The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 September 1957 — Page 2
THfc DAILY B/NNK TI FS.. sf IT. 10. 19.V7. Page 5 GREFNCAisTLE. IND.
Putnam County league
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Roachdale Lions 6 0 Thompson Const. Co 4 2 Pete's Clippers 4 2 Stuckey’s U. S 40 3 3 Moore's Super Service .2 4 Harper's Trucking 2 4 Hampton’s Garage 2 4 Mack's Place 1 5
High Individual game. Wendling 218: High individual series Moore 600 High team game. Thompson Const. Co. 1057. High team series. Thompson Const. Co. 3055. 500 series: Wendling 586: Delp 557; Vorshell 540: Brattain 541: Church 532; McCammack 518; L. Sutherhn 517; Buser 513; Rader 505; Hogue 500. 600 series; Moore 600. 200 games: Wendling 218; Delp 211: Brattain 210: Moore 204
CARNIVAL At Fair Grounds WEDNESDAY. SEPT. IITH THROUGH SATURDAY, SEPT- I4TH Sponsored by V. F. W. Post 459
Can aoor-to-aoor salesmen prescribe? We mean prescribe medications for your health. Of course not. Only physicians are professionally qualified to do this. And only registered pharmacists are professionally qualified to dispense these prescriptions for your use. These are facts of law and medical ethics—designed for the protection of your health. So before you buy any vitamins or other medicinal preparations from a door-to-door salesman, ask him to wait while you call your physician or your phannacist. He probably won’t-
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Tuesday & Wednesday Specials IU.Isk — DRIP OR Kf «.t EAR GRIND COFFEE, 1 Lb. Tin . ... 89c
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SALAD DRESSING, Full Qt. . 39c
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Coffee L 9 e 6 ° z Jar sl.25
GOLDEN KITE
BANANAS, 2 Lbs 29c
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POTATOES, 10 Lb. Bag . . 49c
PURE CANE
Sugar 5 lb. Bag 49c
meaty pork
NECK BONES, Lb. .
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BEEF LIVER, Lb. FRESH
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THE DAILY BANNER end HERALD CONSOLIDATED Entered in the postoffice ot 3reeneastle, Indiana as sec one lass mail matter under act o vlarct, 7, 1878. Subscriptioj irire 25 cents per week, S5.04 »er year by mail In Put nan .'ounty, S6.00 to SJ.0.40 per yeai jutside Putnam County. S> R. Rariden, Publisher 17-19 South Jackson Stre« Telephone 74, 95, 114 TODAY’S BIBLE THOUGHT If any man lack wisdom, let him ask of God. James 1:5.— Christ looked to the Father fo: | guidance in every deed he per- ■ formed, every word he spoke. : God is eager to guide you in minute details.
POPULAR BEN DAVIS SENIOR IS INSTALLED
RECENT BRIDE
FIRST THOUGHTS It’s fine to wish for things —but it’s better to ..place., a true value on what you’ve already got. Chances are you’ve got a lot more ' than you thought you had.
Ronald F. Jordan. the first member of the West Indianapolis Chapter Order of DeMolay to reeive the coveted Representative DeMolay Award last May wa*} in^talled as Master Councilor of the .Vest Indianapolis Chapter at the re.’ .pie of the Indianapolis Lodge So. 669. F. & A. M.. 1522 West Morris Street. Indianapolis, on Saturday September 14, 1957 at i :00 p. m. Services were public -•nd his many friends attended. Donald is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Jordan, 3638 West Troy and is a member of Quill &. Scroll, National Honorary Journalism Society, Student Council. Sports correspondent for Ben Davis High School, president of '.he MYF of the Maywood Methodist Church. Among his other DeMolay honors is his present po?vt. Orator of the State Organization of this Order. Jordan is a grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. J. Smith of Fillmore and is quite well known in | the Fillmore community, where he has often visited.
INDICTED AS SPIES
NEW YORK UP Martha Dodd and her husband Alfred were indicted yesterday by a fed:i;J grand jury for conspiracy to cormni; espionage for Soviet Russia. Th Sterns, now believed tour-
! ing somewhere behind the Iron | fore a in! gr.v ! jury investlCurtain, face a possible death gating subvt rs: •: and espionage.
I penalty if tried and convicted.
Mrs. Stern is the daughter of tho late William E. Dodd, ambassador to Germany from 1933 to 1938. The Sterns had been fined .<25.00 each for failure to appear br-
The couple had b en living^ in Mixico bit", tied to Eu >>pc earlyi in July when the M v. in government sough: to return th*’*H to the Unite ! States for ques-
tioning.
' - " " V V: Beautify Your Home For Fall
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Personal And Local News ■Briefs
UNIONS WILL ACT
J WASHINGTON (UP)— AFLCIQ secretary-treasurer William F. Schnitzler said today the labor movement will “finish the I job” of cleaning out racketeers
V. F. W. Auxiliary will meet and crooks within its ranks. Wednesday at the Post Home. He also asserted that organized Women of the Moose No. 138 labor has? stricter ethical standwill meet Wednesday at 8:30 p. ards than many business con-
m. There will be initiation. ] corns.
The Beta Sigma Phi Sorority In a speech prepared for delivwill meet this evening at 8:00 ery to the AFL-CIO Transit p. m. in the Public Service room. Workers convention here. Schnit-
The Friendship club will meet ; zler said the
Wednesday evening at 8 o’clock
at the home of Mrs. Opal Hammond. The Clinton-Madison Friendly Club will meet Thursday Sept. 12. at the home of Mrs. Ira Hutcheson at 1:30 p. m. A daughter was born Monday at the Putnam County Hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Grimes of
AFL-CIO. will be
stronger bacause of the clean-up
drive.
