The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 7 September 1965 — Page 1

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W#athtr Forecast Partly Cloudy

VOLUME SEVENTY-THREE

Daily

*W# san not but ipaak fh» tbrngi whi A w« har« sewi or hoard." Act* 4:20 GREENCASTLE, INDIANA TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7,1965

mTAH SUrE

UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL SERVICE NO. 270

NASSAU IS BRACED FOR BETSY'S FURY

South Putnam School Personnel Is Announced

India, Pakistan Step Up Undeclared War

Bahamas Hit By Fierce Hurricane

By United Presi International

The staff of the South Putnam Community School system for th« Fall semester is as fol-

lows:

ADMINISTRATION OFFICE: Donald E. Hedrick, Superintendent; Marie Dicks, Financial Secretary to Supt.; Sylvia Query, Secretary to Supt. MEDICAL DEPARTMENT: Theoiine Bee. School Nurse. FILLMORE FACULTY —

1965-66

High School Elmo B. Carver, Principal Maurice Wells, Industrial

Art*

R. W. Smith, Social Studies

Now You Know

Tranquility Prevails In Steel Industry

By United Press International

India and Pakistan stepped up their undeclared war today with a wide-ranging series of

The highest rate of deaths air raids against targets near from accidental causes occurs the biggest cities in each coun-

m three western states — Wy- try. oming, Nevada and Idaho —

where 80 or more people per A spokesman for the Indian 100.000 die of fatal accidents, Defense Ministry in New Delhi

announced that Indian air force

Holiday Traffic Toll Sets A New Record

Rites Wednesday For Sam Halbert

PITTSBURGH UPI — Tran- Dife Insurance Company,

quility, a rare commodity in the

past nine months, pervaded the K|/|e basic steel industry today. wf If Ilf 3

according to the Metropolitan planes attacked Chakala airport on the outskirts of Rawalpindi, the capital of Pakistan. Monday night and early today. The spokesman also said Pak-

The captains of the industry fffCC L0Wltt(ll(6fS iRtani planes attacked Kalaisigned contracts and memoran- kundi air base Monday. The air

Samuel H. Holbert, 90. a dums of agreement with t h • WASHINGTON UPI — Con- base is located 60 miles east of highly respected colored citizen, United Steelworkers union gressmen faced at least anoth- Calcutta, the largest city tin

passed away in the Putnam (USW) Monday night, assuring er month’s work on

^* h ^ €head ’ _ Busine ' ss County Hosptial at 3:05 Mon- labor peace for the next 35 Johnson’s “Great Society” leg-

months.

Walter Wamsley Rites Thursday

By United Press International

NASSAU, The Bahama* —

UPI—Hurricane Belays 150 mile an hour winds relentlessly pounded the fishing and farm villages of the Bahamas today, and this island capital braced for its worst storm since 1929

when scores were killed. Betsy moved at a snail's

pace across the island chain up-

Americans set a record for rooting trees, snapping power s summer holiday traffic toll '^ nes ' wrecking at least two during the Labor Day weekend, luxury yachts and damaging figures showed today. dozens of smaller craft. Police A United Press International re P orted there had be * n no ca * ,, -

Walter A Wamsley, 74, pass- compilation showed 567 traffic ulties although property darned away unexpectedly at his deaths, six more than the pre- a?e was extensive - home in Putnamville early vioua record, set two years ago. The second hurricane of the

President India - Calcutta is in southeast Monday. The mark was the w'orst traffic ^ason drifted with devastating India. He was born in Indianapolis record for any summer week- s1owness toward the southwest

Education & Drivers Training day afternoon where he had months. islation today but there were 111 Kara, 'hi. Pakistani spokes- June 18, 1891, the son of Wil- end, according to Betty Niswonger. Business been a patient since July 19. signs that adjournment fever man said ^ ndian P lanes struck lard and Lillian Foster Warns- Safety Council.

Education Mr. Holbert. who resided at Bethlehem Steel Corp. accept- was beginnin g to set in. a number of cities in Pakistan ley-

other than the capital, including Mr. Wamsley was a member

Some lawmakers were of the Karachi, Dacca and Chittagong, of the Cloverdale Church of

Robert Haas. Band Director 408 Howard Street, was a re- ed in full the settlement worked William Meyer, Art A Gen. tired custodian of the Green- out in Washington last week

Scienca

Ruth B. Hammond

English

Mabel Joseph, English, eiology A Government

Edith R, Doty, Home Ec. A

P. E.

Brenda Haas, English A

Speech

Janice Savage, Choral. Elem. Terre Haute.

