The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 21 July 1966 — Page 2

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t Tha Dally Bannar, Draancastla, Indiana Tnursday, July 21 f 1966

THE DAILY BANNER

and

Bible Thought For Today

Herald Consolidated

"It Wavas For All"

Buslnass Phonas: OL 3-5151 — OL 3-5152 Elizabath Raridan Estata, Publishar PnUnhcd •vary •vMimg except Sunday end heiidoyt. Entered in the Pest Office at Greenceslie, lediene, as secend dess -ei Mtter under Act ef March 1. 1070. Unitad fnm hrtemetieael lease wire service Meesber Inland Pagy Prees Aseerinlieni Meeder State Prew Assedetien. Al ues elicited artides. men us cripts. letters and pictures sent ta lha Daily Banner are sent at •wner's risk, and Ike Daily Banner repudiate* any BabBity ar respansibility tar their safe custady ar return. By Carrier 40c per week, single capy 10c. Subscriptiea Prices ef The Daily Banner effective March 14, IBM: In Petnan Ceunty-1 year $10.00-4 meaths S5.S0-3 menlhs $3.00; Indiann ether then Putnam Cminty-1 year $1100-4 month. $7.00-3 nmnths $4.00; Ouside Indiana-1 year $14.00-4 maaths $*.00-3 manths $4.00. Al Mail subscriptions payable In advance.

Obituaries

Talent Show Set For Rockville

And it came to pus when Aliah saw Elijah, that Ahab said unto him. Art thou he that tronbleth Israel t —I Kings 18:17. The “baddies" always blame the “goodies" when things go wrong, even though the cause of the disaster may be traced to the doorstep of the wicked. Personal And Local News Blood to be donated for George Whitaker can be given at the Putnam County Hospital.

Mfayne Mark, Sr. Dies Suddenly H. Wayne Mark, Sr., 85, died unexpectedly at his home, 407 West Walnut Street, shortly after 2 o’clock this morning. City firemen made a rescue truck run at 2:25 am., but to no avail. He hi survived by his wife, Opal; a son, Wayne, Jr., two brothers, Glenn and Wiley; a sister, Mrs. Madeline Wright; two grandchildren, Nancy and Randy Mark, and a daughter-in-Uw, Paula Mark. He was born in Jefferson Township on Aug. 27, 1900, the son of L. D. and Jennie Foster Marie. He was a member of the Moose Lodge, V.F.W. Fathers Auxiliary of Gen. Jesse M. Lee Post 1550, the Bainbridge Volunteer Fire Department, and the Elks Lodge. Mr. Mark was employed by Public Service Indiana for 18 years and later was superintendent of utilities at Bainbridge. At (me time, he also operated the Bon Ton Diner. Currently, he had been engineer at the Greeneastle Christian Home. He was preceded in death by his parents; a sister, Elma in 1947 and his first wife, Dorothy in 1957. Services will be held at the Hopkins-Walton Funeral Heme at 2 p. m. Saturday. Members of the Elks are asked to meet at the Lodge Home at 7:80 this evening and then go to the funeral home for memorial rite for Mr. Mark. Friends may call at the funeral home after T this evening. Bainbridge Rites For Glenn Jones Glenn S. Jones, 79, passed away in Winter Haven, Florida, where he moved from Bainbridge in 1955. He was born in Putnam County on Feb. 9, 1887, and was a retired fanner. The deceased was affiliated with W. O. W. Camp 7055. He is survived by his wife, Okie W. Jones; a daughter, Mrs. Frances Louise Trippy, New York; a son, Jesse H. Jones, Winter Haven, Fla.; a sister, Edna Veyer, Texas, and two grandchildren. Rites will be held Saturday at the Hopkins-Walton Funeral Home in Bainbridge with burial in the Brick Chapel Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home after 7 p.m. Friday.

Dies In Hospital Irona Jane Cline, 75, Cloverdale, passed away in the Putnam County Hospital at 4:50 this morning where she had been admitted Tuesday.

