The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 4 October 1963 — Page 2

Dodgers Make If 2 Straight Wins NEW YORK UPI The Los Angeles Dodgers made it two straight victories over the New York Yankees in the World Series yesterday when they downed the American League champions. 4-1, behind the seven hit pitching of Johnny Podres ami Ron Perranoski.

third until the ninth He struck out four in posting the fourth series win of his career. The Dodger* jumped off against first-time series starter A1 Downing for two runs In the first inning and made it 3-0 in the fourth when Bill Skowron homered into the right field stands. Willie Davis' double and a triple by Tommy Davis added the fourth run in the eighth.

A crowd of 66.455 at Yankee Stadium saw Podres shut out the Yankees for- 8 1-3 innings before Hector Lopez doubled with one out in the ninth. Manager Walt Alston promptly called in relief ace Ron Perranoski. who was greeted by a single by Alston Howard, scoring a run. but then got Joe Pepitone to hit into a Three play and Clete Boyer to strike out. Podres. who shut out theYankees in the final game of the 1955 »Yorld Series <o give the Dodgers their only championship while in Brooklyn, did not allow a Yankee baserunner to reach

Arrested By FBI CHICAGO DPI The son of a national Democratic political figine was arrested in Loa Angeles by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and charged with possession of _-oun‘sr'eit securitfek. The FBI said win L. Arvcy, 44, son of Cm lacob M Arvey, Illinois national Democratic committeeman, was taken into custody at a hotel in Beverly Hills. M. W. Johnson, agent in charge of the Chicago FBI office, sa<d the younger Arvey. also w a s i barged with interstate transportation of $500,000 worth of the fraudulent securities.

DANCE SAT.. OCT. 5th

Jchn Wood Combo American Legion Post No. 58 Dancing Every Saturday

DANCE VFW POST 1550 Friday, October 4th 9:00 P. M. By popular demand Return Engagement of Clarence Daugherty and His Men cf Melody Featuring the Hammond Organ MEMBERSHIP DRIVE SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6th, 9:00 A. M.

600K FUL-O-PEP CATTLE FEEDS NOW Don’t Second Guess the Future Bock your fall and winter feed needs now, for delivery when you want it. Protect yourself with Fu!-0-Pep quality at one low agreed-upon price. All Ful-O-Pep Cattle feeds are included in this booking. Prices in effect until November 10, 1963. STOP IN OR GIVE VS A < ALL CHARLES P. RADY

Kuachdaie. Indiana

Phone 596-3151

’ SPECIAL NOTICE The office of the late DR. GEORGE T. TENNIS will remain open through October 19th, 1963 for the further convenience of all former patients to complete the transfer of medical records and for payment of all accounts. Hours will be 9:00 A.M. to 12:00 Noon and 2:00 P.M. to 4:30 P.M., Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday. 9:00 A.M. to 12:00 Noon, Wednesday and Saturday.

THE DAILY BANNER FKL. <>< T. i, IMS. Pag* t GREENCASTLE. INDIANA THE DAILY BANNER and HERALD CONSOLIDATED 17 S. Jackson St. Greencastle, I ml. Entered in the Post Office at <1 reencastle. Indiana, as Second ( lass .Mail matter under Act of March 7. 1878. Subscription Prices linine Delivery 35c |kt week .Mailed in Putnam County $7.00 per year Outside of Putnam County $8.00 per year Outside of Indiana $12.00 per year

TODAY’S BIBLE THOUGHT Come now, and let us reason together; saith the Lord: though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they be red like crimson, they shall be as wool. Isaiah 1:18. The exercise of reason cannot help but lead to realization of the holiness of the Creator and the fallibility of man. Personal And Local News Briefs

Susie Clark Photo by Kenny Clark Susie Clark of Bainbridge High School has been selected to represent Bainbridge for the D. A. R. good citizenship award.

