The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 21 August 1956 — Page 2
I
THE lmly banner ti es m ait., 3l-1956 ..if.EM .*1g£. iM 111 AN A \ .u.h Descends From Water Tower
More Comfort Wearing FALSE TEETH
■wpl<>a«nr
ose isconij
.ar to GT^rccaie -rt-FAsr^m,
powder, sprintied on
upper auc! lo^er plates holds tliem firme- so that thev feel more com* fortable No rummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling It's alkaline monartd). Does not sour. Checks "plate odor' identure breath*. Get FASTEETH today at any drug counter.
’TTTSBORO
hard IT
>ital rtftei
Ind. fUF)
18. was taken to anapoha early climbed down from
er tower where he
three and a half
or Iq jump.
nty Sheriff Leon liss said the youth called his ier girl friend. Jean Buchj. Browns burg, Monday night said he would jump from the «r by midnight if she did not
it Int
tern : f'n
see him. At 8 p.
firemen meeting in
the town hall in front of the tower raw Heagy climb the tower. Bayliss said “a crowd of 1.200 or 1.500” gathered a.s the \outh circled the cat walk, beat on the tower with a pipe, and
threatened to leap.
The girl, friends and other t< vcnspeople implored him to
reme down.
Heagy descended at 11:20 p. m. Bayliss gave him the choice of going to the hospital for observation or being booked on a charge of disorderly conduct. Bayliss said Heagy shot himself in the hand by accident Sat-
in day night.
No Talks With Ike Says Nixon SAX FRANCISCO (UP) — Vice President Richard M. Nixon said today he has not communicated with President Eisenhower, directly or indirectly, since he arrived here Saturday for the Republican National C®nventior. Nor, the vice president told reporters. does he have any plans to ;.dk with Mr. Eisenhower "unless he has something to discuss with me which I don't anticipate.” Nixon, oi course, exempted his airport gre?ting to the President on Mr. Eisenhowers arrival here late today. Meantime, a steady stream of delegates beat a path to Nixon’s door as his supporters calmly stamped out the last few sparks of Harold E. Stasson’s "dump Nixon” movement. Seven delegations booked morning visits to Nixon’s hotel suite. Nixon made it clear in repeated sp’orhes to delegations that the GOP will campaign on the record of the Eisenhower administratio : rather than rely on attacking the Democrats. Nixon said the delegations I calling on him were “extremely | friendly” throughout Monday j But he stuck to his theme that j the GOP should have an "op^n convention” to let the delegates ; pick the “strongest possible’ I running mate for Mr. Eisenhower.
ADI AI COMMENTS ON GOV. I.ANGI.IK n M’FK H LIBERTYVILLE. 111. (UP)--Adlai E. Stevenson charged cOday that the keynote speech deli veiei by Washington Gov. Arthur Langlie at the Republican convention in San Francisco Monday was “another example of the administrations smug, self-righteous complacency.” "I have no expectation of ar honest appraisal of the dangers abroad and the failures at home from any official Republican spokesman, at least before the election,” the Democratic presidential candidate said in a statement at his country home. "The Republican keynote was that “all is well and God is on our side’,” Stevenson said. "It was another example of thadministration’s smug, seUrighteous complacency.” Beef Program Af Clayton Friday A beef cattle grading demonstration has been scheduled for the Producers Feeder Yards in Clayton Friday, August 24, beginning at 10:00 A. M. According to Paul Mitchell and Henry Mayo, Purdue University specialists, the demonstration will include information on feed requirements for various grades of cattle, the type of cattle best suited for farms in this area, costs of grain for different kinds of cattle, best times to sell different grades of cattle, and speculative risks of various cattle feeding programs. Demonstrations will be presented with live cattle to show the distinguished characteristics of 10 different types of feeder giade. Cattle ready for market will a-':so be shown to match and compare with the various feeder grades to show results obtained from feeding programs. Information presented will especially
THE DAILY BANNER and H2RALD CONSOLIDATED Entered In the postoffice at GreencaMle, Indiana as second class mail matter under act of March 7. 1878, Subscription price 25 cents per week. So.00 per year by mail in Putnam County, SfiLOO to SI0.40 per year outside Putnam County. Telephone 74, 95, 114 S. R. Rariden. Publisher 17-19 South Jackson Street
TODAY’S BIBLE THOUGHT Behold the fowls of the air . . . Consider the lilies.--Matt. 6:26, 28. God s infinite care and pro-
vision for es assure forgotten.
