The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 8 November 1963 — Page 2
THE DAILY BANNER
GRE-rCAS'H*, INDIANA
FRI., NOV. 8, 1963. Page 2
Senator Margaret Chase Smith 'Considering' Presidential Race
C I.OVKRDALE SCHOOL NEWS
WASHINGTON IT J I
Margaret Chase Smith. R- mount to much.
Maine, is giving “serious con-
IIIC.II HONOR ROLL
SENIORS:
Jackie Cummings. Eloise Hamblen. Don Larkin, Don Snover,
Son. s „ft. so cozy that it doesn't a- Judy williams, Bill Dodge.
•H’NIORS:
Shelby Baxter, Betty Jo Bran-
sideriition' 1 to suggestions that Howard Selected neman, Linda Cummings, Phyllis ahe aeek the Repubhcm pro.,,- Furr . Norman H otfa. Sandy Hofdential nomination and enter the NEW \ORK UPI — Elston . c . . , R
New Hampshire t-rimarv next Howard s selection as the Amer-
March, her top assistant said. ican Leagues Most Valuable nells, Elmer Whicker, Sheila C.
Mrs. Snath does not plan. Player is another example today ^
. t . .. . of the long range planning which SOPHOMORES: however, to comment on the mat- the V w York Yankees castor. Andv Cooper, jernntt, Dee. a. when she speaks toM) . on top . MeClore. Cathy McCnlbefore the Womens National Howards case is. in a way. h ram prl Terrt Reld 1-reas Club her administrative similar to that of Ralph Hook M ,* c Sutherlln , Linda Walker,
assistant. William Lewis, said. and so many others who labor- ^ . For the past vear. the lady ed long in the Yankee vineyards IRESHMEN:
senator has been urged by sup- before receiving recognition. Btik> Am erson, i anc\ ^.ra porters throughout the country Houk Wils never better ick ’ Glen Fur ^’ , Kn °. y ’ . . .u ....a , . . third string catcher with the Diana Lewis, Jackie Linley, Joto enter the GOP presidential _ , „ v j tn n -kT
v, v, Yankees but he bypassed the anne Meyers, Judv Powell, Mar-
sweepstakes. But she has been stars tQ become mana g« r . cia Routti Anna Winings, Robert
most frequently mentioned in re-
, , . —■ Minkler cent months as a possible vice D~
prc.ddenunl nominee Somali DflVeS RaCS KKillTIH Sen. Smith’s strongest support CaT 3tl 5G0 (IVBl ' , " lin n ‘. ;(n . nne a ° U . . we • j j • Vivian W 7 hitaker.
has been m Maine, and admirers , ^
there have been pressing her in INDIANAPOLIS UPI - Pan,a SKVENTH:
enter the New Hampshire pri- Mur i* h >' 28 ’ world s k ' nd s P e f David Brnnneman. R.cky CumTnnrv to give voters a “third kueen. Thursday became the mings. Robert Fenwtek. Anna choice" rather than just Gov. UUrd " om ‘ m ^ history ulld t “ ,! L ' wi *. Maryo Rlley ' Jerry Suth -
w T . Die.,, e wv v- , first in more than 20 years to erlin. Nelson Rockefeller of New \ork, / , _
a liberal Republican, and Sen drlve a r ’ lce car around the l! '- HONOR ROLL
Idwto. « ctmservaUve Si ,1 MORS, Speedway rules generally pro- Sandra Aarrestad. Stan Curtis, hibit women from entering the Wanda Bartley, Daryl Branne-
THE DAILY BANNER and HERALD CONSOLIDATED 17 S. Jackson SL Greeneastle, Ind. Entered in the Post Office at Greencastle, Indiana, as Second Class Mail matter under Act of March 7, 1878. Subscription Prices Home Delivery 35c per 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 Commit thy way unto the Lord; trust also in him; and he shall bring it to pass.—Psalm 37:5. Some of us have found this to be one of the finest formulas for all of life. Memorize it today! Make it your own!
Republican.
Sen. Smith is considered an
independent or road Republican.
middle-of-the- garage area or driving on the man, Dave Carroll, Becky Castrack but officials of the Speed- sady, Diana Cochran. John Crad-
The first hint that she was way and the U. S. Auto Club ick. Roger Cooper. Stan Cumgiving serious consideration to ™de an exception for the mings. Connie Elmore. Sharon entering the primary came re- Studebaker Corp. test driver Hervey. David Johnson. Terry
cently when she answered a let- ^om ^raaada Hills, Calif. Kennedy,
ter to a supporter in Maine.
Her answer w as published by th' SClla HdCtlCS HOpCS TO Rockland, Maine, Courier Gazet- gg yp T3X ActiOD
Personal And Local News Briefs
te.