WINS CHAMPIONSHIP Competing against 5 other Conference teams, (Roachdale, North Salem, Pittsboro, Granville Wells, and Dover) our Cross Country team won the Conference Championship last Friday afternoon. Roachdale was the closest contender.

WATER HEATER!

Approved Safe "Quick Recovery" Electric Water Heaters Purchased by our Customers for their present homes NOW INSTALLED FREE

•> ' 1} For Full Information, Call'Tour Dealer, Plumber or, PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY

The Monday Chib will meet with Mrs. W. O. Griffith on Monday, October 7. Brother Charles McGhee will preach at Long Branch Church of Christ at 11 a.m. Sunday. Visitors welcome. The Brick Chapel Home Demonstration club will meet Tuesday 1:30 p. m. October 8th with Mrs. Theodore Bock. A son was born Thursday at the Putnam County Hospital to Mr. and Mrs. James W. Weatherman of Clayton Route 1. The Putnam County Hospital Sewing guild will meet Tuesday 9:30 a.m. in the Nurses Home basement. Bring sack lunch. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Mendenhall. of Fillmore Route 1. are the parents of a son born Thursday at the Putnam County Hospital Fortnightly club will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Building. Catherine Toole and Mary Frances Cooper will be hostesses. Cloverdale Hurst-Collins Post. No. 281 American Legion will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. All members are urged to be present. Important meeting. Our community Club will meet at the home of Mrs. Jack Anderson, on Wed., O c t. 9 at 1 p.m. weai- or bring something you w ore 10 years ago. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Thomas, of Santa Susanna, California, are visiting Mrs. Thomas brothers, Haskel Rice of Greencastle and Percy Rice of Bainbridge. Putnam County Democratic Woman's Club will meet Monday, Oct. 7 at 7:30 p.m. in Democratic Headquarters at 21 S. Indiana. There will be special guest speakers. Miss Clarice Bemis has been named to the nursing department of General Hospital in Indianapolis. Miss Bemis was former director of nursing at the Putnam County Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Cowgil attended the Central Indiana Chapter of Cystic Fibrosis meeting held Wednesday night, at the Student Union Building in the Medical Center, Indianapolis. Richard D. Neese has been granted an absolute divorce from Shirley Ann Neese. William L. McClellan was attorney for plaintiff, Mr. Neese. and Frank G. Stoessel was attorney for Mrs. Neese. Church Services continue at Deer Creek Primitive Baptist Church tonight at 7 p.m. Saturday Morning at 10:30, Saturday evening at 7 p. m.. Sunday morning at 10:30. Communion services Sunday with basket dinner at noon. This is the 140th anniversary of the church. Everybody welcome. An accident Thursday involving a parked 1962 Ford belonging to Glendon Rightsell of Reelsville and a 1961 Chrysler driven by Bobby Leon Trail, 27, was reported by city police. Police said the mishap occurred at Vine and Washington streets. Damage was estimated at $100 to the Rightsell car and $50 to the Chrysler. The Greencastle Township fire truck made a run to Fillmore Thursday morning to extinguish trash which was ablaze and spread over the highway. Apparently a garbage truck owned by William Parrish caught fire as he was traveling along the road. In order to save the truck he dumped the trash on the road. Firemen report that the wooden truck rack was burned and that the road was slightly pitted. Lester Haltom and Walter Floyd made the run.

Mrs. Eric Boesen. president of Jones P.T.A. and Mrs. Charles Poe, room mother chairman attended the Indiana Congress of Parents and Teachers, Regional Conference Oct. 3. 1963 at Hoover school in Crawfordsville, Ind. Many new ideas and information was the business of this conference.

End closet clutter: Use our storage — Old Reliable White Cleaners.

Racial Situation Remains Tense The possibility of renewed massive racial demonstrations hung over Birmingham today, but Negro leaders in another Alabama city foresaw a lessening of racial tensions because of a court vic-

tory.

