The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 7 October 1963 — Page 1
THE DAILY BANNER
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VOLUME SEVENTY-ONE
WEATHER—Partly Cloudy; Cooler GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1963.
UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL SERVICE
NO. 303
11 More Killed In Traffic; State Toll For Year Is 974
Three multiple-fatality accidents pushed Indiana's weekend traffic toll to at least 11 and the statewide count for 1963 to 974 compared with 895 a year ago. Isaac Pillow, 74, Calhoun, Ky., died in a Linton hospital Sunday night and his wife, Annie, 70, died early today as the result of injuries in a two-car head-on collision near Solsberry Sunday. Six other persons remained hospitalized, some in serious condition. Police said Pillow apparently disregarded a stop sign at the intersection of Indiana 45 and Indiana 54 near the Crane Naval Ammunition Depot. Irene Comer, 62, Elkhart, was killed in a two-car wreck at a street intersection on Ga ry's west side Sunday night when a car witnesses said ran a red light hit one operated by Sidney Collins, 36, Gary. Robert Short, 18, Fountaintown, and his brother, Larry Gene. 16, were killed when another car brushed against their convertible on U.S. 52 southeast of Indianapolis. Marion County officials arrested A. P. Smith, 34, Indianapolis, on a reckless homicide charge. Ivan Perry, 21, Attica, and Herman Burkett, 39, New Ross, were killed in a headon collision on U.S. 41 north of Sterling in Fountain City. Joseph Kinley, 30, Anderson, died of injuries suffered in a twocar crash on Indiana 67 near Muncie. Wendell Carpenter. 57, Bronson, Mich., died in ParkviewHospital at Fort Wayne of injuries he suffered in a car-truck crash Saturday on U.S. 27 north of Angola. Lionel Tyra, 19, Tipton, was killed Saturday night when his auto hit a tree in downtown Tipton. The first weekend fatality was Sidney Miller, 18, Cedar Lake, who died when a car carrying five teen-age boys home from a football game struck a tree.
In Alaska
14 Yankee Explorers Are Missing CHIHUAHUA, Mexico UPI — An aerial search resumed today for 14 U. S. adventures and three Mexican rescuers feared lost and starving along a treach erous, swollen Sierra Madres
River.
A search plane Sunday spotted three deserted rubber rafts along the Rio Urrique that the expedition had used, but no survivors w-ere sighted. An airplane and helicopter were sent out today. “I am confident they will be found,” said James C. Dean, 31,
Proclamation for National Business Womens Week
Whereas
working women constitute 24.5 million of the Nation's working force, and are constantly striving to serve their communities, their states and their nation in civic and cultural pro-
grams, and Whereas
a major goal of business and professional women is to help create better conditions for men and women through the study of social, educational, economic and political problems; to help them be of greater service to their community; to promote “full partnership'' in all phases of daily living; to further friendship with women throughout the world, and
Whereas
all of us are proud of their leadership in many fields of en- the court house on Monday and deavor, and their acceptance of “THE RESPONSIBILITY OF rw v e FULL PARTNERSHIP,” lue.sday, <JA. i-8. NOW, THEREFORE, I, RAYMOND S. FISHER, Mayor of the Meeting at 8:30 a.m. Monday, City of Grecncastle, Indiana by the authority vested in me, do the board went over the followhereby proclaim October 6 through 12, 1963 as j n g budgets: County Unit, Clin-
63 Budgets Kennedy Signs Studied By p apm Rat|fymg
Atomic Test Ban
Tax Board Proposed budgets, levies and rates for next year of all the taxing units in Putnam County are being studied by the State Board of Tax Commissioners at
Include 3 Townships
NATIONAL BUSINESS WOMEN’S WEEK
ton Township, Cloverdale Town-
Putnam County’s school organization committee has asked the
state commission for counsel and treaty.
