The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 28 January 1958 — Page 2

THE DAH.Y BANNER TI ES., JAN. 28. 1^58. Page 2 GFEENTASTEE. IND.' WILL IICTURE AT UNIVERSITY FEBRUARY 10-12 DR. L. THOMAS ALDRICH TO VISIT CAMPI'S NEXT MONTH

A noted peophyeicist. Dr. L. Thomaa Aldrich of Washington. D. C., will appear as a visiting lecturer at DePauw University here Feb 10-12. Sponsored jointly by the American Institute of Physics and the American Association of Physics Teacners, his visit is part of a nation-wide program to stimulate interest in the field of

physics.

Dr. Aldrich, who will be the guest of Dr. Malcolm Corrcll. head of DePauw's physics department, is a member of the terrestrial magnetism department at the Carnegie Institution

of Washington.

During hia stay on the DePauw campus he will lecture, conduct student interviews, and commit with faculty members concerning currictUum and re

search problems.

Recipient of the bachelor’s, master's and Ph. D. degrees from the University of Minnesota, Dr. Aldrich was a Naval Ordnance Laboratory physicist from 1940 to 1944 and a Minnesota faculty

member until 1950.

A former chairman of the National Research Council’s subcommittee on nuclear geophysics. he currently is a member of the executive board of the Arnerioan Geophysical Union. He also is a fellow of the American Physical Society and a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the Geochemical

Society.

A* a researcher Dr. Aldrich has specialized in mass spectrometry and the use of nuclides with long half-lives in measuring

mineral ages.

THE DAILY B**iN*PR

and

HERALD CONSOLlDATEt Entered in the postoffice o.

enrollment for ail new and old members who have not been

given their degree work. All sponsors are asked to bring

their new' candidates to this im-

portant ceremony. Our own Hit- Greencastle, Indiana as second ual Team will put or. the Degree mail matter under act oi work and will wear their new .. roll 7. 1878. Subscription cap and gowns which they just .rice 25 cent'j per week, *5.00 received. Members of the team per year by mail In Putnam are Governor Austin Funk. Ooonty, $8.00 to $10.40 per yea) Junior Governor Ernest Walls, mtside Putnam Connty.

Prelate Bob Crousore, Sergeant-At-Anr.s Nadean Sillery, Past 1 Governor William Alspaugh,

YOUTH WEEK SPEAKER

Orator Murray Lewis and Piano John Wood.

INSPECTOR PUZZLED PRINCETON UP —Postal authorities were puzzled over the case of an armed man who tried to hold up the Princeton post office Sunday and slugged Postmaster William R .Davidson. 32. A postal inspector said perhaps the man ‘'cased" the post office, or he was a transient just passing through town. Money from the post office safe had been deposited in a bank the day before.

TODAY’S BIBLE THOUGHT Blessed are they that mourn, for they shall be comforted Matt. 5:4. We have seen deeply grieved mourners rebound from the lowest depths. God is still in His Heaven and God is love, no harm can come to God’s children

in the end.

271 Are Dead In Jap Storm TOKYO UP—The coast guard announced today that 271 persons are dead or missing in the wake of the weekend storm that sank an inter-island ferry and 22 smaller vessels in Japanese waters. Forty-three survivors of the wrecks were rescued.

Thomas E. Maloney, intemation- .the local was being run.

aj president of the union, had “fa

New Missile

Center Planned

conference.

Now, the West was held

have dropped tacitly many „ , vored .. ^ iMued or .

< these prerequisities. At least,

i this was the impression which ^ ** local to give them

was emerging from official special treatment.

Western pronouncements. : Hf saj(] hi3 ^ tenure ^ loca , Britain was reliably reported j president came to an end in 1952 to be prepared to drop her earlier j , fter he defied Maloney’s ini insistence that a foreign min- s tructions. Seven gun-packing , isters conference, prepared b> t^ugs from Newark seized the advance diplomatic consulta- Philadelphia office, the union was tions, precede any summit gath- . p U ^ pack into trusteeship and erin o- i he was fined and suspended at a

Instead Britain now would be union ‘‘trial,” Underwood said,

satisfied with careful advance

FIRST THOUGHTS In a desk husbands keep the hills—and wives keep the checkbooks. FIRST-CITIZENS BANK

SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UP) Plans for a ballistic missile test base at Camp Cooke, Calif., similar to the one at Cape Canaveral.

Monday

Beta Sigma Phi To Meet Tuesday Beta Sigma Phi will have their social meeting Tuesday night at the home of Marilyn Evans. Don’t forget the items for Chinese auction. ATTEND CONFERENCE Central District Conference for Homemaking Teachers is held today at the Indiana University Medical Center in Indianapolis. The following teachers are attending. Bernice Steward, Bain-

Personal And Local News llrirfs

Special youth week services will be held this week at the Church of the Nazarene. Rev.

