The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 31 July 1965 — Page 3

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SIX MORE YEARS OP THE BEATIES? The Lighter Side

by Dick IVest

WASHINGTON UPI — Vin is no exception, cent Lopez, the only band lead- j am no j referring, of course, *r now in practice who per- his predictions that Rep. formed at Calvin Coolidge's in- John v . Lindsay, R-N. Y., will augural ball, has recently add- elected mayor of New York ed a new feature to his floor and that Michigan Gov. George

shows.

Romney will become president

Cuban Refugee Is Rescued At Sea; Bearing Death Mark MIAMI UPI — The former the spot where he was to have governor of Camaguey Prov-1 been shot for plotting the overince, Cuba, a firing squad tar- throw of the Communist regime get tatooed over his heart, ar- i of Fidel Castro, rived here Thursday night at : Casas owes his life to Thom-

After the musical part of the in 1968.

program. Lopez takes the mike and treats his audience to a few startling prophecies.

While these forecasts might be disturbing to most Democrats, and perhaps to certain

the end of a 12-day ordeal at sea escaping from a Castro prison. Luis Casa Martinez, delir-

as Miller, who retired in 1962 from the Jamaica, Queens, fire engine company 299 to fulfill a life - long dream of sailing

He got Into the oracle busi- Republicans, they would be renesa by way of his h o b b y, garded by others as cheery outwhich is numerology. He be- looks.

lieves there is occult significance In numbers and that if you know how to read them right you can divine things not

Nor was his prophecy that a third world war Is in the offing the one that distressed me. What made cold chills do the

apparent to the ordinary mor- watusi up and down my spine t* 1 - was Lopez’ prognostication in He may be right. On the other the field of music. It was here hand, this may be the result of that he foresaw true calamity, his having played “Nola” on Putting two and two together, the piano just about every day which is the way that numerolo-

since 1921. Anyway when Lopez returned

gists go about ascertaining what the future has In store, he

ious, sun - blistered, bearded around the Bahamas and Carand dehydrated from drifting in \ ibbean with his wife, Laura, the Gulf, wept as he stepped The Millers were about 21 of the sloop Skeezix III and j m ii e s off Gun Bay in the Bahastaggered into the waiting m as around noon Thursday arms of his sister and uncle, when they spotted Casas on A retired New York Fireman a four - by - four foot raft rescued Casas from a tiny raft | made of innertubes and scrap Thursday about 36 miles out 1 lumber. from Miami. j "He was delirious and nearThe 34-year-old governor of ly incoherent when we took

Camaguey Province from 1959 to 1960 had an “X” circled by small dots tattooed over his heart. He wore a Roman Catholis rosary and crucifix around

him aboard,” Miller said. “He told us he was about to abandon the raft and try to swim to Miami. "He didn’t know Miami was

his neck. 36 miles from the point we

The “X,” Casas said, marked picked him up.”

Indiana Will Get $94 Million WASHINGTON UPI — The Social Security Administration Friday released figures showing Indiana would receive $94 million in additional funds under the new Social Security-Medi-care program signed into law by President Johnson. The amount represents the total amount of new funds which will enter the state in 1966 as a result of the program, which | goes into effect July 1, 1966. The administration said $22 million of the total will go to financing I medical care payments for elder- ' ly persons. The remainder, $62 million will be used for increased retirement, disability and survivors’ benefits. The agency’s fig- | ures showed that $476,000 Hoosiers will be eligible for Medi- ; care payments under the new j program. A similar increase is expect- ' ed in 1967.

A Woman's Viev

Skirts To Feature Knee Showing' Look

to the capital this week for a prophesised that the world is post - Coolidge appearance, I facing six more years of the

sought him out for a consulta- Beatles.

tion. Music, Lopez explained, runs An oracle, you know, is some- in nine-year cycles. The type of thi^g like an umpire. He has to music that the Beatles personify call ’em as he sees ’em. regard is now in its third year. Ergo, it

less of the consequences. has six years to go. gy Q a y Pauley boy short and on squared-off Most of the Italian girls have Down through the years. I was so shaken by this pre- PARIS UPI—The eyes have geometric lines, often with curves, often uninhibited by aeers. soothsayers and other diction that I was afraid to ask it y ear> bangs low on the forehead. Or, bras. Their figures are slim, but clairvoyant types have tended what type of music we will j Mannequins showing the fall it's long and pulled up onto the minus those protruding shoulto be a bit on the grim side, have during the next cycle. and win t e r fashion collections head in disorderly stacks or der blades et cetera to disgrace

neat, sausage rolls. Or. there the bikinis some of them modelare pigtails and ringlet pony- l led in sportswear shows, tails, if you're young enough Now about that eye makeup, for the Girl Scouts. false lashes, sometimes two and I've been making notes on three sets of them, are a must,

manufacturers con centrating the models as I migrated from So is eye liner, usually applied on eye shadow in assorted the Florence fall and winter heavily around the entire oval. |

usually predicting famines, There are some things about, j n European style centers floods, plagues, scourges and the future that are better left are a ]i orb in their makeup,

assorted other disasters. Lopez untold.

