Banner Graphic, Volume 12, Number 82, Greencastle, Putnam County, 12 December 1981 — Page 3

; $11.4 billion measure Reagan wins foreign aid bill fight

By MARTIN TOLCHIN c. 1981 N.Y. Times News Service WASHINGTON With Republicans almost evenly divided, the Democratic-dominated House gave President Reagan a hard-won victory Friday by adopting its first foreign aid appropriation bill in three years. The $11.4 billion measure was approved by a vote of 199 to 166. It had the support of 84 Republicans, while 87 voted against it. Republicans have usually voted against foreign aid as fruitless and wasteful, but many were won over by intensive lobbying by President Reagan, Secretary' of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. and Treasury Secretary Donald T. Regan. "You just can’t discount this guy in the White House,” Rep. Silvio 0. Conte, R-Mass., said after the vote. “He wields a tremendous amount of power. These people all were massaged plenty” In a more predictable victory for the administration, the Republican-controlled Senate approved by a 60-to-35 vote a $413 billion omnibus spending bill to finance the government through March 31. The bill, called a continuing resolution, was identical to one the House approved Thursday, and the president is expected to sign the measure on Monday. The president issued a statement saying: ‘‘The continuing resolution just passed by the Congress represents another difficult step forward in this nation’s struggle to restore responsible economic and fiscal policy. It is a step

Americans leave shores of Tripoli Oil companies to cooperate in exodus from Libya

By BARBARA CROSSETTE c. 1981 N.Y. Times News Service WASHINGTON State Department officials met Friday with executives of American oil companies operating in Libya and said later that the companies would cooperate in withdrawing American employees from the North African nation. “They understood the president’s intention and desire,” Alan Romberg, a state department spokesman, said after the first two of three meetings. On Thursday, President Reagan appealed to Americans to leave Libya and invalidated passports for travel to that country. But the oil companies, while acquiescing in the administration’s request to advise American employees to return, publicly questioned the administration’s belief that the safety of American citizens in Libya was in jeopardy. Privately, some industry officials are raising questions about the administration’s reasons for Thursday’s action. The United States has cited Libyan terrorist activities around the world. Friday in Brussels, however, Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. said that another reason for the decision was “to protect the lives of Americans should the situation deteriorate further or some of the plans that we have access to be carried out.” In Washington, the White House spokesman, Larry Speakes, declined to elaborate on what further measures might be planned against Col. Moammar Khadafy, the Libyan leader. “We’ll keep those to ourselves,” he said. The administration’s decision appears to have been set off not by any specific action by the Khadafy government, such as the

chosen fifth UN secretary general

c. 1981 N.Y. Times UNITED NATIONS - The Security Council broke its long deadlock Friday and chose Javier Perez de Cuellar, a Peruvian diplomat, as the fifth secretary general of the United Nations. His approval by the General Assembly next week is regarded as a formality. He would begin his five-year term on Jan. ; i. Perez de Cuellar, who is 61 years old, was an under secretary general for special political affairs here until May, when he resigned to rejoin the Peruvian foreign service. He has also served as Peru’s ambassador to Moscow and headed his country’s mission to the United Nations from 1971 to 1975. He is a quiet, careful and literate man, highly regarded by his colleagues for his diplomatic skills. But delegates here are uncertain whether he will be a firm or a yielding figure in his new post. Perez de Cuellar succeeds Kurt Waldheim, an Austrian, who will be 63 this month. Waldheim has been secretary general for 10 years and unsuccessfully sought an unprecedented third five-year term. Perez de Cuellar was chosen after just one ballot with seven names on it. He received 10 votes, including four of the five permanent members of the council; four delegates abstained and one voted against. According to Third World diplomats, the Soviet Union was the permanent member that ab-

away from the big spending that wreaked havoc in the past and toward our goal of once again living within our means.” Reagan’s senior advisers have settled on a target of $55 billion to S6O billion for the budget deficit for 1984, the fiscal year in which Reagan originally promised to balance the budget, administration officials said Friday. About SIOO billion in budgetary savings would have to be achieved in the next two fiscal years to achieve this deficit. Administration economists project a deficit of $l6O billion, if taxes and spending are unchanged. Continuing resolutions are a way of authorizing the government to spend money in the absence of formal appropriation bills. Thus far, only three of 13 appropriation bills for the fiscal year 1982 have been signed into law. They

