The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 5 February 1965 — Page 3

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Farm Women Will Attend

Bureau Conference In Indianapolis

You can’t keep the women "down on the Farm” during the Indiana Farm Bureau Women’s Conference. February 16-17, in the Murat Temple, Indianapolis. But they will be glad enough to see a rake and plow on their return home — and they will be more effective helpmates in the total Farm Bureau program. From IFB women’s department director, Mrs. Guy E. Gross Churubusco, they will hear of two new projects — one

will talk on "Mankind Is Our

Business.”

Tuesday evening, the man of the American

Bureau Women’s Committee, Mrs. Haven Smith, of Chappell, Nebraska, will be the main speaker. The Reverend Dr. Ray

Montgomery,

NOTICE or ADMINISTBATION

In the Circuit Court of Putnam County. Indiana.

Notice Is hereby riven that Kyla M. Miner was on the 3*th day of January. IMS, appointed: Executor of the W1U of Arthur H. Cubblt, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate, whether or not now duo. must file the same In eald court with-

, in six «> months from the date of tho cnair- first publication of this notice or aald

Farm claims will be forever barred.

r Dated at Qreencastle, Indiana, this

29th day of January. 1968, Probate Cause No. 10.473

Jack P Hinkle

Clerk of the Circuit Court for Putnam County, Indiana.

Attorney

... ^ ,, Frank O. Stoessel 9-12-19-Jt minister of the

COUNTY OP PUTNAM

Speedway Christian Church, will state op Indiana

conduct a vesper service, and the Old Fashioned Airs Quartet, a New Palestine group, will

sing.

Two personalities from Madi-

IN THE PUTNAM CIRCUIT COURT JANUARY TERM,

IMS

« ^ ^ , 0 , IN THE MATTER son County will be featured in of estate of

a venture in meat promotion, the wrap _ up session Wednesday ^^heaVin,

morning, February 17. The

Reverend George S. Taggart, j interested 0 in L the E estate

OF MINNIE HEAVTN

the other, a safety campaign. Mrs. Gross’s annual message

will highlight the opening ses- minister of ^ Fir9t Presby . sion. Tuesday morning. Febru- terian Church And€rson> wdU

ary 16.

Two men who pursue Agri

Estate No. 10.429

tn the matter of the Estate of MIN-

. .. , . „ , NIE HEAVIN. deceased, give an inspirational talk, and no. 10.425

Mrs. Dorothy Blevins, Anderson

culiuial careers otr the farm businesswoman and experienced named estate, has presented and filed will address the Tuesday after- — ^— his final account in final settlement of

noon session. Purdue's Dean of Agriculture, Dr. Earl L. Butz, has selected the topic, “Head-

dramatist, will give a hat deni' onstration, "The Four Wed'

dings.” Jo Anne Doerstler, of February. 1965, at which time all

... . , ■ persons interested In said estate are

said estate, and that the same win come up for the examination and action of said Circuit Court, on the 5th

Greensfork. a State Fair talent required to appear in said court and

power and Heartpovrer _ contest winner, will present or- SHeSU" SE

Foundation Stone of Progress.’ The other speaker, Harold P.

gan music.

the heirs of said decedent and aB

.. , others interested are also required to Planning the program under appear and make proof of their help-

claim to any part of aald

Lundgren. chief of the wool and the direction of Mrs. Gross are

mohair U. S. Department of the Indiana Farm Bureau dis- Reuben heavin Agriculture laboratory at Al- ' t rict woman leaders: Mrs. Ed- cfe^ o’?' HINKI,E

bany, California, will tell the win G . oison, Winamac; Mrs. court

t-12-2t

STATE OF INDIANA

COUNTY OF PUTNAM

the PUTNAM CIRCUIT

Olson, Winamac; Mrs. Atto ^ T for EsUte

women about exciting new de- George Felger, Churubusco; lyon & boyd

velopments in wool. This lab- M rs . James Viney, Monticello; oratory perfected the Wurlan Mrs. Carl Myers. Petroleum; process which renders wool M rs . Glendon Herbert. Clovershrinkproof. matproof, and ma- d ale; Mrs. Arthur Etchison; chine-washable. Mrs. Pearl Fidler, Farmersburg; An awards program Tuesday Mrs. Webster Heck, Connersaftemoon, will feature the ville; Mrs. Albert Schwiersch,

winners

public

Bainbridge News

IN THE PUTNAM CIRCUIT COURT JANUARY TERM.

