The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 23 September 1963 — Page 2

"rsncii Differences Wish Western Alliance May Become More Evident

PARIS UPI — French differencc with the United States and the \\ ostern alliance may bet ome more evicK nt in the ne r future, political observers said today. They drew their cnnctusioas from the final visit here this week. !k1 of K.»nrrtti Aih*»i+»»t*r as t (tcmian chancellor and a bif.t r alt ck. by implication, on the l aitod States from Piemier Geor.-ea Pnnimdou. Athnauer will retire next mont a and turn the Bonn government over to Vice Chancel! r L.'h A r E hjirj \ Vith lhe S7 . yen*-old chancel! ir will go his strong pro-De Gaulle policies, ob ervers predicted. K: hard was expected to sh ft the W ■ t German policy more ido-v> in Ifhe with TV. slUngton^s ^ ua how the Western allian< * ..oald be operated to gain maxi urn strength.

Adenauer relumed to Bonn Sunday as Pompidou was telling a meeting of the deputies of the Gaullist Union for the New Republic UNit party that foreign powers were trying “to make France a satellite.” He did not accuse the United States bv name when lie defended De Gaulle’s independent nuclear policy. But observes said there was no mistaking his target when he hit at those “w h o want us to give up our deterrent, claiming it a useless toy.” ST! DIRS f\ ll.i.IXOfS KANKAKEE. Illinois Danny O Neal, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry O’Neal, d03 W. Jacob, Greeno stle. Indiana, has enrolled as a freshman in Olivet Naz rene College according to an announcement made by Norman Moore. Dhector of Admissions.

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TODAY’S BIBLE THOUGHT I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ. Romans 1:16. Character is revealed in the things of which we re ashamed.

ftVr*oiRal And Local News Brief*

Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Benson. Bainbridge, wishes to announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Andrea, to Lloyd Max Wertz. Parents of the prospective bridegroom are Mr. ami Mrs. Wayne Riddle, 6039 Colonial Ave., Indianapolis. Miss Benson is a 63 graduate of Bainbridge. Her fiance graduated from Russellville, class of 61.

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Cub Sports Calendar Monday: Greencastle B footfall team plays Crawfordsville here at 6:30 p. m. i— country track team vs. Cloverdale here at 4:30 p. m. Thursday: Greencastle 8th and 9th grade football team plays Martinsville there 5:30 p. m. Friday: Van Buren Invitational Cross Country, there at 4:00 p. m. Friday: Greencastle varsity* football team plays Plainfield here at 8:00 p. m. Football Queen will be crowned during the half.

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Russell O. Clapp, candidate for mayor on the Republican ticket is shown handing a s ice of water melon to Delmer Whitted at the Republican Watermelon Feast held recently . t Robe-Amt Parte. Mr. Whitted, who is past 90 years old, was the oldest person there. Other candidates who heloed serve were left to right, Chester L. Grimes, Councilman 1st V.,irl: Maynard Shonkwiler, City Clerk-Treasurer; Lawrence W. Crump, City Judge; Robert B. Eppclheimer. Councilman 4th Ward; Robert Jackson, Councilman for 3rd Ward; Robert Poor, Councilman 2nd Ward and Ernest H. Collins, Councilman-At-Large.

Delta Zeta Alumnae will meet Wednesday at 8:00 p.m. ^t the sorority house. V. F. VV. Ladies Auxiliary will meet Wednesday at 8:00 pan. at the Post Home. There will be a regular meeting of Bethel No. 78, tonight at 7:00 p.m. at the Masonic Temple. A son was born Saturday at the Putnam County* Hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Lewis of Greencastle. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Harlan, of Amo, became the parents of a son Saturday at the Putnam County Hospital. The regular meeting of the American Legion Auxiliary will be held at 8:00 p.m. tonight at the Post Home. The W’est Madison Home Demonstration Club will meet Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. with Mrs. Wilma Evens. A daughter was born Sunday at the Putnam County Hospit d to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Whaley of Coatesville Route 1 Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Warren, of Bainbridge. are the parents of a son born Saturday at the Putnam County Hospital. Reservations for the Putnam County Historical Society must be in by Tuesday, Sept. 24th. For them, call Mrs. William Boatright. Paul Gibbs, 52, Cloverdale Route 1, is in the Putnam County jail awaiting a court appearance on a charge of non-support of minor children. Thomas D. Nelson, 16, Greencastle Route 4. was arrested at 10:20 Saturday night by City Officer Russell Rogers on a charge of reckless driving on Ind. 240. Putnamville WSCS will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. with Mrs. Reggie Glover. Mrs. Walter Williams will be assisting ho - less. Program leaders is Mrs. Jerry Ridgeway. There will be a dessert Wednesday at 7:00 p.m. at the home of Mrs Willard Sunkel for members of Chapter I-PEO. Mrs. L. H. Turk is chairman of arrangements. There will be a business meeting following the dessert. Jim Albin, member of the Bittnbridge Cross Country track team came in 4th place, in the Bainbridge, Greencastle, Spencer and Belle Union track meet held last week. Jim is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Albin Jr.

