The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 9 March 1956 — Page 2

THE DAIkf 6ANNE* FRI.. ArAYj. 9.-W».W P:l ^ <.ia I \( AV7I I INDIANA

'& Coeds Rate Hat'l. Honorary Twenty*three coeds at DePauw T'ni\eri>ity have been de^'lared eligible for membership in Alpha Lambda Delta, national schoUirs ..p honorary for freshman woThe list of new pledges was' .nrmmced bv Miss Lucile Scheuf r. assistant dean of students at DePauw and national secretary «,{ Alpha Lambda Delta. Included are Sandra Johnson, R. R. *, Greenrastle, and five Indianapolis students Ann and Sue Ptgbert, Judith Shutt. Susan Stirling, and Sue Strickland. Also Carole Millikan, Hamn ond; Margaret Reed and Janice Rugee, both of South Bend; and Marilyn Valentine, Darlington. Dorothea Bevilaequa and Patricia Middleton, both of Drexel

Pa

m U Ha-:;

Karen B ickman and

11

.11

Rachael Lahti, Sycamore. 111. Kathr>*n MeClugage, Peoria, 111.; Jacqueline Reusser, Normal. 111.: Eli7.abeth Roys. Scarsdale. N Y ; Marjorie Teich, Elmhurst. Til ; Gail*Van Epps, Dover. O.; and Barbara Ward, Shaker

Heights. O.

NEWS OF BOYS 7TH DiV. Korea. Army 1st ■ Lt Morris W. McGaughey, 23. son of Mr. and Mrs Paul McGaughey. Russellville, is a member of the 7th Infantry Division

in Korea.

Continuing its training, the

division is the only U. division that has reKorea since the cease-

THE DAIlf AARHETt Dod HERALD CONSOLIDATED Entered In the postoffJee a; (.reencastle, Indiana as second class mall matter under act of March 7, 1878. Subscription price 25 eents per week; $5.00 per year by mail In Putnam County; $6.00 to $10.40 per year outside Putnam County. Telephones 74, 95, 114 S. R. Rarlden, Publisher 17-19 South Jackson Stree

ting Hot*

ipo

TODAY’S BIBLE THOUGHT Who shall dwell in Thy holy hill ? He that. . . speaketh trutn in his heart. Psalm 15:1, 2.

-Bayo S. Ar

RECTOR FUNERAL HOME AMBULANCE SERVICE PHONF *41

Lieutenant McGaughey is an < xecutive officer in Tank Company of the division's 32d Regiment. He entered the Amiy in July 1954 and completed basic training at Fort Knox, Ky. McGaughey arrived in Korea in April 1955. The lieutenant is a 1954 gradate of Purdue Univers : ty.

Personal And Local Nows Uriels

SOCIETY

Slate I). A. R. Council Meeting Held March 7

The Daughters bf the American Revolution State Council

as held, March 7, at Sheraton-Lincoln in is. Washburn Chapter

epresented by their Regent Ray R. Neal. Mrs. William ight and Mrs. Truman G. ker. Splendid reports were

by state chairman on all

. R. projects. National De-

and Conservation were

cularly stressed. The first, id and third place winners ie state Good Citizenship st along with their mothers

Miss Ruby Jean

Scl. >rr from Mt. Vernon was the state winner. D. A. R. members \v . r e ur ged to attend Continental Congress, Apr il 16-20 in Wash-

ington, D. C.

Mrs Boa Yur giv<

D.

par seev

re gi

Borrow Now For Easter Clothes S20 to S500.00 “Budget Built Loan Plan” Up to 24 mo. for E. Z. repayments FAMILY FINANCE

PHONE 1178

9 EAST W’ALXUT

I

PRICE CANNOT REPLACE QUALITY NO MATTER HOW SPECIAL The Qualify of Coffee Means Better Flavor -- It's

Time to Change to

KO-WE-BA COFFEE “The Cup Delicious” zol McIntyres QUALITY MARKET

!? SOUTH VINE ST

PHONE 4?

