The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 1 June 1965 — Page 6

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Th« OWly Banner, Graancastla, Indiana Tuesday, June 1, 1965

KdtlCE OF ADBdNHXBATION >1 th» Circuit Court of Putnam County. Indiana.

Notlco 1j hereby Klven that Elizabeth En&lgn was on the 20th day of May. IMS. appointed: Admrx. of the estate of Arm M. En'lgn, deceased. All persons harlnr claims acalnst said estate, whether or not now due, must file the same In said court within six («■ months from the date of the first publication of this notice or said claims will be forever barred Dated at Oreencastle, Indiana, this »th day of May, IMS Probate Cause No. 10 sit Jack P Hinkle Clerk of the Circuit Court for Putnam County. Indiana.

Lyon A Boyd Attorneys

2a-June l-8-3t

•TATE OP INDIANA COUNTY OP PUTNAM

IN THE PUTNAM CIRCUIT COURT APRIL TERM. IMS IN THE MATTER OP ESTATE OF PRESTON H. McPHEETERS DECEASED Estate No. 10,326 NOTICE TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE Of PRESTON H. MrPHEEETERS In the matter of the Estate of Preston H. McPheeters, deceased. No 10.326 Noace Is hereby given that Roachdale Bank and Trust Company as Administrator of the above named estate, has presented and filed his final account In final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for the examination and action of said Circuit Court, on the 21st of June. IM5. at which time all persons interested In said estate are recuired to appear In said court and show cause. If any there be, why said account should not be approved. And the heirs of said decedent and all others Interested are also required to appear and make proof of their heirship or claim to any part el aald estate. Jack P. Hinkle Clerk of the Putnam CIRCUIT COURT

ENDSTONITE J PETE* SELLERS "WRONG ARM OF LAW" and "AMOROUS GENERAL"

WED. THRU SAT.

Inmihnm & bvelMS MANy

CMtawst^

•re&s* of racial activity. Moat of those arrested were charged with violating Alabama’s boycott law by picketing downtown stores.

MAPLECROFT AUTO THEATRE R. I., Clayton. Indiana TONIGHT DOUBLE FEATURE! "BEACH BLANKET BINGO" — and — Keir Dutlea and Jack Warden "THE THIN RED LINE" WEDNESDAY THRU SATURDAY Double Feature

Rock Hudson—Gina Lollabngida "STRANGE BEDFELLOWS" and Ann-Margaret—Michael Parks "BUS RILEY'S BACK IN TOWN"

On The U. S. Farm Front WASHINGTON UPI — A | foreign Agricultural Service report indicates Israel may join i Italy as a large purchaser of i U. S. calves to be delivered by , regularly scheduled airlines. Israel recently imported 357 j U. S. calves following a successful test shipment of 30 head in . late March. In airlifting the calves, ranging in age from 1 to 3 weeks, the Israeli importers got lightweight animals ; which will fatten to about 1,000 pounds each before sending them to the slaughter block. FAS said Israeli importers

South Viet Units Launch Attack

anticipate purchases of up to 15,000 head by May, 1966. The United States has the largest supply of baby calves in the world and is angling for the

Israeli business.

, SAIGON UPI — South VietDuring the past 10 months namese marines today launched

Italian importers have purchased and airlifted about 10,000 head of U. S. calves, mostly Holsteins, and are fattening them for slaughter. The savings

in freight charges are tremen- : Ngai.

dous. The shipments to Italy included calves 2 to 3 weeks old. The Agriculture Department’s Economic Research Service has predicted fed beef production during the April-May-June quarter will be down a little

a counter-attack against a withdrawing Communist force which used human w r ave tactics to smash to government battalions around the coastal city of Quang

capital and alio* South Viet Nam in two. Quang Ngai, about 340 miles north of Saigon, is on the coast of the South China Sea and sits astride the country’s main north-south highway. Miliary sources said Vietnamese losses in three days of bitter fgihting near Quang Ngai may run as high as 700 killed and wounded, believed to be the highest yet for any single battle in the war.

kometown since completing the orbital flight in the two-man Gemini space capsule “Molly Brown." The townspeople represented by Mitchell Mayor James A. Fortner presented Grissom with

a plaque and 9th District Rep. Lee amilton gave Gus, as he is known in the community of 4,000, the flag which flew over the Capital in Washington the day of the historic journey.