Viet Casualty SEYMOUR UPI — Mr. and Mrs. Onis Branaman were informed Tuesday of the death of their son, Pfc. Kenneth M. Branaman, 21, R. R. 3, Seymour. from shrapnel wounds suffered in combat in Viet Nam. Branaman was the third Jackson County serviceman to die in Viet Nam. He was a close friend of Howard Rothring, Jr., R. R. 2, Crpthersville, who was killed in action three months ago. Combine Auto Finance and Insurance Into One Easy Payment GLEN FURR AGENCY CLOVERDALE, INDIANA RHONE 795-4413

The Parke County Fair will hold its annual Talent Show on Tuesday evening, August 9, at 8:00 p.m. in the Show Pavillion on the Fairgrounds. Entries are to be made by midnight August 1st to Kenneth Coleman, Waveland, or phone 435-2170. They may also be made to Richard Tudor, Marshall, or phone 597-2233. Contestants will be entered in two age groups—under 16 and 16 and over. Each age group will be divided into three classes— Instrumental, Vocal, and Miscellaneous. Three placings will be awarded in each class with 3rd place receiving $2.50; 2nd, $5.00, and 1st, $10.00. A Sweepstakes Winner will be chosen and awarded $45.00. Previous Sweepstakes winners are not eligible for further competiton. Performance time for each act limited to 3tt minutes. Nuclear Sub Joins US. Navy GROTON, Conn. UPI—The ultimate deadly weapon in America’s nuclear defense arsenal achieves final maturity today when the USS Will Rogers, the Navy's 41st and last Polaris missile-firing submarine, slides down the launch ramp. Like its 40 sister subs scattered in waters around the world, the Will Rogers will carry 16 solid fuel nuclear missiles, each capable of destroying an entire city. Together, the 16 missiles contain more explosive power than has been used in all history’s wars. The Will Rogers, named for the late humorist, marks the end of an impenetrable defense dream bom a decade ago. The United States government feels there are now enough Polaris subs in action deep in the world’s oceans to guarantee maintenance of an invulnerable retaliatory threat. The Polaris missile, capable of smashing pinpoint targets 2,500 miles away, would be used only as the ultimate retaliatory weapon in full-scale war.

In Memory In memory of our Dad, Clarence Brown, birthday today, July 21, 1966. Daughters Helen Fender Wilma Moore Catherine Miller

Mrs. Irene Grubb Is Hostess To Club The Maple Heights Craft Club met July 13, 1966, at the home of Mrs. Irene Grubb. The meeting was held on the patio. It was a very hot day but very enjoyable. The lesson was given by Irene Grubb and Mayme McCullough. First project was a memo pad placed on a decorated tea strainer. The second item was a candy or cookie jar made of a painted coffee can covered with a tuffy scratcher. Hie last article was made of oats covered with colored foil. The hostess served cooling refreshments. There were 10 members present and three guests. Lots of articles made in the past were on exhibit.

