The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 19 July 1966 — Page 4
4 Th« Dally Bannar, Oraancastla, Indiana Tuasday, July 19, 1966
Defense Bill Before House
WASHINGTON UPI—A *58.6 billion defense money bill, tbe biggest military appropriation measure since World War II, was headed today toward overwhelming approval by the House. Democratic leaders called up the legislation for debate and a final vote. Little opposition was expected and any amendments adopted figured to boost the money total still higher. Though swollen to mammoth size by the costly war in Viet
Nam, the measure still does not represent all that the United States will spend on its armed forces during the coming 12
months.
In sending the measure to the House floor, the Appropriations Committee warned that, if corn* bat operations in Viet Nam continued at their present pace, the Johnson administration would be back in January for “several billion dollars” more. Later this month the House is expected to give its approval to
LBJ To Dress Formal For Luci's Wedding
WASHINGTON UPI — It’s Luci Johnson’s wedding, but it may be her father who grabs the fashion spotlight at the ceremonies Aug. 6. President Johnson is going to break bis own rule against formal dress and wear a cut-
briefing in the White House library to describe the 10 bridesmaids’ costumes—down to the beige-colored stockings. She said she was taking “bridal license” to describe the color of the gowns, originals by Mrs. Priscilla Kidder of Boston, as
away coat—sometimes called a “swallow tail” coat by the less fashionable—and striped pants He didn’t even do that at his own inauguration, Jan. 20, 1965. The design of Luci’s wedding gown is still a closely guarded secret around the White House, and it will be until her wedding day. It was selected several weeks ago, is long and white and is described by her mother as “elegant,” something she can bond down to her grandchildren. But the White House lifted part of the secrecy lid on Luci’s wedding plans during the weekend to announce that she had picked several shades of pink for her bridesmaids’ floor-length gowns and apparently was able to coax her recalcitrant dad into wearing the some formal attire as the best man and the 10 ushers. Mrs. Elizabeth Carpenter, the First Lady’s press secretary, said the President decided to go along with the formal dress “because it was appropriate for the wedding." He will Wear an oxford grey cutaway, black grey stripe trousers, a pear grey single breasted waist coat, wing collar and grey and black striped ascot There was no word whether top hats also would be worn. Mrs. Carpenter conducted a
Ancient Greek Gems Recovered NEW YORK UPI—Five irreplaceable examples of ancient Greek gold jewelry from the Lourve collection in Paris have been recovered at Kennedy International Airport more than two months after they were stolen, police disclosed Mon-
day.
Authorities said the jewelry, valued at *71,000, was seized by police Sunday as it was passed from one man to two others in a brown paper bag. The passer was alleged to have received an envelope containing $2,900 for the jewelry. Arrested were Philip Deutsch, 37, proprietor of a discount store who said he purchased the jewelry from a drug addict, and! Anthony Dagnone, 29, and Doug Waters, 26, who identified themselves as waiters. They were charged with receiving stolen property. The jewelry disappeared May 10 from a shipment of other Greek items which were being returned to the Louvre after being displayed with a special exhibition i n various American cities. They had last been shown in Richmond, Va. Police said the three suspects had been under surveillance for a month before their arrests.
STATE OF INDIANA
•s:
COUNTY OF PUTNAM IN THE PUTNAM ciEcurr court VACATION TERM, It IN THE MATTER OF ESTATE OF ROBERT W. HTT.T., DECEASED. Estate No NOTICE TO AM, PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTA' OF ROBERT W HILL. DECEA In the matter of the Estate of R W. Hill, Deceased. No. EST. 66-! Notice is hereby given that No Hill as Executor of the above m estate, has presented and filed his account In final settlement of sal tate, and that the same will com for the examination and action of Putnam Circuit Court, on the I7i August. 1966. at which Ume all pe interested In eald estate art req to appear in said court and cause, if any there be, why salt count should not be approved. Am heirs of said decedent and all o interested are also required to ai and make proof of their helrshi claim to any part of said estate. Norman HUB, Personal Repres five
Samuel M. Conner, Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court.