* .
his we
are
Personal And Local News Briefs
The Ea-st Marion Home Makers Club will meet with Martha Shipman Friday, August 24th at 1:30 ;
p. m.
The annual To-ney reunion will be held Sunday, August 26th at Robe Ann Park, basket dinner at i 12:30 P. M. The Sutherlin Reunion will be held Sunday, Aug. 26th. on the ^ Hallie Sutherlin farm southeast of Russellville. Miss Ethel Ferrand and Roy i Metzger of Indianapolis visited ! Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Ferrand of 1 Fillmore, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Buis, of Indianapolis, are the parents o r ' a daughter born Monday after-
Revival 110 North Market St i Pro. Rudy Langley, Evangelist -V -cs every night this week i Sunday night S p. m. Wo •'"rship the Lord with us. Mr?. Ethel Dunn, of Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, Mr. and Mrs. Marion Smith and sons. Michael and Marion Jr.. Miss Mary Kap Negengard, of Urbana, 111., were Sunday guests of Mrs. Minta Snider. Grave side services were held today at Fairmont, Indiana, foi he infant son of Rev and Mrs. Kermit Morrison. Dr. Samuel 1 Carruth was in charge of the service. Hopkins and Walton Funeral Home was in charge of the arrangements. Ex-Si nator Elmer Thomas and Fi cd V. Thomas, both former | Putnam county residents, were in Greencastle visiting friends and relatives Saturday. Elmer Thomas, who served as United States Senator from Oklahoma for twenty-five years, was on his way home from the Democratic convention in Chicago. They visited Mrs. De’ssie Thomas, widow of their brother. Oscar Thomas, and Cleve Thomas in this city and another brother, C. B. Thomas in Terre Haute. Mercury Dips To 44 Af Lafayette
noon. Mr. and Mrs. Vernie Buis are the paternal grandparent? Mr .and Mrs. Ezra Newgent, Mr. and Mrs. Max Newgent and | children, Mr. and Mrs. Carl I Berry and daughters, all of ! Greencastle R. R. spent the week i end with Mr. and Mrs. Claud Newgent on Dillsboro R. R. 1. Weldon N. Kelly, 48, Brazil
Route 5, remained in
condition at the Putnam county hospital Tuesday morning. Kelly ! was injured in a traffic accident Saturday on U. S. 40 that killed Ralph V. Montgomery of Indian-
i apolis.
prove helpful to beginning cat- T h e Misses Judith Ann Cash tie feeders. i an{ i Frances Priscilla Miles, both Farmers are invited and urged D f Greencastle, and Miss Carolyn to attend the beef cattle grading j e an Madden of Cloverdale, are
among 124 beginning student?J
demonstration day which is sponsored by the Central Indiana County Beef . Cattle Extension Committees, Purdue University and County Extension Services in cooperation with market representatives in this area. CITY MADE DEFENDANT IN A HEAVY DAMAGE SUIT SHEBOYGAN. Wis. (UP) — The strikebound Kohler Co. has filed a $60,516 suit against the city of Sheboygan for damages resulting from a riot which prevented unloading of a clay boat
July 5, 1955 .
who will enter the Methodis' Hospital School of Nursing in In
dianapolis August 27.
!
[Crawley’s PliillipsOfiStalion
WILL BE CLOSED WEDNESDAY From 1 P. M To 5 P. M. For the funeral of Wilbur Crawley.