day with her sister, Mrs. Ruth Penman in Brazil. Mrs. Pen-

man is ill at her home. Robert Van Cleave of Indian-

Mrs. Bobby Crawley and sons apolis was a guest of his par-

with the rest of the face deemphasized. It looks like a year i in the black for the cosmetics

Johnson Relaxes At Texas Ranch JOHNSON CITY, Tex. UPI — President Johnson, “caught up in the web of judgment” wherever he goes, sought relaxation in his hill country ranch today from a week in which he wrote history with the medicare law and the troop build up for Viet Nam. No sooner did he arrive at the LBJ Ranch from signing the medicare bill in the presence of Harry S. Truman, then he was off to Lyndon B. Johnson Lake for a spin in his 28foot cabin cruiser. Two boatloads of Secret Service agents followed in his wake. It was a cooling break from the 95-degree heat of south central Texas and the burden of momentous decisions. His meeting Friday with former President Truman at Independence. Mo., was somewhat emotional. With Truman at is side, Johnson signed the massive program for expanded Social Security and medical care for senior citizens. It was a philosophical occasion as well in the Truman Library where Vice President Hubert Humphrey and 200 others had come to join the President in honoring Truman for first promising medicarezz maraeh proposing medicare ball rolling in 1946.

The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana Saturday, July 31, 1965

On The U. S. Farm Front

By GAYLORD P. GODWIN I WASHINGTON UPI — There were twice as many farms in the United States in 1935 as in 1964, but net income per farm in the latter year was more | than 6 ] /j times greater than the average farm return 30 years earlier. An Agriculture Department! | recapitulation of the farm in-1 come situation shows that 6,814,000 farms were operated in 1935. The net income per farm was $411. In 1964, there were 3,472,000 farms. The net j income per farm was $2,794. Cash receipts from market- J ings per farm in 1935 totaled $1,045, and government payments were $84. In 1964, cash receipts from marketings per farm were $10,627, and government payments were $625. Production expenses in 1935 averaged $751 per farm, while in 1964 they were $8,424.

receipts of $7.76 billion. Dairy products returned $5 billion hogs $3 billion; eggs $1.74 billion; broilers and farm chickens $1.16 billion; turkeys and other poultry $442 million; sheep and lambs $326 million; wool $118 million; and horses, bees, goats, rabbits, and fur animals, $213 million. Feed grains brought thB greatest cash receipts among the crops, with a return of $3.34 billion. Other cash earners included food grains, $2.15 billion; cotton lint and seed, $2.53 billion; oil-bearing crops, $1.99 billion; tobacco, $1.41 Mllion; fruits and tree nuts, $1.72 billion; vegetables, $2.27 billion; sugar crops, $386 million; and miscellaneous, $1.31 billion.

Cash receipts from farm marketings of livestock and products in 1964 totaled $19.76 billion, according to the Agriculture Department's mid-year review of the farm income situation. Cash receipts from crops totaled $17.1 billion. Cattle and calves led the list of money earners with total

INSTALL PROTECTIVE EQUIPMENT Summer time is busy time for farmers — all the more reason to practice safety precautions. THE INDIANA FARM SAFETY COUNCIL urges you to ba certain the proper protectiv* equipment is always in place on pulleys, power-take-off outlets, belts and other moving parts. Don’t reap a harvest of injuries and pain. Stay “Safe And Alive In ’65.”

