The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 21 September 1964 — Page 3
THE DAILY BANNER
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 f 1964 Page 3
STATE OF INDIANA
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COUNTT OF PUTNAM In. Re: Gu»rQl*ns;.:p ot Fiord Bales Central National Bank. Oreencastle. Indiana. Guardian IN THE PUTNAM CIRCUIT COUR APRIL TERM. 1864 NOTICE OF THE PRIVATE SALE OF REAL ESTATE Ko 750 The undersigned Guardian of the estate of Fiord Bales, an incompetent, hereby fives notice that by virtue of an order of the Putnam Circuit Court it win at the hour of 10:00 A. M. on the 5th day of October, 1064. at Greencastle, Indiana, and from day to day thereafter until sold, offer for sale at private s*e all of the interest of said yard in and to the following real estate to-wit: The West half of the South West Quarter of Section No. 3s in Township 16 North of Range No. 5 West, containing 80 acres, more or less. Also the North East quarter of the South East quarter of Section 34. Township 16 North, Range 5. West, containing 40 acres, more or less. Also a part of Section 3 in Township 15 North in Range 5 West, and a part of Section 34 in Township 16 North in Range S West dsecribed as follows, to wit: Commencing at the South East corner of the said Section 34 and running thence North with the East line 19 chains and 82 links to the North East comer of the South East quarter of the South East quarter of the said Section 34: thence West with the North line of the said quarter quarter section 9 chains. 96 links; thence South 2 and one-half degrees East 32 chains and 5 links to the center of the gravel road: thence South 78 degrees East 13 chains and 2 links to the East line of the East half of the East half
of the said Section 3; thence North wltn said East line 15 chains and 17 1 links to the North East comer of the i said Section 3; thence West 2 chains , and 47 links to the place of beginning. Containing 36.17 acres, more or less. J Also part of the North East quarter of Section 34 Township 16 North. Range 5 West, bounded as follows, to wit: ! | Commencing at a stake on the East i ’ line 5 chains and 68 and one-half links | South of the North Ea»t comer of said quarter section; thence South with said East line 8 chains and 62 and one-half < links to a stake; thence East parallel 1 with the South line 39 chains and 81 links to the place of beginning, containing 34 and one-half acres, more or
I less.
Also, a part of the East half of the North East quarter of Section 34, Township 16 North, Range 5 West, described ! as follows, to wit: Commencing at the South East comer of said half quarter ; running thence West 19 chains and ' 89-'s links with the South Line of said half quarter to the South West comer of said half quarter; thence North 25 ' chains and 62 and one-half links with the West line of said half quarter to a stake; thence North 85 degrees East 19 chains and 90 and one-half links to | a stake on the East line of said half j quarter: thence South with the section ) line 25 chains and 62 and one-half links i to the place of beginning, containing 51 acres, more or less. .. , Said sale will be made subject to { the approval of the Putnam Circuit Court and for not less than the full ! appraised value thereof, and upon the following terms and conditions: Cash, j Central National Bank Greencastle, Indiana Guardian Hughes & Hughes | Attorneys 7-14-21-31 i
FILLMORE NEWS Emra Coshow of IndianapoThe VVSCS met Thursday af- iis and Warren Coshow and son temoon at the Recreation Build-! Gar - V of Bontana - Callf - visiled their aunt. Leiia Herman Tuesday morning at the Ruark Nursing Home. Mrs. Ethel Jackson returned home from the Putnam County Hospital Saturday following appendectomy. Mrs. Oran Buis returned of Greensboro spent Monday' home Friday from the Putnam til Thursday with his cousin. County Hospital following surgJesse Evans and Mrs. Evans, ery. While here the Evans accom- Hershell Scobee returned panied them to visit relatives i home Thursday from the and former friends at Danville. Methodist Hospital in IndianNew Winchester, Lizton, Bain- apolis following surgery, bridge and Clayton. Mrs. Worth Arnold and her YOU'RE TELLING ME!
ing with Mrs. Ethel Byrd as hostess. Mrs. Ruth Ragan gave the lesson on the changes in WSCS in 25 years. The work was finishing a quilt. Plans for the bazaar and smorgasbord, Oct. 3 were discussed. Rev. and Mrs. Olin Reybom
six daughters ate Monday dinner at the Double Decker. Mrs. : Joan Veasley and Mr. Veasley 1 of Amarillo, Texas are visiting relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Fogle are 1 the parents of a daughter, born i Friday at the Putnam County Hospital. Mrs. Ruth Smith spent Friday :n Brazil with Mr. and Mrs. Jack Huskey.
HEALTH CAPSULES by Michael A. Petli. M.D.
IF V0URE ON A LOW-^ALT PIET, IS THERE ENOUGH SALT IN PRINKING WATER TO make anv pipcersnce ?
— Bf WILUAM RtTT — Central Press Writer
WAIt ON ILLINOIS
TAX CHEATS VMAS DECLARED 5T GOVERNOR OTTO KEPNER: “INSISTTHAT EVERT ONE PAY HlS FAIR SHARE." HE ORDERED WHEN HE TOOK OFFICE. IN THREE YEARS, ILLINOIS MOVED FROM A $\l/t MILLION DEFICIT TO NEARLY UOO MILLION in CASH SURPLUS RAISING TAXES/ - . .j~
■
'•’V,
Jllinois leads the 50 STATES IN TOTAL volume of GOODS EXPOQTED/ ..... —-
[Illinois holds the mono
FOR NEW COMPANIES BOPN IN A YEAR IN a sinq-le: state, last year, 1410 new manuFACTUPIN& OP PROCESSING FIRMS WERE FORMED/
£1
Pttiule WASHINGTON ^
MARCH OF EVENTS-
ACtOSS-BOARO WOULD FACE ■
TAX CUT • HURDLES
Geldwater
Majorities a
necessity.