ahead and
WASHINGTON UPI — President Kennedy today signs documents to complete U.S. ratification of the nuclear treaty ban. The U. S. Senate voted 80 to 19 on Sept. 24 to ratify the
Kennedy planed to sign four
draw up a county plan including CO p ies 0 f the ratification docu-
sponsored by the National Federation of Business and Profession- .. al Women’s Clubs, Inc., and urge all citizens in Greencastle, and shl P> Floyd Township, Bambndge was a( j vise( j ~ 0 all civic and fraternal groups, all educational associations, all Civil Town, Franklin Township, news media and other community organizations to encourage and At 1:30 p.m. Monday, the
promote the celebration of the achievements of all business and agenda included Cloverdale Jackson - Jennings and Taylor ent—one each of Moscow and ! of Salt Lake City, a party mem- and^tuml'devetonment^ ContnbUte dHlly to ° Ur econ,jmic - civic Civil Town, Greencastle Town- Tw P«- of Owen County and Clov- London, one for formal “des-poit”
By RAYMOND S. FISHER ship, Jackson Township, Clover- erdale in line with a court order in Washington and another to be
John T. Mayhall, a 1959 graduate of DePauw University, received his D.D.S., degree from Indiana University School of Dentistry on June 3 and accepted an appointment as Senior Dental Surgeon with the U. S. Department of Public Health. He and his wife, Melinda Fuller a 1960 graduate of DePauw, left Indianapolis, July 15 for their assignment on the Pribilof Is-
lands.
Upon their arrival on St. Paul Island. August 12, they have had some very interesting experiences. They have assisted the
ber who stumbled out of the desolate country Friday and told of
his companions’ plight.
The semi-scientific group ran short of food when their rubber rafts got into deadly rapids, protruding boulders and had to portage their floats over jagged obstacles. Dean said some days
they floated only 100 yards.
Dean expressed hope the explorers may have scaled the brush-littered walls of Barranca de Cobre Copper Canyon and started walking through the mountainous country toward civ-
ilization.
Russellville Cast Will Give Play The Junior and Senior classes of Russellville High School will present Professor, How Could You! by Anne Coulter Martens on
and cultural development. Date October 6, 1963. Ernest Trout Is
Called By Death Ernest Trout, 75, Greencastle Route 4, passed away in the Putnam County Hospital at 11:35 Saturday night where he had been a patient since Wednesday. He was the son of Henry and Zella Bales Trout and had spent the greater part of his life in Putnam County. His was an ac-
Q-B Club Will
Meet Wednesday
Greencastle Quarterback Club members and their special guests —the real second guessers (their wives)—will hold their second huddle of the season Wednesday, at 6:15 p.m. in the Memorial Stu-
dent Union building.
Club members will get both barrels from the meeting's half-
Mayor dale Community Schools, Jefferson Township and Madison
Township.
The schedule for Tuesday at 8:30 a.m. is Roachdale Civil Town, Roachdale Public Library, Marion Township, Monroe Township, Russellville Civil Town, Russell Township, Warren Township and Washington Township. At 1:30 p.m., the schedule is Greencastle Civil City, Greencastle City and Township Library, Greencastle and Greencastle Township Consolidated Schools.
Warm Weather Setting Records
Searing temperatures scorched the Midwest again today in a
record-setting October display of co n s °Ui ce -. From the Andrew
kept in the national archives. Today's ceremony marked the
first major treaty signing in the White House treaty room since Aug. 12, 1898. when a peace pact was signed with Spain. The room
recently was refurbished. The treaty room once was a
waiting room for President Lin-
Indian Summer.
Johnson administration to Theodore Roosevelt administration, it
The Weather Bureau said un- was used as a cabinet room, seasonably warm temperatures The test ban treaty resulted were expected again from the from U. S.-British-Soviet negotiamiddle Mississippi Valley to the tions on Oct. 31, 1958 in Geneva.
The two-day session in open to
tive member of the Long Branch time performers, DePauw s coach an y taxpayer and any appeals lower Great Lakes region. Only For years the talks were bogged Church of Christ. Tommy Mont, and Jerry Chance, b e considered in conjunction the upper Great Lakes and upper down over the issue of inspection
with the hearings on the budgets Mississippi Valley regions and against cheating,
and levies.
Tax Board members conducting the hearings are Earl Swain. Don Wissman and Richard Schu-
research veterinarian in tagging October 10 and 11, 1963 at 8.00 seal pups, visited the bird cliffs p. m. in the Russellville High
and seen reindeer herds. School Gym.