Demonstrations at Salem, about 80 miles south of Birmingham, were expected to end because of the federal court decision Thursday enjoining local voting officials from “discriminatory practices.” Negro leaders said the demonstrations at Salem, which have resulted in the arrest of hundreds of Negroes in recent weeks, probably would end because Negroes have achieved their objective. But at bomb-plagued Birmingham the situation remained tense. Dr. Martin Luther King announced plans Thursday to return to the steel center to begin mobilization of the Negro community for possible new anti-segregation marches. City officials have threatened to arrest King if he begins a campaign such as the one which brought scores of arrests in demonstrations broken up by police dogs and fire hoses last spring. A biracial community affairs committee named by the Birmingham City Council meets this afternoon in an effort to splve the city’s racial problems.

wucii tic uairveu tu Jf his hideout Thursday. “We are the last chance for Algeria to get on the path to democracy," he said. “For that, we are ready to sacrifice everything.” Russ Pick Team For Moon Flight HAVANA UPI — Soviet spacewoman Valentina Tereshkova said Thursday night Russia already has chosen its team for a moon flight and is studying the problem of travel to oth :r planets. She did not say how soon Russia expects to achieve these goals. In a television interview, Miss Tereshkova said the Russians hope soon to be able to effect a rendezvous between two spaceships in orbit an essential preliminary to interplanetary travel. She said the Soviet plan for space travel envisions the launching of a manned spaceship, followed into orbit by a rocket-pro-pelled fuel tank at which the manned ship could refuel before heading into deep space. Miss Tereshkova said Russian experts believe this procedure is essential for travel to other planets. She did not indicate whether they plan to use this technique also for an attempted moonshot. She said the Russian moon team is headed by Maj. Yuri Gagarin, Russia’s first man in orbit, and that she also is a mem-

ber.

Her own orbital flight was intended to determine whether women react to the conditions of space flight better or worse than men She did not say what conclusions were reached. GOLF ON GARBAGE NEW YORK UPI oince 1935, Brooklyn, N. Y., with a population of 3 million, has had only one golf course, but it recently added a second built on garbage. The new Marine Park course, according to Golf Digest magazine, is built on land reclaimed by use of the city’s waste deposited on the links site over the

put 80 ihe price of the course's 270 acres isn’t garbage, though. It's valued at $10 million.

PRETTY MOIST NEW YORK UPI It's stylish to be wet with raincoat acces-

sories.

Two examples from the National Notion Association: ruin bonnets covered with elegant lace and rain kerchiefs covered with fine dotted nylon tulle. All waterproof, of course. HIGHER BRAC KET NEW YORK UPI—A total of 38,000 U. S. women have annual incomes of excess of $25,000 So reports a new woman’s magazine (Realm), which in a survey also found that 190.000 working women have five figure annual incomes. SHINING EXAMPLE NEW YORK UPI-Both copper and brass need hot suds and hot rinse water to keep them shiny. Home economists suggest trying a littllel ammonia in water to remove stains or corroded spots from a copper piece. Or, after washing and drying the piece, rub the spots with lemon and salt, and then wash again. FREEZER-TABLE NEW YORK UPI— Instead of just sitting around and being cold, at least one freezer now serves as a table, reports Electrical Merchandising Week. The chest-type freezer has a hinged formica-covered table top which overhangs the freezer by 10 inches or three sides and lifts up to open the freezer.

Tigers To Play At Bali State DePauw’s football Tigers travel to Muncie tomorrow for an Indiana Collegiate Conference encounter with Ball State. DePauw enters the game with an unblemished 1-0 slate in the league while the hosts are 0-1. This will be the twenty-second meeting of the two schools on the gridiron, where DePauw holds a 12-8-1 advantage. The Tigers defeated Ball State a year ago 7-6 in Greencastle on an extra ponit kick and turned the trick, 10-£ ;l’ 1961 on a

field eoal.

