The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 February 1965 — Page 1
r
Weather Forecast FAR; COLD High, 16; Low, —4
“TKie Daily Banner
I"DIA,\ T A STATS LIBR^
"Wo cm not but spook tbo things which wo hovo soon or hoorri." Acts 4i20
VOLUME SEVENTY-THREE
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 2,1965
UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL SERVICE
NO. 85
Baptists Plan Fund Campaign For New Church
9 Rev. Robert B. Mould. Capxt•J Fund Raising Director for the Church Extension and Edifice Funds Division of the American Baptist Home Mission Societies, will be in Greeneastle February 4-18 to assist the First Baptist congregation in raising money for a new church building. Mr. Mould was formerly the Associate Minister of the First Baptist Church of Kansas City, Missouri, one of the largest congregations affiliated with the American Baptist Convention. He held this post for more than eleven years. Prior to his work with the First Baptist Church in Kansas City. Mr. Mould was pastor of the Bethel Baptist Church of Lansing, Kansas. He served on the ataff of William Jewell College. Liberty, Missouri, as counselor to ministerial stu-
dents.
During World War H he served with the U. S. Army as an acting Chaplain. He was awarded the Bronze Star Medal. He also has battle stars for the Central Europe and Rhineland campaigns. Before the war, Mr. Mould was for fifteen years a secretary for Young Men’s Christian Associations in Lincoln, Neb. Chicago, Alton, and Bloomington in Illinois. He has been for several years on the Speakers Bureau for the United Nations and has spoken to scores of audiences on its behalf. He is an ordained minister and resides in Bloomington, Illinois. Mr. Mould’s educational background includes work at William Jewell College, Nebraska Wesleyan University, George Williams College, and Central Baptist Theological Seminary. Tri Kappa To Provide $10,000 INDIANAPOLIS, UPI — Kappa Kappa Kappa sorority announced the state organization will contribute 310,000 for establishment of a camp for retarded children at Muscatatuck State School at Butlerville. The money will be used for the first permanent building on the camp site on the shores of Brush Creek Reservoir, a dining hall-lodge facilities. The camp will be called Camp Holland. Bloomington, founder of Tri Kappa, who died last sum-
mer.
NOW YOU KNOW By United Pre*s International Every minute, 58.000 Americans step up to a merchandise vending machine, deposit a coin and make a purchase, according to the National Automatic Merchandising Association.
Rev. Robert Mould Poster Contest Winners Listed Awards were given for the Dental Health Poster Contest on Sunday afternoon. The winners were as follows: 8th grade: 1st, Mary McCart, Deming School, Terre Haute 2nd, Connie Kosko, Deming
School
3rd, Donna Skelton, Rockville
Jr. H. S.
4th, Sheila Weir. Deming Honorable mention — Susan Dean, Deming
7th grade:
1st, Judy Martin, Rockville 2nd, Debbie Leach, Deming 3rd, DonUa Morlan, Rockville 4th, Shirley Helm, Deming Honorable mention — Karen Clark, Greencastle The contest was held in connection with National Dental Health Week and arranged for by the Western Indiana Dental Society. There were over 150 posters turned in by the 7th and 8th grades and four prizes were given to each grade. The awards were cash prizes and General Electric toothbrushes. Mrs. Edris Loveless is the art instructor for Greencastle Jr. High School and has had several students winning awards in the past few years. Groundhog Saw His Shadow Mr. Groundhog saw his shadow this morning and. according to legend, that means six more weeks of Winter. Regardless of whether he saw his shadow or not. the first day of Spring does not arrive until March 21, according to the
calendar.
So let's face it. Winter is still with us.
Excellent Test Scores Are Made By GHS Seniors
The results of the Scholastic Aptitude Tests (SAT) taken in December by 70 Greencastle High School seniors indicated that the college-bound seniors scored well above the national 20 Years Ago Wallace Spencer, county commissioner, attended a road school at Purdue University. • Priscilla Miles was a patient in the Putnam County Hospital Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Prevo were in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew P. Stoner were visiting in Texas, Arizona, and California.
average of other seniors across the country. The test was divided into verbal and math sections. GHS boys scored 56 points above the national average on the verbal and 75 points higher than average on the math section. The average of the senior girls was 103 points above the national average on the verbal and 71 points higher on the math section. Principal Norman McCammon states that the students should be congratulated on their fine showing on the test, and the faculty should be commended for the quality of instruction which could produce such excellent results.