Since September 1st, Dr. May Miss Martens’ three act cornhall has been in charge of the edy is about a young woman-hat-hospital on St. George Island ing Professor who is trapped by and upon his return to St. Paul three marriage-minded girls. Island about the first of Novem- Through a series of events each ber he will assume the same girl becomes convinced that the duties there. A great deal of his Professor is madly in love with time will be given to adminis- her. Each girl receives a mestration work in the hospital. sage, sent by a well meaning
He was employed at Eitel's Flowers for thirty five years and recently at DePauw University. Survivors are: two daughters. Mrs. Bruce Collins and Mrs. Ted Glidewell; three sons, Chester, Michigan, Elwood and Lennie Greencastle; one sister Rose Jackson Washington, D.C., one
brother, Robert Raisnor, Beech Cubs' fortunes Grove; a daughter-in-law, Jewell Quarterbackers
Trout eleven grandchildren and two great grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his wife, Mossie and three brothers. Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 2:00 p.m. at the Hop-kins-W’alton Funeral Home. Burial will be in the Cloverdale
cemetery.
GHS mentor.
Backing up filmed highlights of a recent Tiger encounter, Mont can he expected to pepper h i s commentary with gems from his “department of useless informa-
tion.”
Coach Chance will go on the firing line too to assay the Tiger
and explain to Friday night's
exciting 19-13 triumph of West
Vigo.
Cars Damaged In Local Accident
parts of the upper plains could
expect relief.
Records were broken Dayton, Ohio, to Norfolk, Sunday, some of them
back to the 1800s.
The treaty has ushered in a new phase of U. S.-Soviet relations—a period of cold war lull, in which both side are cautious-
dating ly ex P lorin £ possibilities of furth-
er tension-easing agreements.
from Neb.,
Fireman Killed NEW ALBANY UPI — Kenneth Stuart. 58, a veteran of 24 years with the New Albany Fire Department, was injured fatally Sunday night when he fell off a firetruck as it rounded a turn responding to an alarm which turned out to be false.
Jackie Sails
ISTANBUL—UPI —Jacqueline Greencastle High School Kennedy sailed today for an un- Melinda graduated in 1956.
known Mediterranean destination after a one-day visit to Istabul, an exotic city she plans to revisit “when my husband is no
longer president.
~ ... ^ . Friends may call at the funerSeptember 3, they sailed to St. friend, that the Professor wants ^ ^
George Island, a distance of to elope with her at 8:30. This re-
about 40 miles from St. Paul suits in chaos, but a long lost Island and will remain there un- relative rushes in to save the
til the third week in October day.
when the boat will return to take The members of the cast are: them away. There is no outgoing Steve Hurst as Keats Perry; mail from St. George; however, Linda Cushman as Vicky Ranthey will receive mail by pouch, if dolph; Suzann Greve as Grandthe pilot’s aim Ls relatively ac- ma Perry; Richard Fordice as
curate Grandpa Perry; Jerry Boiler as „ . . . . curate. K i u Sunday evening. He had been ad-
Upon their return to St. Paul John Appleby; Constance Walsh Island, Alaska, they will stay as Priscilla Morley; Martha Adthere until about the end of June ams as Tootsie Bean; Bob Oliver when they will be reassigned for as Butcher Boy Bean; Linda another year to some other place. Gross as Valerie Whitman; Jay Their address after November 1 K. Harbison as Boggins. The will be St. Paul Island, Alaska, stage manager is Bill Sinnet; Zip code 99660. James Richardson is in charge of John is a 1955 graduate of scenery and sound effects; pub-
and blicity chairman is Constance
Death Summons
John Ginardi
John Ginardi, 77, who resided on Greencastle R. 4, died at the Putnam County Hospital at 7:10
mitted Thursday.
He was born in Italy and came to the United States at the age of seven years. He was a veteran
of World War 1.
Funeral services will be announced later by the Hopkins-
Walton Funeral Home.
Property damage resulted but no one was hurt in a two-car accident in the intersection of Seminary and Locust streets at 1:10 Saturday afternoon, city po-
lice reportesd.
Cars involved were a 1952 Studebaker driven by Harry Sutton, 75, Route 1, and a 1959 Mercedes driven by John E. Moorman, 22, Dayton, Ohio. City Officer Russell Coleman estimated the damage at $300 to the Mercedes and $150 to the
Studebaker.
