The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 14 July 1965 — Page 12
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Th» Dally Banner, Oraaneaatla, Indiana Wednesday, July M # 1965
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Dance Aef* Taftod OMAHA, Neb. UPI — Residents here have only a few weeks to take in night club strip tease acts, including that of Sally Rand, whose arrest led to the downfall of the ancient artThe arrest of the well-known fan dancer resulted in Tuesday’s meeting between police and night club operators. Police Chief L. K. Smith said it was agreed that "exotic dancing acts and strip teasers” will be taboo after Aug. 1. The agreement allowed club owners to meet contract obligations.
Viet Cong Stage Air Base Raid
Senator Praises' Nation's Press DETROIT UPI—The nation’s press "did a superlative Job” during the Dominican crisis. Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich.,
said Tuesday night.
The press "generated a very real public demand that the Dominican problem be shared with the Organization of Amer-
ican States,” he said.
Hart addressed the 32nd annual convention of the Ameri-
can Newspaper Guild.
He told the newspapermen that “it’s not the power of the
Negroes Refect y McKeithen Plea Negro leaders at Bogalusa, La., rejecting a plea by Louisiana Gov. John McKeithen for a truce, vowed Tuesday night to intensify civil rights demonstations in the tense own. Negroes at Jackson, Miss., planned their first demonstration today in a voter registration campaign. Negroes were to march to the Hinds County courthouse to test recently enacted changes in Mississippi’s voting laws that ease revstrictions. Civil rights leaders at Boga-
A New Era in Entertaining GET 1 HE MOST OUT OF LIFE
press that counts—it’s the pow- hisa rejected McKeithem’s plea er of the people that the press for a 30-day ban on marches bei can reach.” | cause they received no conces-
1 sions. They called on civil rights "This was demonstrated dur-
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to gum machines, buy 2.000 ten cent candy bars an hour and i swallow up to 700 soft drinks I a minute.
SAIGON T7PI — Communist ing the Dominican crisis where guerrillas raided the Bien Hoa the press did a superlative job air base 15 miles north of Sai- j —although somewhat to the gon today in a bold display of i embarrassment of some federal strength for 2,976 American sol- , officials. Hart said. diers of the 1st Infantry Divi- Hart ^ the public deman( , sion who had just landed in for OAS intervention "was a South \ iet Nam. | clear indication that Americans The hit-and-run attack was are ready — even eager — to premature. The new American work within the framework of arrivals were waiting to board such international organiza-
transport planes 55 miles away tions.”
when the guerrillas struck and TT , . ° He also spoke of problems
j between newspapermen and
Man Suffocates LAFAYETTE. UPI — Russell Walters. 58. Lafayette, suffocated when he fell asleep while ; smoking in his apartment and the cigarette ignited a daven-
| port.
there were no casualties.
The first C130 transport planes began landing without incident after the guerrillas
melted into the jungle.
But other Communist forces
politicians. "The fact of
that politics and the press are joined in an irrevocable marriage ... a stormv marriage
today attacked a government ^ alternates between admir-
groups around the nation to descend on Bogalusa to participate in marches until "there is total equality” in the Louisana paper-
mill town.
McKeithen called the decision "a tragic mistake” and said about 370 state troopers would remain in Bogalusa as long as
necessary.
About 370 Negroes marched through the town Tuesday, under heavy police protection. A few whites shouted catcalls at
the marchers.
In Washington Tuesday, j President Johnson said he hoped
the matter is the voting rights bill would op-
en the way for repeal of all poll taxes. He said Atty. Gen. Nicholas. Katzenbach will work with congressional leaders on a pro-
by GAILE DUGAS, CF.\ Women s Editor
NEW YORK (CFN)—A New Era of Entertaining is upon us, very much a part of suburban life in 1965 and very much a departure from the casual ways of the past years.
It has developed largely through o the astonishing cultural explosion in these United States. Apathy has been transformed into enthusiasm as Americans across the country take an active part in the arts. Fortune Magazine reports that Americans are spending an absolute minimum figure of S3 billion for culture yearly, exclusive of public funds. This is considerably more than the sum spent annually by the television and radio industries in combina-
tion!
