The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 June 1965 — Page 3
SCOUTS OF TROOP 360 AT ROBE ANN PARK
The Senior Troop 360 of the Girl Scouts informally interviewed Evva Jarperud, a young Swedish girl who is visiting tne country. Ewa is a Girl Scout of her own country. She is pictured above (right) with representatives of the four categories of scouts that gathered at the park Friday. Photo by Frank Puckett, Jr.
Astros Ready For Moon SPACE CENTER, Houston UPI—Six young astro-scien-tists, freshly indoctrinated as America’s newest space celebrities, headed home today to pack up and get aboard the nation's $20 billion express to the moon. They hope to be ready in three years to grab for a scientific golden ring—a chance to walk the dusty, crater-pitted plains of the moon to search for clues to the origin of earth itself. One week ago, they were comparative unknowns, working at various universities and science laboratories around America. Today, they are the nation's first “sicentist-astronauts”: Dr. Edward G. Gibson, Dr. Owen K. Garriott, Dr. F. Curtis Michel, Dr. Duane E. Graveline, Dr. Joseph P. Kerwin and Dr. Harrison Schmitt. And others, said Robert R. Gilruth, chief of the federal space agency's Manned Spacecraft Center near Houston, will follow them into the astronaut ranks for America’s manned assault into space.
Th« Daily Bannar, Graancastla, Indiana Wadnasday, Juna 30,1965
The Farm Front WASHINGTON UPI — The Agriculture Department has estimated world butter production in 1964 at 10.9 billion pounds, up slightly from the 10.8 billion pounds produced in 1963 and 6 per cent above the 10.1 billion pounds estimated for 1956-60. U.S. production last year was 1.46 billion pounds. Other large producer* in 1964 wer* West Germany, 1.083 billion pounds; U.S.S.R., 2.099 billion pounds; France, 961 million pounds; New Zealand, 554 milion pounds; Australia, 482 million pounds; East Germany, 385 million pounds; Denmark, 342 million pounds; Canada, 361 million pounds; Finland, 231 million pounds; and The Netherlands, 197 million pounds. The Agriculture Department has proposed standards for five
Service moved.
ordered the sign re*
“You’ve got to have some limitation,” a spokesman said. But PDM had the last word. The park service also complained about PDM signs on the crane platforms of both arch legs. The firm said the signs acted as wind breaks. They were allowed to remain in place.
Third To Qualify EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. UPI — Air Force Capt. Joe Engle Tuesday became the third pilot to qualify for the military rating of winged astronaut by flying the X15 to an altitude of 54.5 miles. Engle, 32, is the youngest man to become an astronaut in a winged craft. He joins Lt. Col. Robert M. White and Maj. Robert A. Rushworth in having
Two Hoosiers Killed Monday LIVINGSTON, Ky. UPI — Two Indianapolis persons were killed In this small Central Kentucky town Monday night when they walked in front of a Louisville & Nashville passenger train at a crossing. Five others from Indianapolis were injured, two critically, as they leaped from a trestle into a creek bed to avoid being hit by the speeding train. Police identified the victims as Mrs. Pearl Shepherd. 62, and Karen Prewitt, 13. Injured critically and hospitalized at Central Baptist Hospital at Lexington were 5-year-old Terry Prewitt and Mrs.
Judy Whitten, 20. Also injured and hospitalized at Lexington in satisfactory i condition were a 4-week-old infant, Ernie Whitten, Joan Pol- j lard, and Mrs. Pauline Prewitt. All seven persons were from Indianapolis. Police said they were crossing the railroad tracks at a small trestle in the center of the town after parking their car nearby. They were on their way to visit relatives who lived a short distance from the
tracks.
When the train approached, five of the seven jumped into the water of a small stream below, which was only a few inches deep. The two victims remained on the trestle and were crushed to death by the southbound train.
Ok's Business
merce
nor says business is fine and it looks good for the future with the wildly gyrating stock market and only cloud on the economic horizon. But Connor told a news conference Tuesday that the market, which has declined sharply in recent weeks, “may or may not be an indicator of business | 1 activity.” He said his job was to report “on the economic facts of j j life, the business facts of life, | as they really are, even when they’re favorable . . . and the i business facts of life continue to remain strong.” | Asked why he thought the ;
with revenues of about $93 bil- t ure a t Montgomery that Negro ^ on - leader Martin Luther King Jr. But they cautioned that offi- wag “ c i ose iy advised by Comcials figures would not be avail- munists if not actually con-
trolled by them.”
The astro-scientists proved themselves adept at handling
j what other astronauts consider he determined hv a
majo r cml WL, work the tougheat part o( the Jo ^ j^uTof two ^“Tva,!
facing new r s conferences. They ' ue-determining characteristics treated newsmen to a barrage of feeder pigs—logical slaughwitty, erudite answers that | ter potential and thriftiness.