Attorney
Roy C. Sutherha July 19-26-21
“pink-pink.” The gowns are made of moire —a taffeta silk-type fabric. Luci’s attendant also will wear floor-length illusion veils—a fine net— in contrasting pale pink at the back of the head, with hairdos modified to fit the picture. The gowns will have a rolled “wedding ring” shape which matches the edges of the semilength sleeves and floor-length hemlines. The bodice is a moulded silhouette, easing into a streamline-shaped skirt with the skirt flowing slightly in the back. Buttons of a matching fabric accent the back. There will also be low-heeled shoes of a matching pink fabric and wrist length gloves. Purdue Issues Farm Report LAFAYETTE UPI — Farm field work has curtailed only slightly last week by rain, but the showers failed to provide any sizeable buildup in soil moisture because of the hot weather. Robert E. Straszheim, Purdue University agricultural statistician. said field work was limited to five days, and that despite some rain, topsoil and subsoil moisture remained rated at the short to adequate level. Pastures showed little change from the preceding week and were still rated poor to mostly fair. Straszheim said there was progress made in combing wheat, and the harvest was 65 per cent complete, compared with the same figure a year ago and a 5-year average of 70 per cent. The oat crop was 15 per cent harvested, compared with 30 per cent last year and 30 per cent for the average. Soybeans continued slowly. About 5 per cent of the group had set pods, compared with 10 per cent a year ago and a 15 per cent average. Only 20 per cent of the crop had bloomed, which was a week behind sched-
ule.
Only 15 per cent of the corn was tasselled, compared with 30 per cent last year and a 35 per cent average. Salons Oppose Housing Measure WASHINGTON UPI —Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach goes back to Capitol Hill today to try to persuade Senate GOP Leader Everett M. Dirksen, among others, to support the hotly controversial fair housing measure. His mission appeared doomed to failure. Even before the public hearing before the Senate constitutional rights subcommittee got started, Dirksen said he couldn’t think of any compromise that would meet his objections to the proposaL The meeting was scheduled to start at 10 a. m. EDT. The fair housing provision is part of President Johnson’s 1966 civil rights bill and, as originally written, would have placed a flat ban on discrimination in the sale and rental of all housing. But the House Judiciary Committee eliminated from the ban owner-occupied homes and dwellings with four or less units if the owner uses one of the units.
a *1 billion money bill covering only military construction and housing. Despite the whopping figure submitted by President Johnson, the Committee voted to fund some controversial projects opposed by the administration that would add another *1 billion to tbe bill. Included in this category was a start on an antimissile missile system known as Nike-X. About $163 million was earmarked in the biU for Nike-X, but if the missiles are positioned around the country the cost of the system eventually could reach upwards of $20 billion. The committee also decided to push Johnson and Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara faster than they want to go toward converting the surface vessels of the navy to nuclear power. Besides the atomic aircraft carrier and five A-sub-marines the administration wants, the committee voted to build a nuclear guided missile frigate. Highway Aid Hearings Start WASHINGTON UPI — A house subcommittee announced it will begin hearings today into some aspects of the multi-billion dollar federal aid highway program. Rep. John A. Blatnik, DMinn., chairman of the House public works subcommittee, said the public inquiry grew out of disquieting information turned up at secret hearings a year ago. “The subcommittee was particularly disturbed ever failure of the Bureau of Public Roads and many of the states to follow through on closing out completed projects," Blatnik
said.
“There had been unreasonable delay on the part of the states in billing the federal government for hundreds of millions of dollars In costs and there existed billions of dollars in old costs which had not been audited." Blatnik said the hearings should help determine if new laws or administrative changes are needed to improve management of the highway program.