stained. A no vote by one of the five big powers would have vetoed Perez de Cuellar. Of the six other names on the ballot, only Prince Sadruddin Aga Khan came close. The prince, an Iranian and the former High Commissioner for Refugees, got the minimum nine votes needed for the nomination. But among his two negative votes was a veto by the Soviet Union. Perez de Cuellar owes his selection largely to the fact that he was the candidate with the fewest strikes against him. Sadruddin, with his French birth, Harvard education and Swiss residence, was too Western for the Soviet Union. Carlos Ortiz de Rozas, Argentina's ambassador to Britain, got only six votes, probably because his country is regarded as a violator of human rights. Sir Shridath S. Ramphal of Guyana, secretary general of the Commonwealth, who was seen as an instrument of Britain, won four votes. The three others, regarded as minor candidates, were Carlos Julio Arosemena Monroy of Ecuador, Rafael M. Salas of the Philippines and Santiago Quijano Caballero of Colombia. The council met and voted in secret with only two members present from each delegation. When Olara A. Otunnu, the council president, read out the results, the others applauded. Then they applauded Otunnu, a Ugandan, because he had devised the technique that broke a stalemate going back to Oct. 27.

world

reported dispatching of assassination squads to the U.S. Rather, it appears to be part of a continuing policy of both the Carter and Reagan administrations to take a series of measured steps to express disapproval of Libyan activities that Washington views as being terroristic in nature. However, with the latest step, this administration has cleared the way for more drastic steps against Libya that might involve retaliation by the Khadafy government. The administration appears to be giving notice to Americans in Libya that should hostages be taken, they had been warned. Oil company officials expressed concern Friday that their employees might already be facing new dangers in the light of Thursday’s announcement, even before more serious action is contemplated. Most companies say they have faced few security problems in Libya. Since 1979, when Libyans, chanting slogans in support of Iran’s Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, attacked and burned the American Embassy in Tripoli, the U.S. has maintained a low level of diplomatic links with Libya. All American diplomats were withdrawn after the sacking of the embassy and were never replaced. Last May, the Reagan administration ordered the Libyan mission in Washington closed and expelled its diplomats. Since then the U.S. and Libya, while still technically maintaining diplomatic ties, have had no diplomatic representation in each others’ capitals. The Reagan administration has conducted two major foreign policy studies on Libya. The first of these led in June to the taking of a number of undisclosed steps based on National

Dinosaur quest yields footprints By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD c. 1981 N.Y. Times News Service NEW YORK The American biologist who went to Africa in search of a dinosaurlike animal has returned with accounts of what might be a new species of snake and of strange footprints in the jungle, but without success in finding the legendary mokele-mbembe. However, Dr. Roy P. Mackal said in a telephone interview from his office at the University of Chicago that he was “more convinced now than ever” of the animal’s existence in the swampy Übangi-Congo basin of central Africa. Mackal, a 56-year-old research associate in biology, came back Monday night. The “highlight” of the six-week expedition, Mackal said, was finding huge footprints and a wide swath of bent and flattened vegetation. The track led into a river. The size of the rather indistinct footprints were comparable with those of an elephant, Mackal said, but the manner in which the brush was flattened suggested that the trail had been broken by the tail of a huge reptile. If so, he added, it was much taller and larger than any known crocodile. Sonar soundings of the rivers in the area failed to detect signs of such creatures, Mackal said, leading him to believe they must live in the swamps and only occasionally use the rivers as a means of getting from one place to another. According to reports by missionaries and explorers over the last century, the animal known as mokele-mbembe seemed to be “half-elephant, half-dragon.” It was described as being brownish gray with a body the size of an elephant, but with a long and flexible neck and a muscular tail like that of a crocodile. Mackal’s expedition, which included other American, as well as French and Congolese, scientists, was financed in part by Jack Bryan, a Texas entrepreneur, and the National Geographic Society. Mackal said that French scientists in the party had collected several huge snakes that appeared to be unlike any others previously identified.

