The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 25 January 1965 — Page 4
The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana Monday, January 25,1965
8 Girl Escapees Back In Custody
day night within four hours of their escape from the Indiana
Girls School.
One of the girls, Linda Sue Hagger, 15, Knightstown, turn-
INDIANAPOL1S UPI—Eight ed herself in at the school less girls were apprehended Satur-; than an hour after the escape.
The others, all caught in the vicinity of the school, included Donna Campbell, 16, Gary; Susan Lou Vickery, 18, Hammond; Shirley Ann Hersley, 16, Greensburg; Carolyn Ann Conner, 15, Gary; Stella Kay Knight, 16. Goshen; Sandra Kay Breaux, 16. Lacrosse, and Linda Hess. Brownstown.
Select the squash that Is heavy for its size with firm and unbroken skin.
Silicone waxes should not be used on furniture surfaces that may be refinished later.
FINANCIAL REPORT OF THE CITY CLERK-TREASURER OR CONTROLLER FOR 1964 Financial report of the City Clerk-Treasurer or Controller for 1964, Greencastle City, Putnom County.. CLIFFORD C. FRAZIER, Clerk-Treasurer
II. GENiRAL FUND-19*4 Disburse-
1. Balance on Hand, January 1, 1964 2. General Property Taxes—(Amount Levied 1963—Payable in 1964) 3. Liquor Excise Tax 4. M.V.H. Tax 5. Licenses, Permits and Franchise Fees 6. Fines and Court Fees 7. City Judge 8. Mayor's Office 11. Clerk's Office 14. law Department 15. Common Council 16. City Engineer 17. Board of Public Works 212-213-214-223-35 20. Plan Commission 22. Premiums on Officials' Bonds 23. Insurance—All Kinds 24. Public Printing and Advertising 26. Rent of Property or Equipment—Parking Lot 31. Streets, Alleys and Bridges 34. Sewers (a) Repairs . 35. Garbage Salaries, Supplies, Equip
(a) Receipts
Receipts
ments
$ 28,814.29
38.
in
41.
202,621.62
42.
10,639.10
44.
62,731.15
45.
2,272.49
56.
2,785.77
57.
2,115.58
58.
7,391.60
59.
.....
5,351.34
2,148.00
2,338.00
1,761.00
2,060.92
410.00
60.
217.50
3,071.34
609.07
900.00
78,498.86
705.79
10,444.33
III. SPECIAL
FUNI
Receipts
Police Department Fire Department Water Supply and Hydrant Rentals
O. A. S. I.—Employer's Share only Miscellaneous: Water Works Rent & Taxes 1,500.00 Telephone Pay Station 168.56 Fire Protection 4,816.12 Insurance Settlement on Police Car wrecked .... 1,900.00 Street Sweeper 500.50 Bulldozing Refunds: Refund on Clothing Allowance 70.80 Refund from State Farm Insurance—Car Rental 150.00 Refund from Cities Service 2.00 Refund from Sinclair Service 2.04 Long Distance Telephone Call 1.15 Total General Fund Receipts & Disbts $318,975.59 Balance on Hand, December 31, 1964
Municipal
(Bends
Disbursements 750.00 62,662.44 47,457.85 15,175.35 13,943.47 1,320.00 3,463.46 1,818.49
1,548.75
$266,163.14 $ 52,812.45
Cemetery
Park*
Airport
B Interest)
O.A.S.I.