Book sales are soaring. The figure for book sales is almost SI.6 billion and Arnold Mitchell of the Stanford Research Institute reports that more servicemen visiting New York go to the Museum of Modern Art than to any other single place with exception of the Empire State Build-
garrison at an Hoa village 20 i a tj on and contempt, hope and vision to put a legal end to such
Coins Stolen
INDIANAPOLIS
ert Jackson reported to police today that a $2,500 coin collection in a large red wooden box
miles southwest of the Ameri can air base at Da Nang, killing 26 Vietnamese soldiers, and the important district capital of Dak Sut on the Central High-
lands.
In air action. 150 American
UPI Rob- South Vietnamese war-
planes carried out a saturation bombing raid on a two-square-
despair, ness.”
cordiality and rude- ; taxes.
The only sure thing about this "uneasy marriage,” he said, "is that there will be new courtships, new honeymoons, new* quarrels and new charges of unfaithfulness.”
Fast Body, Slow Spirit HOLLYWOOD UPI — Of her
frequent trips between Broadw r ay and Hollywood, Maureen O'Sullivan says: "It seems the body comes in by jet and the
Each day while waiting for gubway trains, four million New
, He said he would like to give . .
mile patch of jungle 40 miles | "one politician’s view’s on slant-1 spint by covered wa E on -
was missing from his home sou t_h G f D a Nang where a full : ed news stories.’
This culture explosion has made itself felt in other ways of living. To quote Time Magazine
on the matter:
“They (the New Elegants) have dismissed the short-cuts . . . for the older, more elegant sit-down dinner. Gone from the boards that count are the stacks of plates and flatware wrapped in napkins ... more and more, the discriminating tables across the land are set with ornate silver on cloths
of heirloom iace.”
And a fine thing, too. The open neck sport shirt has been replaced by the dinner jacket, the dungarees by long evening gowns, the buffet by sit-down dinners, the charred steak at an ‘informal barbecue” by a well-planned,
superbly prepared meal.
But the return to elegance does
ing. This is not odd, for Amer- j not stop just here. The barbecue
is still very much a part of suburban Ihing but careless dressing at a barbecue has vanished. Women guests may arrive in pants and shirt, true, but the pants will be superbly cut by top designers and coordinated with a silk shirt. Gone are the old cotton shirts and blue jeans for an evening out. The cashmere cardigan is back but this time,
It’s lined fn silk and cut like • straight little jacket. This icturn to elegance applies to fashion in more ways than one. The bikini, for example, accounts for only five per cent of all swim suits sold in this country despite all of the talk about it. And these bikinis are worn in private swimming pools, not in public. There’s a softer, more feminine focus on clothes for 1965 and an emphasis on a natural look with great sublety in make-up. The idea here is to achieve a natural glow with a healthy, vital appear* ance. And hairdos are becoming more, not less, feminine. The proper thing to do in entertaining has become the in thing to do. Consideration for one’s guests in every way, large and small. Lots of fresh flowers but no stiff arrangements. Hot, generous canapes. Have fruit juice, ginger ale and cola drinks as well as alcoholic drinks for your guests. Marlboro cigarettes scattered about the house in beautiful little antique cups and silver holders, along with a plentiful supply of matches in hzr.dsrme boxes.
icans have become museumgoers on a large scale, a survey of 21 major museums shows clearly. The American Symphony Orchestra League reports the in-
crease in symphony attendance to be phenomenal. The same
thing is true of opera. And people
swarm through record stores, tak-
ing home with them 17.5 million long-hair records annually.
People now dress for country living in suburbia with this great difference o'er the past, tha clothes they wear for casual daytime life—Little League baseball games, picnics, boating—are as carefully chosen as the fashions they buy for evening. It’s all part of the New Era of Elegance.
when he returned Monday
Yorkers put 150.000 pennies In- from a weekend trip.
division of guerrillas was believed holed up. Pilots were unable to assess damage because
of the heavy foliage.
