The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 19 April 1965 — Page 6

Th« Daily Bannar, Oraancastle, fndiana Monday, April 19,1965

Boy, 14, Admits Shooting Cop INDIANAPOLIS UPI — A 14-year-old boy questioned in connection with a series of burglaries today verbally admitted shooting a policeman six weeks

ago.

Lt. Spurgeon Davenport of the homicide division said James Shopshire has verbally admitted firing the shot which critically wounded Patrolman Norman Shilling, 36. March 7. Police said Shopshire was arrested along with another 14-year-old boy in connection with burglaries and that a number of stolen items were recovered in Shopshire'# home after his arrest early today. Officers questioned Shopshire about the Shilling case because a number of weapons had been stolen from several homes in the area. Davenport said Shopshire said he would take police to the place where the threw the gun that wounded Shill mg, who is | recovering at home. Shilling lay near death for a number of days with a bullet lodged in his brain. He recalls nothing about the shooting, but was scheduled to view Shopshire later today. Authorities said when they questioned the two youths about 1 Shilling's shooting, each at first accused the other of the crime but denied being implocated.

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GETTING READY for commencement at University of South Florida in Tampa, this coed learns how to play it like cool.

Enjoyed Easter

WBSTVTLLE UPI — Fire of undetermined origin destroyed the home of a family of 11 Saturday night, but It wasn’t altogether a bleak Easter Sunday for the Lloyd Fosters. Nobody was injured and a local businessman made sure the Foster children had their share oi Easter eggs and other holiday goodies. Local officials, meanwhile, pitched hi to give the Fosters temporary Shelter.

^E.ND YOUR GIFT

Salads Shine With Sausage

Emphasize the lighter mood in menus by serving salads as the main dish. Sunglow meat salad satisfies the need for protein Willi • combination of salami and bologna, cat juhomw- stj**

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BUCKET BRI

14 Moot Death In State Traffic By Unittd Prsn International Fourteen Easter weekend traffic fatalities and the death early today of a Warrick County man raised Indiana’s 1965 driving toll to at least 365 compared with 319 a year ago. Kenneth Fulks, 52, Newburgh, was killed only minutes after the close of the 54-hour weekend period. He was fatally injured on U.S. 50 just east of Loogootee when his car collided with a semi-truck driven by Carl Holcomb, 49, Metamora. Five persons, two in one accident, were killed Sunday. Mrs. Elizabeth Kinsel, 84, Newton, 111., and her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Vivian Kinsel, 48, Indianapolis, were fatally injured when a car driven by Mrs. Kinsel’s husband, 58, went out of control on Indiana 154 near Graysville in Sullivan County and plunged over an embankment. Blaine Bradfute, 50, Bloomington, w’as killed outright Sunday night when his car went off a Monroe County road south of Bloomington and ran into a tree. Sherry Kuhn, 19, North Riverside, HI., was killed in a three-car accident 11 miles north of Rockville on U.S. 41 in Parke County Sunday night. State police said a car driven by John Murrillo, 23, East Chicago, rounded a curve at high speed, crossed the center line and sideswiped a car driven by Melvin Daniels, 23, Hobart. Murrillo’s car then hit a car driven by Larry Walton, 22, Brazil, headon. A Norfolk A Western Railways passenger train rammed an auto driven by Robert Clark, 25, Lafayette, at a Tippecanoe County road crossing at the north edge of West Point Sunday, killing Clark’s wife, Janice, 22. Nine persons were killed in accidents Saturday.

Crab Bake Acadian

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Teen Party Idea

Kice Council Photo

Crab Bake Acadian is a creamy mixture of rice and the seafood topped with sliced tomatoes and lightly buttered bread crumbs. The creaminess is the result of blending cream cheese, sour cream, and milk and is typical of the rich dishes loved in

the Southland.

The easily-prepared but hearty mixture was named for those Louisianians who are descendants of the French speaking immigrants from Acadia, a former French colony known today as Nova Scotia. Originally, the dish was made using fresh crab, but with today s methods of food preservation, the recipe may be prepared any time of the year, not just during that period when fresh crabmeat is available. Bland flavored rice not only adds a pleasant texture to the hearty main dish but it blends the delicate flavor of the crab with the pungency of green onions, richness of the sauce, and the earthiness of tomatoes. Cook the rice especially for this recipe, if you like, or use previously cooked rice which had been stored in the refrigerator or freezer. Cooked rice, one of the few foods that never has a leftover taste, keeps in the refrigerator for a week, in the freezer for six to eight months. Nice to serve with Crab Bake Acadian: Split-Pea Soup, Assorted Relishes, Rye Rolls, and Pineapple Ambrosia.

