The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 1 April 1965 — Page 5
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SEEK CAUSE OF TRAGIC GAS PIPELINE BLAST—Police and gas company officials are searching the ash covered ground where children once played to find the cause of a gas pipeline explosion that killed 17 persons, including nine children, and destroyed four houses and a trailer on the outskirts of Natchitoches, La. Four of six persons who escaped are hosptialized with second degree burns.
Society will hold Initiation for Denver, spent Friday with Mr.
new members, with parents as guests. A reception will follow. A former resident of Fillmore is a patient at the Ruark nursing Home, Miss Myrtle Prather. About 20 attended the General CWF meeting at the Christian Church on March 18. Mrs. Mary Anne Michael gave the lesson and Mrs. Helen Knitzer led the Devotions. Refreshments were served by Mrs. Elizabeth Pyke and Mrs. Marilyn Wager. Mrs. Sadie Dudley fell Saturday March 13 and broke her knee. She is “laid up" for at least six weeks.
and Mrs. Charles Smith. The Beechwood Pleasent Circle will meet Wednesday afternoon, April 7, with Mabel Petro. The Fillmore Garden Club will meet Friday afteriwon, April 9th, with Mrs. Ethel Lydick with Mrs. Iona Goss co-
hostess.
The “Pep Club” sponsored a “Penny Wise” Dance in the school gym, Friday night. Mr. and Mrs. Vernie F. Lewis of Indianapolis, Gordon Lewis of Michigan, State College and Norman Lewis of University of
The Senior girls nad a bake sale Saturday at 1'ruitt’s Hardware and the boys had a carwash at the Cities Service. Both were successful.
Mrs. Ruth Smith entered Putnam County Hospital Sunday for treatment. Room 224. Curtis Riley 925 West Street, Lebanon, has suffered a heart attack. He is a former resident of Fillmore and wants to hear from his friends. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Wells visited Wednesday afterrwon
with Jesse Evans. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Koessler and daughter Loretta's Thursday supper guests were: Mrs. Koessler’s son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Hickman and grand daughter Maria Ann of Anderson. Other visitors in the Koessler home were: Saturday afternoon, Mrs. Koessler's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Conard — On Sunday, Mr. Koessler's mother, Mrs. Jessie Koessler and his sister, Mrs. Jack Martin, both of Bainbridge and Mr. and Mrs. Rex McBride and family of Greencastle R. R. Callers on Mr. and Mrs. Lee Wells were Mrs. Grace Cunningham and daughter Suzie and Mrs. Lena Bryan.
The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana Thursday, April 1,1965
tended the District W S C S Meeting at Crawfordsville, on Monday.
STUDY CATTLE FUTURES MARKET
COLLEGE STATION, Tex. (UPI) Economist Ed Uvacek of Texas A&M believes a cattle futures market may be the way to stabilize the livestock industry.
Mrs. Ludella Day is recovering from Flu. Mrs. Kathleen Day, Pauline Pursell and Bernie Smith at-
Uvacek said most segments of the industry feel there is a need for a future market in livestock, but do not fully understand how it can best be used. To find out, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange has hired a private consulting firm to study the possibilities of such a market.
SEA GOLD NEW YORK fUPI) —There’4 gold indeed to be had from th*j seven seas, the experts agreed but Prof. Elmer W. Pehraon Columbia University School o# Engineering and Applied Sci-*' ence doubts it will ever pay Off^ the national debt. Although cheerful estimated have placed the value of thd’ gold in a cubic mile of seaway ter as high as $210 million, ^ more reliable figure. Pehrson; says, is $20,000. not enough meet the costs of mining th# precious metal. Pehrson waai one of several authorities mining techniques and econom^ ics who reviewed the possibili-, ties of undersea mining during a recent International Mineral Processing Congress.
Man's Stabbing Ruled Accident
blade severed a large artery in his thigh. Coroner Gailon Stevens ruled death was accidental.
MUNCIE UPI — James L. Crowell’s 13 - year - old son. stabbed to deatn at a drive-in restaurant early today and a coroner's report ruled he accidentally ran into a butcher knife his waitress sister was holding.
Bomb Injures Negro Youth
Chandler was dead on arrival at Ball Memorial Hospital. Sheriff’s officers said he had been drinking and created a disturbance at the drive-in on Indiana 3 where his sister. Mrs. Hazel Ruth Upchurch, 20. was employed.
