The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 14 July 1966 — Page 2
i Th« Dally Bannar, Oraancaatla, Indiana Thursday, July 14, 1966
THE DAILY BANNER and Herald Consolidated "It Wavas For All" Businaas Phonos: OL 3-5151 — OL 3-5152 Elizaboth Raridon Estate, Publishor •vary •vaniitf except Sunday and halidaya. Entarad In the Seat Office at CreancasMe, Indiana, ae secead dace hm! matter under Act af March 7. 1S7S. United Preec Intematienal lease wire service; Member Inland Daly ftaw Amedatien; Haaahr State Pram Aceariatiea. Al nnnlidled artidae, manaccriptc. letters and pidarae seat ta lha Daily lanner are eant at mvaar'c risk, and lha Daly Banner repudiates any liability ar reipenihiity far their safe custody ar return. Suhssriptien Prices af The Daily Bonner effective March 14, 19M: In Putnam County—1 year $11.00—1 months $5.SO—3 months $3.00; Indiana ether than Putnam County 1 year $12.00—4 months $7.00—3 months $4.00; Ousida Indiana—1 year $14.00—4 months $0.00—3 months $4.00. By Carrier 40c par sveefc^ ample copy 10c. Al Mai suhimptiens paysfcle in advance.
OBITUARIES
A local Toenager's View
Mother Of Local Resident Dies Mrs. Homer E. Hughes, 82, passed away Wednesday night in Greenview, Illinois. She was the mother of Mrs. Marshall R. Bless, 851 Indianapolis Road. Other survivors include another daughter, Mrs. Cart Johnson, also of Greenview; a granddaughter, Mrs. David Morgan, Owego, N. Y., and two greatgranddaughters. Friends may call at the Mott Funeral Home in Athens, HL Services will be held Saturday at 2 p. m. in the Greenview Presbyterian Church.
By JANET STAVB With the temperatures staying at a high level these sunny summer days everything is HOT. Humans have the advantages of air conditioning, fans, swimming pools and their own imaginations. Many animals share these convenient, air cooling objects. But those are only house pets or a pampered few. Goldfish don’t seem to be bothered by the heat, but dogs do. Dogs usually find a shady spot, then they are content to stay there, especially if there is a breeze and their owner gives them fresh water a couple of times daily. (A trick of small pet owners during the summer is to give the four legged creatures ice cubes.)
John McFarland's Father Is Dead Word has been received by Dr. John McFarland that his father, Henry McFarland, passed away yesterday at Elkton, Tennessee, Dr. McFarland is on the staff cf DePauw University and Pastor ef Fillmore Methedist Church. Sauna Graham Dies In Hospital Emma Graham, T8, CoatesPffle, Route 1, passed away in the Putnam County Hospital at B:40 this morning where she had been admitted ea July 8. Next et kin, according to hospital records, is a niece, Eula B. Lydiek, same address as the deceased.
ANNIVERSARY Birthday Nellie VanCleave, today, July 14.
Cows seek shady spots or stand with their legs submerged in the farm pond. Pigs have a hey-day rolling in the mud. Ducks and geese float around on the water’s surface. No matter if it is a two or four legged creature, when temperatures soar they get hot, but just think of next winter with its low temperatures and enow. BY THE WAY: Instead of announcing the high temperatures, why don’t announcers use temperatures of six months ago?