North Viet Will Fight To Finish LONDON UPI — Hanoi’s clarion called for a “fight to the finish” is the direct outcome of recent consultations between President Ho Chi Minh and Red China’s Mao Tse-tung—the two aged stalwarts of Asian communism. The decision reflects a victory of Mao’s thesis that the “liberation war” must be fought irrespective of the cost, its sacrifices and duration. It reflects Peking’s determination to push Hanoi into an indefinite fight, mainly with Its own manpower, assisted only by Communist military supplies. The emphasis in Peking is on keeping the fight within the limits of guerrilla warfare to sap American strength, rather than in open battle for which the Communists are not equipped. Ho Chi Minh’s tough and uncompromising weekend announcement that North Viet Nam will fight to the finish has been preceded by a series of top level consultations with the two major Communist power centers in Peking and Moscow. Ho himself reportedly was in Red China and his top party chief in Russia. Peging ostensibly has provided the ideological guidelines. Mao Tse-tung’s teachings are that imperialism must be defeated by wars of liberation, fought mainly by the people concerned. Thus Peking has provided itself with an excuse not to enter the war actively, at least not until it considers itself threatened.
Ships Collide HAMBURG, Germany UPI A West German minesweeper collided with a Soviet tanker in tk® Baltic Sea off Fehmam Island Monday, German naval au-
thorities said.
The German vessel, the Krebs, was damaged extensively but managed to make port under ita own power. The 17,000-ton tanker Krasnovodks escaped
With scratches.
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Kibitzer Is Wrong In Play Criticism By Alfred Sheinwold “I don’t watch a game like this,” the Old Kibitzer stormed. “Nobody has the values for his bid, and nobody knows the first thing about finessing. His outburst came during the middle of the hand shown today. North dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH 4 972 V AQJ O KJ6 <4 Q10 9 6 WEST EAST 4 KQ4 4 J63 C? 862 V J93 0 10732 O Q9J 4AKJ 4 8754 SOUTH 4 A1085 V K1074 O A84 4 32 North East South West 1 4 Pass 2 NT Pass 3 NT All Pass Opening lead —02 East's nine of diamonds forced out the ace and South returned a club. West stepped up with the king of clubs to lead another diamond. East won with the queen and returned a diamond to the king. Declarer led the five of hearts from dummy and tried a finesse with the ten of hearts from his hand. This was the play that sent the Old Gentleman stalking off to another table of the bridge club. South’s finesse worked, and he led his other club. West took the ace of clubs and the last
South led a heart to the ace and cashed the queen of clubs. When the jack fell, declarer led the ten of clubs. He then led the queen of hearts and overtook with the king. The suit broke, and South’s last heart was good for his ninth trick, diamond. Then West led the king of spades to South’s ace. POOR BIDDING The Old Kibitzer was right about the bidding. North’s hand wasn’t quite worth an opening bid, and South’s hand wasn’t quite worth a jump to two notrump. The Old Gent was wrong about the play. South’s finesse with the ten of hearts was his only chance and should have rejoiced the heart of any kibitzer. East could have saved the day by stepping up with the jack of hearts when declarer led the five of hearts from dummy. This beautiful defensive play would hold South to three heart tricks instead of all four. The Old Kibitzer complained about the wrong play in hearts. DAILY QUESTION Partner opens with one club, and the next player passes. You hold: S-A 10 8 5; H-K 10 7 4; D-A 8 4; C-3 2. What do you say? Answer: Bid one heart. If partner bids two clubs, you can try two notrump. A delayed, non-jump, bid of two notrump promises only 1 lor 12 points and is not forcing.