Samuel Childress the District Fla “ %vere announced president of the South West In- j night by the Navy,

diana Young peoples society will speak nightly at 7:30 beginning Wednesday and continuing through Sunday. Rev. Childress who is 29 years old, is the minister at the Nazarene church at Mt. Vernon, Ind. He is a successful youth worker, and will deal with many of the present

day problems of youth.

Baghdad Nations To Get U. S. Aid

Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Patterson have gone to Florida to spend- i several weeks.

Mr. and Mrs. John Boyd will leave tomorrow morning for a cruise through the West Indies Islands. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Mills, of

Armed Robbery Suspects Held

bridge; Marceline Molter, Fill- Spencer, are the parents of a son more; Elizabeth McClure, Green- bom Monday at the Putnam

castle; Dorothy Compton, Green- ; County Hospital. ! Officers meeting of Women of CARD OF THANKS i The Moose No - 138 Wednesday

We wish to express our sincere e ‘ venin K at the ■ Moose Hal1 - L,a

‘ dies please bring salad for refreshments after the meeting.

3KK>«E LODGE WILL

thanks and appreciation to our friends, relatives and neighbors for their help, kindness and sympathy shown to us at the death of our husband and father, Charles Gardner. We also wish to thank the Rev. Elgin T. Smith, the Odd Fellows Lodge, Masonic Lodge, Past Worthy' Matrons Club, the Rector F’uneral Home and the pallbearers for -J their kind and efficient services.

On Wednesday, January 29th, the Moose Lodge will hold a class

OONTER DEGREE WORK We al«o thank all who sent the

lovely floral offerings.

The highest temperature ported in the nation Monday was 1 78 — degrees at Thermal, Calif. 1 Lowest reported temperature today was 8 below zero, at Bis-

mark, N. D.

HUNTSVILLE, Mo. UP—Two Iowa men were held in Randolph County jail today on first degree robbery charges in connection with the armed robbery of a Moberly food market. Lavern Otto Kasemeier, Anamasa, Iowa, and Harold John Elder, Chariton, Iowa, both 21, waived preliminary hearings and were bound over to the February term of Randolph County Circuit

Court.

Kasemeier, married and the father of two children, served a sentence in the low'a Reformatory'. Elder, married and divorced and the father of one child,

record dating to

Glenn C. Skelton, boy’s counselor of the Greencastle high school, has been elected a member of the District Council of the Indiana State Teachers Col'-

J has a police

• 1952.

Mrs. Charles Gardner; Joseph ! 1<!ge Alumni Association.

Gardner, Mrs. Juliana Woody.

North Part Of State Has Snow

PICTURES BY APPOINTMENT ONLY NO NEED TO SIT IN LINE W ITH THE CHILDREN “FIDGETING” FOR LONG PERIODS OF TIME. YOUR PICTURES ARE TAKEN ON TIME W HEN YOU SAY. Patronize A LiH-al Photographer

RALPH TAYLOR PHOTOGRAPHY Prtvo Building Phone 1326-W

There are a few areas in the city which were not contactea by ; the Mothers March For Polio j Monday evening, due to illness | and bad weather. However, the ; March will continue this even-

ing.

Robert H. O’Hair left Monday 1 for Miami, Fla. Mr. O’Hair will be a pasenger on a schooner, | which will call at a number of the Bahama Islands .during the next two weeks. On the itiner-

New snow fluttered over Indi-

ana today and colder tempera-

i tures invaded .the state. At dawn it was snowing

! Fort Wayne, Goshen and in the Chicago and Cincinnati areas. | Five inches of snow lay on South i Bend, 4 inches on Goshen, an I inch on Fort Wayne and an im1 measurable trace on Indianapo-

lis.

The weatnerman said “occa-

ANKARA, Turkey (UP)—The military committee of the Baghdad Pact nations has adopted a NATO-ty’pe concept of defense bolstered by U. S. promises of military aid, American Hources

said today.

The military committee was making its formal report to a meeting of the ministers of the five member nations and to Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, sitting in on the crucial meeting as an official observer. The American sources said the military committee had adopted the NATO concept that a Communist attack on one member would be considered an attack on all, even though the pledge is not specifically written into the pact. And although the United States refuses to join the Baghdad Pact, Dulles’ promise of “mobile” military support greatly strengthened its position. The members of the pact are Britain, Iran, Iraq, Turkey and Pakistan. While the pact was meeting in Ankara’s new parliament building, the Turkish minister of interior formally accused Communist elements of being responsible for the bombing of U. S. Embassy property Sunday night. The ministry issued a communique shortly after police sources said 20 persons had been rounded up for questioning—two Lebanese, an Egyptian, a Yugoslav, five refugees of undertermined origin, and 11 Turks. American sources said Dulles slept through the entire action and did not learn of it until the next morning when Premier Adnlan Menderes formally expressed the Turkish government’s regret for the incident. Dulles pledge to military help

preparation of a summit by ambassadors or merely through diplomatic channels. Diplomatic sources said the United States also appeared reluctantly prepared to accept such a course cf action and sc

did France.