Two Farm Inmates Escaped Saturday Two penal farm prisoners escaped from the Putnamville institution some time after 2 o’clock Saturday afternoon, state police reported Sunday morning. The two are Joe Wheeler Hyden, 27, Marion, and Dale Kyle, 23. Indianapolis. Police said the pair were found to be missing about 8 p.m. Hyden was serving a term for petit larceny and Kyle had been sent to the farm for vehicle taking. ,
Where there were lakes, people gathered in masses for a reprise of splashing and water skiing.
Robert Day Dies At Co. Hospital
Putnam Court Notes J.S. Gleason, Jr. vs. Fred William Lowe and Gerry B. Lowe, complaint on promissory note, foreclosure of mortgage and appointment of a receiver. |?|| Shortage Of Men
O.E.S. Notice
Candidate Dies MUNCIE, UPI — Hobart E. Wray, 60, Republican nominee for mayor of Muncie, died today of a heart ailment at his home. Wray, who had not previously been ill, was pronounced dead on arrival at St. Paul's Hospital. Store Destroyed PORTLAND UPI — The Stresling Discount Store at nearby Fiat was destroyed by fire Saturday night in a blaze which blocked traffic on two state highways. injured one fireman, forced the evacuation of two women from a nearby house and drew hundreds of sightseers to the scene.
Hoffa Assails Bobby Kennedy INDIANAPOLIS UPI—Team ster Boss James Hoffa spent the weekend in his home state and rapped President Kennedy's cabinet member brother as a "spoiled brat” at a news conference here
Sunday night.
Hoffa, a native of Brazil, said Attorney General Robert Kennedy and the Justice Department “have been trying to frame me" since the Senate rackets investigation headed by Sen. John L. McClellan, D-Ala. He said he was one of the few persons who did not take the Fifth Amendment during the Mc-
Clellan hearings.
“I just stood up for my rights."
he said.
“Bobby tried to run roughshod over me and I stood up to him. He is nothing but a spoiled young brat, never having had to work for a living,” Hoffa said.
Walsh and Sherry Uhls is promp- Killed By Racecart
ter The Senior Class sponsor is
Mrs. Jacque McGaughcy. The NEWPORT UPI -
Junior Class sponsor and director Gaines. ^. Newport, died Satur- Court.
of the play is Mrs. Anne Elmore
Ronald
May Appeal Ruling
INDIANAPOLIS UPI — Indiana AFL-CIO President Dallas Sells said today “there is a good possibility" the Indiana Supreme Court's ruling upholding the state's 2 per cent sales tax will be appealed to the U. S. Supreme
Roachdale chapter No. 247 O. E. S. will hold stated meeting Oct. 14, 1963 at 8 o'clock. “Friends Night” to be observed. Also election will be held to fill the vacaut station of Associate Conductress for the remaining year. All members are invited. Betty Ford, Sec’y
LONDON UPI — Raymond
Graveside services were held Blackman, editor of Jane’s Fighton Sunday afternoon f6r Robert ing Ships, said Sunday that a W. Day at the Fillmore Ceme- shortage of 20,000 men in the tery. He died Saturday at the Royal Navy has kept 129 warPutnam County Hospital. ships out of full commission. Mr. Day was bom June 1, 1870, " ■* the son of Isaac and Mary Day. Display Capsule He was married to Leitta Hub-
WASHINGTON UPI —
bard and to this union was born one daughter, Emma Hazel, de-
ceased.
Mr. Day spent the greater part of his early life in the Fillmore area. Later he moved to
The
Faith Seven capsule used by astronaut Gordon Cooper in his 22-orbit space flight will be displayed in Indianapolis Oct. 31Nov. 3 during a 50-state tour ar-
Greencastle and for many years ran & ed b y the National Aeronauwas engaged in the coal business, tics and Space Administration, it For several years after his retire- was announced today.
Two Runs Hade By City Firemen City firemen answered two alarms Saturday morning in less than thirty minutes. At 11:25 a.m., they were called to the Tri Delt sorority house, corner Anderson and Bloomington streets. They reported leaves burning in the shrubbery. At 11:45 a.m., they made a run to Market Street when a car caught fire. A 1955 Dodgers owned by Harvey Woodall developed a short in the wining and damage resulted.
ed.
day in Vermillion County Hospital here from injuries suffered a few hours earlier when he was struck by a motor racing cart during a race in front of the
county jail.
