The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 27 July 1956 — Page 2
THP LVLY BANNER I ill.. ,U I95G Pnc 2 i,UKr\C \>1 f.E. IXIMXNA ( UK V O SPKLU^ I’.) O SHOT* IJKFORK i’ir. »K ; OMI'. ' CHICAGO. July 27 (UP) — City medical authorities rushed preparations today for giving 500.000 Salk polio inorulations before the disease reaches its annual peak Au^. 15. Clinics already have administered 325.780 S ilk shots in an at-
tempt to stem the early ontbreak so far *he worst in the na- *. -n. according to Dr. Herman N. Bunde.- •*n. r t.v health clKef. Bundescn h s the one-hait nuliion additional inoculations will be possible through greatly expanded clinical facilities. Fifty-nin* hospitals in the city and its suburbs have offered to help in the program. SOITBAI.I. RESULTS Home Supply 10. V. F. W. 0 Shetrone 3. Nehi 0.
Methodist Awards Made To Nine
SHIPS COLLIDE OFF NANTUCKET
NTUCKET
Atlantic Ocean
Crossmarks area in the Atlantic ocean .iff Nantucket wheie the liners St K kholm md Andrea Doria collided as the Italian ship headed for New York. A major disaster was averted by rescue vessels that sped to the fog-bound scene.
CONTROL CENTER FOR SEA RESCUE
National Methodist Scholarships have been awarded to nine DePauw University students for the 1956-57 academic year, it was announced here today. Four of the nine are new recipients, and the remaining five qualified for renewals of prev-iously-held Methodist stipends, which have a maximum value oi $400. DePauw's newest Methodist Scholars include a junior, Nancy Ferguson of Scobey, Mont., and three incoming freshmen—Harry Aliemang, Vincennes; Thomas Stiers, Rushville; and Gary Wegenke. South Bend. Scholarships were renewed for Sue Strickland, Indianapolis; Gretchen Kiger, Dunreith; Carol Jones, Sellersburg; Martha Moore, Marshall, 111.; and Ethna Jowce Sulmonetti, Jamestov/n. N. Y. Funds for approximately SCO Methodist Scholarships are o rtained annual from local churches through a church-wide offering on Methodist Student Day, the second Sunday in June. Winners are selected by Meth odism’s Board of Education or i the basis of superior academic standing, leadership ability, I churchmanship, character, pen sonality and need. Vehicle Receipts j At Ail-Time High — INDIANAPOLIS (UP)—State ! Auditor Cur tis E. Rardin said i Thursday a record $19,304,721 in i Indiana motor vehicle receipts ! collected in the second quarter of | 1956 will be distributed for high- i ways and streets. The total was 7.43 per cent! above the previous high a year | ago mainly because of a 5.81 per cent gain in motor fuel tax I income and a 22.8 per cent in- ; crease in vehicle license and reg- I istration fees. Rardin said. According to statute, the State j Highway Commission will get ;;nd cities and towns, $2,895, 708. | $10,231,502; counties, $6,177,510.!
WOMVV THOULIIT DF \I) * HAS BEEN LOCATED EVANSVILLE (UP < Mrs. il.ro* CVsby, CO. was in a me.-.tai recently by iela- , lives who thought for 13 years chess mall matter under aet of she was lead.
THE DAtLY BANNER and HERALD CONSOLIDATED Filter *d in the postottn e at Green castle, Indiana as second
House-Senate Try Hurricane Anna To Stt'emafe Strides Tar.ip.co
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March 7, 1878. Subscription price 25 cents per week, $5.00 per year by mail in Putnam CVanity, fti.00 to $10.40 per lear outside Putnam County. Telephone 74, 95, 114 S. II. Rariden, Publisher 17-19 South Jackson Street TODAY'S B1BL.E THOUGHT He saw a man named Matthew. — Matt. 9:9. Matthew was a tax gatherer, but Jesus chose nim to be a pillar saint. Tax gatherers were hated by the Jews as were all publicans. Only one who could see :nto the very souls of men would have guessed that such men would turn the world upside down.
Personal And Local Nows Briefs
The D. A. R. cabins at RobeAnn Park will be open to visitors Sunday afternoon from 3 to 5.