Moreover, the West’s earliei j demand fo? an advance goodwill | gesture from Moscow also appeared to be fading. . j The West’s terms at present centered, according to the sourc- j es, largely on an advance ar- i rangement of the agenda of the ; projected top level talks. The sources suggested that at any rate the West would not in- ! sist on “boo many pre-condi- j tions" for a meeting, to avert | the charge that it is anxious to avoid East-West talks.

Other witnesses charged that “goons" and "thugs” cracked down with brass knuckles and kicks in the groin on members who dared to question the way

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; axy will Ibe Andros, Great Ba- -sional light snow’ will fall today ; pact nations was the same

jhama and the capital

1 Nassau.

city of

“THE FACE OF SINGAPORE TODAY” BEAUTIFUL t'OLOR SLIDES — AUTOMATIC PROJECTION Including picture* taken during the last rioting in October when the Communist* made an all-out hid to take over control of the i

city.

-HEAR!ON ARY R. B. CA i’LR TO THIS FI

WEDNESDAY, JAN. 29TH

7 *30 P M

ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH

Rev. William *Davis,

of the Reelsville Methodist

VETERAN MISSIONARY R. B. CAVAXESS TELL

THE ANSWER TO THIS PROBLEM!

24 Martinsville street

rar} ITS?

How food fadd can fool you

—Wnfii

We don't mean there's anything wrong with eating yogurt and wheat germ and so on. They are fine, healthful foods. But here’s

the rub. Advocates of some food fads promise benefits that diet alone can’t deliver. Occasionally, someone with a medical problem will try to solve h by living mostly on cabbage juice or some such thing. Special foods and diets, however, hav e limitation—can be harmful when improperly used. So if you think there's anything wrong with you,

by all means see your pnysu. an.

£oan ^Pharmacy

the label of QUALITY. ACCURACY A.VD SERVICE

tonight and Wednesday on the i given earlier to the upper two-thirds of the state j NATO nations. The technical with “a few snow flurries” on the j difference is that the past nations minister southern portion. must first ask for help since the . ^ ^ : Temperatures dropped to low's u. S. is not a member.

Church that was damaged by fire | ,. anging from 25 at Lafayette to

Sunday' morning, announced that! all services of the church will be ' held at the Canaan Methodist : church until repairs are made.

The first service will be Sunday

at 9:30 A. M.

Word has been received here of the 'serious illness of Mrs. John H. Huffman of Klickitat, Washington. Mrs. Huffman suffered a stroke recently.’'She wiH be remembered here as Maude O’Hair of the Brick Chapel, neighborhood. Anyone wishing to write to her. the address is Klickitat,

Washington.

Pianist Glen Sherman of DePauw University will judge the piano division of the Indiana School Music Association’s auditions at Evansville College Saturday’. Feb. 1. A concert perform- : er and member of DePamv’s music faculty, he was selected last year as one of two judges for the national piano competi- ! tion in Philadelphia.

30 at Evansville during the night, j They were expected to remain at ! or slightly below freezing throughout the state today and Wednesday, dropping to the mid i

20s tonight.

The outlook for Thursday was “mostly cloudy and cold with ! light snow likely.’’

Summit Meeting Appears Certain

—-HAZLETT ELECTED

A plan of work for the coming year is being developed by the district which includes the incorporation of the soil conservation plans and practices on a large number of farms during the coming .Year. Also several j educational and promotional activities are being planned by • the district through it’s governing body, the board of supervisors. Any r farm owmer or operator I cf Putnam County with soil or | water conservation problems should contact the district office at 19E. Washington Street

The Student Council of Clay- ■ for technical advice and assist-

LONDON (UP) -Highly-plac-ed diplomats said today mount- ; mg- public pressure in Europe | has made a summit conference

this year “inevitable.”

They said there no longer is a ! question of w'hether there will be ; a heads-of-government meeting. The question now is how soon

and on what conditions. The western governments

have, step by step, whittl ;d dow'n i their terms for such a gathering. the diplomats said, and now are ; merely seeking an advance agreement on the agenda for a

j “summit” meeting.