Coatesville Man Killed By Train Eld Rumley, 75, a Coatesville farmer, was killed Monday afternoon when his car was struck by a Pennsylvania Railroad passenger train at a Coatesville crossing. The victim was thrown 140 feet from the point of impact. His car landed 35 feet from the crossing, police said. State Trooper Tom Underwood witnessed the mishap and said the warning flashers were working at the crossing and that the engineer sounded his horn several times in an attempt to warn Rumley. Underwood said the train was traveling about 40 miles per hour. Funeral arrangements for Rumley are pending at the Powell Funeral Home at Coatesville. Indiana’s 1965 traffic death toll stood at least at 102 today, compared with 77 this time last year, following three fatal accidents Monday, one of them weather-connected. The latest victim was a pedestrian, Gustie Curry, 64, Kendallville, who walked into the path of a car on Indiana 2 south of Kendallville Monday night. Robert M. Cravens, 40, Solsberry. was killed Monday while clearing a road with a farm tractor. He was working on snowdrifts near his rural home when the vehicle slipped into a roadside ditch and overturned, crushing him. Cravens was found by two of his sons who were home from school because it was closed by the snow. Henry Burnett Rites Thursday Henry Burnett, 66, died unexpectedly Monday morning at 9:00 o’clock at his residence on Quincy, R. 1. He was bom April 13, 1898, in Kentucky, the son of Stephen and Nancy Burnett. He was married March 11, 1918. to Sarah Lawson. He was a retired farmer and a member of the Breane Gospel Church. Survivors are: three sons, Robert Burnett, Clayton and Chester and Troy. Quincy, R. 1; seven daughters. Mrs. Kathryn Cottogin. Mooresville, R. 1; Mrs. Maudie Fouty and Mrs. Nancy Smith. Indianapolis; Mrs. Marie Boles, Camby: Mrs. Betty Brock. ‘Monrovia, R. 1; Mrs. Eva May Cheek, Quincy, R. 1: and Mrs. Juanita Fisher, Clayton: two brothers, Tola Burnett and Walter Burnett, Indianapolis; one sister, itrs. Elizabeth Broadstreet. Indianapolis: twenty-one grandchildren and five great grandchil-
dren.
Funeral services will be held Thursday at 1:30 p. m. at the Whitaker Funeral Home, with burial in the Clayton Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home in Cloverdale. 2 Civil Rights Bills In Senate IXDL4.NAPOLIS UPI —Two bills aimed at strengthening Indiana’s civil rights law were scheduled for a final showdown in the Senate of the 1965 Legislature today. One bill makes housing a civil
right.
The other authorizes local school boundaries to eliminate de facto segregation. Sen. Earl Landgrebme. RValparaiso, failed in an attempt to amend the housing bill by inserting a clause which would, in effect, have reenacted the “right to work” law repealed last week when Governor Branigin signed the session’s first bill into law. The amendment was defeated by voice vote. Sen. Nelson Grills, D-Indian-apolyis, tried to insert a clause he said was aimed at preventing conspiracies by realtors and groups of landowners to "make a profit out of fear” in connection with housing. It, too, was voted down. Ex-Judge Dies FRANKFORT UPI — Word received here Monday of the death in California of Paul E. Laymon, 65, a judge of the Indiana Appellate Court from 1936 to 1940. Services will be held for the retired attorney on Wednesday at Indio, Calif.
Loses Two Fingers Strippers Strike
GARRETT, Ind. UPI —Richard Hunter, 15, a Garrett High School freshman, lost two fingers on his right hand when he put his hand in machinery at Griscer Industries while visiting his uncle who was at work as a plastic mold press operator. Doghouse Fire SALEM, 111, UPI —Firemen rushed to a house Monday when a fire alarm was turned in. The dwelling turned out to be a doghouse. Two beagle hounds escaped the flames without injury. There was no estimate of damage. Firemen said the blaze was started by a malfunctioning heating device.
LONDON UPI —Striptease dancers in three Soho nightclubs refused to strip Monday night in a strike for higher pay. “I’m not taking a stitch off in public again until I get more money,” said Loretta Giromini, 18. “And neither are the other girls.” Nine girls, who earn 347 a w'eek for six show’s nightly were involved in the "notakeoff” protest. Others were expected to join the strike tonight. Prexy Resigns UPLAND, Ind. UPI — Dr. B. Joseph Martin has subfitted his resignation as president of Taylor University effective June 30. Martin gave no reason for his action.