Card of Thanks We wish to express our grateful thanks for the tender care and Mndnees shown our mother and grandmother, Mrs. Edna Beeson, during the months she spent at the Putnam Co. Hospital, to Dr. Johnson, the nurses, the aides and to any of the volunteers who may have helped in any way, also to the staff of the Ruark Nursing Home during the week she was a patient there, and to the Rector Funeral Home for the kindness shown us. Mr. A Mrs. Forrest Miller Mr. A Mrs. Hugh Miller Mark Miller
RNORT OF CONDITION Charter Na. 2f 94 _B.port of Condition of tho Control Notional Bonk of Groonco.tlo in tho Woto of Indiana, at tho clo» of butinou Juno 30, 1966 published in roiponso to call mado by Comptroller of tho Currency, under Section 3211, U. S. ReviiM Statutes AmoH Co*h, balance! wtih other banks, and cash items in process of collBctfon ^ j QIC 160 03 * ,ofM Government obligations, -direct and guaranteed .. 5,305 284.58 Obligations of States and political subdivisions 2,039^779.31 Securities of Fodorai agoncios and corporations not guaranteed U ’ j— 1,702,069.37 Securities purchased under agreements to resell Federal funds sold Loons and discount. 7,205,506°39 F,*^d assets 146,281.20 Customors' liability to this bank on ecceptances outstanding ' none Other assets 167,443.84 Totol Assets $18,593,424.72 Liabilities Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations $ 5,647,226.51 Tima and savings deposits of individuals, partnerships, end corpartition. ....... 9,436,648.73 Deposits of United States Government 219,226.63 Deposits of States and political subdivisions 1,241*493.74 Deposits of foreign govornmonts and official institutions, control banks and international institutions nano Deposits of commercial banks none Certified and officers' chocks, etc. 85,710.94 Total Deposits $16,630.306.33 (a) Total domand deposits S 6,970,833.82 (b) Total time and savings deposits $ 9,639,470.73 Liabilities for securities sold under agreements to repurchase none Federal funds purchased none Liabilities for borrowed money none Acceptances executed by or tor account of this bank and out- * , ‘ ,ndin fl none Other liabilities : 418,095.13 Totol liabilities $17,048,401.68 Capital Ace cunts (o) Capital notes and debentures none (b) Preferred stock—total par value none No. shares outstanding (c) Common stock—total par value $100.00 $ 500,000.00 No. shares authorized 5000 No. shares outstanding 5000 Surplus 950,000.00 Undivided profits 95,023.04 Rosorvos none Totol Capital Accounts $ 1,545,023.04 Totol Liabilities and Capital Accounts $18,593,424.72 Memoranda Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar days ending with coll data $16,948,940.00 Average of total loans for tho 15 calendar days ending with coll data 7,026,011.00 Loans as shown above ora after deduction of valuation reserves of 90,810.42 Securities os shown above are after deduction ef valuation reserves af 2,667.76 I, Julian Jarvis, Cashier, of tho above-named bank da hereby declare that this report of condition is true and correct to tho bast of knowledge and belief. ' Julian Jarvis Wo, tho undarsignod directors attest the correctness ef this report ef condition and declare that it has boon examined by us and to tho host of our konwMge and belief is true and correct. Dal# K. Toaford F. L O'Hair Krnest H. Collins, Directors
Personal And Local News Preaching at the Fillmore Christian Church this Sunday will be Dr. Donald Wismar, professor of Preaching at the Christian Theological Seminary in Indianapolis. City firemen made a resuscitator run to 1108 Avenue E Wednesday noon to administer oxygen to Forest Webster. He was taken to the Putnam County HosptiaL Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mitchell of Hollywood, Florida, are visiting friends in Bainbridge this week and next week will be staying in the Commercial Hotel. Mrs. Robert Mitchell was formerly Ollie Terry of Greencastle. Laurel Corbin, manager of Black Lumber Company, was listed in “fairly good” condition at the Putnam County Hospital where he was admitted Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. James G. Hughes, 320 Highfall Avenue, have received word of the birth of a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. James E. Hughes of Indianapolis. The young lady weighed 6 pounds, 9 ounces and was named Megin Lois. Pitch-in supper will be held at the Bainbridge Methodist Church on Friday night, July 15th, at 7:30 to welcome the minister and his family, Rev. Stantz. Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Hillis will furnish the entertainment with their pictures from around the world. Everyone is welcome. Fred Unsworth, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Unsworth, 605 Ridge Avenue, is now in Datrang, Viet Nam, with the Kentron Division of Ling Tempco Vaught Corporation. Mr. Unsworth, whose home is in Honolulu, was en route to Greencastle to attend the 10th reunion of his high school class when he received orders to go to Viet Nam.