State Tax
Balance on Hand January 1, 1964
$16,734.16
$ 1,147.13
$4,445.54
$ -508.36
$2,447.92
$ 519.26
General Property Taxes
7,081.07
871.67
11,415.94
Library Support—County or Township:
Employee s & City's Part
6,601.80
1,683.92
Earnings «,
15,362.00
2,907,41
Pool
11,162.26
Refunds and Transfers—Telephone
1.88
Total
$32,096.16
$19,392.34
$8,224.62
$10,907.59
$9,049.72
$2,203.18
(b) Disbursements
Operating Expense
16,689.53
19,654.72
3,231.89
Bonds—Paid
11,000.00
Interest on Bonds — -
1,915.75
Paid to O. A. S. I. Social Security
6,607.99
Paid to State Tax
1,799.74
Total Disbursements
$16,689.53
$19,654.72
$3,231.89
$12,915.75
$6,607.99
$1,799.74
Balance on Hand December 31, 1964
$15,406.63
$ -262.38
$4,992.73
$-2,008.17
$2,441.73
$ 403.44
IV. MUNICIPAL UTILITIES—1964
Water Works Bond and Receipts Depreciation Interest Cash Balance January 1, 1964 $ 8,453.11 $207,690 14 Rec d from Water Works 10,349.43 103,494.20 Earned on Investments 1,076.00 Refunds and Transfers Sewage Operations Total - $18,802.54 $312,260.34 Disbursements Bonds—Paid $ 36,000.00 Interest on Bonds 24,492.20 Investments Purchased* 219,851.94 Refunds and Transfers' $11,595.13 Total $11,595.13 $280,344.14 Cash Balance December 31, 1964 $ 7,207.41 $ 31,916.20 ’Statements of utility investments, Dec. 31, 1964: Total maturity value of securities owned by water utility Total maturity value of securities owned by Sewage Utility V. STREET FUNDS—1964 Special Street Fund Receipts (Gas Tax) Balance January 1, 1964 Gasoline Taxes and Motor Vehicle Fees $62,730.45 Parking Meter Receipts Auditor of State for Street Sweeper Total Balance and Receipts $62,730.45 Disbursement* Maintenance Administration Payments on Parking Meter* Payment on Street Sweeper Total Disbursements Balance December 31, 1964
Sanitation (Sewage) Bond and Interest $122,315.81
75,975.76 $198,291.57 $ 38,000.00 46,433.25
$ 84,433.25 $113,858.32 $ 96,000.00 $146,285.79 Parking Meter Fund $10,507.00 16,498.65 1,917.50 $28,923.15 78.70 13,166.88 1,850.00 7,263.99 $22,359.57 $ 6,563.58
VI. FIRE AND POLICE PENSION FUNDS 1. Cash or Checking Account: Firemen Receipts Cash Balance January 1, 1964 $10,698.89 Assessments (Dues) 1,200.19 Earnings from Investments Donations and Rewards 340.00 Total Receipts and Balance $12,239.08 Disbursements Pensions $ 5,983.00 Death Beneftis 200.00 Investments Bought Operating Expense 17.17 Miscellaneous 20.50 Total Disbursements ._* $ 6,220.67 Cash Balance December 31, 1964 $ 6,018.41 2. Investments Held: Value of Investments Owned Dec. 31, 1964 .. Number of 3. Roll of Beneficiaries: Persons Number Pensioned—Disability 2 Number of Widows—Deceased Members 1 Total Beneficiaries 3 VII. INDEBTEDNES$ OF CITY AT DECEMBER 31, 1964 Maturity
Date
Interest Year last Bond Rate Issued of Issue Furpese (a) General Obligations Bands: 4% 12/1/59 1/1/69 Municipal Bond*
Policemen $ 2,295.53 1,264.32 556.26 $ 4,116.11
1,991.41 20.00 $ 2,011.41 $ 2,104.70 $19,200.00
2 1 'a% 2’4%
4%
3 3 4°. 3 ! j%
(b) Revenue Bonds:
1/1/50 1/1/50 6/1/35 12/1/57 4/1/62
1/1/65 1/1/78 6/1/74 6 1/77 1/1/85
4/1/62 1/1/90
Sewage Works Sewage Works Water Works-Old Issue ... Water Works—New Issue .. Sewage WorksRevenue Bonds 1962 Issue Sewage Works— Revenue Bend 1962 Issue .
Amount $ 29,000.00 19,000.00 216,000.00 194.000. 00 425.000. 00 445.000. 00 270.000. 00
Mr. and Mrs. Max R. Flynn in front of their Gold Medallion Home in Plainfield, Indiana, “IT’S CLEAN, COMFORTABLE AND WE LIKE THE REASONABLE COST OF FLAMELESS ELECTRIC HEATING IN OUR GOLD MEDALLION NOME!"