Miss Worth Lindsay, Port Huron, Mich., and Mr* and Mrs. Don Cranston, Wheaton, 111., are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Omer Beck. The Irwin reunion will be held Sunday, July 31, at Irwin Grove, % mile south of Brunerstown. All relativea and friends invited. Bro. Milton Sater will preach at the Long Branch Church of Christ Sunday, July 24, 11 a.m. Bible study is at 10:15 a. m. Visitors welcome. The Wells Reunion — (Descendants of Flem and Alice Wells) will be held at Robe-Ann Park Sunday, July 24th, 1966. (Table No. 4.) Richard Drake, who has been in the Methodist Hospital at Indianapolis for the past three weeks, has returned to his home on Stadium Drive. Mrs. Victor Sutherlin will be hostess to a wedding shower for Steven and Carla (Booker) Sutherlin, August 1st at 8 p.m. at the Cloverdale Community Building. Anyone is welcome to attend. The Bride Chapel MYF is having an Ice Cream Social at the Brick Chapel Church July 23, from 5:00-7:00 p.m. There will be pies, cakes, coffee, punch, and most important of all, homemade ice cream! A film, “Heritage,” will be shown Sunday, July 24, 8 a.m., channel IS on television. Everyone is encouraged to see this beneficial film designed to show the value of the Bible in the homes of all faiths. The Putnam County Historical Society will meet Wednesday, July 27th at 6:30 at Terr’s Restaurant. Mrs. Robert McCullough will give the program on “A History of the Rambo Family." Please call Mrs. Florence Boatright for reservations by noon Tuesday, July 26th. Mr. and Mrs. Harry L Tresner have returned home from an extended vacation tour, which took them to the west coast. Along the way, they visited points of interest in several states, Mt. Evans and Telleride in Colorado, Glen Canyon Dam and Canyonlands National Park in Utah, Tahoe Lake and Virginia City in Nevada, Lassen National Park and Monterey Bay in California, and Crater Lake in Oregon. Albert O. Jones of Arlington, Virginia was weekend guest of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Roy Jones. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin O. Jones and son Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Harley Eubank, Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Lee Jones and famJy, Bloomington, Mr. and Mrs. Raliegh Jones, Bloomington, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Dobson and family Greeneastle, Charlie Dobson, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dobson Cloverdale were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Roy Jones Cloverdale. Albert O. Jones returned to Arlington, Virginia Wednesday morning where he resumed his duties in Air Force.

Closed for a combined vacation and reinstallation of more modern methods and equipment. Coin-Op laundry and do it yourself dry cleaning open as usual. White Cleaners.

ANNIVERSARIES Birthday Mrs. Lucy Boyle, 2% East Hanna St. 104 years today.

V. F. W. 1550 GAME NIGHT GAMES AND KffRESHMENTS PLUS SHRIMP DINNER Friday, July 22nd at 7 P. M.

Youthful Monk Is Human Torch SAIGON UPI — A Junior monk drenched his robes with gasoline today outside a tea party at Buddhist youth headquaners and turned himself into a human torch to protest what he called President Johnson’s efforts to destroy Vietnamese Buddhism. The monk wae identified as Thich Rev. Quang Tuong, 25. Two other monks and two bystanders beat out the flames and rushed him to a hospital. Physicians said the monk was bad!} burned and that his condition was “serious.” He received immediate treatment in the hospital recovery room.

Mrs. Herbert Nickerson Hostess To Club On Thursday Mrs. Herbert Nickerson was hostess to the Homemakers Extension Club. Present were 11 members and 12 children. Mrs. Irvin Simmons opened the meeting. The secretary’s and treasurer’s reports were read and approved. Mrs. Eugene Broads tract led the group in the Home Economics Prayer. Mrs. Verlain Fidler led the group in singing. Mr.s Charles Branneman gave a craft lesson on nylon net and different ways to use it; and also showed the club how to decorate soap. The date of the next club meeting has been changed to Sept. 8 and the next hostess will be Mrs. Eugene Broadstreet.

County Hospital Dismissed Wednesday: Donna Sims, Stilesville Ada McCammack, Cloverdale Gustava Smiley, Cloverdale Lawrence Kelly, Russellville Frederick Arend, Eminence Alicia Hammond, Indianapolis William Hammond, Indianapolis Ralphard Hendrix, Greencastle Judy McNeff, Greeneastle Donald Gorham, Greeneastle Larry Coons, Greeneastle James McDaniel, Greeneastle Ruth Shuck, Greeneastle Harold Williams, Greeneastle Births: Mr. and Mrs. James Wallen, Coatesville, a girl, Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Crosby, Greeneastle, Route 6, a girl, today.

—No Third Stand (Continued from Page 1) the “potential implications" of threatened trials of captured U.S. pilots. But Canada was understood to have received “no helpful indications" from Hanoi in response to the diplomatic representations, made by the Canadian acting permanent representative in Hanoi on humanitarian as well as political grounds.