Closed for a combined vacation and reinstallation of more modem methods and equipment. Coin-op laundry and do it yourself dry cleaning open as usual. White Cleaners.
Mr. and Mrs. William Mullinix of Reelsville, wish to announce the engagement of their daughter A3c Gloria Jean to Pfc. James Douglas Dick, son of James R. Dick of Columbus, Ohio. Miss Mullinix is a graduate of Reelsville High School and is now serving in the U. S. Air Force at Westover AFB, Mass., while her fiance, a graduate of Huntington East High School, is serving in the U. S. Army at Fort Lewis, Wash. No wedding date has been set. Russ Ready To Aid North Viet MOSCOW UPI — Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin today reaffirmed the Kremlin’s promise to send Soviet “volunteers with the necessary arms” to fight in Viet Nam if Hanoi asks for them. He said the threat to peace there must concern the Soviet Union. Kosygin spoke at a SovietIndian “friendship meeting” held in honor of visiting Prime Minister Mrs. Indira Gandhi who earlier today called for an end to the U.S. bombing of North Viet Nam. She is in Moscow to try to get Russia to call a Viet Nam peace conference. The Soviet premier described U.S. actions in Viet Nam as “vandalism and barbarity on an international scope” and said the Johnson administration had surpassed the policy of “brinkmanship” practiced by the late Secretary of State John Foster Dulles.
By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign New Analyst Although one may wonder why, the word from New Delhi is that Mrs. Indira Gandhi likes her job as prime minister of India and intends to remain in it. The wonderment springs from the fact that India’s problems appear to multiply at about the same rate as her population and that Mrs. Gandhi has them in great abundance whether she looks to a stagnant economy, a hungry population, the political dangers of a coming general election or to international affairs. The result is a tight-rope act more difficult than any ever devised by Ringling Bros, or Barnum A Bailey. Currently wending her way toward Moscow via Cairo and Belgrade, Mrs. Gandhi seeks to reassure Presidents Nasser and Tito and the Kremlin that her increasingly close financial ties to the United States removes her neither from the lists of the non-aligned nor the socialist countries. Caution Is required because India has assured the United States that it views the U. S. position in Viet Nam with sympathy and understanding. Tito, Nasser and naturally the Kremlin have denounced the U. S. position vehemently. Moscow has been increasingly critical of recent economic steps taken by India in response to pressure from the United States and the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development. These have included devaluation of the rupee and steps to permit, if not actually encourage, foreign investment in certain fields, notably fertilizer, and to liberalize other economic controls. But, while Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin may remind Mrs. Gandhi that the Soviet Union filled with MIG fighter planes, missiles and tanks a vacuum left by suspension of U. S. military aid, Mrs. Gandhi may also reply that when it came to massive dollar aid she had no place to turn but to the United States. These same concerns create problems for Mrs. Gandhi at home.
Vocal leftists, Including the Communists and such as V. K. Krishna Menon, have accused her of selling out the socialism of her father, the late Jawaharlal Nehru, to the American dollar.
Others, among them the president of Mrs. Gandhi’s own Congress Party, Kumaraswami Kamaraj, opposed devaluation of the rupee because it meant increased prices at home and corresponding hardships at a time when elections were approaching. Kamaraj was a major factor in Mrs. Gandhi’s elevation to office six months ago and he still controls the party machinery.
