The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 September 1964 — Page 1

Weather Forecast SHOWERS; COOLER High. 80*; Lou. «•>

The Daily Banner

'It Waves For All'

"W« con not but »peok th« things which we hove seen or heard." Ad* 4:20

VOLUME SEVENTY-TWO

GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1964

UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL SERVICE

NO. 277

Ford Motor Co. Is Next Target For Auto Union

DETROIT UPI — United Auto Workers President Walter P. Reuther gues to Ford Motor Co. Friday where he will demand a better contract than the S90 million, pattern-setting Chrysler. Reuther told reporters Wednesday night, “the basic provisions of the economic packages at Ford and General Motors generally will follow the pattern set at Chrysler.” The labor leader said Chrysler rated its original offer made August 17 at cents an hour for the three-year life of the contract and then agreed to add 15 cents new monej. Chrysler, he said, will sign two letters—one agreeing to provide the extra 15 cents an hour per worker and another agreeing to pay o'a cents an hour to give 12 minutes additional relief time for every assembly line worker. Chrysler, he said, will sign two letters—one agreeing to provide the extra 15 cents an hour to give 12 minutes additional relief time for every assembly line orker. The Chrysler settlement called for pensions up to $400 a month at age 60, early retirement, large increases, additional relief time, two more paid holidays, an extra week's vacation. improved benefits for retired workers, improved insurance benefits, increased survivors benefits, and improved Jobless benefits. Meeting Held By Roochdale Lions The Roachdale Lions Club held their meeting Tuesday evening. Walter <Chick i Taylor pre-

sided.

Lion Hutchins had as his guest his son, Dick. Lions Schmidt and Hutchins were in charge of the entertain-

ment.

Harold Ezri. past president of the Ladoga Lions Club brought the “Quadri-Lads.” four voices in harmony: Don Gravit, Tenor; Dale Buser, Baritone: Virgil Crady, Lead; Myron Pettison,

Bass.

After the Lions meeting, the Scout Committee held a Board of Review. Hal Wendling passed his examination and is now’ a

2nd Class Scout.

As usual a fine dinner was served prior to the meeting. Library Receives Memorial Book The book. “The Four Loves.” by Clive S. Lewis, has recently been presented to the Green-castle-Putnam County Library by Mrs. Jane Hughes, in memory of Mrs. Charles Arnold.

Candidates For School Boards Candidates filing for the new Community School Corporations in Putnam County and whose names will appear on the ballots in their respective areas in November are: SOI Tli PI TNAM Trustces-at-Larue Lee F. Sechmar Washington Tw p. Glenn C. Skelton Frank Jarrell, Trustee Jefferson Twp. Truman W. McCammack Warren Twp. Lee O. Zieg Marlon Twp. James L. Giddings CLOVERDALE Cioverdale Tup. Robert Wilson Glen M. Furr Gordan C. Hoffa Wilbur A. Huber Russell Sendmeyer Lillian Whitaker Joe D. Currie Wayne Brarmeman Jennings Twp. Hugh F. Collins Zerelda S. John Jackson Twp. Jerry K. Orman Taylor Twp. Harold Smith. Jr. Woodrow Sharp NORTH PUTNAM Trustees-at-Larue Harold Alcorn John C. Burdette Francis C. Lane Jackson Twp. John E. Crosby Walter Hubble Franklin Twp. William E. Etcheson Rusvll Twp. Andy Cross Hinton Twp. Hubert L. McGaughey Kelsie R. Warne Monroe Twp. James H. Summers Floy# Twp. William Luther Win Top Honors At Two Fairs Tommy Hendricks, of Cloverdale. one of Indiana’s well known swine and sheep exhibitors made a clean sweep at the Ohio State Fair last week when he won all the blue ribbons and had both champion boar and sow as well as reserve champion boar and sow. His herd sire won the Premier Sire award. At the Indiana State Fair, he won all the blue awards except one and had both champion boar and sow. He will exhibit eight hogs at the National OIC Show and Sale at Greenville. Illinois. Sept.