PUBLIC SALE V>. I am quitting farming, I will sell at public auction all of the loll, wing property at the X. S. Hadley farm, 1' 2 miles southrust of Wavelan I, l' : miles northeast of Milligan. 3 miles west of lliissrllv ille, 15 miles southwest of Urawfordsville, on Thursday, March 15, IS56 Beginning at 10:30 A. M. (UST) 3 — COWS — 3 3-yr. old Holstein, fresh, giving 10 gal. 3-yr. old Holstein, fresh in April. 3-yr. old Holstein, fresh in spring. 2 — HOGS — 2 2 Purebred Hampshire male hogs. — 1 ARM IMPLEMENTS — 1951 Mussey-Harris 44 diesel, in A-l shape. 1911 Ford-Ferguson tractor, good shape. 1954 2-ME International corn picker. 1951 Masses-Harris 7-ft. Clipper combine. 1954 International power take-off manure spreader. 1945 Das is manure loader for Ford-Ferguson. 1951 John Deere 4-mw corn planter. 1955 International 4-ro\\ cultivator. 1954 John Deere 2-svss rotary hoe. 1954 Chattanooga 9-ft. cultipacker. 1954 Try«o weed sprayer. 1954 International 13-7 grain drill on rubber. 1954 Case stalk shredder. 1953 Little Genius 3-14 International break plow on rubber. 1952 little Genius 3-14 International break plow on rubber. 1952 International 8-ft. tandem »lts<\ 1947 John Deere 10-ft. dise. John Deere grain elevator. 1948 SoHrs-iioobuek wagon on rubber and good bed. 1948 New Idea wagon on rubber with good bed. 1947 Jeep. — MISCELLANEOUS — 2 electric br«*oder stoxes, siegler oil stove; Monogram oil stove, heathouser for Intern itional or Massey-Harris traet«»r. forks, shovels, chains, small tools, air compressor, aeetvlene v.elder, tires, tubes, rims. 300-gal. gas tank, 15-gal. oil drum. 4-in. \ 16-ft. Harvest Hand portable auger with electric motor. Chorem :ster gar ten tractor, 2 good 2-wheel trailers, and other artieles too numerous to mention. TERMS — Cash. Not responsible in ease of accidents. RICHARD SUTHERLIN, Owner EARL KAY and ALTON HURST. Aucts. BILL SPENCER. Clerk Lunch served by Ladies Aid of Russellville Christian Church

Mrs. Howard Bennett of Brazil, and Mrs. Arthur White, of Greencastle, spent Thursday in Indianapolis visiting Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hanson. The Morris Wible family, of Farmersburg, will present special music at Sunday school at the Nazarene church Sunday morning. Everyone is cordially invited. One of the performers with the DePauw University Symphony in a home concert here Wednesday, March 14, will be Arthur Masten. Son of Mr. and Mrs. Piercy Masten. 331 N. Arlington,, he is a member of the bass section. Mr. and Mrs. Gene Bond and their two children are now making their home in Greencastle. Coming here from Liberty, Ind., they will reside in the Campbell apartments on East Seminary street. Mr. Bond, who was formerly golf pro., at the Liberty Country Club, has accepted a position as golf instructor at the Windy Hill Country Club. ANNIVERSARIES Birthday Rickey Joe Call, son of Mr. and Mrs. Max Call. Roachdale, 1 year old today. Allan Buser, son of Mr. and Mrs. Warren Buser, Roachdale, today, March 9. Darla Zeis, East Seminary, 7 years today, March 9. Adam Wagner, 78 years today, March 9.

NO FOOLISHNESS JACKSON, Miss March 9 — (UP) The Mississippi House of Representatives Thursday adopted State Senate-approved rules forbidding lawmakers to carry firearms or whisky into the Capitol building.