“We don’t want the guy who extorts from an employer, or who sells out his own members, or who consorts with racketeers, or who dips into the union treasury,” Schnitzler said. “And what’s more we are in the process of ridding ourselves of all this vermin that has infect-
Greencastle. The baby has been ec j ^ ra( j e un i 0 n movement. named Sheree Lynn. Schnitzler said the AFL-CIO Mr. and Mrs. William Brines, ethical practices code contains of Greencastle, are the parents j the basic standards of morality of a son born Monday at the Put- | and decency of the trade union nan. County Hospital. | movement and not “fansy languMr. and Mrs. Mike Summers a = e or Pi° us platitudes.
of Alexandria spent the weekend with Mrs. Summers father, Rossok, Sr., and other relatives. The Happier Homes Home Demonstration club will meet tonight at 8 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Thomas Goldsberry,
Greeneastle R. 2.
City firemen made a run to Observatory Court at 10:05 a. m. Monday where they found a utility pole burning due to a short in an electric service line. The Girl Scout Council will meet Wednesday morning at 9:15 at the home of Mrs. Clinton Green. 629 E. Washington. All members are urged to attend. The Bainbridge Home Demonstration club will meet Thursday afternoon, September 12 with Mrs. D. O. Tate. Members please note the change in meeting
place.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Neier or Sebring, Fla., and formerly of this city, are visiting relatives and friends in the city, for a week before returning to their southern home. Miss Marjorie C. Mahoney spent the weekend with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Mahoney and family. Miss Mahoney entered St. Anthony’s School of Nursing in Ton e Haul, on August 25, 1957. A religious institute sponsored by the Federation of Womens Clubs will be held Monday, Sept. 16th. at Evansville college. The program will be from 10:00 a. m. | to 3:00 p. m. The theme will be, Hinduism. Lunch will be served at the college cafeteria. Doris H. Salsman, secretarvtreasurer of the Greeneastle National Farm Loan Association, left this morning to attend tie four-state Federal Land Bank and National Farm Loan Association Conference to be held on the Ohio State University campus at Columbus, Ohio, on Sent.
10-12.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Crouch have returned from the East, where they have been on vacation for the past two week They were guests of Mr.Crouch’s sister. Mis Don Hogate. and Mr. Hogate at their home in suburban Washington, D. C. Season tickets for the five home football games of the Greeneastle Tiger Cube are available at the office of Principal Norman McCammon. Adult and student season tickets can also be obtained at the high school athletic field and Mullins drug store. ‘
‘•Either you are honest or you jr,! are crooked,” he said. ‘‘There’s
no middleg round.”
Reports on corruption charges in the Teamsters, Bakery Workers and Textile Workers unions are now^ being prepared by the AFL-CIO Ethical Practices Cominittee. The Unions could be ordered tc clean up or get out of the AFL-CIO as a result of charges filed against them.
Across The Counter A commentator recently .observed: "Your Future Security May Depend On Today’s Decisions.” And, in terms of “future security,” one of the most needed decisions is to carry ample liability insurance. Moreover, the decision should be made immediately since even a day’s delay may be too late. Liability insurance is needed because we are in wdiat has been labeled "the claims age.” One observer calls it the “20th Century gold rush —the frenzy to stake out a financ i a 1 claim against somebody or to litigate the Hj.nu., faintest injury to limb, property, or peace of mind, especially where there is a vein or insurance pay dirt.” Another obseiver says, ’In some cases, facts blend into fanev, and fancy merges into outright larceny.” Also, there is the growing trend towards large r “awards ’ to be c o n s i d ered. And the tendency to lean ever b a c k - ward in .avor of the injured party in establishing “negligence.” The only satisfactory protection is plenty of well-plan-ned liability insurance. Let us help you plan your liability insurance protection. Come in, or phene, and we'll visit you. Simpson Stoner INSURANCE Phone 6
Mrs. Charles Ellis, who prior to her marriage Saturday afternoon, was Miss Elizabeth Davies of Marshall. Mr. and Mrs. Eilis will make their home in Rockville. Good Uneer Club Will Meet Thursday The Good Cheer Club will meet Thursday, Sept. 12, 1957 with Mrs. Marvin Jackson at 1:30 p. m. Revival Meeting; Portland Mills Christian Church. Starts Monday, Sept. 16, 7:30 DST. closes Sunday noon Sept. 29, with a basket dinner. Evangelist Rev. H. D. Schneider 1st Christian Church, of Clinton, Indiana. In charge of music, George Green, Bainbridge Christian Church, Bainbridge, Indiana, Everyone is welcome. Delegations from churches invited.
MASONIC NOTICE Called meeting of Cloverdale Lodge No. 132 F. & A. M., Thursday Sept. 12 at 8:00 p. m. Work in E. A. degree. Glen M. Furr, W. JVU
CORRECTION
Due to a misunderstanding the price of season football tickets was misquoted in Monday's paper. The price of adult season tickets is $3.00 and student tickets are $1.50.
TORC H OF KNOWLEDGE HEMPSTEAD, N. Y. (UP) A 14-year-old boy apparently didn’t like his first day back at school. He is charged with trying to burn it dowm.
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