The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 9 January 1964 — Page 2
THC DAILY BANNER
OrtTCIN^AD I LC, IINUIAlNA
Uidicna Troffic Tall Now 20 Indiana' 1 1964 traffic fatality toll stood at 20 today compared with 22 this time last year. Mrs. Maxine Pullen, 41, Indianapolis, was killed Wednesday rwht near the entrance to Southern Plaza shopping center on U.S. 31 south of Indianapolis when two cars collided. Authorities said Mrs. Pullen was riding in a car driven by 1 r husband Robert, 44, when it was struck in the rear by a ear driven by David D. Webb, 20, Indianapolis. Mrs. Pullen was thrown out of the vehicle to the pavement. Harlan Floss, 45. Princeton, suffered a fatal heart attack a few hours after a traffic accident Tuesday ni^-ht. Ross was treated for minor injuries after his milk truck ran off U.S. 41 near Vincennes. He was released after treatment and suffered the heart attack at his home. Gibson County authorities ruled the deatn a tirffic fatality, saying the heart attack was caused by
the accident.
that Nehru retire to spare his health.
Hath Threatens To Call Strike CHICAGO UPI — Teamsters President James R. Hoffa has threatened to call a str.ke against six nationwide trucking firms if a new national agreement is not reached by next Wednesday. “I have notified the industry that six trucking firms, all of which have terminals in Chicago, will be struck here and the strike will spread to their operations throuhgout the country," Hoffa told trucking negotiators and federal mediators Wednesday.
THE DAILY BANNER
and
HERALD CONSOLIDATED ITS. Jackson St. Greencastle, Ind Kntcred in the Post Office at
ANNIVERSARIES Mr. and Mrs. Gareld Stone. 19 years, January 9th.
Roach dale Club Aid Society Meets
his distaste for the bill many Finley defied American League ATTACKS PROGRAM times in the past, is not expected President Joe Cronin today and WASHINGTON UPI - The to run the hearings much beyond said he believed other club own- American Farm Bureau Federthis months, principally because ers would authorize him to move ation today attacked a new Johnof the discharge petition hanging his Athletics franchise from Kan- son administration wheat control
The Mt. Olivet Ladies Aid met i Jan. 2, at the home of Leia Page,
Greencastle, Indiana, as Second Ruth Jones assisting. I.ieie
were sixteen members and five children who enjoyed a delicious dinner after Mrs. Falin asked the
Blessing.
Our new president opened the business meeting by reading one of Rev. Don Jennings thoughts for better living. All joined in
CTa>s Mail matter under Act of
March T. 18T8.
Subscription Prices
Home Delivery 35c per week Mailed in Putnam County
$7.00 per year
Outside of Putnam County
over his head.
Todiyj Bible Thought
Conduct Discussions
$8.00 per year singing "Love Lifted Me” aeOutside of Indiana companied by Virginia Crosby on
$12.00 per year the piano. Ruth Jones chose for her Devo-
tions the 33 Psalm, followed by
prayer bv Maude. Roll Call was , .*„** ‘ hae been nn tr> n,™1 ' ‘ , Witte, Danville wish to announce Deen U P t0 now -
answered by paying dues. The — If God be for us, who can be pj ower anc j Missionary donations
against us?—Romans 8.31. were taken.
‘T am not concerned whether
, ?
.. .v. j.....
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer C.
Wants Firmer Stand On Cuba NASHUA. N.H. UPI — Sen.
Barry Goldwater said he hopes President Johnson takes a firmer stand on the Cuban issue than
the Kennedy administration. The Republican presidential
hopeful said "I am very hopeful that President Johnson will be very firm in the Cuban question — more than the administration
sas City to Louisville. program as "incredible” and said that Congress should reject it. Finley blasted Cronin for mak- Agriculture Secretary Orville ing public Wednesday an order L . Freeman told a House wheat to him to refrain from making subcommittee hearing Tuesday “any further arrangements” for that the program would recoup the transfer and await the de- about $400 million of a $600 miltermination of the American ]j 0n predicted drop in wheat farm League concerning the matter." income in 1964.
the approaching marriage of n °f mention the Kentheir daughter, Eva Estella ne dy administration by name but Christine Witte, to Robert Dale his reference to it was obvious.
