The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 August 1965 — Page 2

The Daily Banner. Greeneastle, Indiana Monday, August 30, 1965

OBITUARY

Karl Wane Haltom, was born on August 21st, 1900, near Cataract in Owen Coun-

—Mrs. Mills

' Mother'’ Mills. She remained "Mother” Mills to generations

„ , of Middlebury and DePauw stuty. He married Gladys O'Conner I dents and graduates . In a letter

on August 9. 1924 and they became the parents of four children. Earline and Erwin, born in Cataract and now deceased;

to the president of DePauw she wrote: "I shall be very willing to cooperate in this matter and in all things that make for the

Sterling Haltom of B ranklin, best development of the stuInd., and Coleen Xeese of Clov- dent.” She was never too busy erdale; two sisters, Laura Evens talk with a troubled student

and Mary Rundell of Cloverdale.! an d ma nv times she found work Wailed in Putnam Co. SB 00 par year ~ . .. ... . which enabled a young man or Co ' ,,00 ° ' w y • Q, Earl .pent h,s enure Me m io remal /, n .. «1«0 ...

and around the cloverdale com- , ,

She loved young people and

THI OAIIY BANNER

AND

HIRAIO CONSOLIDATED

34-28 S. Jack ten Sl GrtancatHa. Ind

Butinett Phene Ol 3-5151 Elizabeth Rariden Estate, Publisher S. R. Rariden, Senior Editor Norma Hill, Gen Mgr. James B. Zeis. Managing Editor William D. Heeper. Adv Mgr. Entered in the Pest Office at Greencastle, Indiana, as Second Class Mail matter under Act of March 7, 187B.

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Home Delivery 40c per week

mumty. He was known by his friends and relatives as a man willing to share time and efforts for a person in need. He was a man who loved to work and commune with nature. He enjoyed fellowship with his fellowmen and took pride in hie ability to do hard labor until the time of his death. He was an honest citizen who could not tolerate dishonesty and deceit

in others.

He was proud of his family and loyal to those about him. He shall be greatly missed by his family and all those that

knew him.

Home is the sailor, home from the sea, And the hunter home from

the hill.”

by her influence and her acts helped many to achieve their best development during their formative years. By these, as by the members of her own immediate family, “Mother” Mills will be long remembered.

—Space Champs

Bible

Thought

But that no man is Justified by the law in the sight of God, it Is evident; for, the just shall live by faith. Galatians 3:tL To live by faith is to say | “There are no unknowns, for God knows and He has it all planned.” There is no sounder basis for successful living.

Sheinwold On Bridge Most Players Bid More Make Less Than Expert By ALFRED SHEINYVOLD It’s very pleasant to put your friends to the test. Ask them to bid the South hand and then to play the North-South hands at four hearts. You’ll find that the average player bids more and makes less than the expert.

West dealer Neither side vulnerable north A 762

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A KQJ53 A 1094

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CARD OF THANKS To our kind friends, neighbors, Be-One Club, and relatives, we wish to express our sincere appreciation for sympathetic attention, beautiful floral tributes, and add courtesies at the passing of Earl W. Haltom. We wish to thank Dr. Ernst for his wonderfull service and thoughtfulness. Rev. John Berry for his comporting message and the Whitaker Funeral Home for understanding-ser-eervice. Gladys Haltom and Children

space.

One of the very first to give his “well done” was President Johnson, who put in a call to the astronauts from his Texas ranch barely minutes after the helicopter snatched them from the shark-infested waters of the Atlantic and whisked them to

the Lake Champlain.

“You have conducted yourselves nobly,” Johnson told them. He said he was consid-

ering sending them to other Harold Harney, 22, city, was countries to tell the story of jailed Rt 7;45 Saturday evening

America's conquest of space and w r hat it means to the

West 1 A Pass Pass

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SOUTH A A 8

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North East South

Pass Pass 2 A

3 0 Pass 3 ^

4 All Pass

Opening lead — A K

Merry Jills Club Held Picnic Meeting Members of the Merry Jills Home Demonstration Club picnicked at Robe-Ann Park for their August meeting. Fifteen members repeated the club prayer and enjoyed a plentiful pitch-in dinner. The secretary's and treasurer’s reports were read during the short business meeting that followed. Louise Pershing of the Exhibits Committee reported on the Fair exhibits and thanked everyone who helped. The Nominating Committee presented the slate of officers for 1966. Happy Anniversary was sung to Pat Jones and Jo Anne Robertson. The remainder of the evening was spent in playing games. The club will meet with Louise Pershing in September.

Personal And Local News

The City Council will meet this evening at 7:30 o’clock.

After bidding two spades,

world.