Boinbridge News

By Muriel Nelson

Balnbrldge Correspondent _ , _

shades, eye liner and those fashion openings, on to Rome, Florentine models used two i

. ... - ' , r j°-. r V, phony eyelashes. and now here for the haute shades of shadow, a deep maentertamed with a dinner on ents, Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Van F , ,, , . F «- , T . 1,,. . As for figure, the shapes and couture collections, and how roon applied near the lashes, in Sunday, July 11th to honor her Cleave over the weekend. , . . . , ., , . , . ‘ . .. . the heights depend on the city they stack up against the girls jagged line as if it were the husband on his birthday anni- Mrs. Marjorie Hanks return- * New York s showrooms. shadow of lashes themselves, versary. Those present «ere ed home Tuesday from the Put-; * Legs? Slim and small in all ; m Paris, the mannequins are and paler tones of blue and Mr. and Mrs. George Kelly and nam County Hospital after hav- They have to b< . to tall or tiny> depending on de- even yellow above that, and finMr. an - rs. ames ® y iog a surgery on . on a\. 1 show off well the above-knee signer whim. They’re thin, most ally a dark line still higher unMorton. Mr. and Mrs. W illiam Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cope ' skirtg and the textured and | near i y matching the New York der the eyebrows and swept Robinson and family o and family attended the Cun- j ewe p ed stockings. image of the gaunt face and out, wing-fashion, toward the man. Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Craft ningham reunion in Greencastle Coiffures? The hair is cut fi g Ure , the flat chest. temples. and family of Roachdale and park Sunday, July 11th. It was i ! j

Mr. and Mrs. Orville Everman the family of Mrs. Cope. FillmfirP NPW^ of Russellville. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Rooker and ril,ll,UI C nCWd

Rodney Crawley spent last Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rooker Tuesday with his grandmother enjoyed the Edie Adams show, Crawley at Roachdale. "Can Can” at Starlight Musi-

Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Grimes cal Tuesday night.

Heavy Rainfall In Many Areas

By Mrs. Charles Smith Fillmore Correspondent

Gen. Ike Now Chippewa Chief

Common Stock Pact Is Signed

Mrs. Ethel Barker visited LAC DU FLAMBEAU, Wis. In a joint statement issued

visited with a number of friends Mr. and Mrs. Paul Crodian Tuesday, July 13 through Thurs- UPI — “Let’s do something today, J. W. Heiney, president fcl Coatesville last Wednesday spent last Thursday with Mrs. day in Coatesville with Mr. and about these palefaces!” newly- of Indiana Gas & Water Com#vening. ( Maude Crodian and Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Smith. headdressed Big Chief Dwight pany, Inc., Indianapolis-based Marcia Solomon. Barbara and Mrs. Vt illis Dickson. Guests on Mrs. Mayleene Puckett en- Eisenhower quipped Thurs- utility, and Robert O. Bethea, fudy Roth returned home Sat- Monday were Mr. and Mrs. Roy tered Putnam County Hospital day night. president of Natural Gas Serv|rday from girl scout camp in Dickson of Plainfield. j Monday. The former President grin- ice. Inc. of Madison, Ind., anpoland. j Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Miller. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Schmidt ning broadly, accepted a tribal nounced that an agreement had Mr. and Mrs. Walter Huff- Mrs. Helen Miller and Mrs. 0 f Indianapolis visited Mrs. Lei- symbol called the “roach” from been signed providing for the man and family and Mr. and Lema Steele called on Mr. and j a Herman Tuesday. Council Chief Alexander Bodi- acquisition of all the outstandMrs. David Elliott and family Mrs. Frank Miller Sunday. j Mrs. Ida Day visited Mrs. dosbi thus becoming the first ing common stock of Natural camped at the Mansfield lake Saturday afternoon. July 17. H uldah Wright Tuesday. honorary chief of the Lake Su- Gas Service by Indiana Gas &

over the weekend. Frank Hart- Miss Joyce Baker entertained The Fillmore Service Club perior band of th e Chippewa In- Water.

man and family joined them on a group of guests In honor of me t Wednesday afternoon with d j ans The agreement is subject to Sunday. her third birthday. Refresh- M rs Laura Owens. Nine mem- Eisenhower placed the band approval bv the Public Service

Bobby Phipps is visiting his me nts of cake and ice cream was bers answered roll call with of p 0rciipine quills ornamented grandmother Myers in Terre enjoyed by Linda. Denise, and "wearing something backward.” vvith an le fea ther on his Haute this week. Mark Hess. Joey and Danny After th e business was trans- ; head to climax the C e re monv. Mary Lynn Hanks attended Doalin. Geratta, Joe. and Janet acted . th e hostess sreved de- A sta nding-room-only crowd of a bridal shower and visited over Baker. Barbara, Judy, and Mar- liC ious refreshments. Prizes some 4 000 Indian3 tourists and the weekend vvith a college class ilyn Roth. Joyce received many were won by Mrs. Lelia Her- neu , smen Iooked on in the In _ mate. Miss Sharon Thomas of | lovely gifts. man and Mrs . Bernice Smith. dian b , of _ north woods

Hammond. She spent Wednes- [ Miss Eva Juperud of Stock- Mrs Daisy Youngerman is vis- communitv of 1 600

day „1 E M with Brenda Weat hnlm^ S^den a houae p,est iting Mrs . Avaril Huller. j ‘'Now that I am a full-fledged

