The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 23 June 1964 — Page 7
Page 6 TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 1964
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
ENDS TONIGHT TONY CURTIS - "Wild and Wonderful"
OPEN AT 6:45 CONTINUOUS SAT. SUN. FROM 2:00
WEDNESDAY THRU SATURDAY
A RIP ROARING WESTERN ACTION FRANK DEAN ANITA siNaina • MaimN * ekbem how th: wist was lost.„ _ nnlnH^
TEXAS
ENCORE - FRIDAY and SATURDAY NITE ONLY SPOOK SHOW—A REAL SPINE CHILLER!
The “Punishment Poll ’U
Right In your theatre seat, you decide the fate of TK/uSaAcfomcus
AMLUAM CASH! PRODUCTION . A COLUhBA RCTUNCS HfLEAS
SUNDAY, MONDAY, TUESDAY HALEY MILLS - "THE CHALK GARDEN'
MIDWAY DRIVE IN THEATRE Evtry Sunday fhtfeofter from 1:00 p.m. to 5 00 p.m. tfioro h going to bo a "Midway Sunday Afternoon Swap Meet," You clean out your basement, attic, closets and garage. Gather up all Hi# things you no longer want or no longer use. put them in your car or truck and bring them out to tho "Midway Sunday Afternoon Swap Meet" and start swaping with one another or buying or selling to ooch other. H's lots of furr because you mako your own deals with on# another It's Fun! If you want, we will Auction off your articles. Set your merchandise out on card tables, on tho hood of your car or on the ground. You might want to mako a sign. Admission 25c — Children Free Merchants interested in bringing out largo trucks loaded with greatly reduced discount specials or for detnonstrtaions — Contact Midway Drive In Theatre, Greencastle Phone OL 3-3295. Advertising other than in local area will bo Indianapolis and Torre Haute newspapers. Soon to be followed by radio announcements.
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bEtter wav (IN ITS DAY) | than the Broad Shoulders (and aching if back) of the fanner himself... to |j| hoist and haul and fetch and carry, I to keep things moving on the farm... ^ ?
ER WAY
IS
THAN WORKFREE.
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WORRYFREE ELECTRICITY FOR HANDLING MATERIALS WITH TIME- AND LABOR-SAVING EFFICIENCY The modem farmer, relying more and more upon dependable electricity, has been freed of his former sentence of hard labor. Why not take full advantage of this most efficient, most economical, most versatile farm energy and let it shoulder the job and safely ease your burden. Hard-working, inexpensive electricity is tireless, always ready to hoist the grain, unload the hay, grind the feed, or do hundreds of other big jobs. So take the strain off your back and off your pocketbook—dollar for dollar electricity is your best buy, your best all-around source of farm power. There's just no better wav' today than WORKFREE, WORRYFREE ELECTRICITY. W orking Together for Better Farming and Better Living Electrically PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY OF INDIANA. INC. v A and REMC 0® SURAL ELECTRIC HEHIERSh.P CORPORATION
MAPLECR0FT AUTO THEATRE Cast of StUesvllle
TONIGHT Walt Dnnay'a "SUMMER MAGIC" Rtut Tho Man — Tho Mutiny Tho Mighty "SILLY SUDD" JUNE SRECIA1 Admission Monday thru Thursday AOs Rogular admission Friday, Saturday and Sunday—75<
LEAGUE LOOKS AT HUMAN RESOURCES
CORRAL DRIVE-IN THEATRE SeeleyriUe, Indiana
Soxoffico Opon 700 Show at Dusk TONIGHT "McLINTOCK!" John Wayns—Mauraan O'Hara (Color) Alto "THE BEATLES COME TO TOWN" (Color) Also "JESSICA" Angia Dickinson Maurico Chtvalior (Color)
Meadowbrook DRIVE-IN THEATRE
TONIGHT Richard Egan, Dorothy McGuiro "A SUMMER PLACE" (Color) ilizaboth Taylor, Rock Hudson "GIANT" (Color) Wodnotday $1.00 Carload
MIDWAY DRIVE-IN TONIGHT Acadomy Award Winner For best Actor, Sidney Roitisr in "LILIES OF THE FIELD" Plus "ONE MAN S WAY" Tho Story of Norman Vincont Pool# $1.00 a Car Load Each Monday, Tuosday, Wednesday and Thursday
Development Of Human Resources: Evaluation of policies and programs in the U.S. to provide for all citizens equality of opportunity for education
and employment.
When delegates to the National League of Women Voters Convention in April decided to study the above topic for the next two years, they based their decision partly on the following facta: American democracy is rooted in the concept of equality of opportunity. But in the United States today civil rights and economic opportunity are not equally accessible to alL That some minority racial groups are at a severe disadvantage is obvious; disadvantaged are the poorly educated, those displaced by automation, and persons living In depressed areas. These are the underdeveloped human resources of our own country. Living among us in all parts of the U. S. but isolated from the mainstream of American life and alienated from its values, these citizens have certain common characteristics. They are found among the 30 million members of families with annual family incomes totaling less than $3,000, the amount offically designated as the poverty line. The heads of more than 60 percent of all these families have not gone beyond grade school — a statistic which dramatizes the importance of educational opportunities In sharing in the life of prosperous America. Fifty-four percent of America’s poor life in cities, 16 percent on farms, and 30 percent in rural non-farm areas. Fewer than half live in the South; yet a Southerner’s chance of being poor is roughly
twice that of a person living elsewhere in the country. One third of the present poor are children. The January 1964 Annual Report of the Council of Economic Advisers suggests that "improvements in the availability and quality of education offer the greatest single hope of escaping poverty as
adults."