Music

Darrell Hover. Head Basket-

ball Co. A Biology Mary Carlson

Plane Geom. A other Math

Ann McKee ban. Math

Gary Baker, Spanish A Eng-

lish

Darrell Durham. Social Studies A P. E. Paul Pruitt, Industrial Arts Elemeatary Phyllis Kendall 1st Grade Mary Baker, 1st Grade Hazel Kiger, 2nd Grade Vivian L. Sutherlin, 2nd Grade Laura Voorhies, 3rd Grade Paul M. Kinney, 3rd Grade Sonia Diaz, 4th Grade Madeline O’Hair, 4th Grade Susan Carricker, 5th A 6th

Gr.

Frances Irwin. 5th Grade Raymond Taylor, 6th Grade

castle Post Office. During his under the admonishments of opinion that, after eight full Dacca is the capital of East Christ and attended the PutLatrn A long years of service in that President Johnson. The other months of work, the only way Pakistan. namville Methodist Church. capacity he made many friends, nine members of the “big 10” they’ll ever be able to get out Few details on the results of He was a member of the

go- He retired in March, 1941.

Mr. Holbert was a member of - . . the A.M.E. Church and served pendmg f ° rmulatlon as trustee as long as his health contract language,

permitted. He was also a member of the Masonic Lodge at

basic steel producers signed of town for the year is to start the raids were available. But Greencastle VFW Post 1550, memorandums of agreement killing off some of the Presi- the spokesman in New Delhi the American Legion, the Dis-

of final dent's bills. said “the latest reports until abled Veterans, and the World Among the measures still on this morning indicated that the ' Var 1 Veterans. He was also a

Johnson’s “must” list for ap- Indian air force had a success-

proval this year are the Imxni- ful day.”

gration reform bill, home rule The reports of the air strikes abled Veterans, last December, when the nnioi. ,or »“ Dlstriot of came as ground fighting be

The breakdown:

Traffic

567

Drowning*

70

Planes

12

Miscellaneou*

69

Total

71S

National on a course aimed close to Nas-

sau and then toward Fidel Castro’s Cuba, 200 miles away. High winds also buffeted tire

east coast of Florida.

The signing* brought down the curtain on a tumultuous negotiating period which began

past commander and charter member of the VFW and Dis-

Betsy’s eye began closing in on Nassau at 4 a. m. EDT. At

_ , , that time the storm was 200

Among tthe states. Texas had

° ........ miles due east of Miami and

about 40 miles northeast of the capital city, near latitude 25-5 north, longitude 77.1 west.

eign aid, farm legislation. The Indian spokesman said “right to work” law repeal, and Pakistani planes bombed the aid to higher education. city of Amritsar Monday. He

said some of the bombs fell on

Feb. 28, 1875, the son of Wil-

Algebria, liani and Mabalia Holbert but and reached a climax last Frihad spent most of hi* life in da y> when Johnson reported to Greencastl*. the nation of the agreement.

Mr. Holbert is survived by The contract is effective The Johnson strategy’ was

his wife, Edith Due Holbert. Sept. 1 and runs through Aug. obvious: Get as much as he can ‘ ,civllian areas.” but that the

While serving in World War I, in the battles of Alsace and Argonne, he was wounded in

action.

Survivors are three daughters, Mrs. Robert Scobee and Mrs. Eugene Hughs of Putnainville, and Mrs. Earl McNeely of Indianapolis. There are two

the worst record with 46 dead. California had 44, Ulinoia 36, New York 29, Wisconsin 29, North Carolina 26, Pennsylvania and Michigan 21 and Ohio

20.

The tolls broke state records m Illinois and Wisconsin for Labor Day traffic deaths.

The weather bureau said Betsy was “really clobbering the northern Bahamas” on its five mile an hour drift to the south-southwest.

1, 1968. It provide! tie 350.000 Consres, tile year '* tmt still be- tmm survivinf , The} , are Mrs

7 6 Meef Death In State Traffic

Funera! services will be held usw number* employed in ba- while the momentum lasts, then in * messed, at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday at the sic steeI ^th sizable pay raises, permit the lawmakers to ad- “° n the £ round advancing In-

permits retirement with full j ourn early—possibly by June dian troops are mee j in £ with dianapolis. Also surviving are benefit* after 30 years of serv- —next year so they can have increasin g resistance in the four g ran( j C hiidren and a host I ndiana

A.M.E. Church. Burial will be ia

Forest Hill Cemetery.

