The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 September 1964 — Page 3

THE DAILY BANNER

GREENCASTLE, INDIANA

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1964 Pag* 3

~DPU To Honor Inland now operates 22 container plants throughout the country and maintains three kraft mills and over a million acres of Southern timberland. The 1912 University of Illinois graduate has received honorary doctorates from four Indiana colleges and universities, plus the Law Day Award from the Appellate Court of Indiana and his Alma Mater’s distinctive Achievement Award. He presently is serving as di-

rector of The Indiana National Bank. Morgan Packing Company. Inc., Decker Real Estate Company, Inc., and is a trustee o^ two Indianapolis colleges and universities and chief officer for a trio of Indianapolis civic organizations. A 1923 graduate of M.I.T., Alfred Perlman launched his career with the Northern Pacific Railway as a draftsman. Eleven years later he left the N.P.R. as assistant to the vice president of operations, including a period in attendance at

Harvard's School of Business, came traffic manager of Union Administration. Drop Forge Co. two years later, Except for World War EL a partner in the S. R. Crown & when he served as an engineer- Ck>- when he was 20 in 1916, ing consultant in Nevada, Perl- and president of Material Seri man was a consultant with the vice Corp., building materials Railway Division of the Recon- firm, in 1921. He chaired its i struction Finance Corporation board from 1941*1959, following | and served in operational and 1 20 years as president, executive capacities with the He is a director of the Chi- : Chicago. Burlington and Quincy cago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad and the Denver and Railroad, Hilton Hotels CorporRio Grande Western Railroad, ation, Waldorf Astoria CorporaLeaving the latter in 1954 as tion, Chicago Boys Club, and

Webfooted Watchdogs

"5®

Few animals detect the scent of men better than geese, and they have had a glorious history as sensitive sentries. A gaggle of noisy geese awakened Rome to the approach of invading Gauls in 309 B. C. and saved the Eternal City

from barbarian conquest.

•>

UL

4

-,v.

mm

t 'w .K.r* For centuries farmers and ranchers throughout the world have used geese to guard their homesteads, herds and flocks. In some areas, like rural Maryland, farmers even trust geese to sense a change in the weather. They say the approach of rain is forecast by their honking geese.

The most famous geese in the world today the Ballantine’s Scotch Watch, in Dumbarton, Scotland. These specially trained geese guard $980 million worth of aging whisky at the Ballantine’s distillery.

NOTICE EFFECTIVE OCTOBER 1st TEMPORARY LOCATION of VIOLET’S BEAUTY SHOP

2 North Morkot St.

Phono 01 3-4«l*

Sniide WASHINGTON MARCH OF EVENTS

TWO POTOMAC MEMORIALS TO HONOR DYNAMIC TR

A H-foot high

statue

[executive vice president, he assumed his present post. Under his direction, the Central has invested approximately $390 million in an extensive physical modernization program. Shortly before the outbreak of the Korean War, Perlman was a consultant on Korean railroads to the U. S. Department of State. In 1950 he served in a similar capacity to the government of Israel. A trustee of Denver University and the American Heritage Foundation, Mr. Perlman also is director of over a half dozen other railroads, the New York World’s Fair, the Association of American Railroads and the Transportation Association of America. A Chicagoan by birth and still a resident of that city. Colonel Henry Crown is chairman of Materials Service Division of General Dynamics as well as chairman of the executive committee of the parent corporation.

City Products Corp. He is a trustee, associate or fellow of six diverse American universities and colleges, five of which were founded by Catholic, Jewish or Protestant faiths. Keynoter John Swearingen was elected president of Standard Oil of Indiana in 1958 and became chief executive officer in 1960. He has held his director’s post 12 years. The Columbia. S. C., native and University of South Carolina graduate joined Standard of Indiana in 1939 as a chemical engineer at Whiting, Ind. He was transferred in 1947 from the firm’s research division to the manufacturing department of Pan American Petroleum Corporation. In 1951 he became a director of Pan American. After becoming a director of Standard of Indiana in 1952, he was elected vice president for production two years later, responsible for coordinating crude oil production, pipeline and purchasing activities of all subsidi-

etta, Ohio. The trip ends Saturday in Chicago. Goldwater spoke at a rally outside Washington’s Union Station Monday night shortly before his 17-car special train pulled out for Ohio. Standing bareheaded in a light rain, he told about 1.000 cheering persons that the President is running scared. “If things were going so well, he’d still be at home, taking two long swims a day and walking the dogs and reporters,” he said. “Instead, he's burning up taxpayer money a mile a minute campaigning all over this country. If Lyndon Johnson really believed those polls that he carries in his pocket, would he be running so hard, so soon and so fast?”

The Colonel, so named for his j aries. He was named executive rank as a U. S. Army Corps of vice president in 1956. Engineers officer in World War Swearingen, who received the II, attended LaSalle Extension M.S. degree at Carnegie Tech, University. is a director of The Chase ManGoing to work as a clerk for hattan Bank. The First Nationthe Chicago Fire Brick Co., at al Bank of Chicago, and the the age of 14, Col Crown be- American Petroleum Institute.