For poverty in the U.S. is too frequently- the affliction of people who do not have the chance to develop their full capacities for contributing to the economy. Being able to contribute little, they receive little. Lacking education, their plight worsens as machines increasingly do the work once done by unskilled labor. The selfperpetuating pattern of this situation can be broken only by educational and employment opportunities, including an end to racial discrimination. Discrimination against Negroes. India r^, Spantsh-Americans, Puerto Ricans, and other minorities reduces their employment opportunities, wastes their talents, inhibits their motivation, limits their educatonal achievement. Although 78 per cent of poor Americans are white, nearly half of all nonwhite citizens live in poverty. Slowly and reluctantly Americans are grasping the fact that the United States has its o*vn underdeveloped human resources which constitute a major domestic problem, The League of Women Voters hopes to bring to its study insights gained through studying underdevelopment problems abroad and experience with many local and state problems in ed-
ucation.
STATE OF INDIANA COUNTY or PUTNAM as. IN THE PUTNAM CIRCUIT COURT APRIL TERM 1964 IN THE MATTER OP ESTATE OF babel Grider, Deceased. Estate No. 103M NOTICE TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF babel Grider In the matter of the Estate of babel Orlder. deceased. No. 10346 NoUce la hereby given that Viola G. Weak as administratrix of the above named estate, has presented and filed her final account In final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for the examination and action of said Putnam Court, on the 33 of July, 1964, at which time all persons Interested In said estate are required to appear In said court and show cause. If any there be. why said account should not be approved. And the heirs of said decedent and all others Interested are also required to appear and make proof of their heirship or claim to any part of said estate. Viola G. Wenk PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE Jack P. Hinkle Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court Attorney for Estate J. Frank Durham 33-30-Sp
LEGAL NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given that the Local Alcoholic Beverage Board of Putnam County, Indiana, will, at 11 AM on the IS day of July. 1964. at the Clerks Office. Court House, In the City (or town) of Greencastle. Indiana Is said County, begin Investigation of the application of the following named person, requesting the issue to the applicant. at the location hereinafter set out. of the Alcoholic Beverage Permit of the class, hereinafter designated and will, at said time and place, receive Information concerning the fitness of said applicant and the propriety of Issuing the permit applied for to such applicant at the premises named: The Kroger Co., by J. C. Zlnser, Dlv., Accountant, (Grocery) Beer & Wine TJealers, 517 N. Jackson, Greencastle, Tndlana. Windy Hill Country Club. lac., by Jake Hirt HI. Pres., St Ernest Collins, Sec., (Club) Beer. Liquor St Wine Retailers. R.R. 1. Greencastle, Indiana. SAID INVESTIGATION WILL BB OPEN TO THE PUBLIC. AND PUBLIC PARTICIPATION IS REQUESTED. INDIANA ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE COMMISSION By W.F. CONDON Executive Secretary JOE A. HARRIS Chairman 33-lt
N. Y., Baltimore, Wilmington, and Hoboken and Perth Amboy, N. J., voted for a second time to reject the pact. At least two locals posted pickets outside trucking firms which contract with Ford and General Motors to haul cars. The revolt, started by Teamsters who haul a major part of the nation’s new cars to dealers, could spread to other East Coast auto assembly centers, tying up hundreds of thousands of workers affected by a possible strike, dissident union officials said.
State Police Probe Accident STURGIS, Ky. UPI —State police investigated today a triple-fatality accident Sunday in which an Illinois couple and a Kentucky youth died, but were hampered by the absence of any witness able to tell what
happened.
Victims of the head-on collision of two cars on Kentucky 109 were Junior L. Dial, 39, and his wife, Laura, 32, Effingham, HI., and Stanley Henshaw, 19, Morganfield, Ky. Police said the Dials recently moved to Effingham from Herrin, HL Donald Stevens, 52, Effingham, was still listed in very serious condition at an Evansville, Ind., hospital. Stevens, the only survivor and only known witness of the accident, was still unable to tell police any details of the crash.
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the Circuit Court of Putnam County. Indiana. Notice Is herebj given that William S. Colwell was on the 8th day of June, 1964, appointed administrator of the estate of Alta Mary Colwell, deceased. ATI persons having claims against said estate, whether or not now due. must file the same in said court within elx (6) months from the date of the first publication of this notice or said claims win be forever barred. Dated at Greencastle, Indiana, this 8th day of June, 1964. Probate Cause No. 10408 Jack P. Hinkle Clerk of the Circuit Court for Putnam County, Indiana Roy C. Sutherlln Attorney 9-16-33-3t
Keep Watch On Air Corridors BERLIN UPI — Allied officials in West Berlin today kept a close watch on the vital air corridors linking the city to West Germany for any signs of new Soviet harrassment of Western commercial flights. Russia claimed In notes to the United States and Britain Monday that direct flights from New’ York to Berlin w’ere illegal because they crossed Communist territory in East Germany without East German ap-
proval.