Friends may call at the Hop- and n€arl - v doubles pension the summer to campaign for

kins-Walton Funeral Home. Heinz Heir Dies

By Own Hand

CHICAGO UPI — Clifford Stanton Heinz HI, heir to the

Cletis Hagerty of Cloverdale and Mrs. Wilbert Eggert of In-

By United Presi International

Lahore-Amritsar sector where

payment*.

The union estimates its cost at 47.3 cents per manhour; the

the fall elections.

Military Bill

Indian forces breached the international border with Pakistan at three points Monday the

spokesman said.

Industry say* it is w'orth 51 to WASHINGTON UPI—House The New Delhi spokesman tery . 62 cents per manhour; govern- members came back from a said that Monday Indian forces ment conomists place its value holiday weekend to a busy sche- destroyed nine U.S.-made Pak- evening, at 49 cents per manhour. dule topped by consideration of istani air force planes and 16 Workers now' receive an av- a compromise version of the Patton and Sherman tanks “in erage of S4.40 an hour — $3.40 51.9 billion military construe- various sectors.” Hhe said in ad-

of relatives.

Services will be held Thursday at 10:30 at the Hopkins-

W T alton Funeral Home with year ago.

burial in the Cloverdale Ceme- Brenda Lombardi.

High seas and rains sent water swirling through the island streets. At Nassau, the city’* famed Bay Street with it* straw market and tourist shop*

was inundated.

Winds up to 100 mile? an

A total of 16 person* died on hour plucked shutters from highways over the s hop windows. Power lines Labor Day weekend. That cracke d in the streets. Police brought the 1965 count to at w -p re sent into the streets on least 955 compared with 863 a special patrol to prevent loot-

ing and found them deserted.

17, Log- Palm fronds, coconut* and

Heinz food fortune, died early m ' va ^ e9 and remainder in tion bill vetoed by President dition two Pakistani planes

Keeping Watch

JOHNSON CITY. Tex. UPI-

Mildred Madison. Kindergar- today, apparently of self-inflict-ten ed gunshot wounds police re-

benefits.

Johnson two weeks ago.

REELSV1LLE FACULTY—

1965-66

High School Keith Helms. Principal

ported.

They said it appeared Heinz, 26. shot himself in the stomach

Sheriff Reports Traffic Accident

Charles McClure, Head Coach ...... , ...

. _ . , and in the head with a .2o eah-

A Social Studies

Jimmy Proctor, Math

William C. Foreman. Indus-

trial Art*

ber pistol.

Johnson vetoed the original measure because of a provision that would have required the Pentagon to get congressional approval of plans to close or

Property damage resulted but downgrade military bases,

no one was hurt in a traffic ac-

u r ere damaged. 16 heavy guns P ref ^ dent Johnson kept condestroyed and 30 to 40 army cerned watch today on the

vehicles knocked out. (Continued on Page 2)

A English

Robert England. Science Mary E. Montgomery. Com-

merce

Jane Eckhardt. English A

Latin

Ronald Timberman. P. E. A

Social Studies

Darlene Dukes. Girls P. E. Nancy Stockwell, Art Max Bailey, Math A P. E. Charlotte Pickett, Choral Mu-

sic

Jane Nuzzo. Spanish A German Chloe Bennett. English Elementary Myrtle Logan. 1st Grade Nancy McClure, 1st Grade Carla Mankin. 2nd Grade Blanche Skelton. 2nd Grade Joanne Lyon, 3rd Grade Wilma Masten. 4th Grade Helen Martin. 5th Grade Jeanette Birkemeier, 6th Grade Janice Hickman. Kindergar-

ten

BELLE UNION FACULTY— 1965-66 Elementary Judith Martin. 1st Grade (Continued on Page t) 20 Years Ago Dr. Coen G. Pierson was the speaker at the weekly luncheon of the Rotary Club and discussed Russian foreign policy. S-Sgt. Theodore Soper received his discharge at Camp Atterbury. The engagement of Mis* Wanda Jean Oler to Robert O. Patton wan announced.

