The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 7 September 1957 — Page 3

1YSW fAYf Itufact NOT LIKE ANY OTHER CAR---The Edsel Is The CAR - • ■ ITS CLASSIC'. VKRTICAL CiRILI. —ITS KLECiANT USES —ITS si PERU PERFORMANCE —ITS Kl<> NEW ENCilNE (That is foot pounds of torqiit*) —All Add I p To You tho Kind of Kid<- and l>ri\e You Have Never Experienced. Let us show you with a ride in the new Edsel. BOI* >1 YE IIS E n S E I. M17 North .laeksor PHONE 343 “The car ahead is Edsel”

diers can’t live s'ith their white ! rot immediately available, but j sections of the country. The

the spokesman said union and ' young persons, most of whom are

management were “far apart’

i a settlement.

wives once the division is trans-

ferred to Texas*.

“Each man concerned has to

make his decision as to whether 1 . he wants to remain in the divi- PAGEANT CONTINUES sjon or transfer out,” the Army ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. (UPi said. The 2nd Armored is swap- , —A courageous blonde girl who ping posts in November with the overcame a false start in a diffi4th Armored Division at Ft. cult operatic solo and a baton Hood. Tex. twirling college graduate studyTexas has fdrict miscegenation j ing for her doctor of philosophy Jaws against allowing Negroes degree took top talent honors and whites living as man and Friday night in the final prelimwife. The Army said it had ad- inary competition rounds of the vised affected personnel of the Miss America pageant, laws. Blonde Miss Oregon, 19-year-Thc Army's explanation came old Judith Faye Hansen of Asafter Rep. Charles C. Diggs D- toria. Ore., plunged to despair Mich, asked Army Secretary Wil-i at her own mistake when she burn M Brucker to set aside the started on the wrong note of her recommendation for the Negroes lyric soprano rendition of “Si,

1957 college graduates, will be serving two years in home missions institutions in the United States. A few will serve three years in Alaska. Hawaii or Puerto Rico. Representing a variety of occupations, they will serve in schools, hospitals, social centers, neighborhood houses and rural parishes.

FOR SALE: 4N acres more WEDDING INVITATIONS and f FOR SALE. 2 fine rams., 2 and | THE DAILY BANNlf

or less, with 7 room house, garage. barn house, nice yard, shade.

modem announcements. Reasonable in ,3 years old Two for S45.00. J’t it j SEPT. T. 1957. Page * chicken price, socially correct—engraved ( choice $25.00. Emory Groner 2 ! GREENUASTEE. IND.

" Five ! or printed. Progressive Printing miles south of Putnamville and

blocks from square on VV. Walnut ; Co., next to the bus station. j Vj mile west. Phone 45. 6--p

Street, Greencastle. Open Fri- ' Ss.L-tf.

FOR SALE: Nice clean feath- ( erbed. $5.00 Stoners. 5 miles east

day p. m.. Sept. 6 to 6 o'clock and j FLIES BEWARE: Punna bulk j Small or odd jobs our specialty.

Electric winng, quick service, on Stilesville Road Justamere

Farm.

all day Saturday, Sept. 7 to 6 p. j dairy spray, $1.25 per gal. in your

Kircher Hatchery.

T-Th-Sat-tf.

5-3t ’

m. Terms. Phone 670-M. Green- ; containers,

castle. Immediate possession.

Phone 7016-W.

19-tf.

FilR RENT

to transfer out of the 2nd Armored.

MARINE ACQUITTED

JACKSONVILLE. Fla. (UP)— A general court-martial Friday night acquitted Marine Cpl. Eugene W. Osick of charges he caused brutal treatment of prisoneis in his charge at the Jackfxmville Naval Air Station brig.

Mi Chiamano Mimi’’ from La Boheme had the heart and the voice to tie Miss Pennsylvania for first place in the talent division. SERVING IN GERMANY BAMBERG, Germany (AHTNC) —Army Pvt. Oscar E. King, son of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar A. King. Commercial PI., Greencastle, Ind.

The 2(>0-pound Marine from | 1 ecently participated in a field

Luzerne. Pa., had faced possible imprisonnment for four years and a dishonorable discharge from the corps if found guilty of the four char ges made against him as a result of a naval board of in-

quiry investigation. LIKE DOUBLE BEDS

OWES COUNTY S9.H00 INDIANAPOLIS (UP) The State Board of Accounts released an audit saying that former Marion County Treasurer Loui« O. Rainier owes the county $9,600 in salaries which he kept as ex officio city treasurer of Indian-

apolis.