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cover the legislative branch, energy and water and the District of Columbia. Two more, financing the Interior Department and the House and Urban Development Department have been approved by Congress and are on their way to the White House. Foreign aid spending has been entirely controlled by continuing resolutions for the last three years. The omnibus measure provided $9.7 billion for foreign aid, which Reagan said deprived him of needed flexibility in the conduct of foreign policy. This sum would be superseded by the $11.4 billion appropriation bill, which has already been approved by the Senate. Differences in the two bills are expected to be resolved in a House-Senate conference. The drama Friday was in the House cham-

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ber, where foreign aid attracted some unaccustomed Republican allies. Almost the entire debate was on the Republican side, with Democrats mostly listening in silence. Supporters of the bill invoked the president’s argument that the funds would enhance United States national security, help provide economic and political stability in foreign countries and, in the case of the Export-Import Bank, create jobs for American workers. Opponents argued that the United States could not buy friends, questioned aid to some unfriendly and unstable regimes, and said that foreign aid was especially difficult to support at a time of cuts in domestic social programs. Most of the debate focused on an effort to reduce the United States contribution to the International Development Association, which provides no-interest, 50-year loans to some of the world’s poorest nations. The Appropriations Committee had recommended that the United States contribution be increased from $520 million, the current level, to SBSO million, the amount recommended by Reagan and negotiated by the previous administration. Opponents sought to reduce the financing to the current contribution. The House voted 282 to 113 to adopt a compromise proposed by Rep. Jack Kemp, R-N.Y., which set the financing at $725 million. He said that the compromise was supported by the administration.

Security Council recomendations, according to a high state department official who briefed reporters Thursday. In August, the U.S. shot down two Libyan aircraft over the Mediterranean during an American naval exercise in the area. The Libyans said the American aircraft had violated airspace Tripoli claims over the Gulf of Sidra. The U.S. and other nations have not recognized that claim. A second major policy review began in September, after Libya signed a pact with Ethiopia and Southern Yemen that the U.S. viewed as a threat to East Africa. The administration believes its fears were justified in the light of what it saw as Libyan attempts to weaken the government of Gaafar alNimeiry of the Sudan after the assassination of Egypt’s President Sadat. The second study, still being carried out, involves more than a dozen federal agencies and top officials in the state department and White House. It is in the context of this study, administration officials have indicated, that further actions against Libya may be planned. Oil officials said that at Friday’s meetings with Ernest B. Johnston, deputy assistant secretary of state for economic affairs, the administration offered no new evidence of supposed danger to Americans in Libya. The officials said that the administration, which in the meetings made it clear that it would take stronger action if a voluntary withdrawal did not take place, appeared to be unaware of the length of time it would take for the Americans to leave. Oil companies say they see no reason for hasty action.

Legal Notices STATE OF INDIANA COUNTY OF PUTNAM ss: IN THE PUTNAM CIRCUIT COURT DECEMBER TERM. 1981 IN THE MATTER OF ESTATE OF GLEN MOREHART, DECEASED Estate No. EST 80-88 NOTICE TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF GLEN MOREHART In the matter of the Estate of Glen Morehart. deceased. No. EST 80-88 Notice Is hereby given that Irma Morehart as Administratrix of the above named estate, has presented and filed her final account In final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for the examination and action of said Circuit Court, on the 4th of January, 1982, at which lime all persons Interested In said estate are required to appear In said court and show cause. If any there be. why said account should not be approved. And the heirs of said decedent and all others interested are also required to appear and make proof of their heirship or claim to any part of said estate. Irma Morehart Personal Representative Sharon L. Hammond Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court Attorney for Estate Houck 4 Houck Dec. 12/1T STATE OF INDIANA COUNTY OF PUTNAM ss: IN THE PUTNAM CIRCUIT COURT 1981 TERM IN THE MATTER OF ESTATE OF JESSE R. SOUTH, DECEASED Estate No. 81-29 NOTICE TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF JESSE R. SOUTH In the matter of the Estate of Jesse R. South, deceased. No. 81-29 Notice is hereby given that Central National Bank as Executor of the above named estate, has presented and filed Its final account in final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for the examination and action of said Circuit Court, on the 28th of December, 1981, at which time all persons interested In said estate are required to appear In said court and show cause. If any there be, why said account should not be approved. And the heirs of said decedent and all others Interested are also required to appear and make proof of their heirship or claim to any part of said estate. Central National Bank of Greencastle Personal Representative Sharon L. Hammond Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court Attorney for Estate Larry J. Wilson Wilson & Hutchens 26 North Vine Street Greencastle, IN 46135 317-653-2632 Dec. 12/IT

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December 12,1981, The Putnam County Banner-Graphic

