The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 23 March 1964 — Page 1
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WEATHER TODAY CI.OI DV ANB MILD High 52; Lou 36
The Daily Banner
^OlAUA STATr trssiisr mu,!A roi IS ' Ia "U Wave* For All'' 1
We can not but speak the things which we have seen or heard. Acts 4:20
VOLUME SEVENTY-TWO
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, MONDAY, MARCH 23, 1964.
UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL SERVICE
NO. 132
Rites Tomorrow For Harry Moore, Ex-Putnam Clerk
Funeral services for Harry W. Moore, 85, prominent Greencastle resident, will be held at 10:30 Tuesday morning at the Whitaker Funeral Home, 602 Blast Washington Street. Mr. Moore, who resided at 509 South Indiana Street, passed away at the Putnam County Hospital Saturday morning after an illness of several months. He was bom in Greencastle December 17, 1878, the son of John and Anna Duncan Moore, and he attended the local schools. Until his retirement a few years ago, Mr. Moore had been prominent in the shoe business in Greencastle for over 40 years. Moore’s Shoe’s, now owned and operated by his daughter and son-in-law, Harry and Ardith Bee, continue to bear his name. Active and interested in Democratic politics during his entire adult life, Mr. Moore served two terms as Clerk of Putnam County. He was a member of the Presbyterian Church, the Greencastle Chamber of Commerce and the Elks, Moose and Odd Fellows fraternal organizations Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Maude Cosner ..,oo.c, ...o daughters. Mrs. Harry G. Bee. 911 East Washington Road, and Mrs. Annice Funk, wife of prominent Indianapolis Judge Glenn W\ Funk, 1214 North Audubon Road, three grandchildren and four great grandchildren; a niece, Mrs. Eleanor Craig, St. Louis. Mo. Rev. Thomas Heinlein, pastor of the Presbyterian Church, will conduct the services. Pallbearers will be William Shafer. Sam Conner, Ralph Call, Francis Hamilton, Jack Hinkle, and Charles McCurray. Friends may call at the fun-
eral home.
James Reynolds Dies In Hospital James W. Reynolds, age 87. Greencastle Route 2, passed away in the Putnam County Hospital at 7:35 Saturday evening. He had been admitted to the hospital on Wednesday. Survivors are: five daughters, Mrs. Annie Frances Blaydes, Hamilton, Ohio; Mrs. Agnes Taylor Blasdell N. Y.; Mrs. Grace Akins Mrs. Lucille Sutherlin and Mrs. Catherine Hendrich. Greencastle: seven sons, George and Richard. Greencastle; James C. of Harlingen, Texas; Louis of Alexandria; Everett, of Canada; Gearl, Ft. Wayne and Benjamin, Florida; four orothers Joe Reynolds. California; Mason Reynolds, of Ohio; Thomas and Virgil of Kentucky; one sister, Mrs. Annie Marsh banks. Kentucky: several grandchildren and greatgrandchildren. Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 2:00 p.m. at the Whitaker Funeral Home in Greencastle Rev. Maxwell Webb will officiate. Interment will be in Forest Hill cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home. Committee Meets Washington upi —Members of the Senate Rules Committee meet today for another likely partisan debate on when to end the inquiry into former Senate aide Bobby Baker a outside business activities. 20 Years Ago Miss Virginia Bundy accepted a position in the bookkeeping department of the First-Citizens Bank & Trust Company. Mrs. Gordon Sayers left to. join Lt. Sayers at Camp Stoneman. California. Miss Mary Ellen W’est, accompanied by Miss Marcia Hamilton, sang a solo at the meeting of the Men’s Forum of £he First Christian Church.
Lectureship To John McFarland Dr. John McFarland, associate professor of chemistry at DePauw University, has been aw’arded a Kettering Foundation lectureship at the University of Illinois. McFarlands one-year appointment as a visiting lecturer begins in September. He has been granted a year’s special leave of absence for 1964-65 by DePauw. Under the lectureship McFarland will teach a class in organic chemistry at Illinois and devote the remainder of his time to research and study. Purpose of the lectureship supported by the Kettering Foundation of Dayton, O., is to enable selected college science teachers to engage in concentrated and continous research they are unable to undertake as full time teachers. A 1949 alumnus of DePauw, McFarland received the Ph. D. from Vanderbilt University in
1953.