CoATESVILLE NEWS
by Joe Davidson, Correspondent
This time of year, wet or dry, seems to grow a plant abundantly that everyone frequenting the outdoors should know and stay away from if possible: poison ivy. The plant is usually erect and bushy at the top if growing on old fence posts. It is found in wooded areas scrambling over fences and walls. The plant has three leaflets and often many of the leaflets have over their surface what looks like blisters. The berries of the plant are white or cream. A Coatesville lady recently came in contact with ivy and she relates that her days and nights have been pure, unadulterated agony. Watch for this plant about fences, walls and about fishing and picnic .places. A seven-year-old boy on Coatesville’s south side came within inches of being struck by a car, traveling so onlookers said, sixty miles an hour or better. The small chap turned- suddenly from an eastwest street into north-south Milton Street and as he turned the driver veered enough to miss him. This street is a very
dangerous one, made so by drivers who, one and all disregard the 30-mile-an-hour limit. Had this small boy been seriously hurt or killed, this motorist would have had a serious tangle with the law. Southeast of Belle Union some three miles there has recently been established seven large, well-drained cattle lots fenced with heavy cable fastened to steel posts set in concrete. Along the front of the lots is a wide concrete feed trough three-tenths of a mile in length at which two thousand steers are feeding day and night. This whole length of feeding space is well lit with large electric globes enabling the cattle to see their feed at all times. Most of the cattle will average 700-1000 pounds and are mixed short-horn, angus and hereford. As soon as the steers are considered fat enough they are sorted, loaded and marketed. Within the next six months seven more lots will be measured off and fenced and 4,000 cattle will be someone’s chore to feed. These feed lots must eventually be cleaned and this
can be done In t abort time— with a bull dozer. Growing and feeding cattle as Is being done here is said to be Montana’s way of doing it This whqle setup Is really a marvel to anyone who has never seen two thousand cattle cared for as they are on this Putnam County farm. Mr. and Mrs. David Brown and new baby of Amo spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Brown near
Reno.
Weekend callers at the home of Mrs. Edna Smith were Mrs. Shirley Ruark and children and Mrs. Johnnie Shoemaker of Fillmore. Mrs. Margery Tumblin of Coatesville, R.R. Mrs. Cordelia McCullough and Janice of Canaan and Mrs. Russell Shoemaker of Greencastle. All day guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bottorff Tuesday were Mrs. Lulu Berry of Danville and Mrs. Dorie Berry of Indianapolis. Two elderly ladies who passed away at the Eventide Nursing Home this week and whose funeral services were in the local funeral home were Mrs. Arthur Masten and Miss Cora Brown. Both were interred in the Coatesville Ceme-
tery.
Monday, July 11, was the birthday of John Quincy Adams, sixth President of the United States and son of John Adams, who was the second President. Few Presidents have been so well educated as this man and few were so adverse to meeting and being friendly with the people. He was no man to slap folks on the back or go an extra step to shake hands. He was a leader of the old time Whig party. He made the country a very good leader but was little appreciated. The Hendricks County Garden Club is having a guest program at the Public Service Auditorium at Plainfield on Wednesday, July 27, the time one o’clock. The speaker, Mr. Dalton Battin, Supt. of the Cincinnati Park Swstem, should give a very interesting and instructive talk. The report has come to friends in town that Mrs. Ella Gambold had recently suffered a fall in her home in Indianapolis and while not seriously injured, was hurt enough to send to the Methodist Hospital for a few days for observation and treatment. One fine thing that can be said about these tropical days is — the lawn mower has been stopped. It is an ill wind that blows nobody good. Coatesville business people are preparing for something quite unusual in the very near future. On July 24, 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. Open House is to be observed by three prominent local institutions: The First National Bank, The Weaver Funeral Home and the New Telephone Exchange Building' The bank has been remodeled until it resembles a large city financial institution with it’s beautiful interior, classicfixtures, air conditioning, comfortable seats for those who might have to wait and with every nook and comer immaculate. The public is invited
to see this and he greeted b9 an obliging personnel. The Weaver Funeral Home is strictly more up-to-date than many such homes found in cities many times the size of Coatesville. The building is lovely throughout and the folks who visit will be met by unusually friendly business folk in the persons of Mr. and Mrs. Weaver, Mr. Wingler and Mr.
Cline.
Since everyone uses a telephone and a new and enlarged system has come to Coatesville, the telephone company is anxious to meet the public and show their subscribers with pride the new stone veneer building recently completed and new equipment, all designed to better serve the public needs.
of them bound for a trip to South America where they will live for three weeks in tha homes of natives. The Coatesville Yankees were host to Clayton Friday evening. The Yankees scored 4 runs in the 1st, 5 in the 2nd, 5 in the 3rd and 3 in the 5th. Clayton scored 2 in the 2nd, 3 in the 4th and 2 in the 5th and that won the game: Coatesville 17, Clayton 7. Coatesville pulled a nice double play and Clayton got a three-base hit.