The committees were appoint- p * ^,r nd H ar _ He said "there are indications God is on our side, but whether ed for the Bazaar. Pettit, son ot Mr. and Mrs. Har-
WASHINGTON UPI — Agi i- we are on God's side.” Abraham culture Secretary Orville L. Free- Lincoln,
man today toid cattlemen and
Freight Derailed
farmers that the government is conducting informal discussions with some foreign countries \\ hich may lead to restrictions of beef imports into the United
States.
Cattlemen have complained that expanded beef imports for the past two years have caused
HAMMOND UPI — Twenty- fed cattle P rices to dro P si S niii - three cars of a 113-car Pcnnsy- cant, y-
Ivania railroad freight train were derailed on the city's east side
late Wednesday night.
A railroad spokesman said the train jumped the tracks while it was traveling about 60 miles an hour. Cars which left the rails contnined wheat, canned goods,
lumber and other freight.
Personal
And Local News Hrieiis
Plans were made to serve dinner for the Aliff sale to be held January 25.
Mrs. Thelma J. Myers Geo. W. Tsismanakis
Mrs. Thelma J. Myers and George W. Tsismanakis of Franklin, Indiana, were married Saturday, December 21, in Rush-
A son was born Thursday ville. Indiana. Mrs. Tsismanakis morning at the Putnam County formerly lived in Greencastle
old Pettit, Greencastle. that President Johnson plans a
The wedding will take place firmer stand.
January 12th at 2:00 p. m. at the Goldwater made the comment Avon Faith Baptist church, to aboi 't 2 °0 women jammed into Avon Ind. a b ° m e for on informal coffee All relatives and friends are boU1 ' on the second day of a
invited.
JACKS AND JILLS MIXED
Dec. 29
three-day campaign swing for votes in New Hampshire’s presi-
dential primary.
Fielding other questions, Goldwoter said the sale of American wheat to the Soviet Union was “an FHA Federal Housing Au-
thority deal for Russia.”
He said, “Why give the enemy
any break.”
Nehru Recovering BHUBANESUAR, India UPI — Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, who was taken ill Tuesday ith high blood pressure resulting from overwork, spent a restful ni; ht and is recovering satisfactorily, his secretary said. An Indian air force plane remained standing by to fly the 74-yenr-old leader back to New Delhi from this Orissa state capital if necessary, and there were demands throughout the nation
Mack's Appliance ....
VV
27 1
L
2 12'fe
Goofy Four
22
18
M-C's
22
18
Pin-Busters
. 20
20
Handicappers
19'
2 20'2
Sooners
19
21
Buis Feeds
16
24
Ding Bills
It
26
High team game:
820
Hand!-
cappers. High team series: 2340 M-C's. Women 400: C. Masten 401, D. Minnick 409. F. Morrison 414, M. Buis 420, J. Cavin 431, G. Conyers 456. Men 500: B. Friend 502, B. Taylor 503, H. Godfrey 509, L. Conyer 509. B. Morrison 508, J. Masten 522, B. Minnick 526, G. McKeehan 550, H. McCammack 554, C. Buis 593.
LETTER TO BANNER
LaGrange, 111. Dec. 31, 1963
530 Blackstone Ave.
Hospital to Mr. and Mrs. James while she was a member of the Greencastle Daily Banner.
Buis of Stilesville Route 1. Education Department of De- Greencastle, Indiana The annual meeting of the Fill- Pauw University. ' ro vv ^ om 11 may concern: more Cemetery Association will The candlelight ceremony was Dear Sirs:
be held at the Fillmore School reformed by the Rev. Frank G. During the hoadays, my family building, January 13th and 7:30 Helme in the chapel of the Main and 1 made a visit to Greencas-
Street Christian Church. Miss G 0, Ind - t 0 m y parents and Jeanne A. Myers and Phil A. My- other relatives living there, ers, children of the bride, served To my dismay, after having
f o , . . . „ „.. t as maid of honor and best man. W brother, drive me to get some ents of a dang t - Preceding the ceremony the Pictures, of what I used to think
day at the Putnam County Hos- ^ ed Dann K were beautiful, useful and cer- nical f ° a ls a nd rough under-the-pitaL Myers, youngest son of the bride. tainl .v landmarks for Putnam bask0t jostling erupted into a The Clinton Homemakers will and Tsismanakis are Gounty were the large, red, cov- bench-emptying fist fight Wedmeet Thursday afternoon at 1:30 b Q th members of the Franklin ered bridges. What did we find? n0 * da y ni gbt in the New York at the home of Mrs. Wayne Bet- CoIIege f acult y. He teaches in Unpainted, boards of? the sides, Knickerbockers-Los Angeles tis. The lesson will be Easy En- the psychology department and hoIes in the floors. They were Dakers’ National Basketball Astertaining given by Mrs. Wood- she in eduction ^ couple al .; at really a big mess and such a dis- social ion contest, row New. home at 65 Wilson Street in appointment to me. What has v\ ith ^ minutes left to play, A daughter was born to Mr. Franklin happened to the people of Put- Bi,ly Mc Gill of the Knicks and and Mrs. Hobart Buchanan Jr. nam County? The one thing that dirn Kre bs of the Lakers—6-foot-
Elks Club
Special SaL ian. 11
Party 8:30 P. M.