« nr preen 7 , T a Th<! Arn,> " i ReUnl ° n ' Va ■ , he ' d Chippewa,, and Mrs. Belle Heaney of Green- last week. Eva is spending six at Rohe Anne Park Sun-! T

ea-tle wa, the sneat of Mr,, week, in the U ni P ted S t at< * .ve age at- 1 h ° P ! ° f ,tS "' arrl " rS ' 1 T” 'T ^ ^

Alva Pruitt Sunday night ahd where ,he ha, vl.ited to the Sj,"/ ^ * *"■* 1 W V" • shOTt “*• ^ GaS j tendance. gestion to the president and M p rtunean of Pii.ntor, To Mr ^ ^ ™unci, of elder, - let, do

Mrs. Eva Duncan of Fillmore families. nnd farnilv Susie Dannv visited Mrs. Inez Hanks Sun- On Saturday, July 10th. Miss ^ Lisa have returned’ from a ^

day and Monday. Carolyn Roth. Miss Patty Min- vaca ti 0 n trip in California. They * . . Sa .‘ ' . e .. CUm The Old Settlers picnic was nick and Mrs. Shirley Baker visited h i g sister and family, | ™ Rnd stom P ed its a P'

held in the Lions Club building spent the day In Indianapolis 0 o i and yf rs Woodrow Abbott, prova ' Sunday with 33 members pres- with Eva. They enjoyed shop- j M arcb Air Force Base. Riverent. Among those from a dis- ping and showing Eva around side California. They saw’ Distance who attended were Mr. the city. In the evening they j ney Land. Knotts Berry Farm and Mrs. Ralph Fry of Clover- were joined by Mr. and Mrs. and ot her scenic places. Attenddale. Hugh Collins and son and Roth and Mr. Jerry Baker for ed the National Lions Club conhis family of Cunot, Mr. and a Chinese dinner at the Yong vention ^ M r. Scobee marchMrs. Grover Clements of Me- Mea Resaurant. ed in the parade . ^ ^

Cordsville. Mrs. Clara Reeves Senior Troop No. 334 held a stitch and Chatt er Club and the Chl PP ewas Wl11 of Greencastle. Mr. and Mrs. CO me-ajj-you-ar« party in honor met Wednesday evening. July I rUle 016 whole nation ” Morris Sutherlin of Roachdale, 0 f Eva at the home of Mrs. 21st with Mrg M adelyn K eii e y. Eisenhower, his wife Mamie Miss Edna Hand and Mrs. Vir- Roth. The party ended with Bar- Eighteen members and one and Howard Young, New York gil English. Eva Duncan. Fill- bequed Hamburgers in the back Misf . pherrl chestnut art dealer and G 16 ' 1- host f or more. Mrs. Belle Heaney, Green- yard. Those present were. Sally wpre p resen t The entertain- their two * wee k vacation at castle. Scobee. Jaque Roe. Karen Doz- ment u - as furnished by Mrs. j nearby Monocqua, arrived by After the delicious carry-in ier. Karen Parent, Carolyn Thelma Wright The hostess car about 35 minutes late for

dinner the afternoon was spent Smith. Sharon Branham. Patty served Vicious refreshments.

By United Press Internationa! Heavy summer thunderstorms rolled through North Dakota's Red River Valley early today behind 58 mile an hour winds. Flash floods swept through some sections of Raleigh, N. C., Thursday night after cloudburst. The w’eather bureau said Fargo and North Forks were hit hardest by the North Dakota storms. More than 2^ inches of rain hit Raleigh in two or three hours Thursday night, blocking roads with high water and sending streams over their banks. The rain hit soil already soaked from daily downpours of the last several days. Further flooding was expected on the Neuse River downstream

from Raleigh. The weather bureau said Thursday night’s thunderstorms hit nearly every reporting station on the Gulf and lower Atlantic coast. Fort Myers, Fla., was hit with 1.55 inches of rain in only 35 minutes.

An rm seasonably cool air mass over the Great Lakes area pushed early morning tempera- | tures down into the 40s and 50s from Illinois to New England. The mercury dipped to only ! three degrees above freezing at j Pellston, Mich.

