The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 5 March 1958 — Page 2
I
Hi DAiiT' bANNfcS caku«ktha>k»
MAR. 5, 1958. Pa?** 2
CiRKKNCAMLE. IND. ! friends, neighbors and Erector —^ | and Riirger Constraction empk y^
Band To Give
Concer. Friday
DePauw University’s concert band will featine both classical] and contemporary works during ] a student convocation here Fri-!
day morning.
Appearing under the baton of Prof. Dan H. Hannas, diretcor of University bands, the 65-piece. musical organization will begin ! its program at 10 o’clock in Me- |
harry Hall.
Amo-,? the selections will be ■ Fillmore’s march, “The Pre?i- j dents,” “King Stephen Over- : ture" by Beethoven, and “Solflogy and Pi nee” by the Ai ;ri can composer, James Niblock. Other programmed works include “Marinuzzi’s “Calzer Cam-
Cake” by • ! Harry Ai-
minxster lor m
J Paul Evans, t
pallbearers ar Rector and all our recent ber Gerald Ashi
Mr. and ^Trs. Ken and family; Mr. a Borders; Mr. and Cooper and family Wm. Ashworth an Lav Ashworther.
consoling woros, e organist, the I Mr. *»nd Mrs. who assisted in
vement.
orth and family;
eth Ashworth d Mrs. Daniel Mrs. Leonard Mr. and Mrs. ! Mr. and Mrs.
P-
f Iht UAILT bAINNtK
and
HERALD CONSOLfDATEC ! Entered in the postoffice at ; Greencastle, Indiana as second flass mail matter under act of March 7, 1878. Subscription 1 price 25 cents per week, S5.i*0 ! per yeir by mail in Putnam
COMMITTEE KEPOHT
A Curriculum Steering Comrhittee was appointed by the administration during the 1956-57 school year to make a study of the direction that the Greencastle Consolidated Schools should move in terms of Curriculum Evaluation and Improvement. The Steering Committee, which
U. S. Atomic Sub Sets New Record
County, $6.00 to $10.40 per year is composed of Martha McMams, outside Putnam County ) Meryl Eggers, Muriel R'ockliill. S. R. Rariden, Publisher i Carl Hurst, Madonna O'Hair,
Reese Hammond, A1 Nowak, the
PORTLAND. England (UP)— U. S. Navy's atomic-powered submarine Skate arrived at this British navy base today, completing a record-breaking underwater crossing of the Atlantic Ocean. The Skate left Groton, Conn. Feb. 24 for Portland on the first
ofe; sor H’.nna
peetm ‘Garin Ralph Hermanr. ford’s ‘The Purph On March 18 I
and the student musicians ■wall undertake a one-day tour fur concert appearance in Kankak e and Tuscola, 111., and Morocco,
Ind.
UNABLE TO PAY
BONN, Germany UP— West ' Germany is unable to meet U. S. I demands for a further $77,500.- | 000 payment for American troop ! support costs in the 1957-58 fis- | cal year, the Finance Minstry • said today. The United States j 1 asked for 155 million dollars ori; nnlly to support U. S. troops in Germany. West Germrny paid half the amount .ast spring, and in recent months has been trying to reach a settlement with T ‘ S. officials on the other half. ' Finance Ministry said today there is no money in the budget
to meet the demands.
17-19 South Jackson Street
Telephone 74, 95 ! Building Principals and the! leg of a European shakedown 1
] Superintendent of Schools have cruise. It arrived here at 3:45! j met several time during the past a. m. EST after a voyage of 3.- ;
j nine months to plan a program 161 mile**.
j for continuous study and in- The he i ef t behind will be j provement in the field of cur- waiting in London for Tom Harrieulum from kindergarten r jg- an> one of the civilian techni-
for its third recent group of 40 State Police cars at a total cost of $<33,320. Cobum Chevrolet. IndianapoI lis, was low bidder at that price, or $1,583 per vehicle. Nine auto agencies in all submitted bids to the State Purchasing Depart-
ment.
The state bought two other groups of 40 patrol cars recently and planned to buy more in the next two weeks. The cars they replace will be sold at auction.
TODAY’S BIBLE THOUGHT ■"Klreate in me a clean 'heart. God. Ps. 51:10. Then you will be free from profound regrets.
Personal And Local News Briefs
CARD OF THANKS
W* wish to express our hea felt thanks and appreciation to 1 our friends, neighbors an tda-( tires for tne messages of sym-, patby, lovely floral offerings and all acts of !• miners extended to us at the time of the loss of our dear husband, father and
brother.
TWO DEAD IN ( RASH
The Knoll Family.