Women Voters Meet Tuesday Tomorrow evening in Charterhouse at 8 p.m. the League of Women Voters will meet to elect officers, approve a budget, select the local program, and consider a by-law revision. Following the annual business meeting further aspects of reapportionment not considered in the February meetings will be discussed by the membership divided into two discussion groups. Because the constitutionality of the present law is currently being challenged, the groups will consider the constitutional amendment which will come up for passage in the 1965 session of the General Assembly. Consideration also will be given to another alternative, an amendment which follows the population basis of the present constitution but apportions on the basis of the decennial census. Various kinds of apportioning agencies will be discussed along with their advantages and disadvantages. The state League has requested the local membership’s opinion on reapportionment so it can support or oppose various measures in the next General Assembly. Anyone interested in reapportionment is invited to join the discussion around 9 p.m. following the business meetnig. Citizens recently becoming 21 or who have moved are reminded to register or change registration at the county clerk's office by April 6 in order to vote in the coming election.
Stassen Slated For DePauw Talk Harold E. Stassen, threetime governor of Minnesotta and a leading candidate for the GOP presidential nomination in 1948. will speak tomorrow at 7 p.m. in DePauw University’s Memorial Student Union build-
ing.
Stassen has announced he intends to discuss his brand of Republicanism and then offer himself to Hoosier voters in the Indiana presidential primary May 5 as an alternative to Arizona senator Barry Goldwater. Following Stassen's public address will be a question and
City Chosen As A Testing Center For I.U. Program
Joseph Whitaker Dies In Gosport Funeral services for Joseph P.
RECEIVES GOD AND COUNTRY AWARD
Garry Clodfelter. a member of Russellville Boy Scout Troop 98 and a high school sophomore, received the God and Country Award from the Union Chapel Church during the regular Sunday morning .sen-ice. Garry is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Clodfelter. The Russellville Scoutmaster spoke as did Glenn Flint, representing the Kenabegwinn District. Shown in the picture are Mr. and Mrs. Clodfelter, Garry, and Rev.
Milton Beeman.
Johnson Speaks At UAW Session
Elks Notice
B.P.O.E. No. 1077 will hold memorial services tonight at 8 p.m. at the Whitaker Funeral
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. UPI Horae for Brother Harry Moore.
—President Johnson is expected to get a warm reception today from the politically potent United Auto Workers in his first appearance before a labor convention since becoming Chief
Executive.
Clora A. Hansell Funeral Tuesday Funeral services for Clora Alice Hansel, 85 Fillmore, will be held at 1 p. m. Tuesday in
from Washington this morning the Powell Funeral Home at to addresh about 5.000 UAW Coatesville. Burial will be in delegates and guests In the Wesley Chapel.
Greencastle is among the 32 Indiana cities named as regional testing centers for the Indiana high school achievement program conducted by Indiana
University.
This year’s program, which
answer series. His appearance W'hitaker. 81 years old, a funer- wiU be ij m i tec j to b igh school is being sponsored by Student al director in Gosport since seniors has been en i arged tX) Senate and the campus’ Young 1929 > wl11 be held at 2 P- m ’ include competition in French, Republican Club. Stassen will oe " ednesdaj in the Gosport Q erman> cb emistry, history and introduced by President Wil- Christian Church. Burial will government> as well as ^ Uam E. Kerstetter. be m Gosport Cemetery. Latin s panish> En gi ish and
Whether the ex-govemor ac- Mr. Whitaker died Saturday mathematics,
tually gets a chance to oppose at his Home in Gosport. In order to permit superior Goldwater in the primary iv ill .Before opening the Whitaker students the opportunity to depend on a service campaign Funeral Home in Gosport, he compete in more than one excertain DePauw Young Republi- operated a funeral home at amination, tests have been cans now are carrying on. Clayton from 1924 to 1928. scheduled for both April 4 and
Petitions bearing the names p r jor to that he worked for the ig
of 500 registered voters are Truax and Sons Funeral Home Xests sch eduled
needed before Stassen can get m Gosport,
his name on the ballot. A week- ^j r Whitaker was a member
end drive by club members in of the Christian Church, Ma- and government On April 18 Putnam and surrounding coun- sonic Lodgei order of Eastern there will be tests in historVi ties had produced over 300 sig- S tar and Lions Club. mathematics, chemistry and
natures by last night. Survivors include the widow, government
The club said friends of Stas- Mrs . Hova Whitaker, two sons, The examinations will be presen had requested their help in John Whitaker, operator of the d b m £aculty mem .