- PRIZES -
For Elkr and Their Ladies
p.m.
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Siddons, Cloverdale Route 2, are the p u - -
Net Tilt Results In Fist Fight
A game marked by four tech-
of Fillmore on December 31st. at the Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis. The baby was named
Betsy Lynn.
Mrs. Doris Andrews wishes to announce the engagement of her
Wheatcn Meets DePauw Friday
can be preserved as landmarks ® players who had been jostling are falling to pieces. under the backboards in the first If Rockville, Ind. can have half--grappled each other to the beautiful bridges why can't f,oor ' Play«rs from both benches Greencastle? ran to battle as 6.345 fans in the It would take so little time and k 03 Angeles Sports Arena watch-
DON’T LET LCW LEVEL HEARING RC3 YOU OF YOUR FRIENDS! EAR LEVEL KFAR’NG AIDS For Nerve and Conductive Losses Only $69.59 • NO BI TTON IN THE EAR • NO CORDS • NO CT OTIIING NOISE • NO WIRES For A Free Demonstration of This Top Quality, Modern llt-uniig Aki — Come In FFiCAY, JANUARY 10th 10 AM TO 8 PM MASON JEWELERS
H. WASHINGTON ST.
Wheaton College, sporting
daughter. Miss Donna Lou Woods 7-4 record and a five-game win- money to brace those bridges ed-
of Greencastle to Tony Dee, vo- ning streak, arrives in Greencas- with steel beams and even ceenlist of Chicago. The wedding tie tomorrow for the eighth re- ment, put on the boards ripped off n r will be Saturday, January 11th. newal of its basketball series and paint them and what lovely Lronin
The Tiger Cub-State High with the DePauw University landmarks they would make for game Friday will be played in Tigers. tyenr^m come. ** the old Indiana State College Tipoff time for the interstate Having been born and reared gym at Terre Haute. The B team match will be 8 p.m. in Bowman in Putnam County I hope on my game will start at 7 Greencastle Gymnasium. next visit I will be able to see time and the varsity tilt af 8:30 Since dropping four of their something being done to those local time. first six games, including a 91- lovely old bridges.
CHICAGO UPI — Charles
CHOICE HOME KILLED BEEF RETAIL CR WHOLESALE HALF or WHOLE HOS-HEAD OFF LEAF LARD OUT 28c per Us. COUNTRY SAUSAGE Custom Slaughtering - Processing - Curing Putnam County Frozen Foods, Inc.
703 E. WASHINGTON ST.
PHONE OL 3-3912
Dr. and Mrs. Clinton Gass left 79 loss to St. Joseph's, DePauw's today for Washington, D.C., opposition in Rensselaer Saturwhere Dr. Gass will attend a day night, the Crusaders have three-day meeting sponsored by won their own eight-team Christtho National Science Foundation, mas tournament and knocked off The session will be attended by scheduled opponents North Park college and university personnel College and Illinois Wesleyan, directing NSF-underwritten sum- John Pfund, junior guard and mer institutes for elementary MVP last year when the Crusatlteachers. DePauw University has ers compiled at a 10-15 record, is been a site for one of the Nation- Wheaton's leading scorer with a al Science Foundation insititutes 22 point plus average, since 1959. Dr. Gass is head of Only common foes DePauw
Sincerely, Irene Toney Stepfienson
G It EE NC ASTI,I
the University's department of mathematics and astronomy. We keep the Spots. Old Reliable White Cleaners.