7965

In the Matter of the

of the state women’s Evansville; and Mrs. Hubert setae m. ciodfeiter, speaking contest who Mathias, Dillsboro. deceased, by

Thailand Target Of Red China

; mation of a “patriotic front” to

| overthrow the pro-Western government of Thailand and eradi-

Willard L. Ciodfeiter,

Administrator

Cause No. 10,467

NOTICE OF PRIVATE BALE OF REAL ESTATE

cate American influence there.

TOKYO UPI — Commumst China today announced the for-

ImooseI I DANCE I I SATURDAY I I 9:30 To 12:30 I ■ At WILLIAMS H HH From Crowfordsville

It was the first time that Peking had openly named Thailand as the next target of a campaign to take over Southeast Asia.

NoUce is hereby «lven that the undersirned as Administrator of the Estate of BetUe M. Ciodfeiter. deceased. pursuant to an order of said Court dated January 29. 1965, win offer for sale at private sale the followInr described real estate situate In the County of Putnam and State of Indians, to wit:

1b the staunchest on the Asian main-

the capital, is

Thailand U.S. ally

land. Bangkok,

the headquarters of the Southeast Asia Treaty Orangization (SEATO) — the American-led defense alliance in the Orient.

i Part of the North West quarter of the North West quarter of Section 11 Township 15 North. Rante 8 West, of the second principal meridian, more particularly described as follows: Be1 xlnnlnc at a point that Is 389.5 feet i East and 155 feet South of the North ? West corner of aforementioned Sec- ; tlon 11: thence East 185 feet to the center line of a county road: thenee ! with the center Hne of said county road South 6 decrees 28 minutes East 70.7 feet: thence leavlnc said center line of said road west 193 feet to a point; thence North 70 feet to the point of beclnnlnc, containing to all 31/100 acre, more or less.

Communist China’s designs on Thailand were made clear in a broadcast of the New China News Agency heard here today.

Said sale to be held on February 27. 1965. at 10 o'clock A. M., on the premises, for CASH, for not less than the full appraised value thereof, subject to any easements now on record and to taxes for 1965 payable In 1966. An abstract of title will be furnished.

OUR SPECIALTY WEDDING and BIRTHDAY CAKES

PAUL'S PASTRY SHOP

lOt N. JACKSON ST.

PHONE OL S-8S80

Willard L. Ciodfeiter. Administrator Estate of Betti* M. Ciodfeiter,

deceased

i J. Frank Durham,

Attorney

8-12-2t

LEGAL NOTICE These amounts did not show In the abstract of Jackson Township annual trustee report. TUITION Treas. North Putnam 8ch. Corp $31,050.05 SPECIAL SCHOOL Treas. North Putnam Sch. Corp 914.714.43

Total 935,764.48 Donald Crosby Trustee

FREE iNsnuunoK

If you are a customer of ours, your new quick-recovery, flameless electric water heater can be installed free in your present home. For complete information call us or ask your plumber or dealer.

0

PUBLIC SERVICE INDIANA

NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the Circuit Court of Putnam County. Indiana. Notice Is hereby given that Paul M. Robinson was on the 4 day of February 1965. appointed: Administrator of the' estate of Ada I. Robinson, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate, whether or not now due. must file the same In said court within six '6' months from the dat* of the first publication of this notice or eald claims win be forever barred. Dated at Greencastle. Indiana, th.s 4 day of February, 1965. Probate Cause No. 10.476 Jack P. Hinkle Clerk of the Circuit Court for Putnam County, Indiana. Hughes & Hughes Attorneys 8-12-19-3t

NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the Circuit Court of Putnam County. Indiana Notice Is hereby given that WANDA J. PATTON was on the 2nd d»y of FEBRUARY 1965. appointed: Administratrix of the estate of WILBUR E. CHADD. deceased. All persons having claims against said estate, whether or not now due, must file the same In said court within six <6'> months from the date of the first publication of this notice or said claims will be forever barred. Dated at Greencastle, Indiana, this 2nd day of FEBRUARY, 1965. Probate Cause No. 10,474 Jack P. Hinkle Clerk of the Circuit Court for Putnam County, Indiana. LYON & BOYD Attorneys 5-12-19-3t

