The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 6 September 1965 — Page 4

Th« Daily Banner, Graancastle, Indian* Monday, September 6,1965

STARTING FRIDAY Thaatr* Open Full Tim*

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FRIDAY-SATURDAY

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COLOR

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MEADOWBROOK DRIVE-IN THEATER Intersection 36 & 43

TONIGHT

John Wayne, Dean Martin SONS OF KATIE ELDER (COLOR) Anthony Perkins, Vera Miles PSYCHO

Japs Growing TOKYO UPI — Japanese school children, nourished by an increasingly Americanized diet, are getting too big for their school desks. The education minister released a report recently which showed that the average height of 14-year-olds has increased about four-and-a-half inches in the past 13 years.

MIDWAY DRIVE-IN

Jet. 40 a 43

MON. • TUE. • WED. • THML Admission $1.00 The Sons of Katie Elder JOHN WAYNE dean msm

Plus Elvis ProsUy "FUN IN ACAPULCO**

MAPLECROFT AUTO THEATRE MONDAY, SEPT. 6TH LABOR DAY —FIREWORKS— Jackie Gleason, Steve McQueen 'SOLDIER IN THE RAIN" and Tony Young, Dan Duryea "TAGGART" CLOSED TUE - WED. - THURS.

Add Sound To Your Home Movies With Little Trouble

By BAKT H.IN< H

How many of you are home movie addicts—members of that ever-growing army of 8mm users who record vacations, holidays, birthdays and other special occasions on film? How many times have you re-run movies taken of junior 10 years ago and wished that you cuold hear what was being said on that day? Well, It now is possible to take your 8mm films WITH SOUND and with a minimum of fuzz and bother. After years of research and development a new earner-re-corder combination has been Introduced that appears to have the answer to the amateur’s dream. It is called the CamraCorder” and the combination, camera and transistorized tape recorder, sells for less than $330 According to the International Camra-Corder Corporation, the Camra-Corder Is the first and only 8mm high fidelity sound motion picture camera which synchronizes speech, pictures and sound. The manufacturer states that the Camra-Corder is made up of two units — an 8mm camera with professional features and a transistorized tape recorder. The combination, which comes in a leather carrying case, weights six pounds. The comera features a zoom lens from 9mm wide angle to 30mm telephoto. The lens is power-operated by pressing a button. The camera also has automatic exposure control with a sensitive cadmium sulfide electric eye light meter with ASA ratings from 10 to 400. The viewing system is through-the-lens which is a 13element optic with a speed of f 1.8. There is a built-in Type A conversion filter to permit

using ‘‘indoor’’ color film in daylight by merely flicking a but-

ton.

The tape recorder half of the Camra-Corder team is capstan driven at 3 3 4 inches per second and Is completely transistorized. It operates the same as any other tape recorder except that the sound track is in perfect lip-synch with the film. In fact, after shooting a roll of the film, both the film and the tape must be sent in for processing. The processing includes transferring the sound track from the tape to the edge of the film. When you get your film back, the sound is on it and all that is needed to see and hear what you have captured in your first "talkie” is an 8mm sound projector and a screen. The Camra-Corder Corporation already Is working on a camera model that will utilize the new Super 8 film format. It also is experimenting with the possibility of using 100-foot film rolls instead of the current 50 feet. There should be no problems involved in changing either film rolls or tapes while shooting. The synchronization of film and tape is automatic, so the sound and the pictures always jibe, according to the manufacturer. • • • The August issue of TJ. S. Camera has a nice layout on a I subject that never fails to captivate — children. The pictures were taken by various photographers and the color photographs currently are on view at the Kodak Pavilion at the New York World’s Fair. If you can t get to the Fair, get the magazine. If you can. get the magazine anyway—it’s interesting reading.

BASEBALL LEAGUE STANDINGS

PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE Eastern Division

Information Agency to bn beamed in 10 Arabic-speaking nations.