Rainier claimed he was entitled to keep the $1,600 annual salary which he received from the city from 1951 through 1956. But accounts board spokesmen said the law required Rainier to return the city salary to the county’s general fund. Rainier thin week returned an additional $2,791 to the county and $66.50 to the city which represented mistakes and overpayments during his tenure as county treasurer. SUPPLY STILL SHORT WASHINGTON (UP) — A spokesman for the Public Health .Service said today the drain on the supply of Salk polio vaccine was “easing up.” But he said the supply still was short of the amount necessary for mass community vaccination programs. The service reported 3,609,702 shots of Salk vaccine were released this week and soon will be in the hands of druggists, physicians and health officers. —BECK AUC USES

tion.”

AFL-CIO President George Meany has said that Gonipers’. policy of union self-government did not mean the AFL-CIO would? .tolerate corrupt leadership of member unions. Beck, writing in the current issue of the Teamsters monthly magazine, quoted Gonipers as saying: "Where we labor unions have blundered into trying to force a policy or a decision even though wise and right, we have impeded, if not interrupted, the realization ol our aims.” Beck also said organized labor was under assault by anti-union

forces.

"The attack is a device aimed eventually at the gains you have made in the field of wages, hours, health and safety standards and

fringe benefits,” he said. MUST MAKE CHOICE

WASHINGTON (UP> Negro members of the 2nd Armored Division who married white women

in Germany in effect today have contract expired at midnight and to make a choice between their picket lines appeared at the two wives or their outfit. newspaper plants at 5 a. m. De-

training exercise with the 10th .Division’s 29th Infantry in Ger-

many.

The exercise was designed to test the efficiency of the newlyformed pentomic division under j simulated combat conditions. King, a gunner in the infantry’s Company A, entered the Army in

LONDON (UP)- Mattress and j Ma y 1955 and completed basic bedding manufacturers reported training at Fort Riley, Kan. triumphantly today that “women

like double beds best.”

The Bedding Information Bureau set up by the national bedbing organizations and mattress

Three New England ministers of the Congregational Christian Churches are en route to Germany on a cargo ship, in charge of 60 heifers contributed by Massachusetts, Vermont, and Rhode Island churches as a mission of relief. The heifers are to be given to German refugee familial who have been able to secure small farms to make a new start in life. Twenty of the animals in the shipment were provided through the denomination’s Congregational Christian Service Committee. Sunday school children, women’s societies and other church groups have been saving their pennies for months in order- to purchase the stock from New England farms at a cost of approximately $200 per heifer. The minister-cowboys are: the Rev. Edwin T. Anthony, pastor of the Pilgrimage Church in Plymouth. Miss.; the Rev. Andrew Richard of the First Congregational Church, Lowell, Mass.; and the Rev. Albert Garner, pastor of the United Church, East Providence, R. I.

j “Announcement: No Auction— ■Selling all Hampshire Boars and

I Gilts at private treaty. Excellent FOR RENT: Four room fur-j now Brucellosis Free nished terrace apartment, avail- | Herd No. 101. Meadowlark able September ith.. Cole Apart- ; Farms, Clinton, Ind. T-T-S-tf ments.'Phone 187-WX 20-tf J The Golden Rule Nursing FOR RENT: One bedroom un- j j^>me, 147 South Wayne St., furnished apartment, also two j Danville, Ind., 24 hour nursing bedroom apartment. See Custo- ; service, convalescent and aged dian at Cole Apts, or phone 18i - J patients. Phone Sherwood 5-2294. " $40 per week minimum operated

by

FOR SALE: Two lawn mowers, one cross cut saw, two pitcher pumps and three heating stoves. George Patterson, Ave. F. 5-3p FOR SALE: Structural glass. 3 feet 14 , * : inches x 2 feet 4 inches. $10. Call at rear of 108 Taylor Place between 4:30 p. m. and 6 p. m. 6-5p

FOR RENT: 4 room furnished apartment, good location, close to town. 513 S. Jackson St.