A 10-nation consortium, with the United States the largest contributor, made economic reforms a condition for raising $900 billion in aid to India. Last week the United States took the first step in announcing agreement to provide India with $150 million to finance imports of raw materials, components and spare parts. For her part, Mrs. Gandhi is following in the footsteps of her father. She is going to tne people over the heads of her party critics. Combine Auto Finance and Insurance Into One Easy Payment GLEN FURR AGENCY CLOVERDALE, INDIANA PHONE 795-4413
YOU ARE INVITED TO A GOSPEL MEETING! WHERE: CHURCH OF CHRIST, 637 East Wash. St. WHEN: July 18th through July 24th TIME: 10:00 A.M. and 7:80 PJW. HEAR EVANGELIST BILL CAVENDER
A Woman's View By GAY PAULEY UPI Women’s Editor NEW YORK UPI—Hats for fall nights are taken right from knights in shining armor. TTie millinery designers are on a glittering helmet binge, and some of the hats are sleek fitting hoods that not only cover the hair, leaving only the face showing, but also are one piece continued on down to cover throat and shoulders. Made in a variety of sparkling materials, they’re shown with equally metallic -like short evening dresses. Jet sequins shaped one such helmet in the collection shown this week by the Millinery Institute of America. Another in a black and white check with sparklers sewn on went with an above-knee jump suit in the same black and white mood. Still another with visor, was in shining gold. The institute’s show was part of a two week series of fall and winter fashion presentations New York manufacturers are holding for visiting reporters. The shows will continue through Friday, under auspices of the A m c r i c a a Designers Group (ADG). At individual hat showings, not part of the ADG events, milliners showed glitter in turbans and hoods. Sally Victor used an untamishable metallic of copper and silver to drape i n t o a turban. Adolfo copied Moroccan hoods — they looked like head scarves falling free, not tied-in velours with brilliants forming the borders. Lilly Dache copied African tribal headdress in glittering materials. The milliners are giving the neck as well as the head the treatment for fall. Adaptations of the green beret, symbol of the Special Forces, run through major collections. Adolfo tied the berets under the chin with long, skinny straps. Mrs. Victor used chamois for a helmet with buttonhole fastening under the chin. Mr. John used solid color cashmeres, notably pink, for scarf-like hats with voluminous ties under the chin. He used chin bands on other hats, the bands’ width narrow as confetti, or wide as bandages. One participant in the millinery industry show used white mink for a round-crowned hat with convertible border. It could be worn up around the head as a close brim, or dropped down to the throat as a chin warmer. Look for a wide variety of wide-brimmed hats come fall, some of them sloped down to shade the face, some level, others with alpine-like brims turned up at the back and sides and with peaked crowns. In ready-to-wear collections this week, it was more of the coat-dress ensemble which promises to be a fall leader. Manufacturer Ben Zuckerman, whose designer is Harry Shacter, showed a daytime group with the coats five-eighths length. His ruby and garnet velvet in long evening dresses came with matching long coats with princess sweep.
Pleas Are Made For County Fair Plans for their part in the Putnam County Fair were made by the Farm Bureau Directors at their regular meeting Saturday evening in the Farm Bureau Insurance office. Mrs. Maurine Aker, County Farm Bureau Woman leader, opened the meeting with scripture and prayer. Morris Evens, president, presided during the business session. Final plans were made for the county meeting to be held Saturday July 16 at the Community Building. Committee reported that the speakers would be candidates for the State Senate, Marion Kirtley and Joseph W. Harrison. Rules for the Amateur talent contest were decided on. County winners will participate in the district contest, Monday, July 18 at the New Fountain Central High School, near
Veedersburg.
John Cantonwine, chairman of milk stand, will be assisted by the dairy committee and townships will be responsible for workers as follows: Monday, Monroe and Clinton; Tuesday, Franklin; Wednesday, Madison; Thursday, Russell; Friday, Floyd; Saturday, Cloverdale. Farm Bureau will also be sharing their tent with the FFA Chapter of Bainbridge. The annual Pet Parade will be held on Friday evening, Aug. 5 at 6 p. m. in the show ring. Any boy or girl thru ten years of age may enter. The livestock committee reported plans for the Swine Carcass Evaluation Show for Aug. 15 at the fairgrounds. This will be open to all hogmen in Put-
nam County.
