The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 January 1957 — Page 6

fN€ OAflT 0ANN£K VO) . JAN. 2. 1957 PAgt 6 GKtKNC ASTL IND.

Same Dedicated To Ex-Teammate

PASADENA. Calif. (UP — pledge, a pass and some of the finest breakaway running ever »een in the 43 year history of the Rose Bowl gave Iowa its smash-

ing 35-19 victory over Oregos Stats. That's the way Coach Forest Evashevski summed up the Hawkeye triumph that prolonged the Big Ten mastery of the Pacific Coast Conference in the oldest of the post-season football bowl games Tuesday. According to Evashevsk, it went this way: 1. Before the game the players got together and pledged to dedicate the game to Calvin Jones,

; the All-American tacaie irum last year’s team who was killed ! in a recent Canadian airplane crash. They also voted to give the game ball—which must be a winning one—to Cal's mother, living in Steubenville. Ohio. Completes 9 of 10 2. The “pass" was the performance put on by heroic quarterback Ken Ploen who completed 9 out of 10 aerial attempts for 83 yards and one 16-yard toss to end Frank Gilliam for a touchj down. 3. The breakaway running in- ! eluding a 49-yard cakewalk down the sidelines by Ploen in the first quarter in which the talented back was merely knocked down twice, but kept his feet long enough to get through the heavy traffic and break into the clear for a score a 65-yard touchdown run by halfback Mike Hagler; and a 37-yard run to the nine yard line by halfback Don Dobrino which set up the second score of the game. “But on top of all of that we got the breaks just as we have been getting all season,” said the smiling Evashevski of Iowa. “You have to be lucky to win—and we have been that way all season. You have to get the breaks in this game.”

released Thursday. “I want to apologize to the University of Tennessee and to my own school for wfcat happened today. I couldn't be more sorry,” Hickman said Net Schedule

F riday Sheridan at Greencastle Eminence at Cloverdale New Market at Fillmore Bainbridge at Stilesville

Tuesday’s College Football By United Press Rose Bowl Iowa 35, Oregon State 19 Sugar Bowl Baylor 13, Tennessee 7 Cotton Bowl TCU 28, Syracuse 27 Orange Bowl Colorado 27, Clemson 21 Sun Bowl George Washington, 13, Texas Western O. Prairie View Bowl Prairie View 27, Texas Southern 6 Tangerine Bowl W. Texas St. 20, Miss. Southern 13.

CASH

YEAR END EXPENSES CONSOLIDATE SMALL OBLIGATION INTO ONE E. Z. PAYMENT PLAN. $20.00 To $500.00 FAMILY FINANCE 22 E. Washington St. Phone 1478

Baylor Fullback Offers Apology NEW ORLEANS (UP)—Bayior fullback Larry Hickman asked the University of Tennessee Tuesday night “to forgive me,” then apologized to the Vols and to his ot teammates. Hickman apologized for kicking Tennessee guard Bruce Burnham during the Sugar Bowl game Tuesday. Burnham, meanwhile, was described in “good condition” in a local hospital today. Spokesman at Touro Infirmary said Burnham might be

Old Gold Will Play Evansville Winners of four straight Indiana Collegiate Confeience games, the league-leading DePauv. Tigers will return to league action at Evansville Saturday. Although DePauw hammered out an 85-64 decision over the Aces here last month in its final ICC outing of 1956, the return encounter will feature two major changes. Evansville will own the homecourt advantage Saturday nig''t, and the visitors will be minus the services of their top scorer, Bob

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3 FALLS CITY BEER

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CHATEAU ■■ Double Feature Tonight DOB’T MISS TWO VERY GOOD PICTURES h \ BOCrAST pulls no punches!

COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR

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with Warren STEVENS

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YEAR OLD NEW YEAR’S DAY

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6195* FALLS OTT HEVtlG COWART, lOBSYli; U. (Y. F£JIS4

Closing-out

Due to the relocating of niy ministry and am quitting farming. I will sell at auction, at my farm, located miles southwest of t'loverdale on S'ate Koud 42, or 8 miles w est of the Junction of State Koad 43 and 4'2 on road 42. the following, on: Saturday, January 5th, 1956 SALE STARTS AT 12:30 P. M. (Daylight Time) 6 — CATTLE — 6

THE BLAZSER TRIPLETS wear some of the Icing as they mark their birthdey in Pittsburgh. They were,bom on New Year’s Day 1956. From left: Denise. Jacqueline. Geraldine. {International)

2 Shorthorn ( o\s, 3 yrs. old to calve in Spring. On*- Shorthorn Cow, 5 yrs. old to calve in Spring. Two Loan Shorthorn Heifers. One I’urt'hred Angus Bull. 18 months old. Cattle are tested. 18 — HOGS — 18 18 Mixed Shouts, weight 100 Lbs., Good. CORN AND HAY 825 tyushels more or less Yellow Corn; 900 bale's good Clover Hav, never wet. FARM IMPLEMENTS Ferguson 20 Tractor, cultivators, 2x14 plows. Dearborn 7’ mower. 6 ft. International disc and tandinn. good flat top wagon on rubber. 12 disc grain drill. 8tH> gal. overhead gas tank. Buz/, saw . W ards garden tractor with mower, hog ftnintain. 2 iron kettles and furnaces, 1000 ft. 2\6’s — 2x8 s. 18 — 2x8’s. 16 ft. long; 2 — Sxe’s. 16 ft. long: 8 double hog houses ahnoat new; one single hog house; one roll cribbing, crc«*p feeder. 25 seasoned Locust poles 20 to 25 ft. long; 6 wagon wheels, some hand tools, one lot junk and man\ other small items. HOUSEHOLD 2 Piece Living Room Suite, Dining Room Suite, Desk and other miscellaneous items. Not Responsible in case of accidents. TERMS — CASH. Hr. and Hrs. Clarence 0. Barr And Son, Owners WAYNE B RAN N EM AN, Auct. IRA C. KNOLL, Clerk

LOAD ‘MAD BOMBER’S’ BOMB

NEW YORK POLICE bomb squad men, wearing protective clothing, load a home-made, “mad bomber’s” bomb into a wire mesh “envelope” on a truck after it was found in a library telephone booth. This is Lae 31st such bomb found in 16 years. (International^

Schner. who broke a bone In his foot Dec. 22. Bengal Coach Cal Luther probably will start sophomore Bing Davis in Schier’s place, with junior Tom Johnson at the opposite forward and sophomore Chuck Cleaver in the pivot spot. The victim of a knee injury in early season, Cleaver has had only 13 minutes of ICC playing time this year but carries an 11point game average. A fixture at guard for DePauw is junior John Bunnell, who popped in 39 points as the Tigers divided a pair of holiday games in the Millikin Invitational, locing to Milligin and defeating Illinois Wesleyan. Pared with Bunnell in the

backcourt will be junior Joe Lawlof, giving Luther a line-up composed entirely of second and third-year cagers. SEES ECONOMY SURGE NEW YORK (UP)—The economy will surge ahead again in 1957 with a 3 per cent advance in the gross national product and 1958 appears promising, Fortune magazine said today. In a business roundup, the publication said “the sti iking thing about the business outlook is how extraordinarily impervious the economy appears to be, after so long a period of expansion, to the threat of a real recession.” It admitted’ there could be a minor economic dip in 1958 . . . but that appears to be the worst

that can happen, and it would , hardly be a recession.” Fortune said its 1957 estimate —in which the nation's total output of goods and services would rise to 435 billion dollars (427 billion dollars in 1956 prices)—is based mainly on expected higher defense, business and consumer spending. It also pointed out that inflation “wil Icontinue bui probably at a slower rate than in the past year.” The cost of !iv J ng should increase by “a bit less than 2 per cent," it said. As for credit, it indicated, the chances next year ‘*a*-e better than even” that interest rate? will be “in the direciion of eas-

ing.”

Freight Trains Crash Killing 3 MARTINSBURG, W. Va (UP)- Baltimore & Ohio Railway officials started an investigation today to determine why two freight trair-s traveling in opposite directions were routed over a single line track at the j same time. The trains, hauling a total of 314 cars, collided headon Tuesday, killing three crewmen and injured five others. Both locomotives and 41 cars left the rails and piled up along the r:gh‘. of

way.

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