23-tf.

registered nurses. Member American Nursing Home Association. T-T-S-tf

Young—But completely broken in, this 6 yr. old home offers all the advantages of comfortable living attractive kitchen, tilled i bath, full basement, automatic ! heat available is FHA for 20

5 room house for rent, two miles north of Reelsville on black top load. Bath, hot and cold water, oil heater. Phone Indianapolis ME-0362. Le Roy Irwin, i - .„ i years and only 20# down. O. U. Carpenter, Progressive Real Es-

World Of Religion

manufacturers to coordinate in-formation-said it has carefully studied 10,000 replies to questionnaires sent to married women throughout Britain. The results: 5.338 preferred a double bed compared with 3,382 for single beds. The others were non-committal or undecided. REDS WARN U. S. Communists around the world warned the United States today to keep its hands off the Sovietinfiltrated Middle East. Radio Moscow, quoting what it said was an article in the Red organ Pravda, said Russia’s latest notes on the Middle East should be regarded as a “serious warning to those who plan attempts against peace and security.” The notes, delivered Tuesday to the United States, Britain and France, accused the Western Big Three of interfering in Arab af-

fairs.

The recent report of the Senate Subcommittee to Investigate Juvenile Delinquency dismisses the following as major factors in the rise of delinquency; lack of organized recreation, poor housing, economic status. “If poverty is the cause of delinquency,” says the report, “we should be singularly free from it in comparison with other nations. We are not.” The report adds: "If society is to achieve any really effective curtailment of law violation, it must come largely through the medium of the family since it is there that attitudes of conduct are bred, out of which anti-social lives develop. Better children can come only from bet-

ter parents.”

Three Wesley memoria-l windows in the Washington Episcopal Cathedral—sixth largest in the world—have been dedicated as the gift of a U. S. Navy chaplain and his sister. Depicting John Wesley, his brother Charles, and their mother, Susanna the stain-ed-glass windows were dedicated by Canon Frederick H. Arterton. The donors are Chaplain (Lt. Comdr.) Robert N. Stretch, an Episcopalian and Miss Florence Stretch, of Washington’s Calvary Methodist Church. The windows are in memory of their parents and a brother. The Wesleys, priests in the Church of England until their deaths, founded withir that communion the Methodist movement which developed into the Methodist Church in America and Great Britain. The Protestant Episcopal Church in America also sprang from the same Church of England.

FOR RTNT: 3 room upstairs apartment, private bath and entrance, 502 Elm St. call between 9:00 a. m. and 3:00 p. m. 5-3p FOR RENT; Furnished upper apartment for adults. 312 Elm St. 6-2t FOR RENT: 4 room upstairs and a 3 room downstairs apartments, unfurnished. Phone 654-J. 6-3t FOR RENT: Upstairs apartment. 9 East Poplar street. Phone 242. 7-2t MISCELLANEOUS See the Daily Banner for your genuine engraved or Thermographed wedding invitations.

CONVENIENT PARKING— Why drive around wishing for someone to pull out from a meter? Shop Quik Chek. You don’t pay for parking, and you're right at the door. Room for 150 cars. Quik Chek Super Market, Corner Locust and Franklin. 14-tf.

Pumps, Furnaces and Plumbing Sales, installation and service. A “Mousie” Jones and Son, Cloverdale, Ind. Phone 50H. 2-tf

HAD SAND TROUBLE PANAMA CITY. Fla. (UP) — The harder they tried, the deeper in sand and trouble these two

teenagei¥> got.

The boys, ages 13 and 14, stole a car in Birmingham, Ala., and drove it to Panama City. It got

stuck on the beach.

They stole another car for towing purposes. It got stuck too. They stole still another car following purposes. It got stuck too. No tellinging how long this would have gone on if a deputy hadn’t wondered about the four vehicles in the sand, investigated and hauled the boys away to jail.

NEWSPAPER STRIKE

ST. LOUIS (UP)—Picket lines closed dowi the St. Louis PostDispatch and the Globe-Democrat at 5 a. m. today as electricians of Local No. 1 went on strike

for higher wages.

Also dosed was the Post-Dis-

patch radio and television sta-

tions. KSD and KSD-TV. A union spokesman said the

"We talk too much in abstract terms and we deal too much in generalities,” Bishop Gerald Kennedy, of Los Angeles, recently told a conference of Methodist laymen and ministers. “It is all very tine to sing the praises of democracy, but the world says, let us see it in action and show us what it really means in a particular situation. Everybody is in favor of education, yet we can go on accepting crowded schools and treating our teachers as if they were second-class citizens who ought to be underpaid. So the future of the nation is jeopardized. Religion can remain in the realm of the merely general. Men can talk their creeds and speak their theological propositions. But men want to know what religion means in a particular community face to face wdth racial bigotry. They want to see it in action in an actual concrete situation.”