18th.

The Thomas Hendricks and Daughter flock of Columbia sheep won all the blue awards except one at the Indiana State

Dr. Lewis, the British scholar * a “' - avm o both champion Ram and religious philosopher dis- an< ^ Ewe and Reserve champion cu~-es the many-sided aspects Ewe. They also exhibited at the ot love, the love between par- Ohio State Fair where they had ents and children: friendship. th e reserve champion ewe. the love between individuals for They also had the Grand each other; the love of men and champion Fleece of Wool over women for each other; and the all the wool shown at the Indilove of God which may enrich ana State Fair. Their wool exal! love and all life. hiblt also won two blue ribbons The author writes with a ^lie Ohio State Fair

charming style and a deep perception of human emotions, giving us a book to be read again and again and reflected

upon.

Northeast Florida Coast Is Lashed By Hurricane's Fury

Crisis In Congo Has Drawn Out For Four Years

DPU AIR FORCE EQUIPMENT DISPLAY

Today Major Knox B. McKee. Professor of Air Science, announced plans for freshman Air Force ROTC orientation activities at DePauw. The orientation program will be conducted during the week of 13th of September and will include displays of Air Force equipment, movies, and a department open house (with free soft drinks, coffee and donuts I. Major McKee stated that the orientation program has been designed to better acquaint freshmen with the Air Force Reserve Officers Training Corps. Members of the AFROTC staff along with members of DePauws cadet corps will be available for ques-

tioning during this period.

By United Pres* International If a crisis can be said to be continuing one. then for the

last four years the Congo has

answered that description. It is a crisis that has defied

solution of the United States,

Barry Very Encouraged With Campaign Start

SEATTLE UPI — Republican presidential nominee Barry Goldwater, “terrifically encouraged” by early campaign reaction, headed east today from the Northwest where he accused the Kennedy-Johnson administration of playing politics with foreign policy. The Arizona senator described himself as greatly surprised and greatly pleased at initial responses to GOP campaign efforts. Midway in his first week of intensive campaigning. Goldwater scheduled speeches in Idaho. Montana and Minnesota today. A rally hen- Wednesday night in the new Seattle coli--eum was one source of encouragement to the GOP nominee. There were loud cheers, fireworks, cascading balloons and an overflow crowd which responded w a r m 1 y to his regionally televised speech on foreign policy.

Before the cheering coliseum crowd which overflowed the 4.250 seats and left a couple of thousand standing outside, Goldw ater Wednesday night de-

foreign policies, charging that the Democrats made cynical use of world affairs for domestic political purposes. He said the nation must be prepared for "a crisis of some sort just before an election” and lie compared the foreign policy views of the Republicans and the Democrats In these terms. “Our view is just this: If an element of foreign policy helps the cause of freedom, do it. If it hurts the cause of freedom, reject it.” “But what does this administration say. If an element of foreign policy hurts Lyndon Johnson's election chances, forget it. 11 it helps his election chances, assign ten press agents to it.” Goldwater attacked administration policies in Cuba. Laos. Viet Naan, and in Berlin. Now You Know

attempted to lead his Katanga Province out of the Congo and hired white mercenaries to help

with the job.

Many of these leaders were the same who had barred him

by the United Nations, the Bel- from a recent African summit gians, the Russians and the conference in Cairo. Congolese themselves. Sponsoring the meeting which For the Republic of the Con- had been called at the Congo’s go has never been a nation. Nor °' vn re( iuest was the OAU, the has its tribal structure permit Organization °f African Unity ted the emergence of a man "'hich nou ' "’as being called who might be a national leader u P on f° face its greatest chal-

a It hough several including the ,en g e -

late Patrice Lumumba, former Working against Tshombe Premier Cyrille Adoula and now not only was his past record but Moise Tshombe have tried to also the fact that to attain even create the image of national limited success in turning back Newgent leaders. Congolese rebels he again had that two The Congo already was on its turned to the help of white mer-

way back to the jungle when cenaries.

th last United Nations troops And. even worse, most of pulled out at the end of June them had come from Southern and it accelerated its pace with Rhodesia and South Africa their departure. whose white supremacy policies Savagery, bow- and-arrow have made them especially diswarfare. murder, rape and even tasteful to Africans,

cannibalism rushed to fill the

lodged in the Putnam County vacuum left by departing au-

Jml Wednesday. thority.