The commando-style raid on
"I don’t regard them as a malignant tumor that must be ! immediately attacked and | slashed away,” he said. “They 1 are inherent in the system—it
ien Hoa was apparently timed happens to be operated by huto coincide with the arrival of mans — an d are no t necessarily the 1st Infantry Division troops fatal to the American way of
by air from their landing area life.”
at Vung Tau, a seaport complex
35 miles southeast of Saigon. The planes were delayed, and the guerrillas pulled back after penetrating the extensive Bien
BORGNINE AND BRIDE—Actor Ernest Borgnine and hi* bride, actress Donna Rancourt, are shown at a party during filming of "The Flight of the Phoenix” in Yuma. An*. They were married in Juarez, Mexico, on June 30.
BE A REAL ESTATE BROKER OR SALESMAN Nfw Clast Starts July 29, 1965, 7:00 p.m. Class meets each Thursday, for 8 weeks, 7:00 P.M. to 10 00 P.M. at Holiday Inn, Terre Haute. Enroll at this time. "BEST 8 WEEK COURSE AVAILABLE TO INDIANA REAL ESTATE UC. APPLICANTS" STUDENTS ARE INSTRUCTED IN ALL MATERIAL REQUIRED TO PASS LICENSE EXAMINATION. STUDENTS WORK OUT LISTING CONTRACT. OFFER TO PURCHASE AND CLOSING STATEMENT PROBLEMS SIMILAR TO THOSE USED ON EXAM. TUITION S50 00 SALESMEN - $70 00 BROKERS - TERMS AVAILABLE, TEXTBOOK FURNISHED. COLLEGE SCHOOL OF REAL ESTATE 3612 WASHINGTON BLVD INDIANAPOLIS. INDIANA WA 5-4908
Senators Debate
Hoa defensives and opening up HOUSillO PtOdtOIII with mortar and automatic i ^ ^ weapons fire at exactly 10 a m. WASHINGTON UPI — SenThe first of the transport ators began debate today on planes touched down 2 1 ' 3 hours President Johnson's $7.3 b : ” : on j later. houseing pr _ ram. His plans for Ten mortar shells crunched In rent subsidies lor'- d like it was near the base perimeter less in for some rough sailing, than 500 yards from the runway Critics of the controversial J area where the Americans fi- j revision to the House-approved ! nally debarked from the planes. | bill banded together in an at-! Another guerrilla band at- tempt to block it. They were; tacked a small Vietnamese led by Sen. Harry’ F. Byrd. Dtraining camp near the western Ya., who labeled the plan "renti- 1 end of the Bien Hoa runway but care” and said it would be "anretreated after a 15-minute fire- other bottomless it for federal
fight. spending.”
Among amendments being ofRebels Burn Flag fered to the bill was one by Sen.
^ John G. Tower, P-Tex., to re-
SANTO DOMINGO UPI — A move t^e subsidv provision, group of young rebels, perched ^ the additicn to the plaJ1 for
national payments to allow cer-
tain needy persons to move to
the bill also
would extend present low’ cost
Cities In North Rights Targets WASHINGTON UPI — The Johnson administration's next civil rights target probably will be the problem of the Negro in the great cities of the North, particularly education. The Chief Executive indicated as much Tuesday when he told his news conference the voting rights bill, now on the brink of final congressional approval, "is not going to solve
the problem completely itself. "There will be muen to be done in the years ahead. I think the problem of the American Negro is one of the two or three most important problems that w r e must face up to with our legislation again next year. "I am particularly sensitive to the problems of the Negro and the problems of the city I and the problems which the ; shift in population has caused, such as the problem of education. I have task forces working on these things.” Most of the civil rights legislation of the past several years has been aimed at correcting inequities which Negro leaders i believed were most apparent in the states of the Old South, j The thrust of the voting rights bill, for example, is principally aimed at the South.
But increasingly in recent months there have been loud protests from northern Ne- ; groes that schools and public | and private housing in some j northern cities actually are segregated in fact de facto if j not in law, as in the South.
atop a Dominican
shrine, set fire to a large
American flag Monday, heeding | better housing,
a crowd's roar to “bum it. Bum
it.”
Rebel leader Francisci Caameno Deno said later the flag burning incident was the natural result of the “flagrant intervention” of United States troops in the Dominican Repub-
lic.