"The safety of these flights . . .cannot be guaranteed," the
Soviet Union warned.
Western officials said the note could mean the beginning of new’ Communist pressure against the three air corridors. A Pan American Airways jetliner, on a flight originating in New’ York, was scheduled to fly the central corridor into the di-
vided city later today.
Three Western airlines—Pan 1 # . American, Air France and Brit- High Court RulGS
ish European Airways — have WASHINGTON UPI — The been making up to 200 nights SuI>reme Court Monday 8tnlck
Hoosier Steer Is Champion
INDIANAPOLIS UPI — An Augus steer shown by the Roy Stum family of Clinton won the grand championship at the sixth annual Hoosier Beef Show carcass judging Monday night. The 793-pound lightweight animal had not placed near the top in on-foot judging June 1112. Neither had the 962-pound reserve grand champion, a halfbrother of the champion, shown by Jones Angus Farm near Clin-
ton.
Backs Scranton
Revolt Flares In Teamster Union NEW YORK UPI — Teamster czar James R. Hof fa already fighting for his freedom in a federal court, today faced a revolt within his own union against his pet nationwide'
truckers contract.
Five locals bolted his orders to accept the contract Monday
when Teamsters in Yonkers, nomination.
a day through the corridors, w’hich were established by the four-power agreements governing Berlin at the end of World
War n.
Although Pan American has been flying into West Berlin for years, its previous flights all touched down in West Germany. The new "direct” flights w-ere inaugurated last month. Although they are not non-stop, they land at Prestwick, Scotlamd, or some other point in Western Europe for refueling and do not land in West Ger-
many.
They are called "direct" because the passengers no longer have to change planes in Frankfurt or some other West German city.
down the acquisition of the Ha-zel-Atlas Glass Co. by Continental Can Co., Inc., in 1956 on the ground it lessens competition in violation of the Clayton anti trust law.
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The vote was 7-2, with Justice Byron R. White speaking for the majority. Justices John M. Harlan and Potter Stewart said in dissent that the court’s conclusion w’as based on an "erroneous analysis” of the factors in the case.
WASHINGTON UPI — Former New York Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, one of the OOP’s "eastern kingmaker*" is reported supporting Pennsylvania Gov. William W. Scranton’s bid for
the Republican
Not To Blame BROWN STO WN UPI — Warden Ward Lane, Indiana State Prison, absolved himself of responsibility today for the parole and release of a convicted murderer last March 1.
"The only people who can parole an inmate is the parole board, of which I am not a member, and Governor Welsh," Lane said. “I have nothing to do with the parole board whatsoever. Nor did I have anything
presidential j to do with Rariden’s release,"
(Lane said.
JHE DAILY BANNER Youth Killed By United Pre»* Internotionol Indiana’s 1964 traffic fatality I toll stood at 539 today compared with 535 a year ago. with * Frankfort teen-age motorcyclist the latest victim. Harold Staley, 16. died Monday afternoon in a hospital several hours after his cycle collided with a car near his home. A cousin who was riding on tho cycle with him was hospitalized.
CONTROL GIANT FOXTAIL
and other weeds and grasses with a directed postemergence spray of...
DEMONSTRATING RABBI EJECTED One of several rabbis who accompanied Negro integrationists who attempted to hold a “prayer service" is ejected from the parking lot by Janies Brock (left), manager of the -Monson Motor Lodge in racially troubled St. Augustine. Fla.
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WHAT’S NEXT?—U. S. Senate minority leader Everett Dirkson (left), Illinois, and majority leader Mike Mansfield, Montana, discuss the civil rights bill in Washington, D. C.
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a
(Others)
(Beautyrest)
Famous Water Glass Test ~ Press down on one spring in an ordinary mattress and other springs sag down, he water spills. Press down on a Beautyrest spring and rt goes down alone. Not a drop spilled. This means you are getting "give''only where your body is everting greatest pressure.
Jotf/fete/J
Independence of Beautyrest springs explains their restful comfort Ordinary mattress springs are connected. When one *sags, it drags the others down with it. Your hips may push down and leave your backbone unsupported at the waist line. But the “give” in Beautyrest springs conforms with and supports every curve and pressure of your body so that every inch gets exactly the gentle support it ______________ needs. The reason is that every Beautyrest spring is a unit in itself, in its own separate fabric container. Each spring yields on its own as illustrated in the “water glass” test herewith. You are as young as you sleep. Seven hours on a Beautyrest are as good as 9 on an “Anybody” mattress. Beautyrest has springs of eternal youth. Now, Beautyrest is guaranteed for 15 years. At $79.50 it still costs less than any so-called “bargain'’ mattress ... less than 2c a night. SHOP IN AIR CONDITIONED COMFORT HORACE LINK & Co. “The Store Of Furniture”
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