Legal Notices THE PUTNAM COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS MET IN REGULAR SESSION MONDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1981, AT 9:00 A.M. LEGAL TIME AT THE COURTHOUSE IN GREENCASTLE, INDIANA AND ALLOWED THE FOLLOWING CLAIMS: PUTNAM COUNTY REVENUE PAYROLL: Dofls Smith 951.51, Sharon Hammond 1085.87, Marilyn Clearwatera 726.99, Wynona Moore 726.99, Helen Kaiser 658.09. Pamela Judy 658.09, Susan Bonney 658.09. Jewel Blue 1085.87, Frances Harris 726.99, Carolyn Fowler 658.09, Kathy Tyler 658.09. Wanda Watkins 658.09, Myrtle Cockrell 1085.87, Nancy Mcßride 726.99. June Albright 658.08, Sharon Freeman 658.08, Carla Smith 525.00, Marion Gabonay 337.50, Geraldine Thomas 125.00, Charlotte Gould 1085.87, Shari Duncan 726.99. James Baugh 1200.28. James Hendrich 1068 i 4, Michael Biggs 960.15, John Stephen Cor 960 15, Millard Vaughan 960.15, Charles Evans 960.15, Gerald Ensor 458.33, Charles Evens 146.00, John Stephen Cox 64.00. James Hendrick 168.00, James Baugh 142.00, Michael Biggs 144.00, Alan Stanley 879 29, Charles Young 10.00, Wayne Hopkins 215.23, Albert Solomon 1085.87, Marcia Nelson 726.99, Joyce Cavin 200.00, Carl Torr 646.22, Margie Torr 509.96, David Heavin 25.00. Janet Jordon 539.70, Shirley Sublet! 350.00, Sally Gray 635.41. Judy Elkins 833.33, Carol Sutherlin 700.00, William Vaughn 375.00, Glennda Deem 1242.57, John Stevens 1242.57. Glenda Evens 748.37, Paula Young 833.33, John Maslen 313.34, Claude Morphew 313.34, Bonnie Helton 655.40, Ronald Freeman 697.07, John Vermillion 655.40, Laura Lee Bauoh 960.15. Georae Paton 772.08. Alicia Hammond 725.00, David Costln 772.08, David Billings 580.66. Steve Fenwick 580.66. Jerry Ruff 580.66, Wanda Cox 622.00, Helen Mason 154.00, Lawrence Shinn 617.62, Marjorie Shinn 617.62, Aileena Heavin 481.10, Melody Thompson 352.80, Anita Jack 352.80, Gordon Hanks 317.91, Stephen Pierson 216.66. Bruce Albright 616.56. Katy Hyneman 658.09, Stephen Pierson 245.25, James Baugh 144.00 PUTNAM COUNTY WELFARE PAYROLL: Larry Sprague 1488.00, Virginia Bowers 1376.00, Juanita Brooks 1315.00, Catryna Shipman 1315.00. Barbara VanVactor 1290.00. Lora Garrison 1137.00, Mary Leslie 1071.00, Helen Crum 984.00, Reta Sutton 947.00. Cynthia Riggs 1220.00. Kay Thompson 435.00 PUTNAM COUNTY HIGHWAY PAYROLL: Richard Malayer 545.25, Patricia Sager 377.27, Wilma Davis 349.72, James Evans 