the drive and that they were Whitaker Funeral Home m u ,
A snowstorm rode cold winds „„_ llHncr --mpe a “service’’ .i ^ i n bers - who also Wl11 do the grad- , „ ^ ^ J securing names as a service Greencastle. and Charles D. u •„ . _ down from the Rockies today „ nnp hnnefni , . * .v , m 8- There will be no final ex- — ■ - - to a GOP hopefuL Whitaker, operator of the Whit- ammation , at the Universityf
Friday if the Funeral Home in Clover-
Rockies Spawn New Snowstorm
for April 4
will be in English, history, Latin, Spanish, French, German
and dumped deep snow out Stasse n said
across the Plains. Drenching n „„ romnleted tomor- j . , . . as in former years. ~ -- petitions are completed tomor dale; a daughter. Mrs. Mary El- Winner , of the regional ex _
Johnson was scheduled to fly
small hall where the Democrats are considered certain to nominate him for President in
August.
Mrs. Hanseh died Sunday morning at the Ftuark Nursing
Home in Fillmore.
rains triggered mudslides on nip-ut ho will return to . „ * . , * w
fire.ravaged foothills in the Los Indlanapoll , , 1Ut them wednes-
Angeles area. day morning to enter the race. Gogp^. a brother, Herschel Nearly a foot of snow blank- i n New Hampshire’s primary Whitaker of Indianapolis, and eted Salt Lake City, Utah, and earlier this month Stassen pick- nine gran dchildren.
up to 10 inches spread across ed up 1,285 votes with what he
Montana. Flagstaff. Ariz.. re- termed "only introductory cam- Jwo Arrested
ported 4 inches on the ground, paigning.” He is slated to run in
Texas in May and California in Sunday Winner June.
MIAMI UPI
Attend Service
NOW YOU KNOW
With Mtiy
She is survived by two sons, Casper it’s a case of always on
Maynard of Fillmore and Ward Sunday. WASHINGTON UPI —Presiof Indianapolis; three daugh* He wrapped up the $50,000 dent and Mrs. Johnson attend-
The Hoover Dam on the Colo- ters. Alma Thompson, Indian- Doral Invitational Golf Touma- ed Palm Sunday services at St. rado River, the highest con- apolis; Ila Sitzwater, Wayne- ment on Palm Sunday with a John’s Episcopal Church across crete dam in the United States, town; i^ena Sitzwater, George- two under par 35-35-70-play- Lafayette Square from the
is 726 feet tall, 1,244 feet long town, Illinois; and one sister, ing head to head against Jack White House,
at the top and contains 4.4 mil- Mrs. Bertha Jacobs, Indianapo- Nieklaus-and his 11 under par As the First Family left the lion cubic yards of concrete lis. 277 for four rounds beat the church Sunday several hundred according to the World Ainu- Friends may call at the funer- young Buckeye belter by one touring high school students charged
nac. al home. slender stroke. gathered to cheer them.
aminations will be guests at a luncheon on the I.U. campus May 23 at which time awards
will be made.