The Augustana Lutheran Church has taken action “to safeguard the sanctity of the confessional office” and to protect its pastors from toeing compelled by law r to divulge confidential information given them. Said a resolution unanimously adopted: ‘Since the L/utheran Church throughout its history has considered the Christian office of confession as sacred and based on Scriptural foundations, the Augustana Lutheran Church supports the position of its pastors that they shall not be compelled to disclose in court information given them in secrecy of the confessional office.”

Classified Ads.

Ditching, Septic tanks, field tile, sewer lines, foundations, etc Veraie P. Zeiner, Fillmore. Phone 17R4. 12-tf

TRUCKING: Crushed stone, sand, gravel for fill, driveways or concrete, fill dirt,.lime and fertilizer spreading. William Newkirk, Fillmore, phone 237. 10-tf.

tate, 25 So. Vine St. Phone 435W. 7-lt.

FOR SALE FOR SALE: 1947 Pontiac 6, sedan, reasonable. Phone 7014-M. 7-3p

FOR SALE: 1956 Buick 4-door hard top, one owmer. Phone 10R11. Fillmore. 7-9-11-13-4?

FOR SALE: 1955—116 hp. outboard, Cruise-a-way motor, remote controls, $150.00. Phone 10R11, Fillmore. 7-9-ll-13-4p

FOR SALE: Yearling Angus heifer also Chester White gilts, 160 lbs., each. Clarence Cox, 2 miles north of Lena. 7-2p

FOR SALE: High grade top soil. Phone 7101-W. 6-3p

FOR SALE OR TRADE: For milk cows, a 24 Int. corn picker, used 2 seasons. In good shape. Wayne Phipps, 2 mi. West Morton. 6-2p.

FOR SALE: 250 bushels corn. Phone 7057-J. 5-3p

FOR SALE At Camden: 250 fancy one-brand N. Darkota yearlings 650-750 lb., 200 steer calves 475-550 lb. 200 medium to choice steer and heifer calves 300-450 lb. Wertheimer Cattle Co., ph. 40. 6-3t.

FOR SALE: 1956 Volksw^agon. Russell Browm, No. 13 Hess Mobile Homes, across from Kreme Kastle. 6-2t

FOR SALE: 4 ton wagon witn tires, $125.00 and up; Tractor mounted wagon hoists $65.00 and up. D. Frank, 2701 S. 7th Street, Terre Haute, Ind. Fri-Sat-tf.

FOR SALE: Marie Siamese cat. brown ajid black, less than half the usual price. Also good Maytag washer. Phone 129N Cloverdale, 6-2p

FOR SALE: 1954, powerglide Chevrolet, clean, good condition, one owner. W. E. Miller, Hadley, Indiana. 6-6p

WANTED WANTED: A housekeeper. 5 days a week or may live with family in Cloverdale. Write or see Mrs. Ellis Haltom, Box 294. Cloverdale. 7lt WANTED: Married man for farm work. Experienced with machinery and live live stock. Straight time woik and straight time pay, house furnished. Write box H2 Banner. 7-9-ll-13-16-5p

Floor and wall tile; hardwood flooring sanded and refinished. Floyd Crawley, Cloverdale. Phone 50E. 13-tf.

Kemember J*/ast Side Motor Sales for expert body work, Painting, Wheel Alignment and [ Mechanical Work. Over 30 years j

experience,

NURSERY SCHOOL Starting September 16th to May 1st 9 to 11:30 a. m. Monday through Friday. Enroll your child now. Preferably four years of age. Call Mrs. Shirly Mundy, 1421-RX or Mrs. Connie Mundy 131. 4-4p SEPTIC TANKS, cesspool* and toilet vaults cleaned. Modern equipment. Sewers and basement drains cleaned with electric cutting knives. Call us, save money. Pay Less Sewer Cleaners, 15 E. Walnut St. Phone 6U 29-tf, WANTED: Man to wash and polish cars, apply in person. East Side Motors. 7-2t

WANTED: Cook for fraternity

Free estimates. 8-tf. i house. Phone 398 or 712-M 4-4p

FOR SALE: 4 light window sash with glass, 3 ft. 4 I .j inches

x 1 ft. 9 inches. Also two window i ply in person. Belle In, Belleville,

WANTED: Short order cook, fountain help and curb girls, ap-

sashes with glass, 3 ft. 4 I _. inches x 2 ft. 8 inches. Call at 108 Taylor Place between 4:30 p. m. and 6

p. m.