Four friends of Heinz, a student at the University of Chi-

Bulletin

UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. UPI — Secretary General

cident involvong a school bus and an automobile at 7:45 this

Bill Stockwell. Band Director " " int ' 0 ' h ' is ~ gou'th Side morning. Mildred Sonnefield. Home Ec. g ’ ? ms S5 ° Um ? apartment after hearing the The mishap occurred just

.shots and tried to save him. He south of the Frank Ton . home Thant, shouldering the concern died a short time later at a southwest of Greencastle. of the wor,d - toda >' Prepared to hospital. take the first available plane to

Sheriff Kenneth Knauer re- India and Pakistan in a per-

The four had just .eft Heinz that the bus was driven sonal effort to halt the rapidly

ITT* t*' Clyde Sallust and the car escalating Kashmir war.

by John Hood.

ansport, was killed in a car- other debris cluttered the pic-

Friends may call after 7 this train crash Monday night when turesque streets. The native

an auto driven by her hus- clapboard shacks strained un-

band, Gerald. 20, waa struck der Betsy’s mighty fury,

at a rural crossing a mile west Some 500 American tourists of Warsaw'. were stranded. They huddled in Authorities said Lombardi candle-lit hotel lobbies for hur-

was taken to the Mercy Medical ricane parties.

mounting warfare between In- Center at Warsaw with mill- Betsy surprised the island* dia and Pakistan. But he also «P : e injuries. when it doubled-back Monday maintained a drum - fife of A Peoria, HI., woman died morning after standing motioncheerful home news ranging -Monday night of injuries suf- less north of the chain for alfrom federal cost cuts to sur- fered earlier in the day W’hen most 24 hours. It was sucked

GLACIER NATIONAL viva ] 0 f the w'hooping crane. her car was involved in a near southward by a low pressure

PARK, Mont. UPI — The sub- Through staff assistants and head-on collision with another area, stance of the heresy charges by telepohne calls to key offi- i us i s 011 ^ Delphi on U.S. 421.

leveled against Bishop Janies A. c i a i s m Washington. Johnson Th* victim was identified as Accept Proposal Pike of San Francisco probably stayed in close touch with de- Mary^ Schabinger, 55. ^ GENEVA UPI — The Soviets

will not even come before the velopments in the Kashmir cri- -* ”

Episcopal House of Bishops s i s , including United Nations which opens its annual confer- efforts for restoring peace

No Heresy Charge

(Continued on Page 21

Wrong Yard

ence here today.

which he fully endorsed.

Stated Convocation Services Held

they hid talked him out of a suicide attempt. Heinz had telephoned them Monday evening and told them he intended to

kill himself.

Stated Convocation, Greencastle Chapter No. 22. Royal

Sources close to the secrc- Arch Masons, Wednesday, Sept.

The sheriff estimated the tary general’s office expected 8, 7:30 p. m. Refreshments, damage to the bus at $300 and him to leave for the war zone Ralph P. Crousore, H. P.

today accepted a neutral nations’ proposal for a treaty banning underground nuclear test*

SIDNEY, N. Y. UPI — Wil- above a certain size coupled liam J. Fuller landed in the with a moratorium on smaller

wrong back yard when giving tests.

an exhibition parachute jump Semyon K. Tsarapkin, the for a crowd at a nearby little chief Soviet negotiator at the

day for C. Gardner Sullivan, league baseball game. 17-nation disarmament confer80." who wrote the screenplavs Fuller. 34. of Coaisnlle, Pa., ence here, said the Soviet Unfor most of the William S. Hart landed in the yard of police ion is “ready to agree without

INGLEWOOD. Calif. UPI — Private services were held to-

said the auto was a total loss, tonight.

Willard E. Silvey, Sec’y. westerns.

captain N. G. Lecakes. He w r as delay” to such a treaty, arrested for violating a state The West opposes such an law prohibiting sport parachut- agreement because it would not ing. pleaded guilty and was include on-site inspections to fined $25. prevent cheating.

NATIONAL WEATHER OUTLOOK m

DEM0LAY CHAPTER CONDUCTS INITIATION

This group of young men were candidates initiated into Omnes Chapter International Order of DeMolay. The gentlemen's work was inspected by Harrison Williams of District No. 41 International Order of their Permanent Charter. They are (left to right) Chris Phillips, Clinton Phillips, Governor Hamson & Williaas, David BatterMS, Joo WiHiun* Marie Cooper, and Jim Tattle. Fboto by Frank Puckett, J«,

... .... _ - C 'iPit - - .v I «, £ r 1 wmtm INDIANA WEATHER: Partly cloudy and warm today. Partly cloudy tonight with chance of scattered thundershowers in northern counties. Partly cloudy Wednesday. High today low 80s. Low’ tonight 58 to 64 High Wednesday 78 to 82. Outlook for Thursday: Partly cloudy little temperature change Minimum 56 c 6 A.M 56’ 7 A.M 58* 8 A.M 60* 9 A.M 66° 1U A.M 70’ 11 A.M 74° 12 Noon - - 79* 1 P.M. • 80

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