PENSACOLA, Fla. (UP) —A
Marine flight instructor and his Navy student were kil'ed Tues!day when their T-28 jet trainer i plane crashed near Evergreen, ' Ala. The Navy identified the victims as Marine Lt. David Bruce Majiorney, 25, of Hartford City, Ind., and student Emr Richard
E. Cossitt of Atlanta, Ga.
through the 12th grade.
The first phase of the program was to make a study of Science and Health by establishing com-mittee-study and evaluation in each grade in the elementary and high school. The past two weeks have seen many individuals meetings to discuss the general areas ot Science and Health. The discussions have centered around
Ivan R. Miller had major surgery Friday. His is getting along fine. He is in the Methodist Hospital. Indianapolis in room B-218. Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Heath ome spent Sunday at Boswell, Indiana, with Rev. and Mrs.
Loren Hetrick. Mrs. Hetrick is j
,, , , . * ! to make a science program more the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. i ,
J complete, available supplemen-
' , T , „ , , tary material and recommenda-
Mrs. John Gough of J
cians who made the voyage. Of the total distance covered by the Skate on the crossing. 2.828 miles were made beneath the sea and only 333 on the surface. The submerged time was 176
hours or 7 1-3 days.
Thomas J. Harrigan, holder of one of the pioneering jobs in atomic submarines, is aboard as a trouble-shooter for the Electric
present science material being Boat Division of General Dynam- p., ren . ^ used, techniques important in ics which has built the only three stimulating the Science Program, fission subs now in operation. His suggestions for additional units ; assignment is to see that the or areas which should be covered | company carries out its part of
ANNIVERSARIES
Birthday
Jackie Gene Miller, 8 years old, j March 5th, .son of Mr. and Mrs. !
Kenneth Miller, Fillmore.
Weddings
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hendrix, j 47 years today.
classrooms would encircle
Rvm.
Townspeople at ending
meeting signed tne petition and ! said it would be circulated in the | township and then forwarded to
! the tax board.
Putnam Native Dies In Montana Funeral services were held
Monday in Missoula. Montana, |
for Elmer Flint, 85. a native of
j Putnam County who passed a-
way Saturday in a Missoula hos-
pital following an extended ill-;
ness.
He was born in Floyd Township. the son of George and | Sarah L^m lint. He lived in * this community until he grew to j manhood and then went to Mon- ; tana where he married and became the father of two sons and I two daughters. He had been in failing health for the past few !
years.
Local survivors include a sister. Mrs. Alma Quinton; a sister-
the - The deceased-was a .membeT of the Christian Church in Mis*! thelscala. • \
STAG FRIDAY, MARCH 7TH 8 O'Clot*' ''II ? FRE! FOOD FREE AMERICAN LEGION POST HO. 53 GrecncasHe, Ind.
Mr. and
Roachdale entertained Mr. and Mrs. Millard Gough and children with a chicken supper Friday evening in honor of Willard Gough’s birthday. Mrs. L. W T . Crump is in Valley Forge, Pa., staying with the children of Lt. Col. and Mrs. Robbins, while Mrs. Robbins is in the hospital, and Col. Robbins is in San Antonio, Texas, taking spec-
ial training.
The Thursday Reading club
tions for improvement.
The teaching staff is well aware that curriculum improvement must be a continuous process year after year. Future plans will bring into focus an intensive study of many other
Students Want New Gymnasium WASHINGTON Ind. (UP) —
of striking students of ! j n -]aw, Mrs. Thomas Flint, and j fusing to work these days. Their Barr Twp., school voted Tuesday several nieces and nephews. His, apparent strike leader is a mon-
Bainbridge Club Enjoys Meeting The Bainbridge Homemakers club held their February meeting at the home of Pat Houser. The president. Mildred Marten brought the meering to order with 11 members answering the roll call of naming who you had your first date with. It was voted to give a donation to the Red
Cross.
In closing the meeting everyone joined in sing a song. Refreshments wme served to: Mistress Betty MinrHok. Louise Lents and son, Jo Ann Bartley and son, Mildred Marten. Mary Evans, Francis Major and son, Garnet Huffman and daughter, Verna Davis assisting hostess. Pat Houser and son hostess. The next meeting will he held Man h 20 at Betty Lambermont. RED INFLUENCE? TOKYO iUP) Six monkeys trained to “operate” a miniature railway at the Ueno Zoo are re-
the bargain and to direct whatever corrections the builder is responsible for until the Navy approves final acceptance. Harrigan boarded Skate Feb. 24 at Groton, Conn. He lives in nearby Montville with his wife, Kathleen, and their three children, Tom, Mike, and Neil Patrick. “See you in London, March 5,” he called as Mrs. Harrigan bade
bon voyage. And
areas of the curriculum during
each school year in the future, j him a cheery
I so he will. Three days later Mrs. Harrigan
LADD OFFICER PROMOTED
BEFORE TRANSFER, OKLA. i left the children with his mother. Col. Richard R. Hurst, the sil-; climbed aboard a plane in New
will meet Friday March 7th with j ver leaves of a Lieutenant York and flew to Ireland. She
a pitch-in dinner at 6:30 p. m. in j Colonel still with the shine of ; Cork
the Savings & Loan Room. Meat) newness on his uniform, left' will be furnished by the club. Lad d AFB by highway last FriMembers bring articles for the day with his wife and son, Ricky, white elephant contest. -t° r a new assignment. The Goverdale P. T. A. will I His > promotion was an early
y 7
. n?
