The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 3 September 1963 — Page 2
Dance Studio REOPENS FOR FALL REGISTRATION Pre-school babies, children, teenagers and adults. Beginners, intermediate and advanced. CLASSES FOR ALL AGES. Tap, Acrobatic, Ballet, Character, Modern Jazz, Ballroom and Exhibitional Ballroom. DORIS HINKLE SCHOOL OF DANCE
NO. 4 IIANNA COI RT
PHONE OL 3-6743
Charter >leinl>er of N.A.O.A.A.
THE uaiLY dannER TI ES.. SEPT. 3. liMHi. Pace 2 G KEEN CASTLE, INDIANA
Kappa Ije'ta Pi. night at 7:J0 p.m. Service Room.s.
xlll meet tcin the Public
LHESTOCK MARKUS ^ itA loe.n Hogs 12.000; barrows and gilts. buslness stil! stains much of its weak to 25 lower; 200-230 lb. 17- ori fr in 11 character of “the poor
THE DAILY BANNER
and
HERALD CONSOLIDATED
17 S. Jackson St. Greencastle, 1ml.
Entered in the Post Office at Greencastle, Indiana, as Second Class Mail matter under Act of
March 7. 1878,
Subscription Prices Home Delivery 85c per week Mailed in Putnam County
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Crousore .00- 17.25
spent Sunday and Monday with their son-in-law Clair Williams and family in Fort Wayne.
The Veronica Club will meet
STRIKE AT GARY
GARY UPI — A wildcat strike of the United Steel Workers to-
Wednesday, 2:00 p.m. with Mrs. threatened to close down the L. W. Vancleave. Mrs. Raymond bu ^ e Gary works of the United
Nelson, will have the program. ^ lat es Steel Corp. Greencastle World War 1 Bar- STOTT IS CANDIDATE
racks and Auxiliary will meet EDINGTON, UPI —L. RusFriday at 7:30 pm. at the Legion Russell Stott, president of the
man's bank.' 1 Many associations are in small or medium-sized communities where there is only one association which serves as the primary source of mortgage credit for the entire area such as the Greencastle Ravings and Loan Association. The local association has assets of 57,500,000 with 7 officers and employees and about 2.600 individual sav-
ings accounts.
The primary function of the
BANNER ADS GET RESULTS
Orville Hill is a patient in Gen-
$7.00 per year eral where he is taking physical
Outside of Putnam County therapy treatment. His room
$8.00 per year number is: B-3 General Hospital Outside of Indiana Indianapolis.
$12.00 per Year
West Floyd Club will meet Wednesday Sept. 11th with Mrs. Ezra Arnold instead of Mrs. Mitchell Kelly. The shower for Mrs. Shirley Whitley has been postponed. There will be election of officers at this meeting. Mem-
bers please be present.
TODAY’S BIBLE THOUGHT The just shall live by faith.—
Galatians 3:11.
To live by faith Is to say “there are no unknowns, for God knows and He has it all planned,” There is no sounder basis for
successful living.
How to succeed in business without even trying ...
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Personal And Local News Briefs
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Mrs. Cleo Fulford entered the Putnam County Hospital Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Campbell, of Danville, are the parents of a daughter born Monday at the Putnam County Hospital. A meeting will be held for the purpose or organizing a Covered Bridge Association for Indiana. It will be held on Sunday, Sept. 8th, at 2 p.m.; place. Charles E. Comingore, U.S. 231, Parkersburg. The Thursday Reading Club will meet Thurs., Sept. 5th with Isabelle Smith. Everyone meet at Josephine Godwins for transportation. Leona Tuttle is the Leader and Elizabeth McCullough will have the gift.
Home. Dessert will be furnished. Indiana Civil Defense Directors Association, announced during savings and loan association, of the weekend his candidacy for course, is to provide a safe and the Republican nomination for profitable depository for the lieutenant governor of Indiana in public’s, savings and to provide
credit for families seeking to own
their homes. It is in this field of SAVINGS & LOAN' housing investment that the inabout $11 billion a year and re- dustry nfakes Its most dramatic payments on outstanding mort- contribution to our national prosgages flow in at about the same perity, and it is here that the rate. High dividend rates and true significance of its SI00 bilthe strong safety record of sav- lion assets comes into focus, ings and loan associations are The S100 billion is constantly major factors behind their con- turning o\er into new housing intinuing expansion. The industry vestments as. old loans are re-
The V oung Mothers Study pays over $3 billion a year to p iired and new' savings flow in Club will meet at the home of its savers and 95 percent of all providing jobs not only in conMrs. Joyce Braden Sept. 11 at its assets are held by institutions struction buf in hundreds of other 7:30 p.m. Please notice change w-hose savings accounts are in- related fields, in meeting place and date. Please sured by the Federal Savings and The 5,000,000 postwar homes know your blood type at this Loan Insurance Corporation—an built 07, Savings and loan financmeeting and bring a baked arti- agency of the Federal Govern- in^ tor example, represented a
ment. Furthermore, nine out of Contribution of S227 billion to the every ten associations are “Vhu- gross national product during the tuals, owned entirely by their 18-year period: they provided the savers. equivalent of a full year’s work Despite its remarkable postwar for 4.750.000 on site construc-
tion worker* and for another 8,-350-000 employees in the manufacturing industries which produce the materials and equipment that go into American
homes.