A Viet Cong terror squad penetrated Quang Ngai’s defenses

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before daybreak today and at-1 tacked the provincial police | headquarters w r i t h satchel charges and hand grenades. One

from a year earlier. Production j policeman was seriously injured, in July - August - September I The guerrillas penetrated to quarter is likely to be about | within 400 yards of the Ameri- i the same as a year earlier. ERS ! oan military compound,

said fed cattle prices into the summer likely will remain form,

Mitchell Honors Gus Grissom

!

A full battalion of Vietnamese

Attome? for Estzt* Lron M Bovd

IS-JuDe l-2t

CLOVERDALE 1-DAY ONLY WED. JUNE

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Reserved Seats, 25c Fcrfomiances 6 4 8 p m

MEADOWBROOK DRIVE-IN THEATER Intencction 36 4 43 TONIGHT AND WEDNESDAY Frankia Avalon. Annette Funicello "BEACH PARTY BINGO" (Color) Ann-Margaret, Tony Franciosa "THE PLEASURE SEEKERS" (Color) Wednesday SI.00 Carload

Racial Violence In Louisiana By United Press International Civil rights leaders staging five-month-old demonstrations in Mogalusa, La., vowed today to return to the street where whites and Negroes clashed I Monday. “Were going to go back 1 there tomorrow and put 10 people in front of every store and ! tell them to build a bigger jail” a Negro leader said after the

brawl.

There were three separate battles in the outburst of violence Monday in the paper mill city. At least three persons were injured and police arrested 15 others—10 whites and five Negroes—and threatened mass arrests to prevent further disorders. One of the fights started when about 25 whites, armed with clubs and pipe lengths, attacked two Negro pickets outside a supermarket. Police guarding the pickets were decoyed away by a sham battle. One of the pickets. Aaron C. Griffith, 24. was hopitalized with severe head cuts. The other picket was slightly in-

jured.

In Selma, Ala., Negro leaders threatened today to move demonstrations into the streets | of white residential areas. It was not immediately apparent if the threat had the sanction of Dr. Martin Luther King who spearheads the movement In Alabama. “We’re going to take our beds into the streets, and eat, sleep and pray there and have church in the street." the Rev. L. L. Anderson told a rally Monday night. King followed Anderson on the speaker’s stand but he did not comment on Anderson’s proposal. Police arrested 38 demonstrators in Selma Monday in an in-

REHEARSE SPACE WALK—Astronauts Edward Whits (left) and James McDivitt rehearse the planned walk in space on the Gemini-4 flight scheduled for June 3. This scene is at Caps Kennedy. The walk in space to set for the second orbit, At 17,400 Qtte# an hour, ever grout

marines was involved in today’s counter-attack. Helicopters airlifted the troops into an area 10 miles northwest of Quang

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averaging nead mid-May levels of about $26.50 per hundredweight, Chicago. Prices in the July - August - September per-1 ood probably will average about

$25 per hundredweight, ERS Vienamese officers said the sai( ^ - ! marines encountered sporadic Hog slaughter during 1965 ie ; res j s ^ ance as (-j le y moved in to expected to continue well below reca pt U re territory lost in ear-

that of last year, reflecting the , lier f jg htinf r

8 per cent decline in the 1964

fall pig crop and a similar cut | The main Communist force

in the 1965 spring crop. Prices I are expected to be above those ! of 1964.

appeared to have abandoned, at least for the time being, an attempt to seize the provincial

MITCHELL. UPI — MaJ., | Virgil I. (Gus) Grissom return, ed to his hometown here Sunday and told a crowd of nearly 30,000 persons, “it’s good to be home where the people along the parade route are old friends and familiar faces.” Grissom and his wife and two sons, plus his parents and his wife's parets. were guests of honor Sunday for the celebration to honor the first American to command a two-man space ship and the first human to fly through outer space twice. ■ i It was the first time the astronaut has returned to his

HAITI DOM. REP * JAMAICA LE sser ANTILLES /

GEMINI WINDUP—"miiup of Gemmi-4 space flight is plannAl for about 400 miles south of Bermuda in Atlantic.

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