High ranking students who later attend Indiana University will be granted advanced p!ac»
Two Terre Haute colored res- ment and also university cre<«
idents were arrested and lodged it.
ir Mv : p ' The University has invited 5:30 p.m. Saturday by State other Hoosier colleges and unii loopers Jack Hanlon and Ted versities to take advantage of Settle. the test results by giving ad-
Herbert Lee Jones, 29. was vanced standing to high school
booked for driving while under achievement program winners the influence of intoxicants, "’ho enroll in their schools. Exreckless driving and public in- amination results will be avail*
toxication. able to all schools.
Cornelius Crawford, 32, was
with public intoxica-
tion.
Hospital Notes Dismissed Sunday: Evonne Moore, Katherine Throop, Alta Bales, John Huff, Greencastle; Effie Miles, Bainbridge; Ruby Singleton, Stilesville; Mrs. Noble Cleanvaters and son, Coatsville; Gene Fidler, Quincy,: Robert Twomey, Martinsville; Lester Lewis, Spencer. Dismissed Saturday: Betty Perkins, Mrs. Frank Baxter and daughter, Mrs. Paul Harvey and daughter, Rowena Hudlin, David White, Minerva Coombs, Greencastle: Glee Truesdale, Ethel Williamson, Darlene Weist, Cloverdale; Inez
Best, Poland.
U.S. Horse Wins AINTREE. England UPI — Team Spirit, an American-own-ed gelding, won the Grand National Steeplechase by one-half length over Purple Silk.
Ray Quits As Welfare Head At the regular meeting of the
Putnam County Welfare Board last Thursday evening, Fay G. Ray tendered his resignation as Putnam County Welfare Director, effective June 1st The Board was reluctant to consider this resignation. However, Mr. Ray made it clear that private business and personal interests made it imperative that he resign at this time. The Board then accepted his resig-
nation with deepest regret. Mr. Ray stated that he would
become associated with the Ray Insurance Agency, Cloverdale, which has been operated by his
wife for the past ten years. Mr. Ray was appointed Coun-
ty Director on August 15, 1946.
iiiimmmmmiiiiimiiiii iiiiiiimimimimii
The J Feather And Local ‘Temperatures
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Mostly sunny and mild today. Windy this afternoon. Partly Cloudy and warmer tonight. Tuesday partly cloudy and mild with chance of a few showers. Highs today 52 to 58. Low tonight 36 to 40. High Tuesday 50 to 57. Outlook for Wednesday: Ram, windy and turning colder.
DEPAUW MEMBERS OF PHI BETA KAPPA DePauw University’s newest members of Phi Beta Kappa, national scholastic honorary, who were named Friday include (top row. left to right) Roger Nelsen, Indianapolis; Fred Gass, Greencastle; Doug Poe, Flossmoor, 111.; Robert Blake, Indianapolis. (Second row) James Hunt, Indianapolis; Robert Wells, Paynesville, Mo.; Charles Fetter, Dayton, O.; James Stewart, Fort Wayne. (Third row) Robert and Bruce Bender, twins from Goshen; V’emon Hamilton, Park Ridge, 111.; Dan Dillon, Noblesville. (Fourth row) Sue Warrick Doederlein, Toledo, O.; Steve Davis, Greenfield; Dave Miller, Carmel; Olu Oredugba, Lagos, Nigeria; and Elmer Brestan, Northlake, 111. ( Front row r ) Karen Kish, Indianapolis; Dee Templeton, Terre Haute; Patricia Howell, Indianapolis; Joy Cremens, Galesburg, 111.; and Dorothy Hutchins, Roachdale. Elected but not pictured were Kathy Pinkstaff. Cravvfordsville; Eveyln Stone. Indianapolis; Jerry Parker, Peoria, HI.; Bruce Campbell, Battle Creek, Mich.; Brenda Mercer, Parkersburg, W. Va.; Susan Vogel, St, Louis, Mo.; Judith Ch&rlick, Alexandria, Va.; Jacqueline Faust, Morton drove, 111.; and Nancy Wagner, Denver, Colo,
Minimum 6 a. m. 7 a. m. 8 a. m. 9 a. m. 10 a. m. 11 a. m. 12 noon ^ ip.m.
31* 32* 37* 37* 42* . 45* 50° . 54* . 55*
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