Sells said he will confer with attorneys for the union and its Committee on Political Education and a decision on a possible appeal will be announced “today or
Tuesday.”
Kidnaper Sentenced LAGOS, Nigeria UPI — Olusegun Ade, 24, has been sentenced to eight years at hard labor and six cane strokes for kidnaping a 10-year-old girl and selling her into slavery for $1,120. Ade pleaded for leniency at his sentencing Thursday because bis wife is pregnant.
ment he lived in Indianapolis. For the last two years he has been a resident of the Putnam County
Home.
The only close survivors are a nephew and two nieces in California and Oregon, also one
niece, Mrs. Ollie Smedley daughter of Terre Haute.
Funeral arrangements were by Hopkins-Walton funeral home and Rev. Paul Robinson was in
charge of the services.
Hospital Notes
HAPPY OVER DAUGHTER’S SELECTION
Marriage License
Corporal Dennis Terry was home on furlough from Camp Phillips, Kansas. Word was received that Staff Sgt. Dallas Runyan had arrived in Brazil, South America. Miss Delia Home was hostess to the Spanish Group of the A. A.U.W.
Masonic Notice Stated Convocation, Greencastle Chapter No. 22. Royal Arch Masons, Wednesday evening, Oct. 9, :30 o’clock. Ivan R. Huxford, High Priest Willard E. Silvery, Secretary.
Frankie Eugene Morris, International Harvester, Columbus. Ohio, and Betty Jean Young, at home, Reelsville Route 1. Ronald Stewart Job, Cook's Sawmill, and Judith Ann Barcus, P. R. Mallory, both of Reelsville Route 1.
Stated meeting Applegate I^odge 155, Fillmore F. & A.M. Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Ray Wells, W.M.
NOW YOU KNOW Story-telling Is a highly developed skill in Moslem countries where religion forbids the portrayal of human and animal likenesses in art, according to the National Geographic Society.
Russ Cosmonauts Plan To Marry
Dismissed Sunday: Mrs. William Phillips and son, Gracie Akins, Linda Phillips, Greencastle; Robert Mason, Regina Shannon, and Roachdale; Mrs. James Weatherman and son, Clayton; Barbara Nickerson, Cloverdale; Faye
Ahlemeye-r, Poland.
Dismissed Saturday: Hubert Crodian, Reva Brewster, John Carson, Sandra King, Mrs. Robert Leonard and son, Ethel Stringer, Susie Patterson, Greencastle; Mrs. Paul Fidler and
daughter, Cloverdale.
A most happy reaction is shown by Mr. and Mrs. James F. Zeis as they heard the annoumement that their daughter, Darla, h hi been chosen 1963 Freshman Football Princess between halves of the Greencastle- West Vigo grid contest Friday night. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Morrison are seated behind Mr. and Mrs. Zeis. Photo by Ralph Taylor
MOSCOW UPI — Moscow buzzed today with reports that Soviet cosmonaut Andrian Nikolayev and pioneer spacewoman Valentina Tereshkova
will marry.
Well-informed sources said the dimpled, 26-year-old Valentina will wed the handsome, 33-year-old ‘ most eligible Soviet bachelor” early this winter. Russians have been calling them “the star crossed lovers"
for months.
There was no formal announcement. But reports of the engagement came from Moscow’s suburban “space town," the community of Soviet cosmonauts. The romance was no surprise. Even as Miss Tereshkova was orbiting the earth to become the
world’s first woman in space last. per ‘ ature change .
June, there were reports that there was more than professional comradeship in her friendship with Nikolayev, who had joined Pavel Popovich in the first joint flight of two spaceships the pre-
vious August.
Valentina now is on a tour of Cuba. Nikolayev is living at the
space town.
7U
'WeatUe’i And Local < 1e*9U2A l iati4/iJel
Sunny and warm today, fair and mild tonight. Partly cloudy
and cooler Tuesday.
Sunset today 6:18 p. m. Sun-
rise Tuesday 6:48 a.m.
Outlook for Wednesday: Fair to partly cloudy with little tem-
Minimum 6 a. m. ..... 7 a. m. ..... 8 a. m. «... 9 a. m. _... 10 a. m. __ 11 a. m. .... 12 noon .... 1 p- m
53° 54° ... 55° ... 59° 67° .... 72° ..... 77° ._ 80° ... 82°