"Going to college and raising three-year-old Ricky keeps me hopping," says Bunny Flynn. "On top of that, I'm a finicky housekeeper. I want my white draperies really white. With clean electric heating I can keep them that way." Max Flynn, supervisor at an Indianapolis truck body plant, finds his Gold Medallion Home with electric heat suits him, too. "We live on the windiest rise in town. But if we didn't see the trees leaning, we'd never know the wind was blowing. There's never a chill draft or cold spot in the house with flameless electric heat. And still it's economical. Our neighbors didn't believe it until a session over the fence when we showed them our electricity bills." If you plan to build or buy, Public Service Indiana has the information you need to put your family in a Cold Medallion Home with Fiameless Electric Heat
DAY BY DAY, THIS COLD MEDALLION appears on more and more homes throughout America. Where you see it displayed, it identifies a home fully-equipped with Flameless Electric Home Heating and appliances. Full Housepower Wiring, and Light for Living. These homes will be as modern tomorrow as they are today.
0
PUBLIC SERVICE INDIANA
LBJ School Aid Plan To Congress WASHINGTON UPI —President Johnson today sent Congress his $49 billion defense budget and declared that the big military buildup started in 1961 was now largely completed. Chopping defense spending
for the second straight year, Johnson planned a 36,000-man cut in present armed forces strength as well as reductions in older bomber and air defense forces. His budget for the year starting next July 1 would eliminate the Army’s experimental 11th Air Assault Division and reduce the previously planned goal for Minuteman intercontinental missiles from 1,200 to
1,000. In cutting $300 million below this fiscal year’s spending rate and $2.2 billion below last year’s, the President said the armed forces had achieved “commanding superiority” over any enemy and needed little further expansion. “With the rapid strides made in the past four years and the future gains already scheduled,” Johnson said, “our powerful modern forces will be adequate to their tasks for years to come.” Spending cuts are possible, he said, because of the "nearly complete” buildup, the Pentagon’s cost-cutting program and the elimination of older forces. His plan emphasized improvements in quality rather than expansion, and “vigorous” research on weapons of the future.
RECTOR FUNERAL HOME PHONE OL 3-4810 AMBULANCE SERVICE
MARITAL WAR POWWOW—Mrs. Micheline Lemer, wife of composer Alan Jay Lerner, arrives at State Supreme Court in New York for a pre-trial conference in her separation suit and her husband’s counter-suit. With her is her attorney, Roy M. Cohn. Two hours later the meeting was adjourned with prospect of an out-of-court settlement. The couple has a 6-year-old son, Michel.
BIG FINDER NEW YORK (UPI)—Freddy Walton, a 54-year-old movie extra, has found more than $18,000 in cash and merchandise on the streets of Hollywood in the last few years, he claims in a magazine article. Walton says in Coronet that on his best day he found $66 in cash. He has not purchased
VONCASTLi OPEN AT 6:45 NOW THRU TUES. AT 7:30 - 9:20
ANN- JOHN rfARGRET FORSYTHE
1
Co Starring PETER BROWf
STARTS WED.
Warren Beatty Jean Seeberg In "LILLITH'' For Adults Only
has found perfume, pots, pans, electric shavers, toys and many other articles on Hollywood
years and claims he streets.
GALLANT, THESE TEXANS—Pianist Van Cliburn, a Texan like the LBJs, plays the gallant at one of the inaugural festivities in Washington as he takes the hand of Luci Baines Johnson to kiss it. Beyond is President Johnson.
Sb^YOURHfALTII
By LESTER L. COLEMAN, M.D.
On Choosing A Nursing Home THE decision to place a rela- j Association, and the National tive or friend in a nursing home Council for the Accreditation of
is filled with mixed emotions. Unfortunately, many people •till persist in the idea that a
Nursing Homes may also offer guidance in making a selection, and suggest certain homes that
nursing home represents a might fulfill your requirements.
heartless rejection of loved ones. In reality, nursing homes may actually provide the best medical care and p s ychological environment for many peo-
ple.