W. L. Pet. G.B.

Oklahoma City 89 53 .627

Denver

82 62 .569 7%

San Diego

70 77 .475 21%

Indianapolis

69 77 .473 22

Arkansas

66 78 .458 24

Salt Lake City

55 89 .382 35

~ Western Division

Portland

W. L. Pet. G.B. 80 66 .548

Seattle

78 68 .534 2

Vancouver

76 68 .528 3

Hawaii

74 71 .510 6

Tacoma

74 71 .510 6

Spokane

56 89 .386 23%

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Loa Angeles

W. L. Pet. G.B. 79 59 .572

Cincinnati

77 59 .566 1

; San Francisco

75 59 .560 2

j Milwaukee

75 61 .551 3

j Pittsburgh

74 65 .532 5%

j Philadelphia

69 67 .507 9

jSt. Louis

69 69 .500 10

Chicago

65 75 .464 15

j Houston

59 79 .428 80

j New York

45 94 .324 34%

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Minnesota

W. L. Pet. G.B. 86 53 .619

Chicago

80 58 .580 5%

> Baltimore

75 59 .560 8%

i Detroit

76 62 .551 7%

j Cleveland

74 62 .544 10%

1 New York

68 71 .489 18

;Los Angeles

64 75 .460 22

: Washington

62 77 .446 24

Boston

54 86 .386 32%

Kansas City

50 86 .368 34%

LEGAL NOTICE OF PUBLIC

HEARING

Notic* is hereby slven that tho Board of Zoning Appeals City of Oreencastle will at 7:30 p. m. on the »th day of September 1965. In the City HaU. hear evidence in connection with tha petlUon of Carl E. Strain for varianco and appeal from the decision of tho city engineer with reference to establishing a Consumers Purchasing Service at 609 S. Jackson St. In a residen-

tial area.

Said hearing Is open to the pub he and public participation Is requested. Board of Zoning Apptals City of Greencastla Harry Voltmer, Ch. James Hill. Sec’y.

NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Hi the Circuit Court of PutsaS County. Indiana. Notice Is hereby given that David O. Sublet! was on the 36th day of August. 1963. appointed: Executor of the Will of Rose Sublet!, 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 ths date of tha first publication of this notict or amid claims will be forever bared. Dated at Oreencastle. Indiana. DUO 26th day of August, 1965. Probate Cause. No. 10,54k. Jack P. Hinkle Clerk of the Circuit Court f«F Putnam County. Indiana. Frank G. Stoessel Attorney Aug. 30-Sept. 4-13-91

NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATIO* In the Circuit Court of Putnam County. Indiana. Notice Is hereby given that Rosla B. Torr was on the 37 day of August. 1945, appointed: Executrix of the Will of EG" win A. Torr, deceased. All persons having clalma 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, ails 37 day of August, 1963. Probate Cause No. 10,544. Jack P. Hinkle Clerk of the Circuit Court for Putnam County, Indiana. J Frank Durham Attorney Aug. 30-Sept. 4-13-31

CHANGE OF PACE IN ART EXHIBIT A new dimension in art an entertainment was unveiled Saturday at DePauw University where a one-man show by Professor Garret Boone opened a four-week run in the Art Center. Titled "Fun, Games and Various Landscapes,” the show drew over 200 to its debut. Standard media represented in the exhibtiion included oil landscapes, prints, plus a number of works from Boone’s "Little People” series. The show’s change of pace came in what the artist introduced as audience participation art. A novel guest register was a pair of framed color-me-figures demonstrated here by Profes*or Robert Williams, eyes one of four Boone creations of "Op Dart.” The targets, this one a He tac toe board, were deaigned and executed by Boone as examples of new forms or vehicles of art expression. The exhibtiion will remain in th« gallery until October 4.

BURR FOR USIA HOLLYWOOD UPI — Raymond Burr, video's “Perry Mason” will star in one of 13 half-hour ‘’Television versus Reality” shows for the U. S.

NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the Circuit Court of Putngm County, Indiana. Notice is hereby given that Mae L. Lanzone was on the 36th day of August. 1965. appointed: Executrix of tho Will of Charles P. Lanzone, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate, whether or not now due, must file the same In said court within six (6> month* from the date of the first publication of this notice or said j claims will be forever barred. Dated at Oreencastle, Indiana, thie 26th day of August, 1965. Probate Cause No. 10.343. Jack P. Hinkle Clerk of the Circuit Court for Putnam County, Indiana. Riley M. Sharp Attorney Aug. 30-Sept. 4-13-Jt

Indian Forces Invade Pakistan By United Press International Defense Minister Y. B. Cliavan of India announced today that Indian forces have crossed the Indo-Pakistan border in La- | hore and Amritsar sector. It was the first time of the six-day-old border war between India and Pakistan that Indian troops were reported inside Pakistan itself. Lahore is about 15 mils from the Indian commercial city of Amritsar : arid 16 miles inside Pakistan's

: border.