The proposal defines logical
official grades of feeder pigs, attained an altitude of 50 miles
The proposed standards provide or more.
for grades U.S. No. 1, U.S. No. In Tuesday’s flight, Engle 2, U.S. No. 3, medium, and cull, flew the X15 3.477 miles an The department said the pro- hour to an altitude of 288,000 posed standards would provide feet. It was Engle's 14th flight
a uniform basis for marketing in the X15.
and market reporting. There Joe Walker, test pilot for the are presently no official grade National Aeronautics and Space standards for feeder pigs. Administration, flew the X15 to The proposed grades would an all-time altitude record of
years.
Officials estimated that feder- i as “action arms” of the Com-
al spending for the budget year munist party
WASHINGTON UPI — Com- which began last July 1 would The commission further re-' of Secretary John T. Con- probably run about $96.6 billion p 0r t ec | t 0 the Alabama Legisla- impressively demonstrated their
354,200 feet and a speed mark of 4,104 miles per hour.
Bitterness Fading
able until the third week in July. Last minute buying or tax collections could put the final reckoning up or down by as much as a few hundred million
dollars.
No one was willing to say for sure when the budget would be balanced, although President Johnson has promised “steady progress” toward erasing t
red ink.
Doing away with the deficit will depend on such things as the war in Viet Nam and the need for more tax cuts or more federal spending to stimulate
is transition time! ONLY A korell FITS LIKE A KORELL
market has declined, Connor
said that certain “comments” the economy, administration ofhad decided some investors to ficials said Tuesday, sell their stock and take a a deficit of $3.6 billion would
profit.
Created by the 1963 legislature to investigate civil rights workers in Alabama, the commission aimed its heaviest bow at the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). The report said SNCC w> a s “extensively Communist dominated, and its leadership sub11 e stantially follows the Communist party line.” The commission said paid workers with SNCC had admitted that a revolution was the aim of SNCC, working with its two companion groups, the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party (MFDP) and the Congress of Federated Organi-
He did not mention Federal Reserve Board Chairman William McChesney Martin Jr. But market observers have pinned at least some of the blame on Martin, who earlier this month spoke of “disquieting similarities” between the current economic area and the boom of the 1920s which precided the crash | of 1929 and the resulting great j depression. Connor said he found no such similarities.
, zations (COFO).
represent the best budget per- j The commission said John
formance since fiscal 1960 when the government closed its books with a $1.2 billion surplus.
It would be a $1.3 billion improvement over what the President originally estimated in January, when he first sent his fiscal 1965 budget to Congress. The better showing is due entirely to reduced spending by various government agencies, particularly the Defense Department. Johnson's original spending estimated was $97.9 billion, but this was cut steadily as the year progressed. The $700 million that Johnson
Lewis, “the titular head of SNCC . . . has made public . statements calculated to overthrow, undermine or subvert” I the governments of Alabama
and the United States.
reputation as the most highly educated U.S. astronauts. Their selection, raising the nation's astronaut colony to 34, was aimed in part at cooling off a long-simmering feud between the federal space agency and the nation’s scientific community over the agency's preoccupation with choosing jet pilots for space chores. Flying experience was not required for this, the nations fourth group of astronauts— but they are going to have to learn. Following their first public appearance as astro-scien-tists Tuesday and briefing sessions thta lasted into the evening, four—Gariott, Graveline. Gibson and Schmitt—returned home to prepare for flight
school.
The quartet will report to Williams Air Force Mase, Ariz., July 28 to begin 55 weeks of learning to become at least passable jet jockeys—experience thta wlil stand them in god stead should they ever have
slaughter potential as the ex- ^ ASHINGTON UPI Facpected slaughter grade after a f‘ ona ^ bitterness seems to be normal feeding period required inside the Republican for the animal to reach a mar- P art y leadership, but it has not ket weight of 200 to 230 pounds. y et vanished completely.
Thriftiness in a feeder animal
is defined as its apparent abiltiy to gain weight rapidly and efficiently. Size in relation to age, health and other general indications of thriftiness are considered in determining the grade.
SNCC Executive Secretary to take the control of an Apollo James Forman termed the re- moonship in an emergency,
port “nothing but rubbish" produced by members of a “racist
legislature. . .”
The legislators said the top
The secretary quoted a Commerce Dtpartment report to back his contention. It said that
IU. S. business output would asked ~ and Congress granted
| — in May to step up the war in . Viet Nam will show up mostly
output
show a “good sized rise" in the April-May-June quarter.