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. UPI— An explosion that police said was caused by a dynamite bomb heavily damaged a con-crete-block garage in a Negro section of the city early today and injured a 13-year-old boy sleeping in a house a short distance away.
the garage, destroyed a boat stored inside, shattered the windshield of one of the cars parked in the driveway, blew windows out of the house and knocked two dents into the frame dwelling about a foot long and about three to four inches deep. It left a hole 10 feet wide and two to three feet deep in an alley behind the garage. Crowell’s 13 - year - old son, Weymouth, was taken to a hospital bleeding. The extent of his injuries were not immediately determined.
Authorities said they learned Mrs. Upchurch picked up the butcher knife and was holding it in front of her when Chandler lurched forward and the
Police said the bomb, consisting of about 15 sticks of dyna« mite, was placed at the rear of a garage at the residence of T. R. Crowell, a Negro public accountant.
Report Heavy Losses To Reds
The blast blew out the end of
Suspect Termites? Don’t Panic!
How Tormitos Enter Your Homo
Do you remember the time when the only aerosol spray can on the market was something called a “bug bomb”? It’s been many a year since insecticide sprays were developed for the Army in the South Pacific and, since those days of World War II, we ve seen just about every product imaginable spray-canned for home use. At one time, it was only the farmer who worried about protecting his crops, but with the advent of apply-it-yourself pes-
ticides, the housewife found
SAIGON UPI — Reconnaissance pilots reported heavy enemy losses today in the step-ped-up American drive against Communist positions on both sides of the 17th parallel. An estimated 200 guerrilla bodies were sighted on a battlefield near Da Nang.
Communist casualties were also believed heavy in a slashing fire bomb raid by U.S. Air Force planes on a Viet Cong concentration 25 miles north west of Saigon. It was the first time such tactics had been used against the Communists. The incendiary explosives set fire to 48 square miles of forest where an estimated 2,000 guer rillas were entrenched in caves and tunnels.
Pilots Stage Pan-Am Strike
them just as indispensable for the rose garden, kitchen or around the backyard barbecue. Unfortunately, not all crawling things are susceptible to this easy home remedy of the spray can. Termites in particular can be a most expensive house guest and one very diffi-
cult to get rid of.
In urban areas, an excellent source of food supply for termites is the wooden house supports in contact with the ground. But, if the house is built on a concrete foundation, termites can climb through openings around pipes or up foundation cracks as narrow as 1/64th of an inch to get at the wood. Even if barred by inedibles, they’ll improvise by constructing hollow pencil-like elevator tubes to bridge from
ground to floor.
Pest control operators can prevent the termite threat by pre-treatment at new building
sites — nests frequently being extensive and well below ground. The PCO accomplishes this with such chemicals as chlordane or heptachlor. These chemicals, when properly applied form an impenetrable barrier between termite nests and the vulnerable part of the house. The PCO can control future termite attacks on older homes by professional treating with chlordane or heptachlor. It gives the soil surrounding and under your home a protective coat, guarding the structure against termite damage. Prevention with such chemicals is always better than emergency—and consequently
expensive—cures.
But if you ever do suspect termites, don’t panic. Except
in unusual cases, thev require years to do irreparable dam-
age. This gives you a few days to contact your pest control operator who is trained to provide effective termite control.
NEW YORK UPI — Pan American World Airways, the nation’s largest international air carrier, was grounded today by a strike of its 1,528 pilots. The Air Line Pilots Association ALPA called a strike against Pan Am at 7 p.m. EST Wednesday after negotiotions became hopelessly deadlocked on issues involving working conditions. The bargaining had gone on for 15 months without resolvmg the complex dispute which ‘included pilot demands for a reduction of their 80 hour monthly flying time. No new negotiations were scheduled. The strike grounded scheduled Pan Am flights from 16 major U. S. cities to 83 countries around the world. The line normally carried 14,000 passengers a day.
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Fillmore News
By Mrs. Charles Smith Fillmore Correspondent Don’t forget uie Spiritual Renewal Crusade to be held in Fillmore Christian Church, April 4-11, 7:30 with Rev. Jack Keppel preaching. There will be special music by various churches. The official Board will meet Monday, April 4 at the Methodist Recreation Bulding. The Circle W. S. C. S. meeting will be at the Recreation Building, Thursday night at 8, with the Faith Circle as guests. This is an important meeting as a date for the General meeting is to be chosen, and the general officers elected. Plans are getting underway! for the annual Alumni Banquet, i which will be held in the school I gym, Saturday night, April; 24th. Fillmore graduates of the last 50 years, please keep this date. Interested Juniors and Seniors of South Putnam School System under the leadership of Mrs. Bee tourned the I. U. Medical Center, Indianapolis, j Thursday. Mrs. Lucille Bunten attended with the Fillmore dele-! gation. On March 31st the Honor I
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