TV TONIGHT

Airs. Turner Hostess To Busy Bee Club The Busy Bee Club met all day, Thursday, March 1st, with Mrs. . Nell Turner. All present enjoyed the usual good dinner at the ; noon hour. Jean Curtis, the President, I conducted the afternoon business meeting. “Springtime in the Rockies” was sung, followed by prayer by Mrs. Klinfelter. For devotions, Esther Jones read the 100th Psalm. Twelve members answered roll call with a joke. The usual reports were read and approved Several suggestions were made for new motions to be brought up for voting at. the next meeting and it is hoped that there will be a larger percentage of members present. Mrs. Dwigans, Cheer Guild Sponsor, discussed Cheer Guild work. Favors for Easter were to be ma le for the hospital. Esther Taylor gave two contests, won by Jeanne Jones and Esther Jones. The club adjourned to meet with Alice Cradick in April. Assistant hostesses will be Jean Curtis and Irene Clark. All members not having donated white elephant packages already are asked to bring them to this meet-

ing.

Boston Club Meets Monday The Boston Club will meet a-t 7:45 on Monday evening in the home of Mrs. Nona Davis with Mrs. Golda Runyan and Miss Kate Lovett as co-hostesses. Mrs. Florence Sheridan, the program leader, will present her daughter, Mrs. Joseph S. Bean of Indianapolis, who will tell of her visit to Cambodia, illustrating the talk with pictures. Friendly Circle Bolds Meeting Mrs. Dorothy Irwin was hostess to the Friendly Circle Home Demonstration Club for its March meeting. Due to illness, both the president and vice president were absent and the meeting was opened by Mrs. Bernadine

DePauw Orchestra To Give Concert

One year shy of celebrating .ts diamond anniversary. DePauw University’s symphony orchestra will appear in a home concert here Wednesday. March 14. Conducted by Prof Herman Berg and featuring Joseph Rush as Clarinet soloist, the 56 piece orchestra will concentrate on the classics at 8:15 p. m. in Meharry Hall. The DePauw Symphony was founded 74 years ago in 1882 and has been in continuous existence longer than any American college orchestra except the Harvard Symphony. We inesday’s concert will open with Precession of the Grail from Richard Wagner's ’ Parsifal” and include the March and Scherzo from “Love of Three Oranges” by Serge Pi-okofieff. Also heard during the first portion ot the program will be Claude Debussy's Premiere Rhapsody for Clarinet and Orchestra. Clarinetist Rush is a senior in the DePauw School of Music. Post-intermission selections will be the Debussy tone poem, “Afternoon of a Faun,” and the allegro modevato movement from Symphony No. 1 in G Minor by B.asile Kalinnokov.

MEN ON RELIEF ROLLS WILL WORK ON STREETS MICHIGAN CITY, March 9 — Men on the poor relief rolls here will be put to work on city street crews at $1 an hour beginning March 19, Mayor Francis Fedder said yesterday. Fedder and Michigan Township Trustee Alex Przybylinski, who will administer the program, said about 50 men now receiving relief payments will be required to work in the program. Pay will be higher for skilled work but anyone without a good reason for refusing to participate will be dropped from the

rolls.

The trustee said poor relief now costs about $10,000 a month. The city will supply supervisors, materials, equipment and accident insurance for the project.