Word was eceived today by Mrs. William Day of the death of her sister. Miss Laura Rayburn of Francisville, Ind., Miss Ravfcurn had been a teacher in the Francisville schools for the past 32 years. Funeal will be held Wednesday at 2:00 p. m. at the Methodist church at Francisville Mr. and Mrs. Lois J. Arnold, and children, Jerry and Judy, moved into an apartment in Danville today, where they will live until their new residence is completed. Miss Judy Arnold will enter Indiana State Teachers College in Terre Haute in September, and Jerry will be a junior in
the Danville high school.
The following people called on , Miss Mary Burks and Mrs. Alice | Minter last week*: Mrs. Eva Me- | Nary, Mrs. Emily Herod, Mrs. ! Lora Pickett, Mrs. Ida Day, Mr?. 1 Yula Bridges. Mrs. Della Smith, i Mrs. Ruth Smith all of the Fill- | more community. Mrs. Florence I Caldwell and mother of Plain- j field, Mr. W. D. Burks of Green- j castle and Dr. A. W. Burks and j little daughter, Nancy Alice of
Ann Arbor. Michigan.
The temperature fell to a chilly 44, within 12 degree? of freezing, early today as Hoosiers shivered in the third day of an August cool spell. Lafayette recorded the low mark during the early morning hours. South Bend recorded a 47, P’ort Wayne 50, and Indianapolis and Evansville 53. The Indianapolis low, cool as it was missed the all-time low for Aug. 21 by six degrees. A 47-de-gree temperature was recorded there only six years ago on this
date.
The cold night came after a cool day. At Evansville, the mercury never got above 69 Monday,
a critical ^ reached the low 70s elsewhere.
ranging ^rom 71 at South Bend
to 74 at Lafayette.
Fair skies will prevail today throughout the state and temperature will remain cool, with highs ranging from 72 in the north and central portions to 77
in the south.
Again tonight, the temperature will dip but not as 'low as the last two mornings. Lows will range from 54 upstate to 60 downstate, the weather bureau said. . The high temperature Wednesday will be a consistent 78 throughout the state, representing a moderate warmup. The
Thursday outlook is cloudy and warmer.
SOCIETY To H lid Opm Hons* Y»edr. -sduy Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. West and son. Jeffrey, of Los Angeles, are visiting in the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth West, this week. Open house will be held at the West home. 629 E. Walnut. Wednesday afternoon from 3 to 5 o’clock and from 7 to 9 that evening. All friends are cordially invited to attend. No written invitations have been issued. Monroe Twp. Club Has Monthly Meeting The Homemakers Club of Monroe Twp. met Wednesday, Aug. 15th for their regular monthly meeting at the home of Mrs. Doris and Eva Price. Roll call: “The nicest thing someone did for you,” was answered by fifteen members and one guest, Mrs. Lucille Proctor. During the business portion a tour was planned for October. The entertainment for the afternoon was in the form of a silent auction and a neat little sum was raised for the club. This wao presided over by Mrs. Madeline O Hair. The hostess served dainty refreshments and the rest of the afternoon was spent in visiting. Those present were Mrs. Carrie Miller*, Mrs. Osa Brown, Mrs. Eula Clyde Ames, Mrs. Lola Nichols, Mrs. Edna Scobee, Mrs. Ann Nichols and children, Mrs. Madeline O'Hair and children. Mrs Rachyle Nichols and daughther, Mrs. Madonna Elliott and son, Mrs. Velma Reeves and sons, Mrs. Frances Harris and children, Mrs. Jean Scobee and daughters, Mrs. Lulu Proctor and children, our guest, Mrs. Lucille Proctor and daughter and the hostesses Doris and Eva Price. The Sept, meeting will be held with Mrs. Madonna Elliott. Please note change of meeting place.
Knicht Host At raifcslcys Party
SAN FRA NCISCO ( UP) California Gov. Goodwin Knight became the host with mostest Monday night.
He party
a fabulou: ■atuiing cha and nearly
5120.000 a ipagne mo\ 10.000 aw
while the audience cheered. The receiving line was so
fellows — Richard N:xon. Gov. Christian Herter. Governor Knight. Even Nixon and Harold Stassen beamed at each other. GOP Farm Plank Gets Midwest OK
line ai
merely poPtl-
Reot
struck Republican conv
guests.