and went against Prophetstown. Several battles occurred on the Great Lakes, but Gen. Andrew Jackson finished this war of independence on January 8, 1815 in the Battle of New Or-

leans.

At that time people thought that the church was too far gone to ever be revived, but pioneer preachers moved into Logan County, Kentucky and Cane Ridge, Kentucky and began revivals.. Rev Peter Cartright preached in a Methodist Church in southern Indiana. This movement was called the second awakening. League of Women \ i.ters To Meet School Reorganization will be the ni-dn topic of the first meeting of the League of Women Voters, to be held Wednesday evening, 8:00 p.m., at Charterhouse. Mrs. John Ricketts, member of the school board of the Greencastle Consolidated Schools will give a brief report on plans for the new northeast elementary school. A panel of Le igue members. Mrs. Clem Williams, Mrs. Ned MacPhail, Mrs. James Hughes, and Mrs. Robert Weiss will review the law and the history of reorganization in Putnam County. Members of the present county committee have been invited to ■ttend, and the chairman, Mr. William Padgett, plans to make a statement to the meeting. The League of Women Voters is a nonpartisan organization whose purpose is to promote politic il responsibility through informed and active participation of citizens in government. It is open to all women of voting age Anyone interested in becoming a member should get in touch with the membership chairman, Mrs. Sam Kirk.

punch cost D«Pamv i t s season football opener, 20-13, at Illinois Wesleyan Saturday. DePauw will attempt to bounce back here this weekend in its league opener with Evansville, 15-14 upset winner over highly regarded South Illinois. Wesleyan quartet back, V i c Armstrong, riddled DePauw’s pass defense the entire first half. He hit 10 of 18 passes in the first 30 minutes; one 22-yard connection gave the Titans their first TD in the first five minutes. A 15-yard penalty on DePauw set up the second IW touchdown midway in the second quarter. Armstrong ran eight yards for this counter. Both extra points were added by Bob Lawry. A third Wesleyan touchdown was averted as the half ended as Ted Crouch intercepted one of Armstrong’s passes in t h e DePauw end zone. On the same play junior fullback Bill Alcott was kicked in the eye. The cut required five stitches at halftime. Alcott came back strong, fortunately, in the second half as DePauw quit passing completely and stuck with line smashes. It was Alcott who did most of the ball carrying in a 65-yard drive that ended with DePauws first touchdown two plays before the third quarter conluded. Mackey scored on a one-yard plunge but Dick Dean's kick was wide. The score read Wesleyan 14, DePauw

6.

After Wesleyan was forced to punt on the next series, DePauw took over on its own 35. Sticking to the ground, the Tigers drove to the Wesleyan 46-yard line, where sophomore fullback Tod Eberle broke off left tackle for the touchdown. Dean’s kick was good this time and DePauw trailed 14-13 with 9:52 to play. Moments later DePauw had the ball again after recovering its own kickoff on the Wesleyan 42. But Wesleyan held after DePauw drove to the 35. Two more DePauw efforts were frustrated in the last five minutes when fumbles were lost on its own 20 and 25. The second bobble set up reserve Titan quarterback Tom Mercer’s sixyard run with eight seconds left on the clock. The extra point was wide.

CORNERSTONE RITES SPEAKER

Dr. Claude M. McClure prepares to deliver cornerstone laying address at Christian Horne Saturday.

Sheriff Kenneth Knauer is shown talking to Clay Bettis ai the Democrat Chicken Barbecue held Saturday night at the Fair Grounds.

Some important information for every man who will need a new truck within the next 12 months

GROUP ATTENDING CORNERSTONE CEREMONY SATURDAY

Many attended the cornerstune lay at the Christian Home.