IKE IS DINNER HOST ! Washington. March 9 (UPl — Pt&kdeLt L.>.\ n_J rx* tie \V House Thursday night a g: up of friends and political strategists who probably will play kay roles in his 1956 campaign. The group of about 16 nmt with the President at a private stag dinner. A White House spokesman confirmed that a dinner was held but declined to gi v e any details. It was learned, however, that the guesi list included Attorney General Herbe't Brownell Jr.; Thomas E. Stevens, former presidential appointments secretary; presidential assistant Sherman Adams, Undersecretary of Co: iir.erce Waite: Williams; forme: New York Gov. Thomas Dewey, and Gen. Lucius Clay. ESTES IS CONFIDENT WASHINGTON, March 9 (UP)- Sen. Estes KefauvCi said today he thinks he is gaining ground in both New Hampshire and Minnesota, where he faces his first two presidential primary contests against Adlai E. Stevenson. Back in Washington for voting on the farm bill, Kefauver told a | reporter he expects to get “a majority or a little better than a majoiity” of the national con- • vention delegates elected in the Democratic primary in Nev' Hampshire next Tuesday. He would make no forecast about Minnesota, where lie rs bucking the state organization headed by Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey and Gov. Orville L. Freeman. They are backing Steveson. HUNGER STRIKE MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. Mar. 9 (UP)—Indiana State Prison officials waited today for the last of 35 angry inmates to end a sixday hunger strike. The prisoners, at least two of them sentenced for murder, first refused food last Saturday. But the demonstration was not revealed until Thursday, when only four of them were still holding

cut.

Warden J. Ellis Overlade said the prisoners apparently were protesting the removal of a steel cot from the cell of Joseph Martinez, 26, in the prison seclusion

section. Martinez

FOUR GIRLS HELD

1NDEP (UP)

' NT

M.

ike Coun’y The cot was nez tore a pi and used it

n 1947. taken after Mar?ce of metal from :o attack a guard.

FLOODS THRE \T!,' PITTSBURGH. March UP) The Allegheny rorged by heavy rains. p(

iters into th.

ce officers onexistent jail today, story Was think the was very

9 — River,

gmg i h^re t<

ters w. o Yalli

Fio

Pit

Houg d For irgh,

•n Penn-

damaging high lay hit the rich hton, head of the ecasting Service said tiie Alleilling down its Ivania valley af-

dai

in up- j

r causing heavy

ver communities, would reach lout 27 feet at Pittsburgh. Flood stage at the city’s Gold-

1 Triangle, where the Allegheny j East might drive

eets the Monongahela to ft

ie Ohio, is 25 feet.

MAY ASK AUTHORITY WASHINGTON. March 9 (UP) The Agriculture Department may ask Congress to authj crize additional spending author- : ity for its surplus disposal pro- ■ gram is about to outgrow its fiI nancial clothes a second time. The Commodity Credit Corp. already has used up more than 1 ; billion dollars of its 1.5 billion dollar spending authority to finance export sales of surplus ! farm commodities. Since the proI gram has been operating only | about 15 months and lias about 1 17 months to go, odds are that the remaining spending authority j won’t last through the stretch. CARD OF THANKS The family of Walter Nelson would like to take this opportunity to thank Dr. Rhea, the hospital staff, singers, organist and all the friends, neighbors, and iclatives for every act of kindness shown during the illness and death of our beloved husband and father. Also we thank Hopkins and Walton, Rev. Mark Hamilton, and Rev. Fisher for their kindness and consolation. From the bottom of our hearts

we thank you.

sent 28 carloads of poli on a chase after two n kidnapers woke up in admitting their wild a hoax. Authorities did not short-lived manhunt

funny.

Sheriff Floyd Huggins, who directed the futile chase, said all four girls would be taken before Police Judge Walter L. MeVey Jr., to face charges of disturb-

ing the peace.

They were identified as Gloria Jc-nsma and Lois Davis, both 18, and Jeaneane Fahrney and Judy

Damman, both 17. GENERAL WARNS

LONDON. March 9 - (UP) Lt. Gen. John Glubb Pasha warned Britain today that any “tough" new policy in the Middle

still-friendly

Jordan into the anti-British Arab

camp.

Glubb, breaking nearly a week's silence on his ouster as commander of Jordan's Arab Legion, said a “get tough” policy also might cost young King Hussein his throne. B \SKETB \LL DINNER TO BE HELD THIS EVENING The annual dinner honoring the Bainbridge High school band and the high school Basketball Team will be held in the gymnasium this evening. A large attendance is expected and a program of band music will follow

the dinner.

