The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 September 1958 — Page 3
LORD'S LA DIRS LF-AGI'E Hrpf# > mfHT '24th. lft.%8 oan's 9 3
BUWWH It •orr'.m br Bladder W«aknes4’' <Gettln* Cp .ViphU or B»'! 'W'rtUn*. too fre-flur-r.t, burnln* or ttchins ortnotlom. 0*con(UrT B*rt»ch» ind Nrrvousnru. or Strong Srr*:t1n«. Cloudr Urln«. <iue to common K.dn»y ond Bladder Irritations, try CYSTEX for quick help 8»fc for ronnc and old Aak drugclat for CYSTEX. Bee how fast you improve.
nevrolet-Buick 8 4 O.v; Cafe 6 6 Quik Chek 6 6 Roachdale Electric 6 6 Putnam Loan 6 6 Mac's Applitnces 4 8 Poffs Gift Shop 2 10 High Indiv.dual Game: Brattain 201. High Individual Series: Brattain 507.
I SHOP AND SAVE AT QUIK E SUPER MARKET Corner Franklin And Locust
Ol l l.K EXPIRES OCT. 2ND jm&ssssm* -
5 Lbs. i|c-I0 Lbs.
U. S. K0. I
Pofutoes io ^ 31
KENTUCKY BEAUTY
Pork - Beans
can
BREAD 2 4e I. 37c
FOLGERS
COFFEE
lb.
73
“ALL GRINDS”
CUT-UP
FRYFR r x& i £jii
US. l! ’-
ALL-MEAT
BOLOGNA BEER AND WiNE TO GO SHH..MY ClfiARETTES BY CiSTSH PAVED FREE PARKING AREA
High Te^.m Game: Coan’s 765 High Team Series: Goan’s 2164 .Over 425: Brattain 507; Buis 468 D. Braden 454; Cantonwine 448; Domasco 445; Wallers 442; D. Beaman 440.
HIGH COURT BACKS LITTLE ROCK NEGROES
KITES RIGHTS CANNOT p,F SACRIFICED OR YIELDED TO VIOLENCE WASHINGTON UPI-The Supreme Court said today that the constitution .1 rights of Negro pupils cannot be “sacrificed or yielded to the violence and disorder" which have occurred in Arkansas. The tribun Ts views were se* f ort v r n for^na’ opinion follow ing up its Sent. 12 decision unanimously rejecting a plea by the I ttle Pork School Board to delay further school integration. Chief Justice Eirl Warren read the court’s formal opinion to a sparsely filled court room. The session ended the special August term of court to consider whether the Little Rock School Board could delay integration at Central High School for 2U years “One may well sympathize with the position of the board in the face of the frustrating conditions which hive vonfrented it.” the opinion said. “But, regardless of the board’s good faith, the actions of the other state agencies responsible for those conditions compel us to reject the board’s legal position. The court referred specifically to the actions of Gov. Orval FT. Faubus and the state legislature. “The controlling legal principles are plain," the opinion said. “The command of the 14th Amend is that no ‘state’ shall deny to any person within its jurisduction the equal protection of the laws.” “A state acts by its legislative, its executive or its judicial authorities. It can act in no other way. The constitutional provision, therefore, must mean that no agency of the state, or of the officers or agents by whom its powers are exerted, shall deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equ 1 protection of the laws. "Whoever, by virtue of public position under a state govern ment .... denies or takes away the equal protection of the laws, violates the constitutional inhibition; and as he acts in the name and for the state, and is clothed with the state’s power, his act is htat of the state. This must be so iaf the constitutional prohibition has no meaning”. Cease Fire Ruled Out For Quemoy TAIPEI UPI—President Chiang Kai-shek today ruled out a cease fire for Quemoy, and it appeared the Chinese Commun sts would deliver their war-or-peace stand by Wednesday, the Communists’ national day. Communist Premier Chou Enlai set the stage for such a declaration Sunday night when he declaied the United States faced “disaster" if it did not stop its "war provocations” in the Formosa Strait. P.ussia echoed the pronouncement. Many observers felt the dateconscious Chinese Communis s would choose Oct. 1, the 10th anniversary of the founding of the Red lepublic. for impoitant military action or a key declaration Thus far the Communists have n't fully made known their intentions. Chiang. at one of his rare
THE DAflY BA MFI MON., SEPT. 29. 1058. Page 3 GREKNl A > PLE, IND press conferences, said the Nationalists reserved the right to bomb the mainland if Quemoy is hreatened seriously. He said the ct on would be carried out with ar without American support but expressed conviction the U ited States would support
HEAD GRAFTED ON—This photo and caption come from Russian sources In Moscow. It shows the German shepherd dog on which surgeon Vladimir Demikhov grafted the head and front paws of a puppy. Both heads are reported to be drinking In the photo. The experiment is part of a research project, the ultimate purpose of which is to transplant diseased human organs. (Radiophoto/
INTEGRATION VICTIM — Billy Gene Smith, 15. lies on a bed in a faint after telling reporters in Little Rock, Ark., he and Jimmy Overton, 15, were attacked by a gang of 15 or 16 Negroes from Dunbar Junior High schooh He said the attackers swung shoes with football cleats. The Dunbar principsl said his students’ version was a lot different from that.
COED—At 82, Mrs. Elsie Koepke goes through some of the literature in course she ts taking at New York university. She says work is the secret of yowfis She has 16 grandchildren and great grandchildren.