Let's be clothes friends. Old Reliable White Cleaners. Entertain With Noon Luncheon The Greencastle Chapter, Daughters of 1812 entertained the State Society September 21 with a noon luncheon at Old Trail Inn. Five members of the Wisconsin State Society were guests along with members and guests from Indianapolis. After Mrs. Frank Schafer, president, introduced the guests, she presented Jacque Schafer and Joyce Brown, who delightfully entertained us with songs which were *1 accompanied by Mrs. Glen Williams. A special guest was Rev. John Howard of Clinton who gave an interesting and detailed account of the War of 1812 in the Northj west Territory. This territory j was organized in 1800 with William Henry Harrison as governor with headquarters in Vtncen nes. Several treaties were made with the Indians, but they finM ally decided to be pushed no far- | ther north than near Lafayette, | so in 1812 with Capt. Zackary - Taylor, William Clark and Gen. Hopkins, the army moved north

Mrs. Heaney Hostess Tj Ncedleeraft Club The Needlecraft Club met with Mrs. Paul Heaney Friday evening with good attendance. The meeting opened with the pledge to the flag which was followed by the club song. Since Mrs. Jesse Duell, president, is moving to Indianapolis, next month, this was her list time to preside, for which the members are extremely sorry. She has served in an excellent way for almost two years. All signed a card to be sent to Mrs. Ted Robbins, who is ill and could not be the hostess as she had intended. The Fifth District Convention was announced to be held, October 16th at the First Christian Church, registration begining at 9:00 a. m. Reservations for the luncheon should be sent to Mrs. Grafton Longden, Jr. by Saturday before the convention. Federated Clubs should be electing their delegates, two for the first ten members, one being the president of the club. One for each additional ten club members and one for a major fraction over twenty. The club paid their dues to the county and to the district as these should be in before November 1st. The musical pennies go to Miss Carrie Pierce, music chairman and the art pennies go to Mrs. D. O. Tate of Bainbridge. The club held a very remunerative auction of various articles with Mrs. Ernest Mugg as the auctioneer. There was much enthusiasm and fun enjoyed by all. During the social hour, delicious refreshments were served by Mrs. Heaney and assistants-

New Chevrolets are a lot more truck than your money bought the last time. Here are some of the things that have been done to give you more value for practically the same investment

Double-wall construction. This feature of Chevrolet cabs and the Fleetside pickup body has two advantages. Insulation and sound-deadening material is sandwiched between the two layers of steel in the cab to give you more comfort; in the body, the inner wall acts as a buffer against load damage, preserving the outer appearance of the truck. Suspension to fit the truck. You get a much better ride in every size Chevrolet truck today than you used to. Conventional half-and three-quarter-ton models have independent front suspension with variable pitch coils in the rear. Variable pitch coils do not “bottom out’’ as readily. Mediums and heavies have I-beam suspension with variable-rate leaf springs. This variable-rate leaf-type suspension automatically stiffens as the load increases — and vice versa. It means a smoother, flatter ride regardless of load, a btrtter handling truck. The right engine. Chevrolet has been building truck engines since 1918 but never has it been in better position to give you the type and size you need for maximum efficiency. Today there are many different capacities of gasoline and diesel Chevrolet truck engines—fours, sixes, YiS's. Stronger frames. Every conventional 1964 Chevrolet truck has a ladder-type frame. Formerly used on heavier trucks only, this type is more resilient, better able to give with the load and terrain, to stand up

under stress. Its simple design also makes it easier to mount special bodies on the truck. Its riveted side rails are stronger. Greater model selection. This time you’re going to find it a simple matter to pick the exact type of Chevrolet truck for the kind of work you do. In delivery trucks, for instance, in addition to regular panels and pickups, we have eleven different sizes of ready-made w*alk-in vans, some with fullwidth rear doors. There are also the Corvair 95 vans with the air-cooled engine in the rear. And the Corvair 95 Rampside with its exclusive side-loading feature. These trucks have more power this year. In the medium- and heavy-duty area there are stakes, tilt cabs, low-cab-forward models and cab-and-chassis units to suit almost any requirement—including school bus bodies of up to 66-passenger capacity. Dump truck operators now can order a Chevrolet tandem with either gasoline or diesel power. Quality and value. Chevrolets today are a lot more truck than your money bought the last time, and yet the price tag is just about the same as 5 or 6 years ago. Call your Chevrolet Dealer for information or for a demonstration.

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Tigers Bow To Illinois Wesleyan A fierce first half passing bombardment and failure io generate a consistent offensive

1964 CHEVROLET TRUCKS Telephone your Chevrolet dealer about any type of truck

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GREENCASTLE, IND.

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