James Kirton, Bob
Leach. Ruth Leach. Mary Madden, John Nees, Shirley Shrader, Gary Staley. John Stuckey, Steve Sutherlin, Robert Walker.
JUNIORS:
Beverly Clines, Betty Frye. El-
In her letter she said she might WASHINGTON UPI — A make a decision by the last of Democratic senator said yester-
this month or early next month, day he would make a new move moia Hardin, Steve Holsapple, Lewis said she would have no shortly to speed up Senate ac- Janet Sutherlin, Paul Walker, comment on her decision until tion on President Kennedy’s tax Bernice Snvdei.
the Dec. 5 speech before the cut program. But he admitted newswomen s organization here, he had but little if any hope of
succeeding.
Assails Mansfield
SOPHOMORES:
John Alice, Laura Allen, Nancy Barker, Carla Booker,
Sen. Vance Hartke, Ind., a Alan Cash ’ Teresa Chandler - member of the Senate Finance Char,es Coffin ’ Sharon Gurney ’
WASHINGTON UPI — Why Committee, said he would move Rodney Hervey, Janice Jordan, has it taken the Senate so long no later than next Tuesday to deIIV Lavenau, Glen a . c am to accomplish so little. halt public hearings on the bill mack ; Donald Morris, William Sen. Thomas J. Dodd. D-Conn., w’hich have geen dragging un- ^ ori ison, Surah Quinnette, \e triggered a spate of soul-search- der the braking influ ence of com- ma Shepherd, Myrna Sutherlin. ing oratory when he charged miUee thairman Harry F BvM> Wanda Sutherlin. Gretchen Van that Democratic Leader Mike ,, D j 1 Pelt, Linda White. Arthur WinM ansfield. Mont., was respond. ' Bvrd «»•*. the admm.stra- ^ Hunter .
ble for the Senate s “dribbling'' tlon P ro S rdm
pace.
If were going to get about Texas Meets Baylor
our business, he's got to be a
leader and say no sometime,'’ cused clearly
FRESHMEN:
Jerry Allen, Fanchon Coffin, Eva Jean Davis, Dixie Dugan,
The eyes of Texas will be fo- Maria Hunsicker. Glenn Napier,
t i cused clearly on Austin Satur- sharon Rubeck Favette Stalev
publtCM Leader , Ev"r«t S M r D5k'. <lav when V“ hometown Texas Marsha Su t herUn , John Truax! L„. i„. He said the op^n hwed^c'ontrence Sharon Ta B ue. D.ana Duna g a„.
has become so complacent, so showdown struggle with Baylor. EIGHTH:
————— Steve Brown, Jerry Denny,
aS
Kk
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Richard Ford, Kerman Goss, Terry Haltom, Gary Hoffa, Hobe Nickerson, Oren Smyser, Susan Van Pelt, Roberta Van Winkle, Linda Williams, Geraldine Hoskins, Jerry Smith, Kathleen Glover. SEVENTH: Shirley Allegree, Michael Elmore, Jerry McCullough, Sandra Mannan, Keith Monnett, Dennis Sutherlin, Deborah White, Pamela Cooper, Leroy Cummings. Stephen Walker, Patti Jo Ziegelman.
SH0NKWILER Jewelers 13 SOUTH INDIANA • OL 3-3713
A PROCLAMATION WHEREAS, the provision of educational opportunity in our community is an eternal debt of this generation to the next, and WHEREAS, education is an essential basis for America’s freedom, security, and prosperity, and WHEREAS, education is confronted by unparalleled problems, such as shortages in teacher supply, classrooms, and finance, which can be solved only by public understanding and public action, and WHEREAS, a rapidly changing world requires that education change to meet new challenges without diminishing the traditional American appreciation of the worth of the individual, the obligations of responsible citizenship, the dignity of constructive employment, and the value of the basic moral and spiritual values, NOW, THEREFORE, I Raymond S. Fisher, Mayor of the City of Greencastle, Indiana, do hereby designate November 1016, 1963, to be American Education Week and urge all citizens to acquaint themselves more fully with the programs and needs of education and to rededicate themselves to strengthening and improving this essential safeguard of our nation. Raymond S. Fisher Mayor
Roachdale OES stated and Masonic meeting, Nov. 11, at 7:30 p. m. All members welcome. Mrs. Carl Nichols and June Pickens, called on Mrs. Jessie Appleby one day this week. Bro. DeVVayne Laws will speak at the Long Branch Church of Christ, Sunday, Nov. 10 at 11:00
a.m.
Mrs. Bernice Harrah of Indinapolis was a week end guest of Mrs. Jessie Appleby of Clover-
dale.