BANNER ADS PAY

FARM BU

Today • • •

Join and Support Putnam county Farm Bureau. "The Voice of Agrkultvre

n \

Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Gontry and ion of Lafayotte spent last weeks’ vacation with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Zane Gentry. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Clark returned home Saturday from Crosby, Minnesota where they visited the past two weeks with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ted Clark. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Fowler and family were Sunday dinner guests of Mrs. Fowlers’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Poynter. J. D. McCullough of Hamilton, Montana is spending the winter with his sister, Mrs. Laura Giltz and other relatives. Vern Bennett of Indianapolis and Miss Joan Martin of Morton were callers of Mrs. Gilts and Mr. McCullough Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hess and Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Vancleave left Monday for a two weeks’ vacation in Florida. Sunday guests of Mrs. Hazel Scobee were Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Scobee and family of Indianapolis, Mr. and Mrs. Herschel Scobee and family of Fillmore, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Scobee and family, Mr. and Mrs. Danny Stockton and family. The occasion was the birthday of Mrs. Hazel Scobee and also her granddaughter, Marcia, daughter of Stanley. Several from here attended the burial services for Miss Rose Cunningham at Brick Chapel Saturday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Steele will celebrate their golden wedding anniversary Sunday at their home from 2:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. William Hueber and family of Brownsburg spent Sunday with Mrs. Hueber’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Claude Etchoson. Sunday dinner guests of Mrs. Curtis Minnick were Mr. and Mrs. John Ash and sons, Gary and Larry of Greencastle and Mr. and Mrs. Lester Leonard. Gary is spending a few days with his grandmother while he is home from I. U. at mid term. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Steele and Mrs. Gene Gooch attended the funeral of Don Smith at Lebanon on Monday. Mr. Steele was one of the pall bearers. Mr. and Mrs. Osborne Dickson of Indianapolis visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Willis Dickson on Sunday. Ross King of Ladoga was a recent all day guest of his daughter, Mrs. Raymond Hart and husband. Debbie Lynn Hart of Crawfordswille spent the week-end with her father, Raymond Hart Jr. at the home of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Hart Sr. Mrs. Gerald Hart of Crawfordsville entered the Culver Hospital Sunday, January 31 and underwent major surgery on Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Lowell McCammack entertained a number of friends Saturday evening with a farewell party for William Hoke, who left Wednesday for the service. David Priest and Miss Mimi Plashke of Butler University were dinner guests Monday evening of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Priest and Melanie. It was a surprise evening for Mrs. Priest in honor of her birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Steele of Brownsburg and Mr. and Mrs. Clint Judy attended a dinner Saturday evening in Indianapolis honoring Mr. and Mrs. William Anderson who Mr. Judy and Mr. Steele had both worked at one time with the Andersons at Allisons’. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Riggen have moved from the Smith apartment to Crawfords ville. Sunday guests of Mrs. Edgar Blaydes were Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Fitzsimmons and family of Twelve Mile, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Blaydes and family of Danville, Mr. and Mrs. Ron Riggen of Crawfords ville and Mrs. Ruby Blaydes and son, Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. Branham and family, formerly of near Roachdale, have moved into the Methodist parsonage.

Caidiovascular Deaffi Rale Among Men Aged 45*64 Declines 7.5 Per Cent Since 1950

Tha Daily Banner, Groancastla, Indiana Friday, February 5,1965

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HEART

HIGH

OTHER

All

ATTACI

BLOOD

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•P 4.1%

STIOII PRESSURE DOUR DOWN tS.*% «t.f%

DISEASES DOWN 123%

DISEASES DOWN 7.5%

by Sens. Keith McCormick, R- i Lebanon, and Robert E. Peter-

son, D-Rochester.

Sen. Jack H. Mankin. Demo- , cratic floor leader, moved to refer the resolution to the Leg-

Portland for the first timo season, appealed from ruling and was voted down, 15, on a strict party-lino to Sen. David Rogers, B

islative Apportionment Com- iugton Democrat and cnairi

mittee, but after many speeches from senators the motion was defeated, 23-27. However, the Democratic majority scored on a GOP motion appealing from the ruling of the chair, Lt. Gov. Robert L. Rock, on his stand on permitting Sen. William Chris-

of the apportionment commi) tee, had promised to schedi the resolution for committee tion at its next meeting Tuesday, but the move for mediate action prevailed much oratory. 7

1

Mankin then moved to necejll until afternoon postponing

HEART RESEARCH IS SAVING LIVES! Arrows show changes which have taken place, 1950-62, in the cardio* vascular death rate for American men aged 45-64. Despite a 4.3 per cent increase in the death rate due to heart attack, there was an over-all decline of 7.5 per cent— thanks largely to dramatic decreases in death rates associated with high blood pressure and stroke. Over 100 miUion Heart Fund dollars have been channeled into heart research since the first Heart Fund Campaign in 1949.

wtiga

tie, D-Hammond, to speak on a showdown on the issue point of personal privilege. majority Democrats tried to Republican Sen. Keith Fraser, coup their lost forces. £

CROSSWORD PUZZLE An,wer t0

ACROSS

rather not describe.’ it was punishment

Hines wouldn’t recommend and

I wouldn’t either."