STYLE PLUS AT Troyers PLAYMATES; The Solid and The Stripe Brighter interchangeable* under the sun - - - - sun-orange or black cotton chinos, worn with a brave array of stripes. The solids: pedal pushers $6 98; narrow skirt $7.98; sleeveless shirt. $4 98. Not shown are capri pants $7.98 and Jamaica shorts $5.98. And the never-more-fashionable additive stripes; Ivy-League blazer, $10.98; and alternate sleeveless shirt. $4.98. All, by Cambridge Casuals, sizes 10 to 16.
meet Monday evening at 7:30 p. m. This will be the music program with the Junior Band givin the entertainment. All parents and friends are invited to attend. Support your local P. T. A. officers, Castle Toppers Koine Demonstration club will meet Wednesday March 5th at 7:30 p. m. at the home of Mrs. Alva Wood,, Indianapolis Road. Roll call will be a small kitchen utensil. Mildred Cassady will be present to give the lesson. Mrs. Fred Fold of Bainbridge, who.has been eonvalescening at the home of her brother, Don Cully in Indianapolis, suffered a ba k injury in a fall last w r eek. Any of her friends caring to send a word of cheer may write to 432 N. Grant Ave., Indianapolis,
Indiana.
The IBM Club made another donation to the Handicap Children of Putnam County. Lester Sw r earingen the club president, presented a $200.00 check to Edgar Steele, president of the Parents Organization. The presentation took place in the office of Larry Brant at IBM. Mr. and Mrs. Harley Hedge will leave on Friday for Malden. Mo., for a visit of several days with their son, Lt. Richard Hedge, and Mrs. Hedge, at the Malden Air Base. They will be accompanied by Mrs. Hedge’s sister, Mrs. C. G. Hall, and Mr. Hall of Cleveland, Ohio. —BANK DINNER more inflation and said there is great need of a training program as the help turn-over is enormous in the profession. He appricated the friendly comradeship with the First-Citizens and believes there is a sound future for banking in Putnam County..
RECITAL TONIGHT DePamv University’s Aeolian Trio will be heard in a music school-sponsored recital here tonight. beginning at 8:15 in the Student Union ballroom. Open to the public without charge, the program will include Loeillet’s Sonata in G Major, Ten Variations, Op 121, by Beethoven, and Walter Piston’s Trio.
NEWS OF BOYS FORT BENNING, Ga.. Pvt. Richard F. Maroney, whose wife, Joyce, lives in Greencastle, is scheduled to depart from Fort Benning, Ga.. this month for Europe under “Operation Gyroscope”, the Army’s unit ratation plan. Maroney is a member of the 3rd Infantry Division which is replacing the 10th Infantry Div. in Germany. The 22-year-old soldier is a Cam Jesder in Company A of the division’s 38th Infantry. He en-
Christmas gift, presented at the quarters of Col. Postford A. Loiselle, 4th AAA group commander, and pinned on the new lieutentant colonel by his wife, Fran, as Lt. Col., Paul Morris, 4th AAA group executive officer ; read the department of the Army promotion ol der at a dinner par-
ty.
Entering the Army in 1941, Colonel Hurst attended Officer Candidate school in 1942. He served with the Americal division in the Pacific during World War II, returning to the States and to civilian life in 1945. He v/as an auto dealer in Rensselaer, Indiana until he re-entexed the Army in 1954. Colonel Hurst was an. instructor at the Artillery School Communication department and at- ! tended artillery officers advance ] course prior to his arrival in Alaska in 1955. While at Ladd, Col. and Mrs. j Hurst wer e very active in many | projects, Colonel Hurst was a , member of the Ladd Youth Council and was in charge of Little | League Baseball last year. Mrs. Hurst was president of the Ladd Officers Wives club at the time of their rotation still having a short time to seive in that capacitja She and the Colonel w r ere at one time active in the duplicate bridge club dn the base. Colonel Hurst has been assigned to the Oklahoma Military district, 1101 Broadway, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, where he is a military advisor at the Lincoln Park Reserve Officer center— Jessen’s Weekly, Fairbanks, Alaska.