Negro Only 'All-American*
In Clagg
VENUS moves so slowly it takes her 253 of our days for her to revolve once, California scientist* say latest studies show. Nice to know our sister planet is not only lovely but mighty easy going. ! ; • Zadok Drtmkopf says there's nothing cheerful about that hurricane Gladys except the first syllable of her name. ! ! ! Bibliographer* estimate that to date some 54 billion books have come off the world's presses. Which reminds us—read any good ones lately? ! ! ! In trying to acquire a tiny bit of it for a souvenir, a visitor to Wookey Hole Cave in England shattered "The Witch’s Broom-
stick’', famous 42,000-year-old staglamite. That's the wrong way to make one's mark on history! ! ! ! Latest count shotes Australia has l€Jf,763.000 sheep. That country no longer is wild, but if sure is ivooly. ; j ! More and more ball clubs are showing some of their games on theater television screens. Does this mean popcorn may replace peanuts and hotdogs? ! ! ! Now that Hawaii has imported thousands of lady beetles to get rid of its mealybugs, a sugar cane pest, it looks like life for the mealies will be short and sweet.
GOLDWATER FLAN FAR FROM POLICIES OF DEMOCRATS
By HENRY CATHCART Central Press Washington Writer |V7ASHI>(JlOV—Barry Goldwater’s rallying cry is ‘‘A choice, W not an •cho!” But to some fiscally oriented individuals in Washington fcis position on tax reduction is providing the re*
Terse of that slogan.
Goldwater has proposed a series of five per cent cuts in taxes over the next five years, straight across the board and coupled with commensurate reductions in the level of government spending. It is really a far cry from tax reduction policies of the Democrats, but it is an "echo" in the sense that it endorses the economic principle of cutting taxes rather than holding rates high in times of balanced budgets in order to apply a surplus to reduction of the
5300-billion-plus national debt.
In any event, even should he be elected President, Goldwater would have a hard tima getting any flat across-the-board percentag* cut through Congress. In order to do so he’d have to win majorities in both Houses of Congress and then convince them of the wisdom of reversing a long-standing principle in tax application of the "ability to pay.”
1 Most Democrats and liberal Republicans are committed to the •proposition that cuts should be proportionate in the various in‘come brackets in order to provide a meaningful cut in tax dollars paid by the mass of lower-income taxpayers. I Some Democratic leaders in Congress scoff at the Goldwater •plan. They claim it is unrealistic and beyond any practical pros‘pect of achieving adoption. And, they remind, "politics is the art
•of the possible.’' » • • «
f
-• CROSSED FINGERS: To date, government officials are keepling their fingers crossed as public school racial integration pro-
•ceeds in the South smoothly and with no crisis incidents.
1 These officials, largely committed to the Democratic Party and -to President Johnson’s candidacy, had been looking to the back-to-school season this year as a possible area for further racial
conflict. It hasn’t worked that way yet, at least.
1 This doesn’t mean that they’re out of the woods, by any means. Some officials are still fearful that protests in the South ar* being held in abeyance until there is better "timing" in a politi-
cal sense.
There is real concern that anti-integrationists who are committed against the Johnson administration, may seize on an incident or series of incidents as election day nears in order to embarrass the President by forcing him to take "extreme’’ ac-tion-such as another use of federal troops or federal marshals.
* • * *
• NATIVE SONS — Government officials interested in tha Negro's stake in the United States like to relate a story told by
a famous law school dean. It runs like this:
^ One of the professors at a famous eastern college asked that
•ach of the 141 members of the freshman class cn American Civilization place a slip on his desk indicating the number of the student’s grandparents who had been bom in America. The survey was anonymous, but on the following day when it developed that only one of the
141 recorded that all four of his grandparents had been bom in America, the professor asked that student, whoever he was, to stand up. The student who arose happened to be the only Negro
Jr the class.
• This story has been used on several occasions to Illustrate tho deep roots of Americanism inherited by Negroes in this country whose ancestors, generally, were brought here between 100 and
200 years agu.
MOBILE ATOMIC POWER—This hut-like contraption on wheels is the Soviet’s new mobile atomic power station, TES-3. The uranium unit can develop 1,500 kilowatts and works for a year on each ’oading.
FALL SPECIALS ON PERMANENTS $25.00 Charm wave—now $17.50 $20.00 Breck wave—now $15.00 $15.00 Realistic—now $12.50 PAULINE'S BEAUTY SHOPPE Clovardola, Indiana Appointment necexory Phone 795-4343
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IN M0*T CA£E£ NO, BUT IN CERTAIN PART^ OF THE WC RLD ANP iN AREA* U*ING WATSR ■SOFTENER*, THERE .MAY BE *lGMlFiCANT *ALT. TOMORROW: HEART VALVE*. Health Capsules gives helpful information . It is not intended to be of a diagnostic nature
Blanche M. Patterson Chiropodist • Podiatrist 208 Spring Ave. WEDNESDAY, SEPT 23rd Phene OL 3-3964 for appointment
PAUL BUNYAN WOULD BE ENVIOUS—A new Kind of "skyhook,” a helium-filled balloon made by Goodyear Aerospace, is used to move logs near Reedsport Ore. The 75,000-cubic-foot balloon is winched along at about 550 feet with two logs weighing more than a ton dangling far below. The balloon is formed by two cigar-shaped sections 100 feet long.
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HORACE LINK & Co. "The Store of Furniture" STORE HOURS: Open Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, & Saturday 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Open Friday 9:00 a.m. to 8:30 p.m.