The diplomats termed it a

Ike Requests Broad Authority

WASHINGTON (UP)—Congress went to work today on a request to give President Eisenhower broad powers in helping America’s allies beef up their atomic weapons arsenals. Proposals for relaxing “unduly r-estrictive” provisions of the Atomic Energy Secrets Act to share nuclear materials and weapon design information were sent to the Joint Congressional Atomic Energy Committee by Lewis L. Strauss, chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC). The committee scheduled hearings on the proposal to-

day. j

At the same time Defense Sec- j retary Neil H. McElroy opened | the door wider to seeking more missile and defense money. He said he “w'ouldn’t hesitate” to ; ask for more if the 40 billiondollar record peacetime defense j budget proves inadequate. It also was disclosed McElroy has no objection if military men | give Congress their personal •view's on th e state of the nation’s J defenses—even w'hen in conflict with Pentagon policy. He specified only that officers be truthful as members of the “Defense |

Department team.”

Presidential Press Secretary James C- Hagerty said Sunday military men should not be questioned about “policy” decisions by the President or defense secretary, such as spending, but should “carry them out.”

Other developments:

—Dr. Alan T. Waterman, head of the National Science Foundation, said mounting an all-out ef- ; for now to fly to the moon w’ould be “premature.” Much more re- | search is needed, he said, before ; Americans can talk seriously

; about space travel.

—Sen. Clinton P. Anderson, D-N. M., said the many-sided missile effort may “get completely out of hand” in consuming funds. He said by concentrating on fewer missiles “we could squeeze an aw'ful lot of money out of the missile pro-

gram.”

Senate Group To Hear Ex-Racketeer

| ton High School is sponsoring a Homecoming basketball game, i January 31. The game to be played in the Clayton Gym, will be against Monrovia. The C.H.S. uniformed band will present j half-time entertainment and a ’ sock hop will follow the game. All C H S. graduates and friends are urged to attend this game.

ance. George Murphy and J. Ear! Allen are employees of the Soil Conservation Service assigned to the local district to provide this technical assistance.

ANNIVERSARIES Birthdays Deborah Kay Call, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Call, R. R 2. 4 years old today, January 28. Wally Sieele, son of Mr. and Mrs. Julian Steele, eight years old today. Jan. 28. Mrs. Helen Fender. Greencastle R. 2. today, Jan. 28. Weddings Mr. and Mrs. James F. Green. , 2i yeans today.

17 So. Vino, OroomsHo OPEN WEDNESDAY AFTERNOONS

WASHINGTON (UP) — The Senate Rackets Committee

clear case of public pressure warmed up its witness chair toforcing a course of action on the d-y for Joseph S. (Joey) Fay, Western governments despite former bigtime East Coast labor skepticism by some leaders of the racketeer and one of Sing Sing usefulness of a rushed top-level prison’s most influential inmates, get-together. Fay, now on parole from an Pressure from public opinion extortion sentence, was expected on European governments—in- ‘o I .? called as probably the clieluding Britain—was in turn matic witness of the committee’s considered to be forcing the pace investigation of the allegedly vioof a reluctant United States in > lence-stained Operating E ndrawing closer to a heads-of- I gineers Union AFL-CIO. governments parley. It remained to be seen whether This authoritative appraisal ol ‘he 66-year-old former vice presithe West's position followec dent of the union would do any Communst Party Leader Nikita talking about the charges of fund Khrushchev’s renewed call foi misuse and personal abuse heapan urgent summit session over ed on him Monday, the weekend and latest reactior Members of Local 542 of Philafrom European capitals. delphia testified Fay ran their It cited mounting signs of a organization with a whip-hand Western “climbdown" reflected strengthened by bully boys frp\ in a progressive whittling down b-s Local 825 of Newark, N. J of Western terms for a summit Roy J. Underwood, who took parley. , over as president of Local 542 in The West at first firmly de- 1948 after Fay went to prison. I manded an advance gesture from estimated that up to four million Russia of good will and sincerity ! dollars “wa* put in the pockets of careful preparations of a of someone'' while Fay was trusmeeting through diplomatic ‘ee of the local, i rhamnela and a foreign miniatert Underwood alao testified that

MiL Thursday Only JANUARY 30TH FINAL ON DRESSES $2.00 and $3.00 Values to SI6.98 Rayon Panties, pair 59c Or Two Pairs for $1.00

I SHOP AND SAVE AT OUIK CHEK SUP1R MARKET Carter Franklin And Locust

“I LIKE THE 1VENING SHOPPING HOURS, THE FREE PARKING, AND THE SPECIAL SALE PRICES THEY OFFER--•• Plus Red Holden Stamps

WITH EACH Kk FUKC IIASi;

PURE PORK

FRESH

Ground Beef3 Lbs Sliced Bacon u> FOLGIR’S -• Drip., Reg., Fine Grinds Coffee Lb. Tin 87

PURE CANE

Bag 4‘/

DAUNTLESS

big 46 oz. can

Grange Juice

AAilnotStallcansSO

DAUNTLESS

FruitCocl(tail3"o2V2cans

GOLDEN RIPE

Bananas 2l^ 29 c

U. S. NO. I

Potatoes 10 ^49'