Next to congratulate them were their anxious wives, Trudy Cooper and Jane Conrad. They had watched proudly earlier in the morning as Gemini 5 — a brilliant, fastmoving star in the dawn skies — swept over — Houston on the next-to-last circuit of the globe. Aboard the carrier, there was more of the same . . , a red carpet cut in the shape of the figure “5,” the traditional band playing the traditional “Wash-

by Sheriff Kenneth Knauer on a Putnam Circuit Court war-

rant charging theft.

Father's Auxiliary No. 1 of

will meet Wednesday night at! the Gen. Jesse M. Lee Post

1550 Home ; spade trick to make sure that

East cannot gain the lead with

Donna Steele, Coatesville. something like the ten of spades. Route 2, has been awarded a South wins the second spade white ribbon in the 4-H For- and must make a key play in estry Division at the Indiana trumps. He must lead the jack State Fair. of hearts.

KEEP EAST OUT

The Thursday Reading Club The idea is to give up a trump

Steel Strike day “neither side has budged

appreciably.”

The Taft-Hartley Act is Johnsons strongest weapon and there is a possibility that be-

, . , ' , . fore invoking it, he would sum-

which is forcing to game, South , 6 ’

can aftord to bid a mere three mon ,10th industr y a " d u " 10n

hearts at his next turn. North n ' , *» Uatora t0 Washinrton. , w v This was his tactic during

must respond, no matter how s

, . j c. -w -n the railroad talks, when both

weak his hand, and South will

, , , i , ,, . . sides were kept negotiating at have a better idea of the best . ^ b * | .. . . , the White House under John- 1

final contract. ... „ a a - .. sons close scrutiny. South must not do a jig on J , , . . The Taft - Hartley Act pro-

the tabletop when his partner ^ K

, , T iv- ev. Vides that if Johnson feels the !

raises hearts, I North had any- t ■ .. . , , , . . v,. . national interest is at stake, the

thing of real value he would bid -

government can go into court and get an injunction for an 80-

day cooling off period.

At a news conference Sunday, the President said if no settle-

we will have

to look to the national interest to see what it requires." The concensus here was that what it required was the Taft-

Hartley Act.

TO MARK 50TH WEDDING ANNIVERSARY Mr. and Mrs. James Otha Miller of Fillmore will celebrate their 50tl» wedding anniversary with open house from 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 5th. The couple were married Sept. 1st, 1915, at the home of the bride, the former Lola E. Arnold, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Arnold. Mr. Miller is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Miller. The Rev. W. H. Brown performed the ceremony. The Millers are the parents off 9 children, Ivan of Lewisville, Mrs. Lela Brown, Whiteland, Mrs. Mildred Vincent, Fountain Valley, California, Mrs. Margaret Huber, Greeneastle R.R., Mrs. Jean Hanlon, Fairmount. Kenneth, Fillmore, Marion, Cloverdale, Maynard, Greencastle R.R., Mrs. Wanda Mason, Coatesville, 29 grandchildren and 4 great grandchildren.

a new suit or raise the hearts to five instead of just four. North’s raise to four hearts is the weakest response he can

the Veterans of Foreign Wars make with a hand that includes | “ent isTelched

three or more hearts.

South should refuse the first

Santo Domingo Reports Fighting SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic UPI — Heavy

12 More Killed

OFFICE CLOSED Aug. 30 - Sept. 7 VACATION Dr. C. H. Finkbiner

Mrs. Leona Tuttle will have the vvins the q Ue en of hearts and i V er.

program. returns a spade to make South Mitchell Bialek, 50, Chicago,

ruff. 1 was killed Saturday night when

Rev.

Ernest Ronk,

will

return Qnc« again South must make a car struck him as he walked dozen heavier explosions fiom

The Office of Lawrence R. Jones, M.D. will be closed August 27 through September 2nd.

Frederick Smith, 16, Knox,

ington Post March," and cheers Thursday, September trick without allowing East to was killed Saturday night when from the crew. 2nd at 7:30 p.m. with Mrs. Tres-, ge t i n and return a club hj s motorcycle collided with a Sweating profusely Inside sie ^ ischer - Manhattan Road, through the ace-queen. West car on a county road near Cul-

their silver-white, $28,000 spacesuit* and sporting luxuriant beard* — Cooper * somewhat fuller than the balding Conrad's — they did not quite match the

image heroes.

They splashed down at the end of 120 orbits into a calm, warm sea. Neither suffered any

seasickness.

‘Were on the water and we re in good shape,” Conrad radioed when the capsule came down under its orange and white atmosphere. Braking rockets fired 22 minutes before had slowed their

Injured were Paul Ludwick, the pilot and owner; Howard Lee Johnson, 31, and Willis Williams, 31. All suffered back injuries and were taken to Jay County Hospital at Portland. The engine on the plane ap-

fighting erupted Sunday night j parently failed on takeoff and and continued early today be- the craft struck a cable, police tween troops of the Inter- said. American Force IAF and rebel |

soldiers. The rebels said five

civilians were killed and H|n|l LOW wounded. ” Both sides accused the other NEW YORK UPI —- The of starting the battle near the highest temperature reported to

Melissa Tackett, 14 months old, was killed Saturday when a car crushed her as her father, Harkless Tackett, backed out of the driveway of his home.