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A LOWER GRADE Seventh g»nde pupils o! closed Venable Elementary school in Charlottesville, Va.. get the (all term underway m Payment ot a private home. Teacher ts Mrs. Janies A. LcJirh- oiitlinm*; uuik on the biacnboaid. Th.ie are other ’’home "classroomsmCharlottesville.
A PICTURE HERSELF — French painter Poucette makes quite • picture herself as she sits with some of her paintings on A Las Vesraa. Nov, poolside.
him. | Chiang said Nationalist China would make no concessions at Warsaw’ or the United Nations and said “Quemoy is not a pawm for international bargaining." He said Quemoy had endured five weeks of bombardment but woudl not endure it forever. “When the crucial time comes.” he said, “there are no restrictions on our taking the right of self defense and bombing bases on the mainland.” He said the Nationalists hoped for aerial and naval support they are now receiving from the United States “plus moral and material support."
Harmony Returns To Indiana GOP
INDIANAPOLIS UPI—A sem j blance of harmony has returned to the Indiana Republic partv. il j •as disclosed today as GOP lead- i e r s v/el coined Vice-President Richard M. Nixon to the state. Sen. Homer E. Capehart said that Governor Handley. h : s ar^h enemy, had asked his a.id in his campaign for senator and that Capehart had agreed to help the governor. “A week ago Sunday.’’ Capehart said, ‘ the governor called on me at my hotel in Indianapolis and asked me to help h m by talking with his campaign Voders. The governor stayed an hour. “Then, at the governor’s reouest I met with State Chairman 1 Robert W. Matthews; Lisle Wal- * lare, the governor’s campajgr manager, and Wm Anderson, th governor’s secretary.” Nixon arrives this afternoon bplane from Washington to keynote the Hoosier GOP electjo’ - campaign at a fund-rajsing banquet tonight which costs diner’' SI 00 apiece. Capehart’s aid had been shun red previously, but he had made 38 speaking engagements on hir own, according to the senator. Former Gov. Ralph F. Gates GOP na*ional committeeman also appan^ntly has been drawn back into the fold a 'ter many .month? of neglect by Handley leaders He is slated to introduce a num ber of celebrities at the Nixon banquet tonight. The appeals from the Handley leaders to their former factional enemies came after a number of polls had shown the governor was slipping in his senatorial bid. Previously, the Handley chVfs had circulated word that Capehart was to be defeated in any reelection bid that may come in 1962.
ACCUSES HA^ajLLi MARTINSVILLE. Ind. UPI—A top rural electric cooperation official accused Governor Handle}’ of conniving with the federal government to destroy the Hoosier co-ops in a speech here Saturday night. Clyde T. Ellis, Washington, general manager of the National Rural Electric Cooperative Assn., charged that Handley sent "Indiana politicians-turned-lobbyists," including the Public Service Commission. to Washington to oppose REA generation and transmission loans. Ellis said the governor and the PSC obtained a "secret, unwriten order” irom the administration drastically cutting the REA's pow’er to frant and approve loans to co-ops. Tills labeled the alleged order a “master plan” for the destruction of the nation's rural electric cooperatives. He told an annual meeting of the Morgan County REMC the administration’s "sly blueprint" resulted in downgrading the REA under a “watchdog" agricultural committee. He warned that if the administration’s policy is carried far enough, it will mean tne enu oi ihe nation’s bou eiectric co-ops. WHITE-WAY LEAGUE September 23rd, 1958 Mullins Drug Store 9 3 Home Laundry 8 4.... Alleynes Beauty Shop 8 4 Moore’s Shoes 6 6 Starr Radio & TV 5'/j 6^ Renies Beauty Salon .... 5 7 Hubers Plumbing 4 1 -. TVs Fenwicks Garage 2 10 High Individual Game: 168. High Individual Series: S. Domasco 437.
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Having described in court h:s precarious financial situation and how he has to sleep on the floor o fhis $75,COO nouywcoc home, Mickey Hargitay and wife, Jayne Mansfield sit on their pallet riage, said he owes $4,000 on Jayne’s engagement ring. $3,C00 on studying drawings of hoped-for furnishings. Hargitay, a:going against increased support payments for a child by a former marh s Cadillac, and that he had to fire the gaidcner. READ IKE DAILY DANNER ADS
Philip and Sandra Jo get license. Lindsay In court HAPPINESS AND TROUBLE came on the same day for two of the Crosby brothers, Philip, 24. and Lindsay, 20, sons of Bing, nee Harry Lillis. Philip got a marriage license with showgirl Sandra Jo Drummond, 20, In Las Vegas, Nev. Meanwhile, back In Hollywood Lindsay was in court pleading Innocent to a drunk driving charge growing out of an accident which occurred Sept IL Officers said h# failed a sobriety test after hia car struck a parked car. Bail, |253, trial OqL 20.
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Where Did This Shopping Trip Start? F ike so many of tke most successful shopp ng ex^ed'tions hereabouts, this one started with a careful s.udy of the advertising calumnc of The D?.i’y Banner. o That way, the shopper got a quick, city-wide pr?v*ew of who v as of ei**ng v hat for sale . .. a c; for how much. G Thus, without wrrt: rro i n r r l~s> of tVc. she was able t^ make a bee-line for the stores that had what she wanted to buy at the prices she wanted to pay. Advcrtisn^ in The Daily Banner is a " two-way street/’ For the shonper, it’s a time-saving shortcut to the best values in town. For the advertiser, it’s m ef.ec/ve se! ing shorl-cut Lo his n s; re pensive market.
THE DAILY BANNER “NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING SERVES EVERYuNE ’
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