He said are ret ^ n ^ f rom Allisons. Mr. “Duncan & in & ham fabrics, that “in turn,

enable U. S. apparel manufacturers have been alive to the

A spokesman for the Ameri- real trends in fibers for a lon «

time and no longer look upon themselves as part of the cotton or woolen industry but as diversified makers of fabrics.

can Embassy here said Landerman’s case had been reviewed by the Soviet equivalent of the supreme court and he was released because of “humanitarian considerations.” He was arrested in Minsk in western Russia on Aug. 15, 1963, after being involved in a traffic accident in which a Russian was killed. He was sentenced by a Minsk court on

Sept. 27.

Performance Not Price In Textiles

Score 1st Victory In Legislature

INDIANAPOLIS UPI — Re-

publican senators, aided by a number of rural Democrats, scored their first victory of the

legislative session today. The event occurred in con-

sideration of a resolution memorializing Congress to enact legislation that would permit apportionment of one house of a state legislature party on

l.ldtntical 5-Tier 8-Cea«* 12- Silkworm 13- Nativ* metal 14- Leas* 15- Rage 16- lndonetian tribesman 17- Spanish pot 18- Goes in >0-Color 12- Decay ’3-Superlative ending ’4-Essays !7-Give up office 11-Ventilate >2-Beam 13- Repaired 37-Spin (0-Reverence 41- Before 42- Prohibited 45-Climbing device 49- Keyed up with interest 50- Land of tha free (init.) 52- Challenge 53- Certain 54*Houaehold pet 55- Send forth 56- Scorch 57- Organ of eight 68-Female ruffe

•-Cash drawer 10- Heraldic

device

11- Fuel 19-Fish eggs 21-Suffix: subject to 24- Scottish hat 25- Hasten 26- Sea eagle 28- Man’s name 29- Ship channel 30- Brood of pheasanta 34- Peril 35- Female

sheep

36- Infer

37- Tell

38- Anglo-

Saxon money

39- Hay

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42- Singing voice 43- Chillt and fever

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DOWN

NEW YORK UPI—If cotton,

wool and silk are to survive in a basis other than that of popthe textile world, they will have ulation

to do so on the basis of performance, not price, many garment industry leaders believe today. And, according to the Association on Japanese Textile Imports, Inc., representing the wholesale buyers of about 70 per cent of the Japanese textile goods imported into this country, that conclusion destroys any reasonable basis for quotas and other import restrictions on the natural fiber textiles. New style trends, new uses and marketing methods that emphasize the comfort, wearability and other special qualities of cotton, wool and silk are the only thing that will increase their usage, the importers of the Japanese goods argue. Price considerations already play little part in the selection of fibers for quality textiles, they contend, so how, they ask, can import restrictions help? They said Japan's cotton industry is turning out an ever increasing variety of styles and colors in high quality box loom

1- Withered 2- Island off Ireland S-After-dinner candy 4- Diners 5- Cooka in oven •-Worthless leaving 7-One who works on loom i-Dischargea gun

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THIS MUD SLIDE &t Toledo, Ore., Is typical of the many throughout the state. Many highways axe blocked and some have even a unit under weight of the mud. ,

Last Yank In Russ Jail Freed

MOSCOW UPI — The Soviet Union Hrarsday freed the only American known to toe in a Russian jail. Peter N. Landerman, 24, Riverside, Calif., had been serving a three-year jail tern, after being convicted of injuring a Russian fatally in an auto accident. He was released after 16 months behind bars and handed over to U. S. officials. Landerman later told reporters he was given food "I would

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JIM HARRIS CHEV - BUICK

SALES ROOM & GARAGE BUILDING

115 NORTH JACKSON GREENCASTLE, IND. SQUARE FEET FLOOR SPACE GROUND FLOOR APPROX. 8,425

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USED CAR LOT

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118 North Jackson Square Feet Approx. 6209 BOTH FACILITIES IN GOOD REPAIR

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WE ARE PLANNING TO MOVE TO LARGER NEW FACILITIES - THEREFORE WE WILL SELL--0R-LEASE

CONTACT PAUL HARRIS AT 115 NORTH JACKSON ST. GREENCASTLE, IND. OL 3-5178

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