Many of the nation’s major industries depend heavily for their continued productivity on housing and the flow of mortgage credit which savings and loan associations provide for new
housing.
The 5,000,000 postwar houses., for example, required over 10 million tons of steel, 23.5 billion bricks, 49 billion board feet of lumber. 50 million kitchen cabinets, 100 million gallons of paint, and almost uncountable quanti-
ties of other products that reach into every segment of the American economy. The accumulation of $100 billion by the savers who hold accounts in savings and loan associations, consequently, represents a powerful anti-recession bulwark for the entire nation. “It is safe to say,” said Ernest H. Collins, president of the Greencastle Savings and Loan Association,” that American prosperity since World War II has rested to a substantial degree on housing and that the continued strength of the savings and loan industry Is essential to the maintaining of that prosperity-
cle for the Bake Exchange.
The annual No. 10 School reunion of Washington township, Putnam Co. will be held at the Croy’s Creek church Sept. 8th. There will be a pitch in dinner at noon followed by a program. All former teachers, pupils and friends are urged to be present. The Football picnic at RobeAnn Park was well attended. Coach Chance gave a nice talk. The Football Mothers had elec-^ tion of officers: Mrs. Howaj’d Biackney, president; Mrs. Chester Coan, vice president.; Laverne Sanford. Secretary; Mrs. E. H.
Billingsley, Treasurer,
Ideal drycleaning when the ordinary won’t do. Old Reliable White Cleaners.
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Eine fit is such a gentle thing Here's why you can he sure when we fit your youngsterin JUMP/NG-JACKS’ Truly fine fit... the kind of fit tender, pliable young feet need ... is not just a size, but the result of many things. * Perhaps it is best summed up as the result of great care and caring on the part of everyone concerned with your children’s shoes. f Great care... and caring... in the designing of lasts and patterns... in the selection of materials... in the development of more modern constructions... in workmanship involving tolerances to small fractions of an inch ... in choosing and fitting a particular shoe to a particular foot. When you see the Jumping Jacks label, you can be very sure of one thing: there are many, many people behind it who are not just designing, making and fitting shoes but who also care a great deal about your children’s feet. It makes a noticeable difference. $i.9S to $8.50 Moore's Shoe Store West Side of The Square
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“ESCAPES" THROUGH IRON CURTAIN—Awaiting return to his parents, Peter Eichhorn, 2, from Mupperg, Thuringia, East Germany, is held by a nurse at an orphanage in Coburg, West Germany. Found on the Western side of the border dividing Germany, the child apparently had toddled across a heavily mined area and through baibed wire barriers without Injury. (Radiovhoto)
HOW FAST CAN YOU READ THIS? (Test yourself at end)
Wy |
I
Instructed by modern techniques and devices, Bill Carmack, front row, wearing white sweater, reads at
rate of 10,000 words per minute.
Can a boy who was reading She believes, for example, 280 words a minute so improve that with the combination of
himself that wdthin the course of a single term he brings his rate up to the astonishing speed of 10,000 words a
minute?
Is it possible to read a history book in school at 5,000 words a minute and still have 80 per cent comprehension? Would it take you five seconds to peruse 1,000 words as William Carmack, newly graduated from South Hills High School in Pittsburgh, has done on camera ? He would read this piece of approximately 400 words in about two seconds, yemembering all salient pointy Young Carmack, a crack varsity swimmer and co-cap-tain of his team, is an augury df things to come in American education for both young men and women, according to his Neacher, Miss Elsie Murphy.
proper approaches and scientific techniques, there will be people scanning at the rate of 20,000 words a minute in the
not-too-distant future.
Her prize pupil, Bill Carmack, plans to eventually become a Professor of Scouting in Boy Scout Camps —■ undoubtedly, he will be the fastest reader of Boy Scout
manuals of all time.
He will be seen demonstrating his skill, incidentally, on “An Experiment In Excellence”, an NBC-TV program scheduled for Thursday, September 19, from 10 to 11 p.m., ET. The program, sponsored by the Gulf Oil Corporation, shows how the skills of the traditional teacher must blend with modem scientific devices
to produce the outstanding
American student of tomorrow.
NOW TEST YOURSELF
In blank spaces in each of the following sentences, fill in the word or words which correctly complete the sentence. Count five points for each. Total: 20. . , , , X. Bill Carmack was reading 280 words a minute before he was
able to average words a minute.
2. Carmack is not only brilliant in speed but is a swimmer and
of his team.
S. Miss Elsie M. Murphy, Carmack’s teacher, believes that people will be scanning at the rate of - in
not-so-distant future.
4, Young Carmack will demonstrate his skill on “An Expertn»«j>t In Excellence” over NBC-TV on —. -s
part of a broad study of education.
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U. S. GREATEST CIVIL RIGHTS DEMONSTRATION—Ending the greatest civil rights march In U. S. history, down Constitution Avenue in Washington, D. C., an estimated 210,000 Negroes and whites gathered quietly in front of the Lincoln Memorial (top), walked from the debris-littered scene (center), and left the capital by train (lower), plane and bus.
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