Mrs. Carl Myers entered the Putnam County hospital Thursday evening for observation and treatment. The regular meeting of the Putnam County Board of Realtors was held Monday evening at Torr’s Restaurant. A daughter was born Thursday at the Putnam County Hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Stafford of Coatesville Route 1. The 4-Leaf Clover club will meet Tuesday, Nov. 12th at 1:30 p.m. with Mrs. William McElroy. The lesson on Food additives will be given. The Tip Toppers, home demon stration club will meet Tuesday, November 19, at 1 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Charles Chestnut. The lesson will be on food additives. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Sutherlin of Roachdale have arrived in Fort Myers, Florida where they will spend the winter. Their address is: 2134 Monroe St. Ft. Myers, Fla. Mrs. Gerald Handy informed the city police at 12:55 Friday morning that her home, at 322 Dogwood Lane, had been broken into and entered. Officers investigated and reported that nothing was missing. A. W. McNary, Greencastle. has been elected to membership in the American Angus Association at St. Joseph. Missouri, announces Frank Richards, secretaiy. Mr. McNary was one of 28 breeders of registered AberdeenAngus in Indiana elected to membership during the past month. James Martindale, head librarian of DePauw University's Roy O. West library, has been elected vice president and chair-man-elect of the college and university section of the Indiana Library Association. Martindale's election occurred last weekend at a joint annual meeting of the Indiana and Kentucky Library associations in Louisville. The Indiana Library Association is composed of Hoosier college and university librarians.
delay a decision on the presi- A THICK FOG
dential race until January. Thick fog blanketed central
portions of Indiana today, ere-
- Fair Board otl " s "! aior tra ' tic h “ ard,, ■
For the second night in a row, the soupy fog blocked visibility
98.00 until well past dawn when sun-
$15,306.90 shine dried it up.
$25,165.31
WABASH MAN HELD
10,902.45
481.89 639.75 174.35
DePauw University president, Dr. William E. Kerstetter, and Steve Biichall. a junior from Normal. 111., check the manuscript of Birchad's musical composition which was dedicated to the President and performed this week by the university’s symphony orchestra under the direction of Professor Herman Berg. Birchall wrote the work. Ceremony for Trumpets and Orchestra, this summer to coincide with Dr. Kerstetter's inauguration.
Donation to Chair and Table fund Total Receipts Total Balance Disbursements Maintenance
& Repair Insurance
Development
Ribbons
Catalog Printing Office Supplies-Postage, Sec. help, tickets Utilities-Electric, heat, water, telephone
Tents
4-H Premiums
Judges
Open Premiums Entertainment (Pony Pull, Sock Hop, Queen Contest, Greased Pig
etc)
Police Custodian Advertising- Pony Pull
& Fair Adv.
Taxes-Indiana Gross
Miscellaneous
•Tickets-Fair Change Mortgage &• Interest
Chairs & Table
Comm. Bldg. 195.00 Other 314.34 Total Disbursements $25,147.58 Total Balance on hand November 1, 1963. $ 17.73 •(Operating cash for Fair Week—Neither receipt or dis-
bursement)
$ 1 193 22 WABASH UPI — A 16-year-1 159 26 oltl Wabash youth was held on
open charges today in the stabb-
ing of his father.
Police said Conrad Cunningham stabbed Harold Cunningham nine times with a butcher knife after a family argument as the father lay in bed at their
home.
2,041.38
636.00
3,132.50
430.00
2,423.00
376.06 184.00 92.15 54.20 300.00 418.03
BRAY PROPOSES WASHINGTON UPI — Rep. William G. Bray, R-Ind., proposed Thursday the establishment of a World War 1 Commemorative Commission to plan appropriate observances of the entry of the United States into the war and its eventual victory. ESCAPE FOILED PENDLETON UPI — A plan by three convicts to escape from the Indiana Reformatory was foiled Thursday night when they mistakenly believed a guard had seen them hiding under a stairway.
Ex-Tiger Cub Net Coach Has Tough Job Ahead At Madison
INDIANAPOLIS UPI — It might be an understatement to say that Jim Bates is stepping into a big pair of shoes when he makes his debut as high school basketball coach of the Madison
Cubs today.
Bates left relative security at Greencastle after the 1962-63 campaign and moved to the Ohio River city, where basketball and hydroplane talk is a favorite year-round occupation. Although Madison’s basketball opposition is generally not as tough as Greencastle's in the Western Conference, the Cubs under Julius (Bud) Ritter compiled a glittering record.
Consider this:
— In nine years, Ritter's quintets registered three consecutive perfect regular seasons—a record unequaled in Hoosier hard-
wood history.
—They put together a 61-game regular season winning streak that started in January of 1959 and ended last November with the third game, 69-66 overtimo
loss at Connersville.
—They made it to the fourteam state tourney finals in 196? with a 25-game winning streak before losing to eventual champion Evansville Bosse, 79-75. It was only the seventh time that a team with a perfect record
gained the state finals.