Chavan said the Indian forces crossed the border early this morning to "forestall a planned Pakistani attack on the Indian state of Punjab.” Chavan made the announcement to Parliament in New Delhi. It indicated a serious new escalation in the fighting between India and Pakistan and raised the threat of all-out war between the two countries.

W/t/l

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CORPORATION creencastle Open. Wed. 4 Sat. H Noon 15 USX WASHUKTQ* SHEET . . . OLmt UUf

Hike In Steel Prices Hinted PITTSBURGH UPI — The United Steelworkers Union (USWi observed Labor Day with its heftiest contract in nine years. From the steel industry there were rumblings of price increases. With resounding satisfaction, the union’s Wage Policy Committee approved Sunday a 35month contract estimated to cost from 47.3 to 52 cents per manhour. The "Big 10” steel companies are expected to ratify the pact this week. "It is a great piece of work and absolutely the best we could get,” said I. W. Abel, the USW president. Replying to criticism of some union officials Abel conceded it was "not a perfect contract.” ‘‘But then what Is?” he asked. Abel estimated the worth of the agreement, hammered out in Washington last week under five days of unrelenting pressure from President Johnson, at 49 cents an hour and the industry at 51 and 52 cents an hour. Chief features of the contract were sizable wage increases, voluntary retirement with full pension after 30 years’ service, «nd the nearly doubling of pension payments. Industry sources said Hie burden of the contract plus record expansion and improvement programs might necessitate relief in the form of high-

Famed Jungle Doctor Buried YAMBARENE, Gabon UPI— Albert Schweitzer lay at rest today in a single jungle grave near the tiny African mission to which he devoted his life. President Johnson joined the great and small from throughout the world in mourning his passing. I Schweitzer, who renounced fame and fortune as an eminent theologian and musician to tend the medical and spiritual needs of lepers and primitive Africans, died late Saturday night after a long illness. He was 90. He was buried Sunday in a plain wooden coffin beside his wi 'j at the edge of the clearing they carved from the jungle together in 1913. She died in 1957. Tributes to the famed doctor poured into the tiny West African settlement from both sides I of the Iron Curtain and from world leaders and ordinary people impressed by Schweitzer's life and work. They included messages of condolence from virtually every head of state in Europe and AfI rica.

“We shall again return to war if we should feel that our democratic objectives are being frustrated,” the former followers of junta leader Antonio Imbert Barrera were quoted as saying. The statement heightened the mutual distruct between the military and the rebels which Sunday stalled the scheduled disarmament of both sides. The rebels and junta forces occupied virtually the same po-

sitions that they maintained during the last few weeks of , the four-month-old crisis. Troops of the Inter-American j Force IAF began tearing down of the fortifications in the ini temational peace-keeping zone, but still maintained control of the area between the opposing sider. | Some rebels who had turned in their arms before the broadcast were reported to have ask:ed for them back.

Tuesday Nite Special 5 - 8 P.M. SWISS STEAK & GRAVY Choice of 3 Vegetables or Salads, Rolls, Coffee $1.25 TUESDAY ONLY American Fries, Home Made Noodles DOUBLE DECKER DINING ROOM

"AIR CONDITIONED**

President Johnson sent a j message saying that Schweitzer’s example served to remind the world “that the sick should be made well: that our heritage | of religion and culture should be carried forward; and that all men of all races in every part of the world are brothers.” i In a brief message. Queen Elizabeth II. England said Schweitzer’s "great work in so many fields will long be remembered and hit humanity will inspire this and future generations.”

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Santo Doming^ Tension High SANTO DOMINGO UPI — Tensions heightened in this re-volt-torn city today with the threat by former junta leaders to again take up arms because of alleged increased Communist influence in the regime of provisiona President Hector Garcia -Godov. A broadcast by the militarycontrolled San Isidro radio station Sunday night quoted five top-ranking military men as saying the threat of communism had increased since GarciaGodov MBumad offLca FridaDw

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PUBLIC SERVICE INDIANA