381.60. Buddy Jones 348.21, Brian Phillips 381.60. Walter Stevens 381.60, Thomas Brothers 390.40. Paul Harvey 401.41, Walter Hubble 397.74, Wayne Runnells 423.43, Brian Boiler 419.98, Steve Phillips 428.00. Emerson Phillips 460.12, Dennis Shillings 428.00, Michael York 428.00, James C. Boiler 452.00, William Burroff 364.80, Mark Gubser 364.80, John Shaner 364.80. James Akins 466.40, James Graves 479.52, Bill Malayer 466.40 PUTNAM COUNTY BOARD OF HEALTH PAYROLL: John Ellett, Jr. 812.00, Evelyn Spencer 658.08, Rosalie Graham 921.67, VernieZeiner 1032.91 PUTNAM COUNTY DRUG & ALCOHOL SPECIAL PROGRAM PAYROLL: David English 1416.66. Linda Feuquay 750.00 COUNTY HIGHWAY VENDORS: Donald Walton 400.00, Elbert Irwin 400.00, C. James Malayer 397.20, General Telephone Co. 161.11, T. R. S. 54.22. Woodbum Printing Co. 507.00, Books Plus 10.54, Mo-Trim Incorporated 35.01, Dan Young Chev. 223.29, Girton Implement 179.80, Indianapolis Spring Corp. 24.46, Kitchen Machinery, Inc. 195.28, International Harvester 67.80, Wabash Ford Truck Sales 4.16, Chuck's Rental 105.89. Indiana Equipment 4,546.14, M. & R. Auto Parts 484.77, Greencastle Automotive 1071.46, Ace Hardware 66.02. Manford Craver 50.00, Baysinger Machine Shop 54.00, Morrison Tire 686.86. J. T. Liles, Inc. 2,400.00, Greencastle Trading Post 79.90. Diamond Crystal Salt Co. 2,386.99, Sherwin Williams 102.21, Lester Haltom 30.45. Martin-Marietta Co. 906.77, A & C Enterprises 837.72, Harris Stone Co. 1.719.38, Russellville Stone Co. 1.206.60, France Stone Co. 72.69, Culvert Pipe Co. 1.629.00, Hendricks Co. Farm Bureau 25.70, Dalton Asphalt Corp. 46,181.99. Associated Sign & Post 76.35, Communications Service 29.06, Motorola. Inc. 175.50, Public Service, Inc. 133.81, Dept, ol Water Works 6.88. High Point Oil Co. 6.454.12, Indiana Gas Co. 80.41, D. & D. M. Farm Supply 13.80. Shaffer & Co. 460.53. Ruth Industries, Inc. 199.40, Continental Research Corp. 320.13, Correlated Products 293.25, Paper Calmenson 8 Co. 804.44, Pool's Bargain Center 22.56, Dever Kor-X-AII Corp. 129.30, Certified Laboratories 129.98, John Vanes Boiler Works 45.00, Lawson Products 508.15, R. 4 S. Tech Supply 12.90. Precision Alloys Co. 165.00, Putnam County Treasurer 1,561.00. CUM. BRIDGE FUNDS: Skelton-Skinner 41.50, Dalton Asphalt 1,216.62 R 4 S FUNDS: Martin-Marietta Stone 1,153.49, France Stone Co. 219.94, Dalton Asphalt Corp. 17,224.76

