The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 September 1957 — Page 4

THE DAflY BAIsiNft MOh\ SEPT * 1957. Page 4 0REEM 4STLK. DTL Says Leadership Is Endangered PITTSBURG (UP)—The United States has failed to meet the challenge of civil righto and has thus endangered its position of leadership among the world's free nations, David J. McDonald, president of the United Steelworkers. said today. McDonald, choosing to speak this year of “social rather than economic wages" in his annual Labor Day mewsage to his union, •aid that despite the Supreme Court ban on segregation “opponents of democratic procedure are openly defying the order of the highest legal authority in our land, while others are resorting to legislative attempts. . . to postpone compliance as long as it is possible. . . ”

He said most of the headquarters of these industries are locat- J ed in the northern part of the , country and it is here that the policy is made and administrative procedures are formulated. It is the obligation of those who have this resposibility to institute a system of education for plant managers and other supervisory personnel, particularly where the problem is so acute, so that they can join wdth | us in helping to establish real i American democracy.

ROBBER CAUGHT SLEEPING

ST. PAUL, Minn. (UP) — Joseph Borgerding probably never will live down his latest burglary attempt. He was caught sleeping on the job. Borgerding was found by police Sunday perched atop a safe in a private garage. He apparently had worked very hard at his labors.

Police Hunting Slayer Of Two DECATUR, Neb. UP — Authorities in two states today j sought an enraged gunman who I shot and killed two persons, j savagely beat his wife and left j her for dead and wounded his I father-in-law. The Nebraska Safety Patrol found the abandoned car of j Arthur McCluskey, 37, Omaha, j southeast of here Sunday night, i I McCluskey fled in the car Saturday night after killing Mrs. Ida Stoddard, 59, his mothcr-in-iaw, and Orville Brewer, 60, a friend of the family. He then beat his estranged wife, Betty, 29, with a crow oar and shot and beat his father-in-law, Glenn Stoddard, 68. Stoddard was shot in the shoulder and clubbed with the butt of Mc-

Cluskey’s gun. Mrs. McCluskey, who left her husband in May, said her husband stopped beating her when she feigned death. She was hospitalized in Blair, Neb. Sheriff Walter Dean said Mrs. McCluskey and the couple’s four children were living at the farm home of her parents near here. He said McCluskey visited the Stoddard home and apparently w£nt berserk when his wife refused to return with him. The Stoddards and Brown were playing cards in the kitchen when McCluskey went on his wild shooting spree. He fired three shots through a screen door, fatally wounding Brewer and Mrs. Stoddard. Stoddard, although wounded, escaped and fled to a neighbor’s home where he called police. McCluskey forced his wife to accompany him to a home they formerly occupied in Decatur where he continued the brutal at-

Meadowbrook Drive In Intersec tion 36 and 43

Tonight “SHOOT OUT AT MEDICINE BEND” RAmlolph Scott, James C raig “UNTAMED YOUTH” Mamie Van Doren John Russell

Tues., Wed., Tluirs. "SWEET SMELL OF SUCCESS” Burt Lancaster, Tony Curtis “BEAST OF HOLLOW MOUNTAIN” (Color) Guy Madison, Patricia Medina

MAPLECROFT AUTO THEATRE Juftt East of Stileaville on U. S. 40 Show Starts at Dusk

FREE SHOW ON LABOR DAY Monday Night Only, Sept. 2 Two Brand New Western Features Load in your family and ffiends and drive right in without one cent of cost—This is our tr^at!

Tues., Wed., Thurs. Jack Pa la nee A Eddie Albert “ATTACK” John Erickson fk Mari Blanchard O “CRUEL TOWER”

Corral Drive-in Theatre BEELYVILLE, INDIANA Boxofflce Open 7:15 Show At Dusk Monday & Tuesday "THE D.L” Jack Webb — Monica Lewis “LAST OF THE BADMEN” George Montgomery (Cinemascope-Color) BUCK N1TE BOTH MONDAY AND TUESDAY NITE — $1.00 PER CAR

0-C Midway Drive-In Theater Junction U. S. 40 and 48.