LBJ Adviser Leaves For Viet Nam Tonight
Legion Oratory Contest Feb. 4th
WASHINGTON UPI — Presidential adviser McGeorge Bundy leaves tonight for Saigon to consult with U. S. Ambassador Maxwell D. Taylor on the problems plaguing South Viet
The Putnam County High Nam’s anti-Communist war. School oratorical contest, spon- High officials said President sored by the Americanism Com- Johnson wanted someone to mission of the American Legion take a new look at Vietnamese will be held at the American affairs because of last week’s Legion Home, 123 E. Walnut, military coup. Taylor himself Greencastle at 7:00 p. m. Thurs- suggested that Bundy be sent day, February 4th . to “review the situation.” Relatives and friends of the Bundy is Johnson’s assistant contestants, as well as the gene- on national security affairs. He al public are cordially invited, is to be accompanied on his All High School principals in trip by John McNaughton, asthe county have been notified sistant secretary of defense for by letter and it is hopeful that international security affairs, each school will have a contest- and Leonard Unger, deputy asant. sistant secretary of state for Judges from the DePamv Far Eastern affairs and head University Speech Department of the interdepartmental task will select the winner. force on Viet Nam. Contestants are required to White House Press Secretary be in the hall by 6:30 p. m. for George E. Reedy said Bundy is instructions. expected to return to XVashing-
ton late this week.
The White House announcement Monday night of Bundy’s mission to Saigon followed the weekend disclosure in Moscow that Soviet Premier Alexl N. Kosygin planned to leave “shortly” for Communist North
Student Killed By Truck Driver
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. UPI—A truck driver, pelted when he
drove his truck through a cross- yj^' am
fire in a college snowball fight, T t c- , t . .. T . . . . . 6 . . . U. S. authorities said Kosyvvhipped out a pistol and killed , , , ...... ... r ,. , gin s planned tnp had nothing a University of Tennessee fresh- . .. * . . ' , .. .. to do with the arrangements man late Monday, police said. , ^ . Th. action »o angered col- ^ tlw burned Bimdy misaion. legions they knocked him to the ™ e > r saId ““ Bm,d y vlslt ha<1 ground, stamped and beat him. been m P™I»ration for about a
the driver told police. ueek.
Police charged William Douglas Willett Jr., 27, of Greeneville, Tenn., with murder in the death of Mamell Goodman. 18, of Swampscott, Mass. Goodman was the nephew of Fred Blumberg, professor of English at
the university.
State Telephone Calls Reduced
General Telephone reminds customers that starting Febru-
Police said Goodman was shot ar -’ 1 reduced rates are in effect over the right eye with a .22 for telephone calls within the caliber pistol. state. This is the same day Homicide Capt. Fred Scruggs charges on long distanc e calls said Willett had a bruised left crossing state lines also are re -
eye and nose and a “busted du<: ' ed -
mouth” as a result of the drub- Following are some of the ta n S* highlights of the rate reduc-
The shooting was near a popu- tions: lar student hangout, the “T”
Room. Several hundred students t. The maximum one dollar were engaged in a snowball rate for a three-minute stationfight on both sides of the four- to-station call anywhere in the lane highway at the time. continental United States now One student. Dana Fred Wolf applies week-days from 8 p.m - Jr. of Knoxville, said he was 4 ; 30 a m. and all day Sunday.
2. A maximum 40-cent rate has been set for three-minute station-to-station calls within Indiana from 8 p.m.-4:30 a.m.
and all day Sunday.
about 30 feet from the truck
and saw the shooting. Nicholsons Win Top Quality Award
3. Reduced station-to-station
The Miami Valley Milk Pro- rates for calls between 6-8 p.m. ducers Association announced week-days apply all day Saturat the annual meeting on Jan. day till 8 p.m. also.
19. the Top Quality Award win-
ner for Association members of initial charges are for Indiana to be Mr. and Mrs. tbree-minute calls. In the past, James Nicholson and son, Bill, some have been for six minutes. The award was a trophy and overtime charges are based an all-expense paid plane trip on eac ^ aditional minute. In the for two to the International P as L some have been for two Dairy Exposition in Chicago minutes - next fall. a. The extra charge for a colThis award is based on these cad within Indiana is twenfactors: First and most import- ^ cents,
ant—a low bacteria count as shown by Division of Health records. Second—Production of milk in line with the market’s need of milk. Third- -General
farm neatness.
Warm Feet Help
60 Days On Farm Pleasant Evans. 24. city,
pleaded guilty to a public in-
toxication charge when arraigned in City Court Monday night.