Against this background of failure and frustration, the un-

eurtody by City Officer John liveliest of all collaborators met Vermillion and also jailed in the Ethiopian capital of Ad-

dis Ababa this week for another attempt at solution. On the one hand was Congo lese Premier Moise Tshombe pleading for the aid of black

African troops to help bring Mrs. Bertha Sigler Brothers, about order, and on the other 74, who made her home with the foreign ministers of other her daughter, Mrs. Paul Garl,

James C. Rev- new African nations which had 810 South Indiana Street, pass-

dammed him the most when he ed away Thursday morning at

Two Jailed In Recent Robbery

Police Chief Roy stated this morning

local young men are being held as suspects in the recent robbery ot the Drake Jewelry Store

on Seminary Street.

Orville Ward was arrested by Sheriff Kenneth Knauer and idged in the Putnam County

ail Wednesday.

Tommy Rolls was taken into

,if tody by ermillkiTi

Wednesday.

The two are slated for appearances in the I’utnam Circuit Court. Chief Newgent said. Rites Held Today

Upon his return to the Congo to lead the nation he once had sought to dismember, Tshombe asked the help of troops from Nigeria, Ethiopia, Liberia. Se-

(Continued on Page 9)

Bertha Brothers ; Rites Saturday

The most lethal hurricane to hit the United States was one which struck Galveston, Tex., on Sept. 8, 1900, accompanied

livered a sharply worded criti- by a tidal wave. The death toll cism of Kenned y-Johnson reac hed 5.000. according to the

World Almanac.

Services for

nolds were held at 2:30 this afternoon at the Rector Funeral Home. The Rev. Maxwell Webb officiated and interment was in

Forest Hill Cemetery. High And Low

NEW YORK UPI Tile highest temperature reported Wednesday to the U.S. Weather Bureau, excluding Alaska and Hawaii, was 102 at Presidio. Tex. The lowest reported this morning was 30 at Missoula and Butte. Mont . and Red-

mond. Ore.

LBJ To Speak

8:20 o clock at the Ruark Nursing Home at Fillmore, follow ing an extended illness. She had been a patient in the nursing home for the past two years.

Woman Perishes

In Home Fire

20 Years Ago Rexell A. Boyd attended a meeting of Indiana prosecutors at Lake Wawasee. James F. Zeis received orders to report to the U.S. Marine Corps at Indianapolis for final examination following his enlistment. Cioverdale was holding a Lions Club Fall Festival and 1-H Club Fair.

MISHAWAKA. UP! - Mrs. Sherry Dausman, 21, was burned fatally Wednesday night in a fire at her home. Authorities said Mrs. Dausmans husband. Stanley, 22, dragged her from the burning house and rolled in grass on his lawn to extinguish flames in his own clothing. William Nehmer, 13. a neighbor boy. saw the flames and called the fire department.

WASHINGTON UPI — President Johnson invades Pennsyl-

vania tonight on a vote-seeking Mrs. Brothers was born Novtrip to help kick off the Demo- ember 29. 1889 in Clinton Towncratic campaign in one of the ■''hip. the daughter of Hulda key northern ‘‘battleground” Cromwell Sigler and Abner states. Sigler. She was the last survivJohnson was scheduled to ad- member of her family. She are.ss a $100-a-plate fund-rai.-- ' vas preceded in death by three ing dinner at the Farm Show brothers. J. O. Sigler. Dr. T. A. Arena building in Harrisburg, > is' er an d John M. Sigler, the state capital. Surviving are six children.

James Brothers of Attica. Mrs. A1 Singer of Wyandotte. MichJP igan. Mrs. Francis Koch and Mrs. Allen Stoner of Indianapolis. and Mrs. Paul Garl and Thomas Brothers of Greencas-

tle.