$75,000 Blaze FORT WAYNE. UPI — Fire caused about $70,000 damage Sunday to the Earth Mount Co. plant at Leo, including destrtcfed by more than 300 containers of paint stored in the building and light posts are manufactured.

Dominican presidential palace. It was the second consecutive night of fighting.

The

bursts

the U. S. Weather Bureau Sunday, excluding Alaska and Hawaii, was 111 degrees at Palm

shooting started with Springs, Calif. Lowest reported of automatic weapons this morning was 26 at Butte,

fire. There were at least two Mont.

missionary, will speak and a k pv pj a y He must lead a low along U S. 30 near LaPorte.

of dashing, clean-cut show P ictures at the N * w Ma .v s - trump without first taking the Sam Jackson, 41. Indianapo-

ville Baptist church Thursday ace or king of trumps. lis, died Saturday night of inevening, Sept. 2 at 7:30 p.m. West wins and cannot re- juries suffered earlier in the Everyone is welcome. j t urn a spade since dummy still day in a car-truck collision at

. 1 has a trump and can therefore Indianapolis.

Mr. and Mrs. George Friend. ^ Jt js for ^ reason that j Clarence Peters. 31. New Al-

R. R. 2, Greeneastle, celebrated

their 31st wedding anniversary ^ ^ up tw0 trump tricks August. 18th. They are present- ^ dummy stm had a t rump . ly visiting Mrs. Martha Whit- ; Nq matter what West returns, aker and sons in Ann Arbor, South c{m draw the ]ast two Michigan. trumps, cash the top diamonds

and overtake the jack of dia-

South led low trumps; he want-

DR. BURNS, D.C. CHIROPRACTOR Tues. thru Sat. 9-12 1-5 Tues., Thurs., & Fri. Evenings 7-9 Phene OL 3-5814 Seuth Jackson & Sunset Drive

Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Brown,

17,500-mile-an-hour speed and Roachdale, recently returned monds < niaking the game ton-

brought them into the fiery re- f ro m a trip through the South, tract, entry into earth* atmosphere. While vacationing, they visited They splashed down at 44 miles with their son, Alan Hughes in per hour. Tennessee.. Alan will be a They smiled broadly and sophomore at Milligan College,

laughed and shook hands and

walked around and seemed hap- The completion trip for the pier than any man on earth 7th, 8th and High School Green-

simply to be on earth.

DAILY QUESTION

As dealer, you hold: spades A 8 hearts A K J 4 2 diamonds AKJ clubs A Q 5. What do

you say ?

ANSWER: Bid two hearts (forcing to game). Make a

bany, was injured fatally Saturday afternoon when the car in which he was riding rammed the rear of a truck on U.S. 31 near Jeffersonville. Other weekend victims were Michael Mosher, 20, Pierceton; Karen Sue Johnson, 15, Nappanee; Eddie Harvey, 26, and Ruth Brown. 26, East Chicago, in a car-truck crash in Gary, and Virginia Bennett, 47, New Castle, in a Henry County

crash.

bazookas, grenades and 106

millimeter recoilless rifles.

A report by IAF headquarters said the fighting started shortly before 10 p. m. when a Brizilian company on duty near the presidential palace came under attack from the rebel zone with grenades and automatic weapons and returned the fire.

The rebels accused the Brazilians of shooting first.

Crushed To Death PIERCETON UPI —

Joyce

ALL LANGUAGES ST. LOUIS UPI — The St. Louis University hospitals maintain a pool of about 60 employes, ranging from nurses to janitors, to act as interpreters for patients and visitors who do not speak English. The volunteer Interpreter* are fluent in 19 languages.

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Private Plane Crash Injures 3

Pan Fried CHICKEN Every TUESDAY All You Can Eat

$1.25

Starting At 4.P.M.

2 Vegetables

Salad

Drink, Hot

Biscuiti and Honey

DUNKIRK UPI

A four- —

ANNIVERSARIES Weddings Mr. and Mrs. Leon Herbert, 1, | year August 21st.

castle 4-H Clubs, will be Thurs- forcing bid when you have more day, Sept. 2nd. The bus will quick tricks than losers. You leave the Jr. High School build- have Ola Quick Tricks and fl-

ing at 7:15 a. m. and return at bout 4 or 5 ’osers. 8 p. m. ; — —

JIM'S SHOE REPAIR Coma tea us, JOHN and JIM 204 SO. COLLEGE

9 • • • • • •*-v» •

One American in four has this disease

Physicians call it obesity, but it's just as unhealthy if we call it pounds—too many pounds. In some places a chief cause of early death is malnutrition but in this country the Grim Reaper’s number one helper is overeating. Overweight people subject their heart and blood vessels to undue stresses and strains, fcvery ounce of excess flesh is a menace to health. Which is why so many of us diet today. And those of us who are wise see a physician first. We, as professional pharmacists, know how effective a doctor's advice can be.