Top Secret Plane To Be Unveiled EDWARDS AFB. Calif. UPI — America’s super-secret A-ll triple-sonic plane was to be unveiled here Wednesday, possibly with a world record speed attempt. President Johnson earlier disclosed that the All outclasses all other aircraft. The Air Force said the advanced experimental jet fighter can streak. 2.300 miles an hour and fly higher than 70,000 feet. So secret is the plane that only accredited news media representatives — and these had to be U. S. citizens — were to be allowed at the public unveiling.

paigning before crowds totaling more than 300,000. He struck out hard and often at the Arizona senator in a series of speeches designed to convince Republicans to abandon their candidate for the White House this year and stick with him instead. The President received the wildest welcome since the campaign started and responded by shaking hands with thousands of well-washers who surged around his open car. And he stopped his motorcade at least three dozen times to hold his own version of New England town meetings with super enthusiastic crowds wherever he went. Johnson rejected Goldwater’s suggestion for carrying the war in South Viet Nam to the North and brushed off the GOP contender’s “why not victory” slogan in foreign policy as a “dangerous illusion of fantasy."

LEGAL NOTICE OF PUBLIC

BEARING

Notice Is hereby given that the Local j Alcoholic Beverage Board ol Putnam ' County. Indiana, wilt at n AM op the 15th day ol October. 1964 at the Clerk* Oltlce. Court House. In the City <or town) of Oreencastle. Indiana In said | County, begin InvesUgatlon ol the appllcaUon of the following named person. requesting the Issue to the a> | pllcant. at the locaUon 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 eucb applicant, at the premises

named:

American Legion. No. 58. (Club) Beer. Liquor A Wine Retailers. 123 E. Walnut St.. GreencasUe. Indiana. Donald L. Carrington St Joseph A.

Goldwater Woos Midwest Votes EN ROUTE WITH GOLDWATER UPI — Presidential nominee Barry M. Goldwater, convinced he’s got President Johnson running scared, headed into the vote-rich Midwest today aboard the season’s first whistle stop campaign train. The first stop on the Arizona senator’s week-long, 33-stop

•. r u™m) d B\° OU Ucuof A T w,nT-Rrt*.c- tri P ttrou&h Ohio. Indiana and ers. it w. Franklin, Oreencastle, in- Illinois was scheduled for Mari-

dlana

SAID INVESTIGATION WILL BE

Huge Crowds Greet Johnson WASHINGTON UPI — President Johnson counted unexpected political dividends today from a crowd-arousing New England tour that buoyed his hopes of sweeping the six-state region's 23 electoral votes In November. Johnson sought to pin a “reckless and heartless” label on Republican presidential challenger Barry Goldwater during 20 hours of whirlwind cam-

Steer Rules On Public Records INDIANAPOLIS UPI — Financial statements, which list any debts on persons, firms or property, are not unlimited public records under the uniform commercial code law. Atty. Gen. Edwin K. §teers Monday ruled that such statements were within the meaning of the Hughes-Anti-Secrecy Law but “the Legislature has in some respects limited the public’s access to them.” In answer to State Sen. Lee Clingan. D-Covington, Steers said a county recorder had the right to require a $1.50 charge for persons seeking information from such documents.

Lung Cancer Fatal MOSCOW UPI — Mikhail Svetlow’, 61, Soviet poet and playwright has died of lung cancer, the Russian news agency Tass reported Monday.

MASONIC NOTICE Work in the Red Cross and Malta, Wednesday, Sept. 30, 7:30 p. m. F. D. Commander

GREENCASTLE COMMUNITY SCHOOLS 1964-65

ADULT EDUCATION PROGRAM

ENROLL IN ONE OF THE FOLLOWING CLASSES FOR SELF-IMPROVEMENT OR HOBBY INTEREST • TYPING Beginner and Refresher Course • SKETCHING Second Semester—Oil Painting • DRIVER EDUCATION Learn To Drive—Get A License • BU SINESS ENGLISH Business World English • BEGINNING SHORTHAND .... Second Semester Advanced • SEWING Primarily For Beginners • AU TO MECHANICS For Out-of-School Youth • BASIC ELECTRICITY Second Semester Electronics • DRAFTING Class Will Determine Type • READING IMPROVEMENT COURSE Learn To Read • NURSE'S AID TRAINING A Pre-Employment Training • CONVERSATIONAL SPANISH Beginners Only • OFF-SET PRINTING Limited To SLx • MACHINE SHOP Bench, Lathe, Mill Work • PHYSICAL FITNESS FOR MEN ... Calisthenics and Games • BRIDGE Instruction Only

HIGH SCHOOL CREDIT For adults who hav* not completed requirements for graduation. Class meets two evenings per week for 10 weeks. Subjects offered os demand warrants.

REGISTER SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL BLDG. 7:00p.m. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1964

First Clots 7:30 P. M. For Furthor Information: Call School Office Ol 3-3715 Call Harold W. Stewort Ol 3-4039

OPEN TO THE PUBLIC. AND PUBLIC PARTICIPATION 13 REQUEST-

ED.