COUNTY GENERAL VENDORS Genera/ Telephone Co. 30.38, Greencastle Offeet, Inc. 76.00, Books Plus 56.06, Emeat Collins 4 Co. 150.00, Marie Brothers 75.00, 1. B. M. 363.25, T. R.S. 84.85, Woodburn Printing Co. 32.00, T. 13.77, Courthouse Office Suppliers 192.50, Greencastle Offset 106.00, Xerox 224.75, Xerox 346.62, Sam Hostetter 30.00, Rexell A. Boyd 30.00, Wayne Hopkins 30.00, U. Postmaster 104.00, Coen's Pharmacy 212.50, Home Laundry Cleaners 149.64. Shell Oil Co. 54.56, Amoco Oil Co. 104.86, High Point Oil Co. 1214.80, Al Carney ChevroletBulck 1,143.41, Pool’s Bargain Center 12.65, Putnam Motors Inc. 341.54, Steven R. Jenkins Co. 193.79, The Uniform House. Inc. 129.80, Putnam County Treasurer 815.80, Terre Haute Medical Laboratory. Inc. 850.00, John E. Pleas, M.D. 300.00, Hopkins-Rector Funeral Home 105.00, Carl Torr 10.00, Progressive Printing Co. 14.70, Hubert Clodfelter 250.00, Alfred W. Crosby 250.00. Regina Shannon 231.25, John W. Moy 300.00, Earl Bridges 261.25, Willard Scobee 755.00, Jean Cromwell 250.00, Juanita Crosby 250.00, Franklin Bindery 280.00, U.S. Postmaster 60.00, Delbert H. Brewer 606.18, Glennda G. Deem 86.00, David J. Houck 45.00, James M. Houck 97.50, Stephen S. Pierson 249.00, James Harvey Young 127.50, Keith A. Kauble 45.00. John R. Zeiner 197.50, Pengad Co., Inc. 22.29, Books Plus 30.92, David J. Houck 120.00, John R. Zeiner 705.00, Stephen S. Pierson 1,138.50, Keith A. Kauble 120.00, James M. Houck 150.00, James Harvey Young 78.00, David J. Houck 150.00, Stephen S. Pierson 96.00, John Wilcox 35.60, James Harvey Young 25.00, Indiana Dept, of Correctional Industry 4 Farm Programs 161.16, T.R.S. 411.76, Callaghan 4 Company 169.75, General Telephone 728.91, Public Service Indiana 639.50, Public Service Indiana 38.52, Dept, of Water Works 91.90, Indiana Gas Co. 417.67, A.A. Huber 4 Sons 448 20, Bakers Remove-All 50.00, Atlas Linen 46.00. A. A. Huber 4 Sons 45.00, American Linen Supply 12.60, Dever Kor-X-AII 161.30. Black Lumber Co. 11.49, Correlated Products, Inc. 6.78 Clody's Downtown Marathon 6.05, Ace Hardware 46.65, Marquee Manufacturing 36.10, Schultz Bros. Co. 9.89, James Baugh 80.00, General Telephone 395.83, Dept, of Water Works 169.34, Public Service Indiana 176.26, Indiana Gas Co. 329.44, G. A. Thompson Co. 90.00, Greencastle Decorating 21.08, Skelton Skinner 2.49, Kromme Plumbing 4 Heating 648.82, Humphrey's Wheel Horse 80.65, Manford Craver 5.00. Culligan Water Conditioning 17.25, Home Laundry Cleaners 12.40. Dever Kor-X-AII 258.15, Coan Pharmacies 417.92, James Baugh 1,503.75, Reliable Exterminators 12.00, Todd's Ace Hardware 104.50, Putnam County Treasurer 124.60, American Han Gunner 17 95, PPA Publications and Events 22.10, Sargent Sowell, Inc. 16.79, Sears Roebuck 4 Co. 509.95, Maurice Jones 30.00, General Telephone 31.65, Public Service Indiana 287.67, H 4 W Concrete Products 253.40, Headley Hardware 121.88, Kromme Plumbing 4 Heating 25.00, High Point Oil Co. 1,743.05, Gould's Market 1352.27, Putnam County Landfill 2.50. Dever Kor-X-AII 12.80, Arab Termite 4 Pest Control 22.00, Servisoft 19.50, John L. Poor 4 Co. 33.20, Communications Corp. of Indiana 118.24, Bruce Albright 74.10, Donald K. Walton 216.20, Banner-Graphic 133.91, Indianapolis Newspaper, Inc. 36.75, TribuneStar Publishing Co. 49.82, Jack Dalton 3,900.00, Motorola. Inc. 125.50. Operation Life 10,000.00, Putnam County Treasurer 1.552.60, Whitaker. Blttles and Hurt Funeral Home 200.00, Hopkins-Rector Funeral Home 200.00, Whitaker Funeral Home 100.00, Virginia Kendall 30.00, Walter L. Pynter 4 Jack Nixon 400.00, Montgomery County Treasurer 76.00, Donald B. Brattain DVM 15.00. COUNTY GENERAL UNAPPROPRIATED: Pep-si-Cola Bottling Co. 123.60 CUM. BLDG. COURTHOUSE: Group Five, Inc. 18,018.46 AVIATION FUND: Debbie Rader 25.00, BannerGraphic 1.01, Stephen Pierson 36.00, Robert E. Madge 850.00, Books Plus 345.06. BD. OF HEALTH FUND: Dr. Donald B. Brattain 100.00, June Eiteljorge 100.00, Dr. Fred Haggerty 100.00, Donald Hazlett 100.00, Dr. Dale Oliver 100.00, Loren Salsman 100.00, Dr. Richard L. Veach 100.00, Evelyn Spencer 1.87, Rosalie Graham 101.40, Vernie Zeiner 124.60, General Telephone Co. 96.11, Wayne P. Ham, Ham Rebinding Co. 265.00, Coan Pharmacy 29.37, T.R.S. 34.11, Woodburn Printing Co. 129.00, Greencastle Offset Inc. 24.00, Perry Office Products 14.08, Putnam County Treasurer 212.00 ALCOHOL 4 DRUG FUND: General Telephone 154.31, Kimball Larkin 200.00, Dept, of Water Works 17.40, Public Service Indiana 59.98, Indiana Gas Co. 71.99, Books Plus 33.00, IBM Corp. 42.50, Putnam County Treasurer 173.60. ATTEST: Jewel Blue Putnam County Auditor Dec. 1?/1T

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