Tonight Buck Night Void “THE YOUNG STRANGER” James MacArthur Kim Hunter In Color and Cinemascope "LET'S BE HAPPY” Tony Martin. Vera Ellen

Tues. — Wed. In Color "FT. YUMA” Peter Graves. Joan Vohs In Color and Cinemascope “HEAVEN KNOWS. MR. ALLISON” Deborah Kerr Robert Mitchuni

NOW SHOWING

With 150,000 Students Enrolled, Plus 12,000 Faculty Members, University Of California Rates World’s Largest

tack.

STASSEN HOPEFUL OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS' CONTROL

By WILLIAM RUTLEDGE til Central Press Association ' Correspondent

PROBABLY the world's largest university, probably the world’s most , remarkable, and probably the most advanced in tta courses, the University of California expects to register more than 55,000 full-time stu* dents and more than 110,000 parttime students at its eight campuses this falL These students will come from almost 100 foreign nations, about 2,000 of them, and from virtually every state

NOTICE OK ADMINIPTIIATION In the Circuit Court of Putnam County. Indiana. Notice ia hereby *lven that Roachdal* Bank and Trust Company. Roachdale. Indiana was on the 2Sth day of August. IS',?, appointed Executor of the Will of David I. Carter, deceased. All persons having claims again^t said estate whether or not now due. must file the same in said court within six <fi) months from the date of the first publication of this notice or said claims will l>e forever barred Dated at Greencastle, Indiana, this 2>th d iy of August, William R, Padgett. Clerk of the Circuit Court of Putnam County. Indiana. Prohate Cause No. 9724. Frank G. Stoessel. Attorney 3-10-17-3t LEGAL NOTICE oK Pl’BLIC HEARING Kotlce is he. ehy given that th» Local Alcoholic Beverage Board o» Putnam County. Indiana, will, at 9 a. m. on the 18th day of Sept.. 1957 at the Clerks Office. Court House, in the City of leeencastle. Indians in said County begin investigation of the application of the following named oeraon. requesting tl e issue to the applicant, at the location herein ♦fter a«t out. of the Alcoholic Rev ersge Permit of the class herein after designated and will, at said Fma and ptace. receive informa Jon concerning the fitness of said applicant, and the propriety of lasuing the permit applied for ts such applicant at the premiaet named: Paul T. Rising (Package Store) Beer. Liquor & Wine Dealer. 16 N. Jackson St.. Greencastle. Indiana. SAID INVESTIGATION WT1J BE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC. AND PUBLIC PARTICIPATION IS RE QUESTED. INDIANA ALCOHOT TC BEVERAGE rr»W'fTeq ION By E G. MINNIEAR Executive Secretary NOBLE ELLIS Chairman 2-lt

v -

1

jfe •

- . <y,/. -r/-.

V> v

* > >

iin

:3^.' '.k,*: W * W

-

* • 'rt, 'M % «'■ . '■ '''.iX : -. H v- V t ' ■ ' ' * l ' ' *P.

DISARMAMENT NEGOTIATOR Harold E. Stassen (right) is explaining a serious point to Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and President Eisenhower at the end of his five-months-long London negotiations. Stassen said there is still hope Russia will agree to a system of world control of nuclear weapons.

in the nation.

J More than 12,000 faculty members will be in charge of courses offered at the University of California at Berkeley, at Los Angeles, perhaps better known as UCLA, at Davis, at La Jolla, at ML Hamilton, at Riverside, at Santa Barbara and at San Francisco. On its faculty are the largest number of Nobel prize winners, second largest number of members in the National Academy of Sciences, and largest number of faculty members who have won Guggenheim fellow-, •hips. ^ v In addition to it« eight campus locations, the University ©f California maintains 50 county farm adviser offices keep in close contact with the 125,000 farm families in ttvr Golden State. Also, 'the University of California offers adult education classes in 40 ' leading ciSies of this booming state. Educational aspirations of every _ citizen are encompassed

Salher Tower, more familiarly known o* the Campanile, dominates the Berkeley earopus. More than 300 feet tall, its belfry hovies a carillon of 12 bells.

•; ;

England’s Famed ‘Public’ Schools Have Long and Interesting History

By LEONARD J. SNYDER Central Press Association Correspondent

If vcc work upon marble, it will perish; if we work upon brass, time will efface it; if wc rear temples, they will crumble into dust; but if we work upon immortal minds, if tee imbue them with principles, with the just fear of God and love of our fellow men, we cngrax'c on those tablets something which will brighten to all eternity— Daniel Webster.