Richard Goodman of Linton will be the new regional fieldman working with the Farm Bureau directors. John Cantonwine, building committee chairman, and Larry Wright, County Office Coordinator, were present and gave progress reports. Double Ring Rites Planned WASHINGTON UPI — Luci Baines Johnson’s wedding to Patrick J. Nugent will be a double ring ceremony with rings designed by the bride and groom themselves. The fashionable New York jewelry firm of Harry Winston, whicn caters to the Park Avenue set, is executing the designs as White House preparations for the Aug. 6 wedding reach an ever faster pace. For Luci’s engagement ring, Nugent selected diamonds OPTIMIST CLUB GARAGE SALE Sat., July 16, 8 a.m.-3 p.m.
FURNITURE,
OLD DISHES, CLOTHES Blue Hou.t—Grocnbrior Addition
Want to took good and be comfortable at the same time? There’s an easy way to do just that. Wear Hush Puppies* shoes. They’re designed for comfort with steel shanks and soft-walking crepe soles. And they’re available in both Breathin’ Brushed Pigskin* and new glove-soft leather. Shown is ftoya/, in new smooth leather. Other casual coordinated colors also. It’s just one of the many styles in the newest collection of Hush Puppies*shoes. Prices start at Huwi mm Pkipples YrfojflD SRAN0 CASUALS MOORE'S SHOES West Side of Square
shaped like hearts to stand on each side of a one carat diamond center stone. Wednesday, the President’s 19-year-old daughter and Nugent delighted onlookers at the District of Columbia Court House when they appeared to apply for their marriage li-
censes.
Wellwishers crowded around the couple and offered their congratulations as Luci and Nugent stood in line with several other couples. Nugent and the President’s daughter filled out their applications. The District of Columbia requires no blood tests. The license will be issued after a five-day waiting period. At the White House, meantime, florists were busy making up sample nosegays for Luci to choose the one she fancies for her bridesmaids. And in the kitchen, cooks were trying out various cake recipes to find just the right one Luci will want for her wedding cake. U.S. Accused By Conservatives LONDON UPI — BriUsh Conservatives are privately accusing the U. S. administration of pushing Britain’s troubled economy into a strait jacket of socialist planning. The-United States is being accused of not merely backing, but of actively pushing the Laborite government’s rigid “prices and incomes policy” of wage and production control. They charge this is tantamount to shackling the economy to a system of state control. The Conservatives say they are puzzlied that the free enter-prise-minded United States should, in effect, act as the sponsor of a policy which would paralyze private initiative In
Britain.
The criticism reflects the growing disillusionment in Britain’s Conservative party ranks with the trend which the An-glo-American relationship is
: taking.
i. Fervent supporters of continued close British alignment with the United States, the Conservatives nevertheless view
with a Jaundiced eye Prlfna Minister Harold Wilson’s current "subservience” to Wash-
ington.
Phrases like “no satellite status for Britain in relations with the United States” have begun to crop up in private and even in official pronouncements of Conservative meetings. Conservative leaders are anxious to dispel the impression that if in power they wouldn’t alter Britain’s policy course where the United States is concerned. They deny firmly that they are anti-American.
County Hosoital Dismissed Wednesday: » Richard Leach, Cloverdale Ray McGinnis, Fillmore ‘ Edward Minnick, Bainbridge Bonnie Harbison, Roachdale Floyd Miller, Greencastle Cynthia Snyder, Greencastle
—Penal (Continued from Page 1) would make possible a reduction in inmates by removing those not needing maximum se-
curity.
“It cost $1500 a year to support a man in a correctional institution but only $300 on probation,” he commented. "Why, for example, should the state support the 100 or so men who are imprisoned for non-support of their families and also support their families?”
MOOSE DANCE 9:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. “The Twilighters” from Zionsville ; Members and Invited Guests 5at. f July 16
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