She flies to London today w r here she will meet her husband as promised and they will go on
for a brief fling in Paris.
That over, Mrs. Harrigan will fly back to Connecticut and the husband will rejoin Skate for the
remainder of the cruise.
He will be back home March
31. i
Harrigan,, 29, has followed the construction from keel cradle to the sea, and Skate has been in his charge constantly since she started sea trials last October and passed them with flying col-
ors in less than two months.
State Auditor Issues Denial
night to circulate a petition ask- j ing the State Tax Board to modi- ( fy a ruling and permit them to add a gymnasium to their new i
school.
Their children have been at- 1 tending classes in the Washing- i ton National Guard Armory since ! fire a year ago destroyed their old school building at Montgom- | ery, six miles from here. Townspeople learned that the tax board unofficially failed to approve a plan to construct a $475,000 building on grounds that a 1957 law r prohibits the use of state funds for school gymnasium construction. When word of the ruling reached here Tuesday, it set off a demonstration by students. They abandoned classes and marched down the town's main street with banners saying ‘We want our own school” and “What’s happened to education.” The petition asks the boar d to permit Ban- Twp., to use the $160,000 of insurance money “to 1 construct any part of the build- ! ing deemed necessary.” There | was no mention of the proposed > 1,800-seat gym, but it was understood that the money would be used for that puipose if ap- ; proved by the board. Plans for the school include i t* 16 gym, >13 classrooms and ; rooms for band practice, home economics and agricultural j courses and a cafeteria. The i plans are laid out so that the
wife preceded him in death five
years ago.
key named Jiro - an import from
Communist China.
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Mrs. Goslin Hostess To Roachdale Club The Roachdale Home Demonstration Chib met with Mrs. James Goslin. March 1st., with Mrs. Bernice Chastain and Mrs. Elsie Thompson agisting. The meeting was opened by the president, Mrs. Goslin. The history of the club song was given by Mrs. Bufford Blaydes who also led the members in the song. A safety lesson was read by Mrs. Letha O’Conner. Mrs. Albert McFerran gave a paper on citizenship. The constitution was read by Mrs. Nona Grantham.
INDIANAPOLIS UP — State Auditor Roy Combs denied today he made any statements about a barge trip to New Orleans that ! might “antagnoize” people below the Mason-Dixon line. He replied to a demand from Derral Byers, secretary of the Rockport Junior Chamber of Commerce, that Combs make a “public apology” because of published statements attributed to
him.
Combs is cnairman of the Indiana Lincoln Sesquicentermial Commission, which will help spnsor a barge trip along the same route taken by Lincoln, as part of Indiana’s 1959 observance of the 150th anniversary of Lincoln’s birth. Byers said the Jaycees at Rockport were “very upset and we expect an apology from Mr. Combs.” He said the trip was a Jaycee idea in the first place, noi the Commission’s. “It w-as meant to be a good wall trip through the South, and also to publicize our Lincoln pioneer village,” Byers said. “We feel Combs has done a great deal of harm to the trip.” A newspaper story said Combs “isn’t fearful of any organized Confederate assault, but of renegades from the ranks of segregationists" who might take “pot shots” at the passing barge. Byers said unless the statements are “retracted” the people of the South “might be antagonized.” Combs said the question of being shot at w’as not even brought up in a commission meeting Monday, preceding the story. "I made
Mrs. Goslin gave a lesson on the
use of tube paint and malting no statement like that al al, he
your own patterns. She closed the lesson with a contest on sew-
ing, which was won by Mrs. Letha O'Conner. Mrs. Jesse Ford explained the new* point system of the club which the member
voted to accept.
Mrs. Nona Grantham gave the secretary* andt reasurer’s report, secretary and treasurer’s report which was answered by nineteen members and one guest, Mrs.
John Leatoiu
The next meeting is to be with Mrs. Letha O’Conner with Mrs j Hazel Blaydes end Mr* Nathan j
said.
Combs said Byera was rignt that the idea was hatched by ; “Rockport people," not the commission. ‘We’re not taking credit for it,” he said. “I couldn’t apologize for something I didn't say,” Combs said “But I’m very sorry Byera got the wrong idea.” Combs said he would telephone Byers and straighten the matter
; out.
j tered the Army in August 1957. , Call assisting.
BUY* POLICE CARS INDIANAPOLIS (UP)—Indiana awarded contraets Tussday
of ttHwiitg ummbfm foz mml
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