Uncle Sam 3.6 In The Red WASHINGTON UPI — Fiscal 1965 ended today with Uncle Sam expected to be about $3.6 billion in the red — the smallest budget deficit in five
in fiscal 1966, which begins Thursday, Budget Bureau sources said.
next
Civil Rights Workers Communist Inspired By United Press International An Alabama legislative commission said Tuesday its investigation has revealed that two
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Kerwin, a 34-year-old Jacksonville, Fla., Navy lieutenant commander who conceded that his 700 hours of jet flying "is
dozen leaders of the Congress , „ , ®
perhaps one reason whv I m
of Racial Equality (COREl, in- .. on . ... . , , ™ , ,. __. -1 ’ he re, and Michel, a 31-year-old eluding Director James Farmer Rice University, Houston, asand field secretary James Peck, sistant professor of space sci _ "have impressive pro-Commu- ence who ]ogged 500 hours Qf m.st records. ’ flying in the Air Force, will byThe commission called CORE pass the flving course and ; “an important arm of the pro- port directly to the Manned Communist conspiracy and a Spacecraft Center late
dedicated agent working toward month.
the Sovietizing of America.” i -
King, head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), was called a “false prophet of the far-left.” The commission said that King probably was not a member of the American Communist party, but that he has been closely associated with known Communists for 10 years and “has amassed some 60 pro-Commu-
nist citations.”
"PDM" Knows Their Business ST. LOUIS. Mo. UPI — Pitts-burgh-Des Moines Steel Co. (PDM) is a firm that knows an opportunity when it sees one. In building the steel structure of St. Louis's proud Gateway Arch, PDM atached a huge, temporary strut June 17 to hold the legs together until they meet. It promptly hung a 12foot high billboard on the strut advertising “PDM” in big yellow letters. Tuesday the National Park
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the Circuit Court of Putnam County, Indiana.
Notice is hereby given that Glenn H Lyon was on the 28th day of June. 1965. appointed: Administrator of the estate of Koleen K Irvin, 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
re- ' 28th day of June, 1965.
It can and probably will revive before the GOP begins to choose up sides to nominate a presidential candidate in 1968. Republican National Committee members and state chairmen spent two days here this week observing a still uneasy truce. They were interested mostly in their prospects for gaining state offices and congressional seats in 1966. There was less bitterness apparent than when the party leaders met at Chicago last winter to accept the resignation of National Chairman Dean Burch, a protege of Barry M. Goldwater. They replaced Burch with the nuetral Ray C. Bliss. The pro-and anti-Gold* water factions are still keeping a wary eye on each other and
on Bliss.
Bliss, w’ho took over t h • chairmajiship April 1, called this week's meeting to report on his first three months and to talk about the nuta and bolts of planning for the future.
Probate Cause No. 10.528 Jack P. Hinkle Clerk of the Circuit Court for Putnam County, Indiana.
Stale of Indiana County of Putnam
iss:
Lyon & Boyd Attorney i s)
June 30-July 7-14-3t
Dr. D. H. Austin Dr. R. R. Ruble Chiropractors 201 South Indiana Street Teleohone Ol 3-3024 OFFICE HOURS BY Men. thru Friday — 9:00 a.m. te 9:00 p.m. APPOINTMENT Saturday — 9:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.
In The Matter of
the Estate of
Arthur H. Cubitt,
Deceased
Kyle M. Miller.
Executor.
In The Putnam
Circuit Coun
April Term, 1965
No. 10.473
NEW DEGREE BERKELEY. Calif. UPI— The Universtiy of California will offer a master of arts degree in “folklore" this fall. Among the courses leading to the degree wall be “Problems in Folklore,” “African Folklore," "The Popular Ballad" and “Chinese Society and Folklore.”
NOTICE OF SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY AT PIBLIC AUCTION Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned. Executor of the Estate of Arthur H. Cubitt. deceased, will offer for sale at pubhc auction at the late residence of decedent at 15 East Hanna Street. Greencastle. Indiana, on the 14th day of July. 1965. sale to begin at 12:30 o'clock p. m . certain personal property of the estate consisting of household goods, furniture and effects and other miscellaneous property. Dated: June 28th. 1965.
Kyle M. Miller
Executor
Frank G. Stoessel Attorney June 30-July7-2t
STATE OF INDIANA
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COUNTY OF PUTNAM IN THE PUTNAM CIRCUIT COURT APRIL TERM. 1965 IN THE MATTER OF ESTATE OF MONTIE r MULLINS DECEASED Estate No. 10.453 NOTICE TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF MONTIE F. MULLINS In the matter of the Estate of Montie F. Mullins, deceased.
No. 10.453
Notice is hereby given that Lois J Arnold as Executor 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 28th of July. 1965. at which time all persons interested In said estate are required 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 of said estate. Lois J. Arnold PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE Jack P. Hinkle Clerk of the Putnam CIRCUIT COURT
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