IF THERE IS any group of jchools in the United States which is today successfully impregnating generations of young minds with the principles referred to by Webster, it is the privatelyendowed ^‘public” school. Many such schools have long since grown in both standing and size in this country and abroad, patterned after those established centuries ago in England. England’s “public” schools, founded usually as institutions of learning for “pore and needy scholars,” were never truly public. So the word "public” is actually a misnomer. Britain’s “public" schools became academies where the rich and “highborn” sent their sons. While many thousands of American families send their sons to American “public” schools today, not all could be considered rich or “high-born.” Costs of such schools per schocj ye-.r vary but, in most cases, tuition, board and room is comparable with college and university leveis.

r

U

fipf

u

!

PAY NO FEDERAL INCOME TAXES!

# A group of nine Indiana rural electric co-ops has applied to the Rural Electrification Administration (REA) in Washington for a loan of $42,000,000 to finance the building of an unneeded electric generating plant. These nine co-ops pay no Federal income taxes—not a cent on their last year’s profit of $884,465. If an investor-owned electric company had realized that 1956 profit of $884,465, it would have paid 52% of it—more than $450,000 — in Federal income taxes. The total retained profits of these nine rural electric co-ops to date amount to $4,803,018. And small wonder. For instance, in 1956 they were able to purchase all their electricity from investor^ owned electric companies for $1,561,506, and they resold it to their own customers for $4,395,182. The difference is a handsome middleman’s mark-up—and the nine rural electric co-ops didn’t have to pay one cent of Federal income tax on the resulting profits*

‘ i

• >

GET THE FACTS

• • •

“ri'BLIC” SCHOOLS (or prep jchools) in England are commonly referred to as secondary schools in this country, from which a student graduates to the ;

General view of the stately towers of Eton, above. Lower photo shows a group of typical Eton boys, wearing their traditional school caps and the famous Etonian 12-foot-long mufflers. "goes up” to a university, how- were often hidebound, brutal arl ever, scholastically he is about intolerant. Young Tom Brou ( two years ahead of the American was not the only boy “fagged - prep-school graduate. j unmercifully. Dormitories wen Names of the three dozen or ; cold and bare, food was poor, an I so top schools in England are scholarship was a matter ol

both ancient and world-famous: Westminster, founded by Henry VIII; Rugby, Shrewsbury. Char-

college and university level of terhouse, Cheltenham, Marlbor-

leaming.

Britain’s Harrow, one of that country's most famous “public" schools (founded in 15711; Eton, another (founded in 1440), and

ough, to cite but a few.

Read this booklet which has been published in the interest of fairness and economy in government, important to every taxpayer. Ask for a copy of “What's all this about a $42,000,000 LOAN FROM REA?" at your nearby Public Service Company office ... or write to the Company (giving us your address) at 1000 E. Main Street, Plainfield, Indiana. A copy will be mailed to you promptly.

(£0? j&&fS

,

« ** mm

-25

r ■*-.•* ^

: . vltl

memorizing Latin lines. Kow ever, unrest could and did ofter

boil into rebellion.

Students at Harrow once obtained gunpowder to blew up t new headmaster, but the pk|

BRITAIN also has “day” J failed. Another “head" impose) schools (without room and board) discipline by tF.gpug the entirl

such as St. Paul’s and Merchant sixth grade.

Winchester, the oldest in continu- Taylors in London, and. below the ‘ Led by Dr. Thomas Arnold oi ous service (founded in 1382), “pubhc” school level, “grammar" Rugby, however, reforms humancorrespond to such famous Amer-[ schools such as Sherborne and ized Briia-n's “public” school! i ican secondary schools as Exeter. Uppingham. -.nd In tne mid-1800s they en- 1 Andover and Groton. | England’s “public” schools in tered their golden age of producWi««a 4m Etonian or Harrovian} the early years of their existence, ing learned Victorian gentlemen

YOUR ELECTRIC POWER INCREASED OVER 5 TIMES ... 1946-19601

PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY OF INDIANA, INC. SUctUc Senvict t* TK&tc “7%** 700 (dommu*Utccd 70 (^ukCcca in 'Indiana.