INDIANA ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE COMMISSION By W.F. CONDON Executive Secretary JOE A HARRIS Chairman

BRONZE STATUE ON ISLI NAMED AFTER PRESIDENT

By HENRY CATHCART Central Press Washington Writer TTTASHPfGTOX—President-choosing season between convenW tions and election is a good time to recognize that xnomen* tous memorial* are under construction now in the national capital, honoring another President—Theodore Roosevelt. One to a granite memorial and bronze statue on Theodore Roosevelt Island and the other is a bridge across the

Potomac.

Walk along trails on the Potomac island and suddenly you come upon a clearing in the wilderness. Near the center of this forested Island you find construction half completed on

the Theodore Roosevelt Memorial.

The public’s or>!y access to the Island at present is by boat. A small ferry carries pedestrians on weekends from the Georgetown side of the Potomac. When a 400-foot pedestrian bridge is completed from the Virginia side, the ferry will cease. Vehicles of all kinds will continue to be barred from the island. The central attraction of the memorial will be a 17-foot bronze statue of TR, his right arm raised in one of his famous gestures. The statue will stand on its pedestal in front of a

30-foot granite shaft. A 40-foot reflecting pool will surround them. It will contain two fountains. Two footbridges will span the moat. Two circular pools with ornamental fountains are be-

ing built on two sides of the main reflecting pool.

• • • •

• STEPS WILL ENABLE pool-area visitors to walk to the upper terrace. There among ornamental gardens will stand four 21foot granite slabs, or stales—pillars bearing inscriptions. Various statements by the dynamic TR will be chiseled into the granitat These inscription® will cover four main subjects: NATURE. MANHOOD. YOUTH, and THE STATE. Here are examples of TR’s words from each panel: NATURE: “Conservation means development as much as it

does protection.”

MANHOOD: “Only those are fit to live who do not fear to die, and none are fit to die who have shrunk from the joy of life and

the duty of life.”

YOUTH: “Courage, hard work, self-mastery’, and intelligent effort are all essential to successful life. Alike for the nation and the individual, the one indispensable requisite is character.” THE STATE: "A great democracy has got to be progress!vs or it will soon cease to be a great democracy.” Theodore Roosevelt Island itself to a living memorial to TR. He used to hike there and swim in the Potomac with his boys, when he was President. The Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Association acquired the island in 1931. They transferred it to the National Park Service to maintain in honor of TR—one of th# nation's greatest conservationists. Numerous trees were planted and for 30 years wildlife and wilderness have developed.

• • • •

• IN 1958, the centennial of TR’s birth, the island was fornufily

dedicated as a living memorial to him. Invited guests sat beneath big oaks near the island’s southern end. Downstream and across the Potomac they saw the Lincoln Memorial, the Washington Monument, the United States CapitoL They knew this island once belonged to George

Mason, author of the Bill of Rights.

Americans who will vote this year one week after Oct 27, anniversary of Theodore Roosevelt's birth—a year marked by assassination, riots, strikes, and Intrigues against liberty—may well remember this admonition from TR that will also be inscribed in granite at his new memorial: "Ours is a government

of liberty by, through and under the law.”

LLOYD ELLIS

ASK FOR A FREE ESTIMATE ON PEERLESS ELECTRIC FURNACE WITH CENTRAL AIR CONDITIONING OL 3-6595

This advertisement was in error Monday

Today’s Watchword

lei-a Fortune^ tel/er took info your M&fe/t/

BRING VOUR WATCH TO A SPECIALIST FOR

Rights Bill

Author

Owned Island

Should not have included this price

Accrodited exports wlHi tea* experioaca ood vary nawat* alactroaic-oga equipment auvre dependable work and tael tarvice. NCW WATCH GUARANTEE! MASON JEWELRY So. Side of Square Registered Watchmaker

LUXURIOUS TAILORED - TO - MEASURE CUSTOM MADE DRAPERIES Wall To Wall--Ceiling To Floor

or

Tailored To Fit Your Windows Regardless of Size Our New 1964 Fall fabrics have arrived and priced lower than in many season*# We invite you to come in and see our beautiful new selections of fabrics. WAVERLY’S creators and designers have contributed their best to make your home more attractive and inviting. You’re sure to find your wanted material. Hundreds of Fabrics To Choose From

All Kinds and Prices

We are the FRANCHISED DEALER for WAVERLY Fabrics and many others. Including the complete line of Aero Fabrics. Tree Decorator Service. We bring samples to your home, take all measurements, make your draperies perfect in our own workshop and hang them for you. Complete line of traverse rods and

accessories.

NEW LIFE FOR YOUR OLD FURNITURE Before you discard any comfortable piece of upholstered furniture see how our expert craftsmen can transform that old chair or sofa into a truly beautiful modern piece of furniture. For less than half the price of new. Special price.

SOFA $35.00 CHAIR $25.00 Plus Material

NOT ONLY NEW COVERING

But rebuilt completely or restyled to whatever you desire. From the frame up, including new springs and padding.

★ REAL ★

UPHOLSTERING

Art Furniture 6l Drapery Shop

5 W. Franklin St.

Tel. OL 3-3219