JUDICIAL SALE OF REAL ESTATE The farms known as the Wilson C. Blue and Isa J. Blue farm approximately one mile west of Eminence, Indiana, will be sold at private sale for Cash at the Farmers State Bank, Eminence, Indiana, on Monday, August 9, 1965 at 11:00 o'clock A.M. Good farm land and well located. RUSSELL BLAYDES, Administrator
CENTRAL NATIONAL BANK, Guardian
lyon 6 Boyd Hughes A Hughes Attorneys
Seven Identified OTIS AFB. .Mass. UPI — The , Air Force today identified three more of the nine crewmen known dead in Sunday night’s j crash of a radar patrol plane 1 in the North Atlantic. The latest release of names brought to seven the number of dead crewmen identified by the Air Force. The bodies of two other I crewmen. still unidentified, were recovered following the crash 100 miles off Cape Cod. Seven others are still missing and three were saved. Eetter Off Home NEW YORK UPI —The crew of the fireboat Sen. Rob-
ert F. Wagner would hava been better advised to let the vessel remain at its mooring Tuesday. While the craft was on a routine dock inspection tour of the East River, tire marine fire house caught fire. Although five land - based companies and the returning fireboat fought the blaze, damage to the fire station was extensive.
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In ths Circuit Court ol Putnam County, Indian*. Notice Is hereby given that Glenn W. Lyon was on the 28th day of June. 1965. appointed: Administrator of the estate of Koleen K Irvin, deceased Ail persons having claims against said eaate. whether or not now due, must file the same in said court within six '6i months from the date of the first publication of this notice or raid claims will be forever barred. Dated at Greencastle, Indiana. th!» 28th day of June. 1965. Probate Cause No. 10.528 Jack P Hinkle Clerk of the Circuit Court tor Putnam County, Indiana.
Lyon Sr Boyd Attorney's)
June 30-July 7-14-.It
housing, urban renewal
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FARMERS SPREAD THE WORD ns OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY, JULY 17TH, 1965 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. GRAIN DRYING & STORAGE
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“WHOOPIE!”—Jennifer Mathew*, 2, goes deeply western In Salinas, Calif, where residents are wearing such garb for • 10-day period as aa "Old West" revival.
Closing-Out Sale As we ore leaving the state, we will sell at auction the following property, at our farm located 2’2 mi. southwest of Cloverdale, Ind., on State road 42. On: SATURDAY, JULY 17th, 19S5 SALE STARTS 11:00 A.M. SHARP 17—CATTLE—17 7—Holstein springer cows, all young cows and very good 4— Holstein heifers to freshen soon good. These Holsteins are Wisconsin breeding. 1—Angus heifer springer. 5— Holstein 4 Hereford cross calves 4 & S mo old These cattle are tested. FARM MACHINERY 1950 Ford tractor new rubber. Ford 2x14 plow, Ford cultivator. 3 qt. corn planter, disc, Clipper bush hog like new, gravity bed and wagon gear both like new, corn elevator, wagon with steel flare bed, post digger for tractor, rear end loader for Ford, manure spreader, Electro kerosene blower type heater, pair of electric clippers new, 2 large water tanks, and many misc. items used on a farm. BUILDINGS — 30 ft. x 60 ft. cement block barn with metal roof to tell at the highest bid to be moved from farm. 1—Steel grain bin. DAIRY EQUIPMENT - Bulk milk cooler Cleland model A-3 in A-l condition, Revere hot water heater, SO gal. site, Universal 2-unit milker complete and good, wash basin, double wash vat, also overhead gat tank. HOUSEHOLD Co-op 21' deep freexe good, Co-op refrigerator, Westinghouse dryer, metal cabinet, couch, 12' x 12' nylon carpet, cedar clothes closet, metal bed, twin beds with mattress, dresser, bookcase, kitchen table 4 chairs, rocker, adding machine, cash register, set aluminum meat trays, electric window fan and many other articles. HOUSE & LOT We will sell to the best bidder, the house where we live, a 7 room modern house on a 150' x 180' lot with good drilled well and shade. This is a good location on State road 42 just 2’2 mi. from CloverdaU and near Cataract Lake. House will sell at 1:00 P.M. Terms on real estate $1,000.00 down solo day, if terms on balance are desired, please contact owner prior to sole time. Not rosponsible in caso of accident. Terms — Cash. Mr. & Mrs. Robert D. Hamblen, Owners
Wayne Branneman, Auctioneer Lunch will be served.
Phone 795-4403
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