Since there are various types of nursing homes which cater to Dr. Coleman different needs, the choice must be made carefully, based on the particular needs of the individual. Some homes are purely custodial and are designed to accommodate. guests who have no serious medical problem or handicap. These residential homes provide room and board, with supervision for the safety, comfort and entertainment of the guests. Some Provide Assistance Other homes offer moderate nursing care and are equipped to provide assistance for guests who may need help in getting in and out of bed, dressing, bathing, eating and walking. In both of these types of homes, the guests’ private physicians are called whenever there is a need for medical attention. A far more complicated arrangement is the nursing home for patients who are chronically ill or convalescing from a serious illness. This type of home provides highly skilled nursing care, reliably carried out under direct professional supervision. How does one find the nursing home that will best suit his specific needs? Ask Doctor’s Help First, consult the patient’s personal physician. He can outline the particular physical and emotional needs of his patient. He may also be able to recommend some nursing homes which might be suitable. Health and welfare agencies, fh» AmeHean Nursing Home
The family should have a frank discussion to decide cm matters of cost, distance, transportation and other personal concerns or requirements. Language barriers must be given special consideration. Arrange Family Visits Then the nursing homes which have been suggested should be visited by the family. An attitude of kindness and understanding among the staff is vitally important and becomes quickly apparent. Take into account the cleanliness and neatness of the home, the size and appearance of the rooms and the grounds and the special facilities, such as elevators and provisions for recreation and relaxation. Find out, too, about visiting privileges and extra “hidden” charges for special diets or other services. These are some of the many details which must be carefully considered and investigated to attain the maximum happiness, security and comfort of a loved
one.
No ‘Tdeal” Homes Yet The “ideal” nursing home, offering homelike atmosphere, comfort and convenience, trained medical supervision, psychological support and facilities for entertainment and recreation—at a reasonable cost —is still “on the drawing boards,” despite the pleas, pressures and efforts of medical and social agencies. The choice of a nursing home remains a difficult and complicated decision. Make your choice only when you feel certain that it is a place where the individual can live in comfort and in dignity. These columns are designed to relieve your fears about health through a better understanding of your mind and body. All the hopeful new advances in medicine reported here are known to doctors everywhere. Your individual medical problems should be handled by your own doctor. He kntngs you, best.
YES, WE HAVE NO BANANAS—Getting settled In his new home at the primate house at the zoo in Brookfield, HI., sad Sam the orangutan may be wondering where bananas are.
(0 1865, King Featyres Syndicate. Inc,)
PUBLIC SALE To settle the estate of the late Dewey Stultz, we will sell the following property at the Morton Sale Barn, located 16 miles east of Rockville on U.S. 36 or 3 miles west of intersection 36-43 on Thursday, January 28 Beginning at 11:00 A.M. 806 D. 1964 International tractor, 400 hours. Wide front. 450 D 1958 International "R" D 1953 J. D. 30 Ferguson 1951 with Davis loader 6 14“ Int. breaking plow, semi-mounted 4 14“ Int. breaking plow, pull type No. 70 4 14" breaking plow, mounted FTC 43 2 10' 11" wheeled disc No. 37 2 No. 463 rear-mounted cultivator* 4-row rotary hoe, mounted on carrier 1957 No. 450 4-row planter, International 12' harrow, fold-up 1953 International 4-bar side delivery rake 1957 10' International lime spreader 1955 No. 200 International manure spreader 1962 International No. 26 stalk chopper 1958 International 7' fast-hitch mower Ferguson 7' mower 2 wagons with flare beds and 5-ton hoist 1 flat-top wagon 1963 International 2 MHD corn picker MM Model D corn shelter with 30' of drag 1959 Cont. 8-row sprayer 1958 Int. Ilz ton truck with Midwest bed and hoist 9' cultipacker 4" auger, 16' long Auger wagon Air compressor 46' Farmers Friend elevator Hand tools spade, fork, shovels and misc. 1949 4-door sedan, Ford 1951 4-door sedan, Chev., doesn't run 2 L.P. gas water heaters 2 kerosene water heater* 3-pig creep feeders 7 hog feeders 1960 FB-B 16 Disk J. D. Wheat Drill Other miscellaneous hog equipment 1 Jersey milk cow All this equipment is in good condition and ready to go. ESTATE OF DEWEY STULTZ By Joseph D. Stultz, Adm. Stalker B Campbell, Aucts. G. Stalker and B. Hartman, Clerk*