Ind.

WANTED:

4-6p.

Custom corn pick-

ing. George Miller, 4 *4 milee i southeast of Bihnbridge. 4-24t.

_ i

FOR SALE: Nice evergreens, $2 per tree if you dig them—3 for $10 if we dig them; 75c extra for peat moss. We deliver and set. 4000 ready to sell at Moore’s Orchard, State Road 43 at Raccoon. Sat-Tues-tf.

FOR SALE: Allan Clodfelter, 3.

Redbone dogs. Greencastle R. 3-5-7-3t

FOR SALE: Used Baldwin spinet piano, 36 inches high, mahogany finish, excellent condition, Phone 1098 or write P. O. Box 75, Greencastle, Ind. 18-lf.

FOR SALE: Rambo apples, good for cooking and eating. $2 per bushel. Buchheit Orchards, Airport Road. 30-tf

WANTED: Cement work of all kinds, plastering, block laying. James Sims, Reelsville phone 1809. Th-F-S-tf.

FOR SALE: Load of Alberta Michigan peaches, Sunday Sept. 8th, Ross Pans, Clinton Falls store, bring your baskets. 3-5p

FOR SALE: Yorkshire boars, medium type, makes a good cro^s. I have several different ages to choose from. Don C. Pat-

Metric Machine Co. 806 Block St. Let us fill your machinery re-

quirements, Shafte, Bearings, ton, % mile south of Freedom

church, just off

Welding.

6-6t.

AT SHERM’S One ton Ford Truck, $400. Sherm’s Implement Sales. 6-6t

234.

phone.

Waveland

4-6t

For shelling and delivering government corn, contact Gerald Hartman. Phone Bainbridge 64 R 3. M-W-S-tf

DAIRY SALE: Thursday, Sept. 19, 12 noon. 27 head Holsteins, 1 Kupfer stainless steel

FOR SALE: Two oil heaters, one Seigler, one Coleman, with barreis, good condition. Phone Banbridge, 51-R-H. 3-4p.

VALUABLE COUNTY FRANCHISE ROUTES TO BE AVAILABLE Need conscientious dealer in this area to supply stores with a new and recently patented product. This franchise can be handled part time without interference with present job or can be worked full time if so desired. Earnings far above average monthly depending upon time devoted. To qualify you must be 21 to 60 years old, have car, references and $690.00 operating capitol which is secured by inventory. This is not a vending machine route. Write: Monarch Supply, Inc.; 2438 West Lincoln Ave., Milwaukee 15, Wis. 5-5p

FOR SALE: Used oil heater

WANTED: Muzzle loading guns, other antiques. R. W. Baldwin, R. 4, Greencastle. 6-2p

WANTED: Toilet and cesspool pumping. Free estimate. Jess

with thermostat. Excellent con- i Rum ley, R. 3, Zinc Mill

dition. Phone 7075-W.

5-3p

i Phone 7081-R.

AT SHEKM’S

One row Belle City picker, $250.

, , _ ,. _ ^ T One row 1HC picker, $125, one

bulk milk cooler and other equip- a doz.; green beans 2 lb. 25c. In ,

M r i „ . „ _ , : row Woods picker, $350; two row

, ^ D osw el l, Ave. B. 5-3p ; t _

_ 1 mt. IHC po ker, fcloO. Two row

FOR SALE: 1950 two ton Fold i mt. A/o pickers. Sherm’s Imple-

ment. H. D. Kindell owners. Watch this

large ad.

and Son, paper for

7-6p.

LOST

Twenty-six young men and women, who have volunteered two years of their lives for the home mission service of the Methodist Church, are on the campus of Scarritt College for Christian Workers, Nashville, Tenn., in a six-week training and orientation program in the missionary vocation. The group includes 23 women and three men

Tile Army Hnid the Negro sol- tails of the wage dispute were and represents 18 states in all

LOST: Shakespeare Spinning Rod, and Johnson Reel, between Fillmore and Cagle, Sunday morning, Sept. 1st. Reward. Gene Ozment, mile east Fillmore. 6-2p

REAL ESTATE

ARKANSAS GUARDS STOP PUPILS AND NEWSMEN

FOR SALE: 2 bedroom modern home, except heat. Automatic washer and dryer installed. New 18x24 garage. On Burma Road in edge of Cloverdale. $5,500.00 John McCallie. Inquire after 5:30 p. m. 5-5p

AT SHERM’S 1951 A/C combine, $500. 1951 Gleaner combine, $400. 1954 A/C combine, $900. 7 foot self propelled MH combine, $600. 1948 combine, S350. Sherm’s Imple- ( ment Sales. 6-6t.