Judge J. Frank Durham fined
EXETER, England UPI — the defendant $5 and costs and “Warm feet help efficiency,” sentenced him to serve 60 days declared the chief constable at the Indlana state Farm - here Monday in announcing Evans was arrested early Satpolicewomen may wear booties urday morning by Officer Alva on duty during cold weather. Hubble on Bloomington Street.
Dr. Kerstetter Announces New Scholarship Fund For University Students ——— College students considering careers in the ministry and A A A I * work of The Methodist Church AA 3 ft %# tPHC I ft I V I* I ft will benefit from a new $30,000 ■ WlQIlW VUV III \JII|# scholarship fund that has been established at DePauw UniverCo (I W3YG creation of the Albert Z. and Mary H. Mann Scholarship By United Press International Fund emorializing the late St. c n ■ t Pald (Minn.) couple was anSeven below Zero The remnants of one of the nounced today by Dr . WilUam This community was again winter ’ s worst storms dumped E Kerstetter, DePauw presichilled by a frigid cold wave fresh snow on New En§r and t0 ' d ^- ♦hie day while bitter Canadian air this morning when the mti m> . . temDeratur es below zero Scholarships produced from dropped to a minimum of seven P u ’ shed temperature, beiou zero decrees below zero at 6 o'clock southward through the Ohio U e of th * " U1 be de-icer, oelow zero at 0 o clock. awarded to students going into It was five below Monday, a e> ' religious life work in The Methbut the temperature did climb 'ni e mercury stood at least 25 odist Church, according to to a maximum of 25 above be- degrees below zero in North terms of the will. fore starting another downward Dakot a. and sub-zero readings „ ^ „ trend .. Both Dr. and Mrs. Mann, who trenu - were common across the snow- ... , „ „ . died less than a year apart in The seven below reading this covered plains and Midwest. igfi9 . J , . „ , , oo and 1963, were alumni of morning was a drop of 32 de- . grees from Monday’s high in Cold wave warnings were ex- niversily : wake of the latest snowstorm tended into Arkansas, northern Ur. Mann, a native of Eairof the winter season. Mississippi and western sections land - Ind -’ received the A.B. deof Kentucky and Tennessee. giee in 1909 ^ at LePauw, the Snow fell during the night AM ’ at the Universit y of ChimOSOnS Honor throughout New England. The ^ ag0 ’ and then served a num * MfoVIt ■■ ■■ ff death of an Air National Guard ^ Ieth ° dist pastorates un ‘ William McNeff P^t to an airplane crash hear ^ Granby, Mass., during a snow- p aul William Amos McNeff, of storm and the death of a 6-vear T7 ' , _ „ „ DanviHe, Route 2. has been old Shelton. Conn., boy in a fie]d Coll (Mass , J ]933 awarded the designation o traffic accident raised the but returned to Hamline in 1944 Knight of the lork Cross of storm death toll since Friday as a professor of sociology and Honour, it was reported todaj% ni g ht to at least 39. director of bUc relatio ^ This honorary degree, highest Binghamton, N. Y„ picked up He later direcled Minneaota . s in the lork Rite of Freemason- four, inches of new snow and Methodist Centennial Fund, a ^ \ conferred only on those Syracuse, N. Y„ reported three capita! funds drive among the who have held the highest of- more inches on the ground, state’s "Methodists fice in each of the four bodies Four inches fell Monday night Mrs. Mann, the'former Mary ° f : Ir : - '• '“. be ° 0 ' 1 “ S at Crossville and Bristol, Tenn., H . Hyten of Ladoga, Ind.. \va» the 11853rd to have received this „„ Beckley, W. . member ol the class of 1910 award m the past 36 years in x- a . , „ ... Va. at DePauw. North America and the Philip- TI , . . . _ , 1 Hazardous driving warnings = rfln^dst s: Cloverdale Rites fraternity. ^ ° ^ A , Mr. McNeff served as Master p0rtl0nS * K< “ y fLU* rl'.MAe of Groveland Lodge of Masons and Tennesse€ and for sectlon3 'Or 10100 1/1/165 in 1949; High Priest of Green- of the southe m Appalachians. castle Chapter, Royal Arch Ma- Showers and thundershowers Mrs. Chloe Clines. 72. former sons in 1958; Master of Green- the southeast Gulf coast, resident of Cloverdale. died castle Council, Royal and Select uith the Air Force base at Sunday in Fort Myers, Fla. Masters, in 1964: Commander 0zark - Ala., reporting one-half She was born June 9. 