Since '943, Mrs. Cosby was a patient in Central State Hospital at Indianapolis and in Evansville Smte Hospital. Nobordy came to visit her. No relatives sent gifts on holidays. * Then a hospital social servic worker, attempting to trace rela- , lives of the unremembered paJ tient. found Mrs. Cosby has four i children living in Evansville and Indiaiapolis. A daughter, Mr 5 ?. Inez Gee. Evansville, was speechless when told two months ago her mother vas in the Evansville hospital amt “would like to see you.’’ “But my mother is dead—she's been dead for years,” Mrr. Gee , said. A reunion followed, and now Mrs. Cosby has visitors every week and is planning to visit in her children's homes. Mrs. Gee explained that in 1913 her mother was a patient in the Evansville institution when fire destroyed it. Mrs. Cosby was evacuated and sent to a son's home temporarily. One night 3he disappeared. For days, authorities and relatives looked for her. | She could not be found.
WASHINGTON (UP) House and Senate leaders from both parties planned-to meet secretly today to try to compromise a
legislative snarl that threatened i northeast Mexico south of Tam-
to delay Congress' drive for ad- [ ,, ico today.
TAMPICO. Mex. (UP) Anna, the first tropical storm of f* * season, broke her back on * w rugged mountain ranges
journment.
At issue were Senate aiul Hcuss versions of a housing bill to authorize 70,000 units of public housing in the next two years and make home buying easier.
The leaders called an informal' •ieanes. bauened down. Po; meeting behind the closed doors | running strong winds blew down
She moved inland Thursday right, with winds up to 60 miles an hour near the boiling center. Tampico, not yet recovered from last year's devastating hur-
William Fitzer of Cloverda.e underwent surgery on his leg
ci the old Senate chamber in the Capitol in a last-ditch attempt to reach agreement. Any reached would have to be agreed on again by a formal joint conference committee. The House passed a GOP Democratic compromise housing bill Wednesday and sent it to the senate on a take-it-or-leave-it
basis.
The Senate agreed to the 70,- ^ 0 unit public housing program—a sharp reduction in the program it soughf. But insisted on other provisions that it passed earlier and th<* House opposed. There was talk that themegotiations were so hopelessly deadlocked that agreement • was impossible. An influential House leader indicated that both bills might be junked in favor of
telegraph lines between Tampict
and Sen Lnin Fotosi.
Wooden homes in the port’s low-lying sectors which were flooded last year were aba ’ Ion- . ■•d. faj’v home and store owners boarded up their wind >wr Gusty head winds caused blowing
dust.
As Anna blew inland, she still was below minimum hurricane strength of 75 miles an hour. T
• -
The FF.I arre J^<1 tr!foa* K Gvcbb ThuVsday on
charges h.' env>ezzled $380 from a bank here Orebb had been working at the bank for oce
month.
ANNIVERSARY Birthdays Madonna Mae Gough, daughter f Mi .and Mrs. Howard Goi^gll IloaehdaJe R. 2, 12 ye^rs ol*:*iuday.. July 27. Mrs. Mary K. Fall. Roachdale, 6$ years old today, July 27. M"s. Edward Duckworth, North Salem, today. July 27. Henry D. Buis, Fillmore P. I, 56 years old ami his granddaughter, Linda Head. Ac^on, 8 years oi 1 today. July 27. Mrs. Nora Miller, Bainbndge, Saturday, July 28.
FRIENDS ARE CALLERS
__ a __' / __ Saturday night thirty-three
Wed icsday at the Putnam Coun- * relatives visited with Gene Mo- passing a’’bart-bones resoluLon ty hospital. Murtry at the home of his par- merely continuing
Mrs. Martha Baker has returned to her home on Elm St., after a seven months visit with relatives and friends. After a vacation at Lake Tippecanoe, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Moore are returning to their home here on Saturday.
a half-dozen
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Perry McMur- government housing programs try and family. Refreshments , which otherwise would die.
sandwiches and watermelon were enjoyed. Also a beautifully decorated cake made by Mrs. Viola T* 16
60-mile-an-hour winds were reported in the center. Gales extended out about 100 miles toward the east in a semi-circle.
SEED CORN DETASSLING IN FI LL SWIN GIN STATE
CORRECTION
hours of Quik-Chek
INDIANAPOLIS. (UP) Seed corn detasseling is in full swing throughout Indiana this week, according to Indiana Employment Security Division’s weekly
farm labor bulletin.
Indications of an earlier tomato harvest than previously exare i pected were reported as weeding
C ARD OF THANKS
I wish to thank all my frienas and neighbors for the beautiful flowers, cards and gifts they showered upon me. during my illness and slow return to civilization. You realize again how ! wonderfully kind ami thoughU'd family, friends and neighbor* are, how impossible it would b® j to manage without their he'p. Again from the bottom of my i heart, thanks to all of you.
Mrs. Geo. Bailey p.
Miller,
Congratulations were offered Mr. and Mrs. Harold Miller since * it was their nineteenth wedding
| anniversaiy.