The white-h known as "Goo state, outdid b<:
red govemoi ie” in his home h in size ar.d
DemonA'Ugust Mrs. Iva
today
ANNIVERSARIES
Birthdays
Mrs. Dale W. Brown,
Aug. 21st.
Michael Newgent, age 4, August 26, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dale E. Newgent, Lithia Springs, Ga.
Softball Schedule
Tonight
7:15 Shetrone vs. Home Sup- ( ply. This will be a play-off game | to determine the winner of Round j 2. as the two teams are tied.
Soft ball Scores
Shetrone 3, Moose 2. Progressive 11, Relsville 8.
Mrs. Iva Harcourt Is Club Hostess
The Canaan Home stration Club held its meeting at the home of
Harcourt Thursday 16th at 1:30 p m. with Mrs. Russell Harcourt as hostess. Mrs. Leffel Goss opened our meeting consisting of salute to the flags, creed. Song of the month and roll call. Report on the Putnam County Fair exhibit from our club was given by Mrs. Vern Lydick. Farm Report and Marketing Guide by Mrs. Fay Kessinger. All gave a Safety Slogan. Plans were made for a clothing model to he at the Farm
Fair.
The business meeting ended
with the club prayer.
During the social hour a con-
fer partly test W3S & iven b y Mrs - Carl El-
liot and won by Mrs. Glen Duncan ami Mrs. Lloyd Greenlee. The hostesses served delicious refreshments. We had 17 members, 13 children and one guest, Miss
Ulanda Runnells, present.
Our next meeting will be held Sept. 20th , an all day meeting at the home of Mrs. Elmer Christy. All members are urged to attend as it will be the election of officers for the coming year that
day.
lavishness the Democratic con- | vention soiree given by Perlo | Mesta, known as the hostess with the mostest. Mrs. Mesta had a mere 600 guests at her ; supper dance in Chicago last week. j Knight staged his party in one j of San Francisco’s biggest buddings—the block-large Civic Aud- : itorium. Convention delegates, party I big-wigs, governors. Cabine'. members, mayors and many Hollywood celebrities—in black tie with their wives showing off beautiful evening gowns—arrived in limousines. Each guest was handed a flower from tables loaded with 15,- i 000 carnations and baby orchids. : The next stop—after a..walk of half a block—was the food served on four buffet tables. Guests lined up for crab newburg 4.2C0 crabs gave their all for the Re- I publicans, tossed green salad 35 j crates of lettuce and 20 quarts of f french dressing; French pastries, finger sandwiches and coffee. I Three hundred cases of mag- j nums of California champagne j were on hand. But not all saw i the light of the 15,000 champagne ! glasses. The bar closed on the stroke of 10 on orders from the governor who wanted his guests j to concentrate on the floor show. , This command caused severe in-dig-nation and suffering to sever- | al hundred guests who arrived at one minute past 10. A policeman was called to eject, one guest who threatened to invade tne i forbidden cases. But enough delegates hit the party early to make it a gay one. j *One woman reclined on the floor, eyes closed, and finally was escorted outside. A young | couple took off their shoes to dance. Others sat on the floor to watch the entertainment—Art Linkletter, Helen Traubel and the dancing Weire brothers. ‘Stassen arrived and was escorted to Alcatraz Island, cell | block three,” Cracked Linkletter !
SAN FRANCISCO Mid-west Republican 1 day praised the farm the GOP platform as "sure, sound approach tion of U. S. agricul
lenis.”
Delegates pre Meted ers back home would with the restatement <
(UP) rulers plank
nrobh
—LANGLIE week ago." Langlie is 56 c r. His hair is thin He is reitl but only 36. bn
said. Party their to get id pro-
ind a NorthemImost white and ?r tall nor short, the same height vn-haired, and a
Iture probthat fanngo along Of the Eis-
enhower administration’s flexibi.* price support program as opposed to high, rigid props promised by the Democrats. And the soil bank plan wa> hailed by Ohio delegate Roger Cloud as the “sure—sound approach for the government to help the farmer.” Cloud, speaker o f the Ohio House of Representatives, said: “I'm sure the Ohio farmer will find completely defensible the expenditure of funds to make the soil more fertile rather than foi higher production of farm goods that are already a drug on the
market.”