TERMITES CAN BE STOPPED General pest control for Moths, Roaches, Ants, etc. PRICES REASONABLE - RESULTS GUARANTEED Reliable Exterminating Company RHONE COAN PHARMACY - Ol 1-3123

Commission of Indiana and clearance with other governceremony. mental authorities. Natural Gas Service, Inc. serves a total of approximately 3,500 customers in Madison and Hanover, Ind. and in Milton, Kentucky, directly across the Ohio River from Madison. The company obtains natural gas

Corporation located on the Kentucky side of the Ohio River. Indiana Gas & Water Company, Inc. serves natural gas to approximately 130,000 customers in 75 communities in

He said he thought at first it nor th central, central and southmight be a good idea “to drive ern ®rid water to about them back into the Atlantic 35 ' 000 customers In seven of Ocean — but there might be ^ bese same communities,

too many of them.”

Instead, he said, ‘Vhy don’t we adopt them into the tribe,

the open air ceremony.

with talks from Mr. Bruce Lane. Minnick. Mrs. Shirley Baker. , Mrp Ruth g m ith has returned Eisenhower said he regretted

Mr. Clarence Steward and several others. Members and a general social hour followed.

and Mrs. Marilyn Roth. from visiting a week wdth Ind-

Eva and Caroyln Roth, along ianapolig relatives.

with several girls from Green-

Mr. and Mrs. Richard John- j castle and other cities In covson and family of Danville and ered Bridge Council left Wed- m IJ |\ ■ ■ • Rev. Doolin and family spent nesday. July 14 from Terre Hold UCITlOnStrfltlOn Monday evening with Mr. and Haute for the Round-Up camp- MARTINEZ. Calif. UPI Mrs. Ernest Johnson. site at Farragut, Idaho. These A f ami i y that pickets together Mrs. Molly Noll is quite 111 girls have planned for this wan t s to stick together, in the Robert Long hospital in trip for the past six months. Roger V. Maes, 29. his wife Indianapolis. They will join 9.000 girls and Norma Jean, and their seven Mrs. Laura GiKz Is spending ? 000 adults for the next two children demonstrated in front

he was late because it delayed by a few minutes his being made a tribal chief. “I saw a cute little girl here I wanted to dance with, but I couldn't because at that time I still was a

paleface,” he said.

from Wednesday through Sun- weeks of camping and fun.

Bites Steak

Leaves Record

AMERICAN LEGION DANCE Saturday Nite, July 31st Music by THE TOWN CRIERS First tims at tha Post

of the Contra Costa courthouse

Thursday. They carried signs BILLINGS, Mont. UPI — A demanding the return of eight- visitor to the home of Mrs. Lin--year - old Tommy Maes, who <ia R. Haggerty apparently was made a ward of the court needed foor more than music.

WINSTON CHURCHILL as a baby, you think? No, tt’a 4-month-old Jerry Steven as a baby, in Falkville, Ala. The late British statesman once said all babies look like him, but Jerry’s resemblance is unusually striking. ’

four years ago and placed in custody of an aunt. Last month a court ruled that

When Mrs. Haggerty walked into her kitchen Thursday, she found that a bite had been tak-

the Maes family was still too ; en out of the steak she was unstable to permit Tommy’s re- i preparing for dinner. Near the turn. : steak she found a record alTommy himself joined the bum that she had never seen protest meeting Thursday. before. “We have six children living The steak - taster, sans recat home, why not one more?” . ords, remaina at large and | Mrs. Maes said. j anonymous. i

NOTICE MY OFFICE WILL BE CLOSED August 2 to August 16 Dr. D. W. Killinger

FOR SALE TWO HOUSES Sealed proposals will be received by the undersigned up to 10:00 A.M. (Daylight Savings Time) on FRIDAY, AUGUST 6 1965 at the office of the Parke County R.E.M.C. at 119 West High Street, in the Town of Rockville, Indiana, for said houses. These houses, which are located on South Jefferson Street in said Town, are owned by the Parke County R.E.M.C. and will be offered for sale for cash. If a proposal or proposals are accepted therefor, the houses are to be completely removed and all debris cleared up on or before Friday, September 24,1965, at the expense of the buyer or buyers. One house has a new gas furnace installed in 1964 and the other house has a new circulating oil heater purchased in the winter of 1964-65. Each bidder shall furnish with his said proposal a performance bond in the sum of Three Thousand Dollars ($3,000.00) to guarantee that such bidder will remove said house or houses at his expense, clean up the debris and hold said Parke County R.E.M.C free and harmless from any and all claims, damages and/or demands that may arise from said successful bidder or bidders removing said house or houses from said premises. The owner reserves the right to reject any and all proposals received. These houses may be inspected by appointment at any time prior to the submitting of said proposals. PARKE COUNTY RURAL ELECTRIC MEMBERSHIP CORPORATION

By REUBEN DOOLEY Manager