COANJPHARMACY

A

\ PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS

SAsuruMtU

Epsilon Sigma Alpha Sorority will hold their first meeting of the fall season Tuesday evening, 7:30 p. m., at the Greencastle Savings & Loan Building. This is a very important meeting. All members are urged to be present. Attention GHS Band members, Don Marketto. GHS Band Director, announces that band practice will be tonight, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday nights at 7:00. Bring Instruments, uniforms will be issued this evening at 6. Be there! As drum Majorette, Melissa Gough will be directing the high stepping GHS marching band Stacia Chadd is head majorette.

For the Discriminating Taste

in Dry Cleaning. Old Reliable Dismissed Saturday:

W’hite Cleaners.

Rites Wednesday WASHINGTON UPI — Funeral services will be held Wednesday in Northfield, Vt., for William D. Hassett, who served as an aide to two presidents. Hassett. 85. died of a heart attack Sunday at his Northfield home.

Kennedy Girl Hurt HYANNIS, Mass. UPI-Sen. Robert F. Kennedy's 14-year-rld

daughter, Kathleen, knocked 675 peasants scurried for safe-

unconscious when her horse ty.

Demo Editors Hear Senators FRENCH LICK, UPI— Sen. Vance Hartke, D-Ind., told the fall meeting of the Indiana Democratic editorial association Saturday night the “Republicans have accepted the false premise that government is best which governs least.” Hartke and Fellow Democratic Senator Birch Bayh were the featured speakers at the banquet session and were introduced by Gov. Roger Branigin. Hartke added that the Democrats have always governed on the idea the government is best which “helps the people the

most.”

“We do not run on the belief if you give prosperity to the ‘fat cats’ at the top. it will trickle automatically all the way to those at the bottom,” Hartke added. Bayh pointed out that federal money is flowing into v the Hoosier state in ever increasing

colume.

He said the 1965 Federal allowance for Indiana water resources will total $52 million which is $24 million more than last year. He also noted that Congress has authorized projects of more than $20 million in areas bordering Indiana which will have a direct effect

on the state.

Striking in battalion force, j In regard to federal defense the Marines swept in just south related expenditures for Indi- | of a hill called marble moun- ana, Bayh said the total was tain after airplanes used leaf- $300,000 more in 1964 than in lets and loudspeakers to warn 1960. The allotment of more civilians of the attack. About | than $10 million in federal as-

sistance received by colleges

place private plane crashed on i r J takeoff from a farm field near ^ I here Sunday sending three Dun- E 1 kirk residents to a hospital. ! =

TOUR'S

South of Greeneastle at U. S. 40 = n 11111111111111111111111111111 ii ii 1111111111111 it 11111111111111111111111111111111111 g

County Hospital Dismissed Sunday: Myrna Anderson. Fillmore Mildred Sandy, Cloverdale Earl MrCallie, Spencer Hazel Fisher, Stilesville Ada Call, Indianapolis Charles Pettit, Greeneastle Hallie Smiley, Greeneastle Melvin Hood, Greeneastle Births: Mr. and Mrs. James Whitaker, Roachdale, a daughter, Sun-

day.

Mr. and Mrs. William Pettit, 1156 Ave. D. a son, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. George Adamson, Greeneastle, Route 4, a daughter, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs, Dale Martin, Greeneastle, Route 2, a son, to-

day.

Rita Allen, Cloverdale Anna Walls, Bainbridge Vera Clones, Roachdale John Coy, Greeneastle

Kathy Wickert, Greeneastle Mrs. Larry Williamson and

daughter, Greeneastle

~ Viet Nam

'yJttctneif (HAS TWO MEANINGS)

The usual meaning plus: The power of your attorney to provide legal counsel that will be of most help to you in your important problems. See your Attorney in any legal matter-and visit us for information aboutTrust Services.

^LSERVICE t y^BANK^

tripped and fell on her, was off the danger list today anY5 resting comfortably at a hospital near the Kennedy compound. Despite her injuries, a mild concussion and contusions. Kathy was determined to con- ( linue horseback riding.

The Communists answered the assault with mortar and automatic weapons fire, then fled to the seashore. Five guerrilla bodies and two weapons were left behind. Marine casualties were described as "llght. ,,

and universities for construction of new facilities also was cited by the speaker. He added the state has received $23 million more foe other forms of educational assistance, such as vocational training program, student loans and public libraries this year.

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