For Ritter, who helped Bosse to state titles in 1944 and 1945, that was enough hardwood hysteria. He called it quits to concentrate on his many business enterprises and Bates got the call
to take over the Cubs.
Friday, his young club opens at Vevay with only two lettermen in the lineup-junior Howard Bugs Humes, already a two year veteran and Bob Cooke. Humes stands just 5-10 and is the brother of former “Mr. Basetball”
Alva Cash giving their favorite flower. The lesson was making women belts, covering dress hangers with plastic lacing for drip dry clothes and nylon net dish cloths. Mrs. Nickerson and Mrs. Wayne Sinclair gave the lesson. The November lesson will be on Christmas decorations and instructions will be given by Mrs. Patten and Mrs. Gordon Mann. Each member is also asked to bring a Christmas decoration, table centerpiece, or an article that could be made for a Christmas gift or stocking stuffer. The next meeting will be at the .home of Mrs. Wayne Sinclair on Nov. 20th. Delicious refreshments were served by Lie hostess, Mrs. Nickerson, and the meeting was adjourned with a lot of useful articles made to take home and put to use.
JUDGES CONFER INDIANAPOLIS UPI — A panel of three federal judges met here today to discuss progress toward a ruling on two suits seeking to force legislative reapportionment in Indiana. Judge William E. Steckler of Indianapolis said earlier this week, however, that no decision could be expected from the meeting.
HOME WINS SEAT PERTH. Scotland UPI — Prime Minister Sir Alec Doug-las-Home today won a seat in the House of Commons and called his 9,323-vote majority "a decisive vote of confidence in the government.”
WOMAN KILLED COLUMBIA CITY, UPI —Mrs. Florence K. Miller, 45. a farmwife and mother of four, was killed by a gunshot Thursday in her home under mysterious circumstances as her husband worked in a nearby barn.
Treat your wash and wear to a drycleaner’s care. Old Reliable White Cleaners.
Will Not Meet
There will be no city council meeting Monday, Nov. 11th. due to it being Veterans' Day.
The calendar used today with but slight variations is the same as the one introduced by the Egyptians in the year 4236 B.C., according to “Reviewing World History.”
Rector Funeral Home PHONE OL 3-4810 AMBULANCE SERVICE
Heat Lamp May Have Caused Blast INDIANAPOLIS UPI — Investigators apparently are working on the theory that a heat lamp was at least partially responsible for a gas explosion which ripped the Indiana State Fairgrounds Coliseum Oct. 31. killing 68 persons and injuring more than 300 others. Twelve of the injured remained in critical condition today at five Indianapolis hospitals. They included two who were removed from critical lists earlier but later suffered relapses. . t : (
Uphill Fight Is Seen For Rocky WASHINGTON UPI— Republican leaders across the nation agreed that Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller is running uphill in his quest for the GOP presidential nomination. His critics said he is too much like President
Kennedy.
For the record at least, party leaders welcomed his announcement of his candidacy Thursday. They also looked forward to his expected contest with Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona, a still unannounced candidate for the
nomination.
Goldwater himself was in Michigan today and his office said here that he would have no immediate comment. But a source
Larry Humes, who led Indiana close to the senator said the against Kentucky in the mid- Rockefeller move will have no summer benefit classic. Cooke, a effect on Goldwater's plan to
senior, stands 6 feet.
The Cubs are not too tall this year and lack experience. Senior Jim Bohn and Junior Bill Poindexter are the tallest at 6-3. ‘‘Our size and lack of scoring punch will hurt us,” said Bates. ‘‘Lack of experience will also show early in the season.” But Bates said he is counting on more balance than Ritter had last year when his final team finished with a 12-6 season rec-
ord.
‘‘Bud had 5 or 6 boys and we should be able to go with 6 or 8." he said. Madison’s biggest personnel losses were 6-4 Ed Sudlow and 6-2 Larry Cheatham. In nine years, Ritter’s Cubs compiled a classy 171-42 record. His final crew was eliminated in the second round of the state tourney by Columbus.
NEW PITCH FOR PIERCE—Now living in Chicago’s suburban Evergreen Park, pitcher Billy Pierce (right) of the San Francisco Giants has joined the management team of the Hames automobile agency. Anthony (Bud) Hames is coaching him. Pierce plans to open nis own agency in Midwest.
Cloverdale Craft Club Met With Mrs. Nickerson The October meeting of the Cloverdale Craft Club met on Oct. 30th at the home of Mrs. Hubert Nickerson. The meeting was opened by Mrs. Robert Patten and roll call was answered by eleven membera and one guest, Mrs.
Announcing our
OPEN HOUSE SATURDAV and SUNDAY, NOV. 9tli. 10th.
10 to 4 pm
We cordially invite all interested parties to inspect our new building designed for the best of care for our guests. DONNA NURSING HOME
IN CLOVERDALE on Main Street
