The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 4 November 1957 — Page 3
Rus-sells
FURNITURE RUGS'V\M^C\5»
^^^ujajujujjLi.J.Ji-1-U.x juj NORTH SIDE OF SQUARE RHONE 1467
Last Chance
OPEN HOUSE TONIGHT Till 9:00 P. M.
DIES IN MAINE
Word has been received here of the death of Walter J. Ny’an. j former resident of Greencastle, i now residing in Portland, Maine j Mr. Nylan passed away Saturday at St. Mary Hospital in 1 Lawrence, Mass. He is survived | by the wife, Anne, three chilI dren, Bart, Jimmy, Johnny and ! Mary Ann. Funeral services will be held Tuesday in Lawrence, Mass., at the McCauliffe Funeral Home, with burial in Lawrence, Mass.
BRING THE FAMILY
Register for the $30 pair lamps. Other door prizes ■■ at 9:00 P. M. * Free cider and cookies. ® Free demonstrations.
SHOP NOW AND SAVE - DURING
Th!3 m (O DAY FALL FESTIVAL SALE
TO COMBINE CHECKS WASHINGTON UP — Start- | ing in January, elderly couples will receive their mouthy social security payments in a single check instead of separately. The Social Security Administration said Sunday the consolidation will save one million dollars a year.
THE COLD SPOT
l •*l*Oi: l \ OI K <1! XMIIKK OF COMMERCE
LOVE CONQUERS ALL MILWAUKEE, Wis., UP vf ter an argument in 1954, F y vi Biachman, 33, rented a bill »aiu to tell Miss Arlene Hale -7, of his affection for her. II: lareeyear campaign paid off 1 week when the couple took o i a marriage license. SUBCONSC IO > URGE CHICAGO UP - Arrested for selling part of a 30.000-pound shipment of watermelons he was transporting from Henderson, Texas, to St. Louis, Mo., Chicago truck driver James O. Clark, 40, told police “I hate watermelons.”
Greencastle Indiana
ascii Prices
10 % DOWN holds any gift ’til D
H EYI Mom, Dad, Sis, Brother, Friend Wards CNdrdmas Lay-Away starts tomorrow -- make your selections now from new stocks of merc'ianc^e - avoid the rush of crowds later - Y our choice selection will be held for yo^ until Deccember (5. Wards Ghrsimas plan is for any merchandise sold in our store - so make your selections now! And — 1 Dozen Pair of Nylons To Be Given Away Free Every Hour T uesday, Nov. 5 a nd Wed., Nov. 6 for
ft DS Christmas Lay - Away
Opening
J^:i c' p3, f iIris coupon in a box located in Wards Shoe Dept., main f.oor -- toy dep;. Iscaied in besemeri - cr in furn ture floor. No coupons av ailabfe in store - Every ho ir (startirg 10 A. M. each £.! :nn]; coupon wili be displayed in front window - no purchases necessary!
■M VC3£3a*CaeBBBBBI Coupon for I dozen pair of nylon hose
; 132 pair of ladies nylon hose (o be ! given away free af Wards Tuesday,
^ Nov. 5 and Wed., Nov. 6.
'Wards Christmas Lay-Away Opening
hi n m
V(l<!
BMin’kiiig '■i/p "■eir.e.T.ber --
a lit) COJPCHS AVAILABLE AT STORE
■
■aaaaacBBBiBBaaBviB
■ a
DRUMMOND, Mont., with a reading of 12 degrees was the oldest spot in the nation today, the U. S. Weather Bureau reported. Sunday’s highest reported .emperature was 87 degrees at \lioe, Tex.
CAPITOL PUNISHMENT
ALMA, Wis., UP — Buffalo bounty Judge G. L. Pattison has ;entenced a young speeder to the :hair and fined him $25. Pattison said the youth had a “duck tail” haircut and ordered him to the barber chair.
RED REGIME NEARING 40TH ANNIVERSARY
LONDON (UP) — Russia’s Communist regime nears the 40th anniversary of the October revolution Nov. 7 drunk with its newly gained and awe-inspiring world power, but clearly in the throes of a fresh internal struggle for supreme leadership. Looking back over this eventful 40 years, the regime can boast of having taken Russia a long way since a handful of old Bolsheviks stormed the Czarist Winter Palace on that gray fall day in 1917. The 40 years of Communist rule have witnessed one of the most spectacular drives in modern history. They have seen some world shaking events and some of the most surprising achievements—some of them launched on a sea of blood and human agony. Russia, which 40 years ago lay prostrate and dismembered after years of bloodletting in World War I, today stands as one of the world’s two military colossi, rivalling the United States for military might and aspiring at overtaking her economically. Her expansionism dw'arfs Western empire building of modern history, with her tentacles stretched deep into Europe and Asia. Communist regimes, many of them still looking to Moscow for guidance, now control more than one-third of the world’s total pop-
ulation. Blood, starvation, wholesale extermination, degradation of human rights have been among the stepping stones to success. For years, the Russian people themselves had to endure the grimness of Josef Stalin’s dictatorship with its purges and concentration camps. His death brought the first glimpses of a better life. Today they’ ar e again faced by the uncertainties of a newly tightening regime. Thus 40 years after the revolution Russia stands provocatively as challenger of the United States, with the launching of the first satellite into outer space
as the crowning result of her efforts. But she too has her problems. They center around internal rifts, cracks in the seams of the expanded Soviet empire, the challenge to her ideological leader- ; ship and the emergence of "national Communism” among her satellites. In the distance looms the rising i star of Red China as a future ! challenge for Communist leader- ■ ship. Today, China is an ally. ; Whether that will last when ! China is no longer economically dependent on Russia, no one can | say. Russia’s most recent gain has i
fHE DAILY BANNER MON.. NOV. 4. 1957. Pa K e S GREENCASTLE. IND. been growing influence in the Middle East, until only a short time back an exclusive preserve of the Western sphere of influence. The past four decades have also seen the destruction of Russia’s once powerful middle and upper classes, the annihilation of the opposition, the liquidation of the Kulaks and the collectivization of agriculture and the emergence of a tight, all-power-ful and all-controlling "monolithic” party apparatus.
■\ On The Way
Register NOW at King Morrison Foster Co. and you may win one of the 9 NEW 58 FORDS TO BE GIVEN AWAY Register Nov. 7, 8, 9, 70, only!
Here’s how the 9 new Fords will be given away • To be eligible to win one of the nine new 58 Ford V-8 Custom 300 Tudor Sedans to be given away by the Indianapolis Sales District, all you have to do is visit our Dealership on November 7, 8, 9, 10 and fill in and sign an entry form. • The entry form is made up of two stubs. Be sure to fill in both stubs. Then
drop these stubs into the boxes you’ll find on our showroom floor. • Everyone 18 years of age or older is eligible to participate except Ford Dealers’ employees and their families—Ford Motor Company sales department personnel and their families—and members of Ford Dealers’ and Ford Motor Company’s advertising agencies and their families. In the event of questioned eligibility, the judges’ decision will be final.
YOU NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN Cars to be given away are brand-new 1958 Ford V-8 Custom 300 Tudor Sedans
COME IN AND REGISTER
58 FORD. PROVED AND APPROVED AROUND THE WORLD. NOW AT ; : : King Morrison Foster Co. L ONLY YOUR FORD DEALER HAS f/FVJ USED CARS AND TRUCKS
F.D.A.P,
A