Alterations, Repairs. The fin- ; FOR SALE:

FOR SALE: Home grown tomatoes, 2 lbs 15c; Mangoes 40c

Road. 6-4p.

28 ft. modern

eet in dry cleaning Davis Clean- j house trailer. Ping’s Trailer ers noith Side of square. Phone j Court. Priced for quick sale. 7-4p I Union.

906.

Sat.-tf

truck, two speed axel, 900 x 20 tires, good condition, reasonable, J. N. Morrison, 2 miles So. Belle

5-3p.

ment Sales.

6-6t

FOR SALE: Dalmatian pups.) FOR SALE: Estate Heat Phone 492-J. 7-10-2t. * coa l stove, 6 Cu. Ft. Kelvinator j refrigerator, small fuel oil

^x.uu; Pictures, o x au, $i.ou; o x i vp SHERM’^

.7, «.0». P.a,p, Tay,o r Photog- I joc Internatioiial » with | “

raphy. Prevo Bldg. Sat.-tf

WANTED:

911 Crown St. •Phone 874-M.

Fence building. James R. Jones. 3-5-7-9-p4

Old pictures copied— Negative, J $1.00; Pictures, 8 x 10, $1.50; 5 x

PLAN NOW—Come In and see the wonderful new plans for Midwest Homes. @r bring your own ideas in for free estimate.

and porcelain drainboard. Call at I

corn ami yrass head, $1000. A j Clarel Williamson, west

new Rotary mower $355. Also | union 6 o

used rotary mowers. Sherm’s Im- |

plement Sales. (6-6t

FOR SALE: Chester White

FOR SALE: Good clean 1950 Buick, $200. Paul Bible, i milj north Putnamville. 6-2p

Greencastle Home Supply, Inc,. male ho& ’ lon S yearling. Ivan

14 N. Jackson St. Phone 69. 1 Clark st°c k - Wm. Cosner, R. 2. j FOR SALE: Hampshire Bo;rrs. Tues-Thur-Sat-tf Greencastle - 1 mi le south of Mt. Gale Grimes, I’/fc miles east of

Meridian.

6-2t. Browns Valley.

Tues. Sat.-tf

FOR SALE 2 Good Used Woods Bros- Pickers Greencastle Tractor Sales Phone 1434 (Across from Fair Groonds)

I

I

BL0NDIE

WANTED Local and Long Distance Moving and Trans ter 40 Years Experience Delivering New Furniture for Montgomery Ward, past 4

years.

Randel Transfer i johnny hazard

HE TOLD ME AlLAl'n 7 ABOUT HIS EAPLV childhood and HIS EXPERIENCES IN THE FIRST WORLD WAR

By Chick Young

HE GOT VERY '‘n FRIENDLY AND S. TOLD ME HOW HE J MET HlS WIFE -f AND HOW HE < GOT STARTED

WELL, HOW ) ABOUT 7—^

THE <

(HE NEVER r GOT BACKET TO THAT

RAISE? L-^, \yC-5--_7

^ --P S 97 V ; V s 'C

PHONE 559-M or 7S5-R.

A NEGRO GIRD Elizabeth Euehier. walks through a cat-caiiing crowd at the all-white Centra, high school in Little R*>ck. Ark Aimed National Guardsmen baried her and eight other Negro students from entering the school.

Bowling Notice SUNDAY N'lTE MIXED LEAGUE Meeting Sunday, Sept. 8th 6:09 P. M. VARSITY LANES

OZ F&5S SLY THE &FOKEN NECKS' WHO'S PIRELTING THIS EPIC, CESEPAL 7,

By Frank RobbitM OL "AUTHENTIC 106AN * \ HiW&ELF/THAT BOY PPEFEPS REAL GORE TO CATSUP AM? USES UVg AV.MO IN HIS BATTLE |

5TARTN6 NEXT WEEK *BORPER INCIPENTj*