1892. in of Greencastle Commandery, tnch. Owen County, the daughter of Knights Templar, in 1957. He West of the Mississippi, skies William and Sarah Parrish. She He was elected to membership were clear except for snow flur- was married to Roy G. Clines in Robert A. Woods Priory and ri es in central Montana and in 1914. She was a member of his election confirmed by Con- tog along the Pacific Coast, the Methodist Church, vent General of the Order on Great Falls. Mont., picked up Survivors are: the husband: January 29th. A certificate of two more inches of snow during three daughters. Mrs. Violet membership has been mailed to the night. Thompson. Tucson, Arizona; him. _ Mrs. Retha Wagle and Mrs. There are sixty-four Priories Dies Of Bums Ruth Williams, both of Greenof the Order in North America CRAWFORnsvTT T „ TnH rpT castle, R. 4: two sons. Robert and the Philippines with a pres- “ k Clines. Greencastle and Roy ent membership of 7,000. . 0 “ cc '’ Hdlsbor °. died Clines, Jr., Cloverdale; one broIn a hospital here Sunday from ,, „ „ . , . , f . A bun,, suffered when he tried ° U5 ’ Strike Is Over ><, .v.mr,:.i.»me * m, ku. thirt r n f ™> e great grandchildren. _ mmm - a _ chen. Becks brother Charles. _ , . Af Missile Base **■ - - — .. . Whitaker Funeral Home in CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. UPI MaSOOIC Notice Cloverdale. Rev. John Berrv - Construction workers re- The caUed meetin of T le will officiate. Burial will be in turned to America’s new Pro- Lodge No 47 which was stated the Cloverdale Cemetery, ject Appollo moonport today, for Tuesday February 2nd. has Friends may call at the fuending a three-day walkout been p OS t poned neral home in Cloverdale after that idled S200 million in key Bruce Albright. W.M, 7 o’clock Thursday. space building. Work ob the 45 space agency projects that were affected by | | • A | ^ I the 3.800-man strike began a H ft ^ I* I ft ft f l\l ft ^ F ft ft ft slow return to normal. llwQllll^d IawQI LilIU Building tradesmen, directed by union leaders Monday night || ft ft I I A * | to end the walkout, began to { 1ft I I V Xf ftftftl A Ift pour into the vast base before 11 V11 I 1VI dawn backing up traffic on roads that had been nearly de- WASHINGTON UPI - A — serted since Thursday House general education sub- avoid “the most dangerous sub. Clifford Baxley, coordinator committe hoped to wind up version of the constitutional of the Brevard * Building and hearings today on President principle of church-state sepaTrades Council, predicted by Johnson’s S1.2 billion school aid ration since James Madison’s the end of the day that about Program. famous remonstrance set the 90 per cent of the 4,300-man But the P lan sti11 faced more direotions of American religious work force would be back with of tbe criticism it has run into liberty in 1<86. a 100 per cent turnout Wednes- m *he last few days from reli* day . gious and law groups over a —-■ The walkout, fifth to hit the provision that vvould provide mmr vast space center within a year, a ' d ^ or parochial school stu- ww had kept more than 5200 mil- dents - . ^ . lion worth of vital space con- ^ criticism arose after ma- faiF, Cold struction at a standstill since J or Cath olic and Protestant Thursday groups gave their conditional Fair and cold through Wedendorsement of the plan, which nesday. High today around 13. Doesn't Pay would provide 31 billion in aid Low tonight near 8 below. High for poverty area schools and " ednesday near 15. t«AN JOE. Calif. I PI — s200 j^pon in ot i ier funds. Outlook for Thursdav Cold George Sebring found out that T , oth „ flinds , vould be Outlook tor Thursday. Cold. .. T. , . , . . The otber tiuias " olua De Snow flurries near Lake Michit doe.m pav to help a fnend used to finance libraries, buy lgan Fair centra , and south in need. textbooks and build “shared Sebring brought a bail bonds- ti , me ” educational centers for Minimum -7* man to the Santa Clara County use by public and parochial 6 a. m -7® jail to free Ray Allen Tartar, school children. 7 a. m -7® 23. Police noticed that Sebring Scheduled to testify today 8 a. m -6® fit a description of Tartar’s al- wa s the American Civil Liber- 9 a. m -4® leged companion in several rob- ties Union (ACLU), among the 10 a. m 2 beries and he was arrested, critics of the plan. 11 a. m 4® Tartar was freed on bond, but Spokesmen for the group 12 noon 8* Sebring stayed in jail. called for major revisions to 1 p. m. 10“