Present were, Mr. and Mrs. James Miller of Roachdale. Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Young and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. James Young. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dillon and son of New Winchester. Mr. and Mrs Harold Miller a id sons of Ladoga, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sutherlin and sons o.
9:00 a. m. to 9:00 p .m. each day
except Sunday.
NAMED COMMANDERS
INDIANAPOLIS, (UP)— The Salvation Army lale Thursday
announced the Brigadier and
Gabrielsen as Indiana command-
ers.
Mr. and Mrs. Arvel Roach left
today on a vacation trip to the southern part of the state and to j
the Mammoth Cave in Ky.
Otis Gorham, Avenue E, was j arrested early this morning for i drunken driving on Hillsdale Avenue. Gorham was placed in
tee Putnam County jail.
Alex Bryan, auditor of p u t_ t aweidak, Mr. and Mis. \ irgd nam County, has announced ail( ^ - spns a nd Mr. and Mr.; that Monday. July 30. will be the Tflomas an d family of P-
last day to file claims to be con- aan ’l 1 ’
sidered .by the County Commis-. has completed his Naval sioners at their next meeting. boot camp ti aining and left i uss-
of the Christian (Ja * v for his base at San Fran -
cisco, Cal., where he will be aboard a cargo ship. Among his orders is a tryout for the basketball team. Gerald Beck and Jerry Malbyer drove him hack to Call--
foinia.
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Peck of Minneapolis are here at their farm south of the city for the summer months.
BACKS NIXON
FIERY CROSS BURNED AT CONGRESSMAN’S HOME
The meeting
churches of Putnam county to be held at Roachdale Sunday,
appointment of' -* u ^y 29, will begin at 7:30 p. m. Mrs. Raymond I a »d not at 8:00 p. m. as previous-
ly announced.
The Richards Gardens will be open to Greencastle and Putnam county visitors Saturday. The Indiana members of the Amei'ican Hemerocailis Society will
Controller of the Coast Guard rescue control center in New York, Lt Harold W. Parker posts the positions .of vessels speeding to the rescue of the battered liners Andrea Doria and Stockholm after they collided in a fog off N intucket.
ILEDE FRANCE PLftYS RESCUE RGIE
BONHAM. Tex., July 27 (UP) A Texjs highway patrol today guarded House Speaker Sam Rayburn’s home where a cross was burned Thursday night in the driveway. Rayburn was in Washington but his brother and sister-in-law and a sister were at home. The 7-foot tall cross with arms : about 4 1 j feet across was made: of wood. The lumbe~ apparently j came from an Air Force base; I the initials USAF were stamped on one of the cross-arms.
CARMEL BANK ROBBER
GETS 35 YE \RK
INDIANAPOLIS. (UP)- Robert Eugene Fowler, 31, Indian-
meet at the Richards Garden* ? p 0 ij s was sentenced to 35 years
■’ > v !•’. v'.'h Ljier I!.' de France (above) played a major role in the rescue of passengers from the stricken liner Andrea Doria after .. i, ,i.oia uu.i me nner Stockholm.
IMPROPER PAYMENTS WASHINGTON (UP)—House investigators today asked the Justice Department to determine whether private firms exerted "improper influence” on the Agriculture Department' to get more than two million dollars in imporper payments for cheese under the farm price support program.
LINERS COLODE IN FOG,
„
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PASSENGERS RESCUED
: \v -
Sunday afternoon, 423 East
Franklin street.
Mrs. Ralph Reeves of Indianapolis, is a patient at the Putnarti County hospital, recovering from an emergency appendectomy underwent early Wednesday morning. Mrs. Reeves is the former Janie Robinson of Fill-
more.
Jim Coffman won the Grand Champion ribbon at the Paris, 111., fair in the Draft Horse class with his registered Belgian marc He also showed five other registered draft horses with which he won 3 firsts and 2 seconds in state competition. Ruby M. Bachelder, who accompanied the body of her mother, Mrs. Emma Bachelder here for burial last Monday, left this city Thursday for Dayton. Ohio wheie she will spend the remainder of the week with her two brothers. Neal and Roy Bachelder and wife. She will leave Dayton Sunday by plane for her home at 1700 N. E. Bayshore Drive, | Miami, Fla.
imprisonment today on his pleaof guilty in the $16,000 holdup of the Union State Bank of Carmel last Sept 22. His former wife, Mrs. Rose Marie Gray, 25, was given a fiveyear term for conspiracy in the holdup.
and spraying tomato plants continued. A total of 3,381 migrant workers helped with crops in Hoosierland, and 2,549 of them were Texas-Mexicans.