GIANT
10c
CANNED GOODS SALE
\
STOCK UP NOW TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS I Qc SALE OF FAMOUS BRANDS Dauntless Brand BEANS ... choice of Kidney Beans, Red Beans, Chili Beans, Pinto Beans, Navy Beans or G reat Northern Beans, 300 can
Dauntless PORK & BEANS, 3O0 can Dauntless KRAFT, 300 can
Dauntless SPAGHETTI, 300 can Dauntless BI TTER BEANS, 300 can
Farmer’s Pride (.KEENS . . . choice of Mustard Greens, Turnip Greens or Kale, 303 can
Farmer’s Pride HOMINY, 300 can American Beauty BLACKEYE PEAS SM can American Beauty ( REAM STYLE CORN 300 can
Trellis WHOLE KERNEL CORN, 12 oz. American Beauty WHOLE POTATOES 300 can Butterfield INSTANT POTATOES 300 can
YOUR CHOICE AT ONLY 10c PER CAN
Choice C ut PORK C HOPS, lb. Wcnning’s I.ARD, 2 lb. pkg.
59c Boneless C I BE STEAK, lb 79c 29c Marhoefer’s SLICED BACON, 3 lbs $1.00
POTATOES, 10 lb. bag 39c YELLOW ONIONS, 3 lb. bag 29c TRY OCR JUICY FRESH FRI ITS AND C RISP VEGETABLES
VAN BUSKIRKS
Home of VERY BEST Values
HOME
OWNED
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W EST SIDE SQUARE
HOME
OPERATED PHONE OL 3-6214
and Wheaton have had are Wabash and Illinois Wesleyan. Wabash crushed Wheaton 98-76.. just a week after losing to DePauw, 82-77. Both clubs whipped Wesleyan. DePauw, confronted with rebuilding its confidence after Saturday's 97-53 episode with Evansville, will stick with the same starting unit the Aces trumped. Dean Rush (6-4t and Morgan Everson (6-3) will go at forward, 6-6 Bob Hutto at center, and Jim Callanc (5-11) and Bruce Osborne (6-3) will get the nod at guard.
Wrestlers Win Ex-football player Ralph Larsen pulled DePauw's wrestlers out of the hole last night with a pin that give the Tigers five points and a 16-14 win over Millikin University. Wrestling in the heavyweight division, Larsen, who played center this fall behind Richard Dean, won the verdict and the match with 30 seconds left in the second period. In winning its first match of the year. DePauw picked up its other tallies on decisions by Sky Hack (157» and Jim Thompson (123), plus Fred Wendelboe's speedy pin in the first period of the 147 pound match. SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL
Hearings Start On Civil Rights WASHINGTON UPI — Tin House Rules Committee opens today what is expected to be at least three weeks of hearings on the sweeping civil rights measure President Johnson has placed at the top of his list of unfinished public business. The first testimony on the bill was to come from its supporters, but the preponderance of argument before the Sourthernled rules panel was expected from opponents. Chairman Emanuel Celler, D-j N.Y., of the House Judiciary Committee, and Rep. William M McCulloch, R-Ohio, his Republi can counterpart, were by tradition first to testify. Technically, the Rules Committee's only function is to set the time limit and other termsH of floor debate on the bill. But the committee traditionally takes testimony on the merits of bills and sometimes overrides legislative committees by refusing clearance. Chairman Howard W. Smith, D-Va., though he has expressed
,
Shown above is the family of Richard Lemmink and two of the large Warsaw Grouper fish caught deep sea fishing off the shores of Cortez, Florida on Monday, December 30th. The fish on the right weighed 240 lbs. and the other 236 lbs. The action took place 100 miles out in the Guix and the bait was lowered to 275 feet. Shown left to right, is daughter Celia, Richard, his wif 2, Anita, daughter, Cherril, and standing between the fish is son. Gary.
(Mixed League) W
L
Atkins and Sons
33
18
Cofer Shellane
32
19
7-Up
26
25
Monon Grill
24
27
Mallory’s
19' 2
31%
Pepsi Cola
18'2
32%
400 Series: Bob Evens, 565: Tom Love, 466; Vern Rader, 459; Bob Patterson. 457; Larry Mays, 450; Rusty Elliott, 442; Linda Gofer, 441; Ron McClure, 441; Stan Hurst, 429; Ann May, 415.
SPECIAL INVENTORY SALE CLOSE OUT DRAPERY FARRICS $2 & $3 A YARD FABRICS ROW SI.OC A Y ARD $2=50 & $4.50 A YARD FABRICS NOW SI JO A YARD YARD LONG REMNANTS 4 (or SI.CO ART FURNITURE AND DRAPERY SHOP
5 W. FRANKLIN ST.
PHONE OL 3-3219