Sen. Karl Mundt also had cheers for the soil bank program He said that four months ago he might have been worried about farm state defections from the GOP this fall. "But since the sod bank went into effect the majority of the farmers are happy,” he said. Mrs. George P. Abel, chairman of the Nebraska delegation, said the farm plank appeared to "reflect what we've been supporting all along and it’s likely to get our complete support.” "I think the Nebraska farmers will give the Eisenhower farm program a full trial because it has been in effect such a short time,” she said. Former Sen. C. Wayland Brooks of Illinois could find no objection to the farm plank. He pointed out that the majority of Illinois farmers belong to the Illinois Agriculture Assn, which has officially endorsed the Eisenhower farm program. Clifford O’Stillivachairman of the Michigan delegation, said the farmers back home were “sound people” who will recog nize “that the GOP approach to agriculture will bring about a
Clement started bis keynote speech shouting. Langlie started his in a conversational tone and never, as they say at political conventions, made the rafters ring.. Yet there is a paraded between Govs. I^anglie r.nd Clement. Clement : ‘ u y ungest governor Tennessee ever had. When he first got the otfice at age 40, Langlie was the youngest governor in Washington history. Hodge May Work In Rock Quarry CHESTER. 111. 11 TP)—Deposed. State Auditor Orville E. Hodge, sentenced to state prison for bis one-million-dollar raid on the state treasury, began prison life today with the prospect of soon pounding rocks in a quarry. < Hodge arrived at Menard State Prison Monday night after being sentenced to 12 to 15 years in prison following his plea of guilty to embezzlement in a gigantic phony state chock scheme. Warden Ross B. Randolph .>»aid ho anticipated no problem with the one-time political playboy. “In a few days," Randolph said, “he'll be just another number." The warden also revealed there was a possibility Hodge would go to work at the prison's rock quarry and pound rocks to restore his health. Hodge suffered tt nervous reaction to the scandal and was hospitalized after being jailed about a week ago pending sentencing. Hodge was given No. 2U303, fingerpt inted, photographed, showered and dressed in an olive drab coverall shortly after entering the prison where he’ll he observed for two weeks in the diagnostic center. The diagnostic program will determine to which slate prison Hodge finally will be sent:
President Backs Ban On Passsorfs
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TV
TONIGHT
WISH-TY—Channel 8
5:30
GOP Convention
9:00
S64.000 Question
9:30
Trust Your Wife?
10:00
News; Weather
10:15
10:45
Late Show
WTTY—Channel 4
5:30
GOP Convention
9:00
. Warner Bros. Present
10:00
Family Playhouse
10:30
News
10:45
Hollvwood Movie
WTHI-TV—Channel 10
5:30
GOP Convention
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WASHINGTON (UP)—Pres : - j dent Eisenhower has thrown his full weight behind the State Department decision to deny passports to American newsmen invited to visit Red China. The State Deportment announced the President's decision j today following the disclosure that three reporters plan to make the trip behind the Bamboo Curtain with or without pass-
ports.
The department on Aug. 7 de- { dared that it would not issue passports to 15 newsmen who received invitations from the Peiping regime to visit Red China. It argued that it would not make any exceptions to the ban against U. S. travel to Red China as long as Amaiicans still are held prisoner in China. But leading newspup rs ana new^ agencie.-, including the i United Press, protested the ban on the grounds it would infringe the right of newsmen to get the truth wherever it may be. Three reporters " hart Mil! :r of United Press, John Roderick of Associated Press and James Robinson of the National Broadcasting Co.—said they were ready to make the trip inside Red China without U. S. passoprts.
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TOO MUCH SWAPPING JACKSON. Miss. (UP)- James Jones, 19. was arrested by police in a restaurant as he tried to swap the two cases of warm beer he had stolen from another restaurant for two cases of cool beer. „ .
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