RECTOR FUNERAL HOME
AMBULANCE PTTOVnr
8EKVKT
RENEE' Beauty Salon NOW GPENTRAINED AND EXI LBFUM KI» OPERATOR “Spe. iali/.ipg in II (lie arts cf Beauty Uultiire’’ LILUAN FULLER 506 I \sT I! \ \\ \ PHONE 473-J For Appointment
m si
TV TONIGHT WISH-TV—Channel 8 6:00 News; Weather 6:15 CBS News 6:30 My Friend Flicka < :00 Marne 7:30 Our Miss Brooks 8:00 Crusader 8:30 Star Playhouse 9 00 Undercurrent 9:30 Pantomime 10:00 News; Weathei 10:15 Studio 57 10:45 Late Show 32:15 Late Late Show
Sk .m.
jMaooaCHuSW ITS GOV. Christian A. Herter, surprised by |. backing of presidential aide Harold E. Stassen as GOP vice presidential candidate, tells newsmen “The decisive factor is the wish of the president.” Later he taked with Vice President Richard Nixon and offered to nominate him at the Republican national convention.
featuring The Complete Lines Of
Ko-We-Ba Fine Foods zol McIntyres
QUALITY MARKET 22 SOUTH VINE ST
PHONE 42
NEW BEAUTY SALON OPENS IN CITY ON HANNA ST. The opening of Renee’ Beauty Salon at 506 East Hanna St. was announced today by Mrs. Lillian Fuller, owner and operator. Mrs. Fuller completed her schooling in the arts of beauty culture at the Mt. Clemens, Mich. College of Beauty Culture, and fm- the past six years has had considerable experience in her association with beauty salons in Detroit and Mt. Clemens.
REDS BYPASS U. X. WASHINGTON <UP)- Russia asked today for Soviet U. S. discussions outside the United Nations on reduction of nuclear weapons, other armaments, and military manpower. The request was delivered by Sovist Ambassador Georgi N Zaroubin to Acting Secretary of State Herbert Hoover Jr.
Dramatic night-time rescue saves the l.ves of the 1.134 passengers aboard the Italian liner Andrea Dona (topi after it collided wHh the Swedish liner Stockholm dower) in the Atlantic ocean off Nantucket.
GOVERNOR THREATENED BOSTON (UP)—The office of Gov. Christian A. Herter said today a telephoned threat had been made against his life. An ext^a, ^ state police guard was assigned to the executive mnta. i
WTTV—Channel I
6:00 Little Rascals 6:45 New * 7 :00 Combat Sgt. 7:30 Crossroads 8:o0 Dollar a Second 8:30 Auto Races 9:30 I Am the Law 10:00 Highway Patrol 10:30 News 10:45 Hollywood Movie WTHI-TV—Channel 10 6:00 TV News 6:30 : ! I Fli k 7:00 Marne 7:30 O r Mi , Brooks 9:00 Stories of the Century 9:30 Pantomime 10:00 TV News 10:30 Late Show Mestlnghouae WRIGHT'S ELECTRIC SERVICE
2 LOCATIONS:
305 N. Jackson St. Phone 64
GREENCASTLE, END. MAIN ST. CLOVERDALE
—-
-w sy’-r- -y—; ******* 4**>A*A^<M*
80 MERCURY PHAETONS
i f 1
u i
IN ED SULUVAN’S *425,000 MERCURY CONTEST JUNE 11th —AUGUST Ath
! !
WVIrlvalmtSlm
1st PRIZE EACH WEEK
2nd - lOth PRIZES EACH WEEK
MERCURY MONTCLAIR
9 MERCURY MONTEREY
PHAETON
PHAETONS
plus all-expense paid trip to New York for two via American Airlines • suite at WaldorfAstoria • guest of Ed Sullivan at his show.
. . . plus 25 G.E. portable TV seta, light, easy to carry .. . 300 Elgin American Signet automatic cigarette lighters each week.
SPECIAL BONUS AWARDS $10,000 CASH to new Mercury buyers—Awarded instead of new Phaeton if you ouy a ne*r Mercury during contest and before being advised of winning one of the 10 top weekly prizes.
$2,000 cash to used car buyers —Awarded in addition to new Phaeton if you buy a used car during contest and before being advised of winning one of
the 10 top weekly prizes.
(5e« Official Entry Blank for details)
APPLIANCES AND TELE\TSION SALES AND SERV1CB
YOU CAN ENTER EVERY WEEK . . . here’s all you do! 1 Go to your Mercury dealer today. 3 Complete last line of Mercury Phaeton rhyme. 2 Pick up Official Rules and Entry Blank. 4 Mail Official Entry Blank to “Mercury Contest”.
GO TO YOUR MERCURY DEALER TOOAYI
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