Despite then setback last Saturday at Butler, the Cardinals are decided favorites to knock off DePauw. The Tigers wore Evansville down, 19-7, last week but will find the depth of Ball State much more difficult to

ercome. Head Coach Tomm? font expressed concern over the 3all State running attack and has been working hard all week to find a defensive setup that can check the Cardinals on the ground. Mont will depend -.1 Bill Alcott and Doug Weir to move the ball under quarterback Bruce Mackey’s direction and hopes that his line, which came to life last Saturday, can come through with another outstanding effort. GETTINGER was introduced by Kiwanian K. W. Harris. Guest included Walter Russell, I-V Coach line official, F. L. O'Hair, president of Central National bank, George Murphey of the local soil service Eric Boesen, president of the local Wabash Valley Chapter, John Foxen, Marvin Williams, Richard Stark. Don Graham, and Pat Aikman.

TAKE ABREATIIER CROWN POINT, Ind., UPI — Approximately 20 per cent of all home accidents happen in the kitchen, and fatigue is a major cause, says Minerva Partin, a county extension agent. When you're dog-tired things go wrong, she said, because your hands tend to fumble, your feet trip over things, you are less alert and your eyes fail to see potential dangers. At such times five or 10 minutes of relaxation will make you a safer worker, she advised.

BACK TO REPORT TO PRESIDENT Ending a factfinding mission to Viet Nam. Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara (left) and Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, talk to newsmen at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., before leaving for Washington, D. C.. to report to President Kennedy.

■I

OPEN FOR BUSINESS We cordially imite the motoring public to visit us any time .... COMPLETE SERVICE for your car Lubrication Oil change Tire service Washing Polishing GAS for LESS DEEP ROCK

BLOOMINGTON ST. mmmmmmrmmmmmm

Landing ship leaves the main space ship for descent to Mars. The space ship will orbit Ihe planet for five days while two of the four-man crew explore.

After a stay on Mars, the two-man mission blasts off for rendezvous with the space ship. They abandon their small ferry capsule in Martian orbit.

Tribesmen Reject Ben Bella Offer ALGIERS UPI—Berber mountain fighters \\ ho have rebelled against President Ahmed Ben Bella’s one-man rule rejected his offer of negiotiations to end their uprising today and began building up their defenses. They moved armor plate and barbed wire to their hideouts in the Kabylia Mountains 60 miles east of Algiers. Rebel trucks moved freely within the area, although Ben Bella’s troops have cut it off from the rest of Algeria. There has been no bloodshed since the uprising started Sunday. and B^n Bella, in a speech after receiving emergency powers to deal with it Thursday said “any problems must be discussed within the party and not in the mountains with hands on submachine guns.” But the military leader of the insurgents, 65-year-old Col. Mohand Ou El Hadj, was defiant

TRIP TO MARS DURING 1970s POSSIBLE—Nuclear and chemical propulsion systems already in the planning stages should make manned space flight to Mars possible during the 1970s, Thomas F. Widmer, General Electric nuclear spacecraft expert from Valley Forge, Pa., told a meeting of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics in Palo Alto. Calif. A mission to Mars would take approximately 15 months and require a nuclear rocket of 139,000 jatonnas thrust. The nhotos were made of

REELSVILLE LION’S FISH FRY SAT., OCT. 5th 6:00 P. M. Fun -- Food -- Prizes

LAUNDERAMA 611 SOUTH JACKSON

COSA NOSTRA RITUAL—Joseph Valachi, the lifer who is telling the Senate Investigations Subcommittee about organized crime, demonstrates in Washington a secret rite of Cosa Nostra. He said he was given a piece of paper (upper) and burned it, passing it from hand to hand (lower) while repeating in Italian, “This is the way I bum if I expose this organization." He’s exposing it.

NOTICE Are You Registered to Vote If you voted in either, or both, the Primary and General Election of 1962 and have net moved you are registered. If you have moved sines that time, you should transfer your registraficn to the proper precinct. Deadline for Registration for the City Election is MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1963 If you need to be registered Call Oliver 3-6064 between the hours of 9 to 12 or I to 4 P. M. Democratic Central Committee