“HIGHWAY ROBBERY" NEW YORK. March 9 (UP) An irate letter to the editor of the New York Daily News suggested today that New York state's new Thruway, a toll toad, be called “Highway Robbery.”

12 DIE IN FIRE

OXFORD, Pa., Mar. 9 (UP) At least 12 members of one family burned to death shortly before midnight when flames destroyed a two-room wooden ami cardboard shack on the Oxford

borough limits.

The victims, all Negroes, were identified tentatively by police as John Tvvyman and his wife.

-Mrs. Walter Nelson and family j 9 of their childre n and 1 grand-

P' 1 - child.

WTHI-TV Chanel 10

Woodall. Business was conducted

6:00

TV News

in the usual manner with eleven

6:30

My Friend Flicka

members answering roll cal!

7:00

Mama

Mrs. Freda Wright gave part I

1

l 8:00

Crusader

of the lesson on Floor Coverings

9:00

Lineup

Mrs. Mary Ford gave a contest

9:30

Person to Person

won by Mrs. Mary Lou Albin and 1

10:00

TV News

the door prize was won by Mrs.

10:30

Late Show

Mildred Sutherlin.

Delicious refreshments were

WFBM-TY Channel 6

served. The April meeting will be

6:00

Weather; Winn

at the home of Mrs. Mildred

Sutherlin.

; 6:15

Winn Trio

6:30

News; Sports

6:45

Weather

i 7:00 The Norths 7:30 Eddie Fisher 7:45 News Caravan 8:00 Truth or 8:30 Riley’s Life 9(00 Big Story 9:30 Star Stage 10:00 Sport Cavalcade 10:45 Red Barber 11:00 Celebrity Thea. 11:30 Boston Blackie 12:00 Tonight WTTY- Channel 4 6:00 Little Rascals 6:45 News 7:00 Fav. Stor'y 7:30 Waterfront 8:00 The Nelsons 8:30 Crossroads 9:00 Dollar Second 9:30 The Vise 10:00 Ethel ’n' Albert 10:30 Highway Patro! 11:00 News 10:15 Bonnie’s Thea Westinohouse WRIGHT'S ELECTRIC SERVICE 305 N, Jackson SL Phone 64 APPLIANCES AND

TELEVISION

SALES AND SERVICE

The Counter Mr. Hunter: “It’s time for us all to renew another insurance policy.” Mr. Stoner: “That’s right. All America is interested in this policy. We’re really not talking about everyday insurance —but disaster insurance.”

7Vte car says GO and the price wont stop youl

It Knows No Master but Km !

Mr. Hunter: time for us to our great friend, the American Red Cross. When iisaster strik3s it’s always ready, however. it depends on us. Mr. Stoner: Let’s ail give generously.”

“Again it’s contribute to

Simpson Stoner INSURANCE Phone 6

You’re sotting the pace in this one—with your own good iudgmen ths only limiting factor! Up fron yen h; ve the highway’s hottest perjormanu team . . . the mighty 227-h.p. StA.vC Str:~„ V-8 1239-h.p. with dual exhausts*) and its partner, the revolutionary Strato-I’ light Hydra-Matic*. Here’s a vast reservoir of dynamic, vibrant power! The 8rst time vou tap that reservoir, you'll 8isco' .. a thrill that can't be duplicated any-

You can actually buy a big, glamorou For than you would pay for many models 'of the

where else at any price! The way it whisks you past awkward situations and slower-moving traffic will have you holding your breath. You're the master of every thing on the road. Why not come in today or tomorrow and sample this tremendous go' And while you’re here, you'll find that performance is only half of this fabulous '56 Pontiac’s wonderful story. The other part is price—and it's every bit as exciting!

860 for less nc-priced thrci

1% ’ 56 strato-stheak Pontiac WITH STRATO-FUGHT HYDRA-MATIC

Fentress Motors, Inc.

119 No. Indiana St.

Phone 297

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