Crab Bake Acadian 1 can (8 ozs.) crabmeat,

flaked > 2 medium tomatoes, peeled

and sliced Salt to taste

% cup buttered bread crumbs

1 package (8 ozs.) cream

cheese

V 2 cup sour cream

% cup milk

% cup chopped green onions

with tops

3 cups cooked rice

Combine cream cheese, sour cream and milk. Whip until smooth. Fold in green onions, rice and crabmeat. Turn mixture into a buttered 2-quart casserole. Arrange tomato slices over casserole mixture. Sprinkle with salt. Top with bread crumbs. Bake at 350 degrees for 30 minutes.

Makes 6 servings.

Here’s a hot party idea for a “real cool’* hostess. Forget tha last minute flurry of cooking hamburgers for the crowd. Let thw guests cook their own burgers (kabob-style) on a table-top hibachi. Then, give the party a quick, refreshing lift with TUnamg Split 7-Up “Flpats.” i Burger Kabohs ’ Combine ! lb. ground beef with 1 teaspoon garlic-flavored salad dressing mix and teaspoon salt. Form into 18 small meatballs. Alternate on 6-inch metal skewers with onion wedges, green pepper squares and strips of partially-cooked bacon. Cook •lowly over glowing coals. Serve in "hollowed out” frankfurter buns. Makes 6 servings. j Banana Split ‘‘Floats’* In each tall glass place: 1 tablespoon mashed banana, t small scoop each vanilla and strawberry ice cream and l tablespooM sweetened, sliued strawberries. Tilt class and slowly pour ill L botila (7 QM.) chilled, sparkling 7-Up.

Pope's Message Hopes For Peace VATICAN CITY UPI-In an Easter message filled with hopes for peace, Pop® Paul VI Sunday urged that “every war and guerrilla operation give way to constructive collaboration.” The pontiff was obviously referring to negotiations to end the fighting in Viet Nam. Wearing the triple tiered tiara of his reign over the world’s Roman Catholics, the Pope told 150,000 persons in St. Peter’s Square that such talks for peace could become “a new start in the history of man.” “May the day come on which the discords among peoples will be resolved not with the force of arms but rather in the light of reasonable negotiation,” he said. The address was broadcast around the world by Vatican radio. It was delivered to pilgrims and tourists, many of them American, who braved an intermittent drizzle. The square seemed a sea of umbrellas during the ceremonies, which were capped by the Pope wishing the world a happy Easter in nine languages—including English. Pope Paul closed with the words of the resurrected Christ: “Peace be with you.” Then he gave his blessings tq the city and to the world— “Urbi et Orbi.” Pope Paul used the occasion to encourage those who are “obstructed and oppressed” behind the Iron Curtain. He said that their suffering “is a stmfj ning witness in behalf of religious liberty.” In calling for an end to “guerrilla operation,” the Pope, as usual, did not mention Viet Nam by name. But it was clear he intended his remarks to concern Southeast Asia.

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000 students were counted on his beach. More were coming, he said, as fast as their hitchhiking thumbs will carry them. Two hundred miles south on Florida road A1A about 15,000 more students soaked up sun tan lotion on Fort Lauderdale’s mile-long beach. Since the 1960 student riot and the much-publicized film “Where The Boys Are,” Fort Lauderdale has lost much of its attraction for collegians. Folsom said during the last 30 days there have been more than 500 arrests involving students, mostly on misdemeanor charges. These include 200 during the 24-hour period ending at 8 a.m. Sunday. Fort Lauderdale officials said they had no record of stu-

< dent arrests but added that the number was very small. Folsom said reports that a handful of students were kill'ing time by leaping from bal- | conies three and four floors jhigh into swimming pools did 1 not indicate a new fad was | about to develop. | i “Heaven forbid one like that,” he said, pointing out that most of the motel swimming pools are too far away from the ! building to make jumping from balconies a safe proposition.

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Frozen Food

I Big Buy;

Broccoli Cut*, Cot Groon Boons, Corn, Pea*, Pea* ond Corrot* — ^ ^ Frozen Vegetables. . K T.. 61°.” $ 1 Swanson Frozen Dinners.. J 1 Kroger Frozen Waffles x 10" *1 Realties Frozen Noodles.. 3 «... *1 Crinkle Cut Potatoes °:~.12 £ 49< Orange Delight “nr 4 & 59*

Frozen Strawberries

Comod Boef Ho*li, Boon* n' Prank*, Spaghetti & Meat

Pacer A 10-oz. $9 Brand "T Pkg*. |

Quantity Right* Reserved Copyright 1965 — The Kroger Co,

“May there no longer be on this earth any of those deliberately caused and unprofitable sufferings due to systematic political and social oppression, to racial strife, to the contempt and restriction of the just freedom of conscience and expression,” he added.

Florida Beaches Are 'Invaded' DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. s UPI—More than 75,000 college I students engaged today in the annual Easter ritual of “flaking out”—doing nothing—along I miles of Florida beaches. They are “recovering” from a long winter's textbook grind by basking in 90-degree tern- j peratures. They stare at each other, bat volley balls’ pluck guitars’ and occasionally leap off buildings into swimming pools. Daytona Beach Police Chief Oscar Folsom said at least 60,-