Funeral services will be held Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock from the Rector Funeral Home. Burial will be in the Clinton Falls Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home after 7 o'clock this evening. Calls Off Protests CORNING, Iowa UPI — The National Farmers Organization, reacting to the death of two NFO members crushed beneath the wheels of a cattle truck, today called off all protest demonstrations in its 23-state market rebellion. Oren Lee. Staley, president of the NFO. issued a post-mid-night plea from his head-

ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. UPI— Monstrous hurricane Dora, the worst of the century in this area, smashed through this historic coastal city today and inland across north Florida, leaving a multi-million dollar trail of damage. Giant ferris wheels, fishing piers, trees and power poles c rumbled as the season s mightiest storm moved over a stretch of beach that hadn t been hit directly by a hurricane this century. Slamming inland late Wednesday night, after dawdling about 50 miles off shore for about 15 hours. Dora hit the nation's oldest city with 100 m.p.h. winds which were expected to increase to full force as the center of the storm

passed.

The storm, moving at * snail’s-pace 7 m.p.h., was expected to buffet the St. Augustine and J a c ksonville area with hurricane winds until late morning, according to the Miami Weather Bureau. Ten-foot high tides inudated reads and streets and washed away others. Torrential rains added to the flooding. Much of Jacksonville Beach resembled Venice with tra’ el through its watery streets limited to boats. City Manager Walter Johnson, standing on front steps of Jacksonville Beach's new city hall Wedne.-day night, with six inches of water lapping at his feet, said it would be impossible to survey damage until daylight. “There are no injuries yet, thank God.” he said. More than 45,000 persons had fled inland from exposed beaches in Florida, Georgia and South Carolina. Hurricane warnings were displayed from New Smyrna Beach. Fla., to Charleston. S. C., and gale warning* northward to Myrtle Beach. S.C The weather bureau warned of possible severe flooding in much of the area. Similarities Exist SPRINGFIELD. Mo. UPI — A staff psychiatrist at the U.S. Medical Center said Wednesday similarities exist between accused assassin Lee Harvey Oswald and 11 other potential presidential assassins. Dr. David Roth stein made the observation in an article. “The Presidential Assassination Syndrome.” written for the archieves of General Psychiatry, a publication of the American Medical Association. Rothstein. who interviewed the 11 during the last year, said tlie similarities included a disturbed family background, hostility toward authority, suicidal and self-destruction tendencies, difficulty with selfidentity and a poor record of military service. O.E.5. Notice Roachdale Chapter No. 247, O.E.S.. will hold stated meeting Monday evening. September 14th. at 8 o'clock. Practice se— sion will be held Friday evening, September 11th. All officers please note. Visitors welcome. Sec y., Betty Ford

Wcailicr

"WOMEN VOTERS WEEK" PROCLAIMED

The League of Women Voters drive to increase registration and voting will be highlighted by “Women Voters Week” proclaimed nationally and locally to begin September 13. Mayor Ray Fisher is shown above signing the proclamation in the presence of Voter Service Committee members Mrs. Frank Deer. Mrs. Clem Williams and Mrs. Mary Frances Strain. The public is reminded that the last day to register in Indiana is October 5. Photo by Martin Kruse

quarters here, calling upon leaders and members of the militant farm group to stop

demonstration.

Sunny and hot today. Partly cloudy tonight and Friday. Showers and thunderstorms tonight. Cooler Friday. High today low 90s. Low tonight near

BULLETIN

60. High Friday upper 80s Minimum 58®

ATLANTA. Ga. UPI — Rep.

b a. m. ••••,•••.***

58°

Phil Landrum, who managed

7 a. m.

60®

President Johnson's anti-pover-

8 a. m.

65®

ty bill in the House, and Rep.

9 a. m.

75°

C harles R. Weltner. who voted

10 a. m.

81*

for the civil rights hill, won re-

11 a. m

85®

nomination today in Georgia

12 noon

88*

primaries.

1 p. m.

...... 90*