for armed robbery and 10 to 25 years for robbery. The two robbers tied up a coowner nad held employes at gunpoint as they rifled a safe. The alleged accomplice is being held in Chicago in a murder investiga-
tion.
KENDALLVILLE, Ind. Aug. 10—(UP)— Kennel Mosley, 30, Willard, Ohio, was killed Tuesday night in a head-on collision of his pickup truck and a semitrailer five miles south of Kendallville on Ind. 3. Sylvia I. Stout, 34, Kondallville, a passenger in Mosley's truck was injured critically in the accident. The other truck driver, Howard Sullivan, 25, Newygo, Mich., was burned when thrown from his truck into a pool of burning gasoline. He rolled onto grass alongside the road and extinguished flames in his clothing.
BOMBERS PASS OVER Scores of four motor bombers passed over this city yesterday and it was thought they were flying to western airfields to escape the Atlantic coast hurricane. Soviet Farmers See Cinerama MINNEAPOLIS, Aug. 10 — (UP) The touring Russian farm leaders went to a new-fangled Cinerama movie Tuesday night and took it in their stride. The movie “Cinerama- Holi-
TV
TONIGHT
WTTV—Channel 4
7:00 ...
Request Theater
7:30 ...
Ames Brothers
7:45
Fishing Club
8:00
Mark Saber
8:30
Man Behind the Badge
9:00
This Is Your Life
9:30
Big Town
10:00
Jalopy Races
11:00
Tonight
WISH-TV—Channel 8
7:00
Frankie Laine
8:00
Millionaire
8:30 .
I’ve Got a Secret
9:00
Steel Hour
10:00
10:15
Grand Old Oprv
10:45 ...
WTHI-TV—Channel 10
7:00 Frankie Laine 8:00 Masquerade 8:30 I’ve Got a Secret 9 ; 00 - Liberace News Roundup 10:15 Sports Huddle 10:35 Date Show
WRIGHT'S ELECTRIC SERMCB Wcsti nohouse 305 N. Jackson St. Phone 64 APPLIANCES AND TELEVISION SALES AND SERVICE
HOSPITAUZATION’INSURANCE 'will protect every' member ef your family! SIMPSON M. STONER, Insurance PHONE 6
day” was billed as the last word in three-dimensional thrills, but ' the Russians didn’t act very impressed. Delegation lender Vladimir j Matskevich even refused to say j whether he had seen anything like it before. When a reporter asked Matskevich whether the movie was a novel experience, the Russian refrrd the matter to tour director John Strohm, saying “Mr. Strohm arranges the press confemces." The 12 Russians, who have been concentrating on American farmlands in their tour so fa,r changed their died today with far-ranging visits to the famed Mayo Clinic at Rochester, Minn., and the bustling auto factories at Detroit. The main body of Russians set out for Owatonna, Minn., for a look at the Daniel C. Gainey farm and then went on to Rochester to view a poultry producing plant, the Rochester Cooperative aDiry and thee linic. Matskevich and two other Russians, however, split off for a flying trip to Detroit. They were scheduled to arrive tonight and tour the giant Ford Rouge plant in suburban Dearborn Thursday. Matskevich nad said earlier that “visiting the United State? without seeing Ford would be like visiting Rome without seeing the Pope.’’ Andrei Shevchenko pronounced "Cinerama Holiday” “very in teresting.” But he wasn’t floored by a three-dimensional toboggan sequence which makes most viewers feel as if their stomachs were dropping out. “I can take it,” the Russiar said. “As you can see. even airplanes don’t bother me.”
CLEAR VIEW CLUB State Road 42 - 5 Miles West of Cloverdale HOURS: Sunday I l:0G A. to 10:60 P. M. WEEK DAYS -- 4:00 P, M, to 10:00 P. M. CLOSED TUESDAYS CLEAR VIEW CLUB MR, AND MRS, HUBERT COOPER
MONEY NOW $20.00 - S5GQ.G0 For SCHOOL CLOTHES fICifOOL BOOKS SCHOOL NEEDS IRH FAMILY FINANCE 9 E. Walnut Phone 1478
Hush Puppies and Sh*3rt Orders Family Room SHINE S TAVERN AIR CONDITIONED STILES VILLE ROAD 40 Kitchen Closes, 10 P. M.
CANNON'S CALLING ALL SCHOOL PARENTS
DOLLAR DAY
FRIDAY, AUGUST 12TH.
LIGHT WEIGHT
B m / C Uel/otc Reg ’ S3,95 flnt 50 Reg. S5.95, $050 0;!% J =*3U\Cl5 $4.95 Values X. S7.95, SS.SS J
Boys Dress Pants
Only $3 Only $4
VALUES
S4:50, S5.00, S6.00
VALUES
$6.50, S7.00, S8.00 Sizes 6 to 20
Wmmrn
-v
0
No Alterations.
mm
Boys'Hobby Jeans values tcS.vs Now 2.58 Boys Knit Shirts GOOD FOR SCHOOL WEAR Reg. S1.50 Value, NOW $1.00 -/w* S1.95, $2.G0 Values, NOW $1.35 $2.50, $2.95 Values, NOW $1.75 3 SIZES 6 THROUGH 18
Boys Sport Shorts were 2so a nd 2.95 now 1.75 LONG AND SHORT SLEEVES - SIZES 6 THROUGH 13 “WHILE THEY LAST” BOYS’ COTTON DRESS SOCKS, 3 Pair . . . $1.00
FEW PAIRS OF
BOYS' SHORTS, Sizes 4 thru 10 . . . REMEMBER-ONE DAY ONLY!
V2 PRICE
CANNON'S