Meeting Postponed WASHINGTON UPI — A meeting between the Federal
Aviation Administration and irate Midwestern Congressmen
These three institutions ^ j was postponed indefinitely Mon-
on Sunday, July 24, from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. do their best to meet all visitors and acquaint them with these new business places. Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Hathaway were Sunday afternoon callers at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Walton in Clay-
ton.
Mr. Steve Komgenick of Stilesville died Friday morning enroute to the Long Hospital. He was bom in Virginia in 1910. He leaves the following survivors: a wife, two daughters, and a son. Services will be held at the Weaver Funeral Home in Coatesville at 2:00 on Sunday. Burial was at Stilesville. Mr. and Mrs. James Bartley, daughter Cherryl and son, Kevin of Lubbock, Texas were weekend visitors with Mr. and Mrs. John J. Gambold, Jr. and family. They were on their way to Lima, Ohio, where Mr. Bartley would leave for a return trip to Lubbock with a new ambulance. Mrs. Bartley, daughter and son, were going on to New York where Cherryl would join a thousand Camp Fire girls from many states, all
day because a formula had not been completed that would please all persons Involved In the dispute oyer the use of Na-
tional Airport here.
The congressmen had protested the closing of National to non-stop flights of more than 500 miles. This meant they would have to use either Dulles Airport in Virginia or Friendship near Baltimore, both 30-45 minutes away. National Is only 10 minutes drive from the Capi-
tol.
SUZIKI TRADE-INS 1966 HONDA S-65 2,767 miles, red, excellent condition. $280 1964 HONDA-90, 7,534 miles $225 WHITE We now hove a good selection of Suxuki X-6 Hustlers on sal* at $731
- -JIM HARRIS CHEVROLET-BUICK
Rus-sells
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FURNIWRI- RUGS-APPUNKte
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NORTH SIDE OF SQUARE 17 WEST FRANK1IN STREET
Ol 3-6315 GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
This Is C0RVAIR WEEK We have Covair Monzas, 4 dr. Hard Tops, Fully equipped, spare wheel lock, tinted Windshield, push button radio, white wall Tires, 110 HP engine, Powerglide transmission, Deluxe heater, turn signals, front and rear seat Belts, back up lights, outside rear view mirror. Padded dash, 2 sp wipers and washers, bucket Seats, large wheel covers, and undercoat on Sale for $2275 Save $509 40 JIM HARRIS CHEVROLET - BUICK
INDIANAPOLIS RD.
PHONE OL3-5178
Too Bad -- But Still True MORE Hot Weather Coming! This is the worst kind of weather, and the hardest kind you will find on your brand new or used REFRIGERATOR Suggestions: 1. DON'T allow unnecessary overloading — even remove certain foods and their containers such as catsup, can goods, etc. that most likely wouldn't spoil. 2. DON'T crowd your wall at the back. Allow room for air passage to the compressor. 3. DON'T neglect your refrigerator compressor and condenser coils. A few minutes with your vacuum sweeper will remove dust, cob-webs, etc. from beneath, and at the back, to give much improved performance. 4. DONT just buy a refrigerator when you replace yours. Price alone is not the important thing by any moans. With an average investment of its cost plus the price of the food you may be risking an entire month's salary and more. We recommend good and qualified service from a dependable dealer. Any original price saving of $20 to oven $50 on your new purchase may be much more costly in the end.
We Sincerely Recommend KELVINATOR
1. Oldest Makar. 2. Cans font basic impravemants. 3. Mora built-in features. 4. Lowest on your electric bill. 5. Immediate parts replacements.
PLUS-
4. Quick service when needed. 7. Trained service help. 5. Minimum service charges. 9. Pleasant and helpful advice.
- PLUS - When we sell you a new KELVINATOR Our service is at your disposal on any of your other appliances regardless of brand or where you purchase them. Try your local RUS-SELLS next time — The store where you will always get a true trade-in discount. SEE US FOR AIR-CONDITIONERS