CARD OF THANKS With sincere appreciation we thank our relatives, friends and neighbors for sympathy expressed, the beautiful floral tributes and the courtesies extended at the passing of our infant daughter, Julie Ann Stringer. We are especially grateful to Dr. Nichols, the nurses and nurses’ aides. We wish to thank Dr. Frank Helme and HopkinsWalton Funeral Home for their kind and understanding services rendered. Mr. A Mrs. Jerry Stringer

Ante Raised By Gen. De Gaulle PARIS UPI — French President Charles do Gaulle has done nothing to lower the ante on Britain’s entry into the European Common Market In fact, there are signs he has upped it In any event, Britain’s admission to the six-nation economic “club" from which De Gaulle barred it in January, 1963, seems as far away as ever. This became clear after French Premier Georges Pompidou’s talks in London this month with Prime Minister Harold Wilson. Before Pompidou’s visit both the British and French had been making public statements indicating possible changes of heart Ever since the general election campaign last spring the British Labor government talked as if it wanted to bring Britain into the market as soon as possible. De Gaulle himself had hinted recently he was willing to reconsider his veto. Yet the London talks showed no real break. The British reiterated they were anxious to enter the market—always provided certain basic conditions were satisfied. The French said they wanted Britain in—provided it subscribed wholeheartedly to the 1957 Common Market Treaty of Rome; that it did not demand any special conditions and that it furthermore, that she put the British economy in order. The demand that Britain take drastic steps to end its economic crisis, coupled with hints that a devaluation of the pound sterling might be in order, was something new from the French side. Diplomats could only conclude that, far from undergoing a change of heart, De GauUe has stiffened his conditions. When Da GauUe blackballed Britain from membership there were three main roadblocks. These were Britain’s Commonwealth economic commitments, the claims of British farmers and Britain’s relations with the seven-nation European Free Trade Association (EFTA), often known as the “Outer Seven.” But since 1963 the system of privileged trade relations between Britain and the Commonwealth has been to a considerable extent dismantled. The Comomn Market has signed bilateral agreements with such Commonwealth countries as India and Nigeria. Canada no longer is largely dependent on the British market for sale of wheat. Trade relations between the Common Market and EFTA have become noticeably closer since 1963. Britain’s own relations with EFTA were chilled by the import surcharges it applied without warning in November, 1964. The only one of the three original roadblocks that has changed little is the problem of British farm subsidies. Hie Labor government stiU appears unwilling to accept the high food prices which Common Market membership would mean for Britain. But diplomats believe that in the back of De Gaulle’s mind there are deep-rooted fears that Britain wants to change the market to suit Itself; that it would enter it as a “trojan horse” on the behalf of the United States.” As long as these suspicions

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persist, diplomats see little prospect of De Gaulle changing his mind. Certainly, they say, Britain’s Common Market entry is not for this year or next.

Guerrillas May Become Passe WASHINGTON UPI — Maybe the time will come when guerrilla warfare in the jungle just won’t be worthwhile. World War II produced the infrared snooperscope which was supposed to make enemy soldiers visible targets at night. The Viet Nam war stimulated further research in this direction and also prompted development of super microphones which, one company said, could betray the breathing of a single Viet Cong sniper in a jungle

glade.

Now here’s the Radio Corporation of America with a twopound battlefield radar which not only detects mobile enemies out there in the green hell but literally its little radar, “believed to be the world’s smallest,” can translate visibue electromagnetic reflections from the otherwise invisible foe into identifiable sounds which “distinquish between such targets as walking and running men and animals, or jeeps, trucks and tanks.” The two-pound radar, along with a two-pound battery, was developed by RCA to make possible “blind firing of such weapons as grenade launchers machine guns, and bazookas in jungle environments.” Its range neatly matches the “spray pattern” of such weapons when they let loose. Happily, whether or not the new radar makes the Viet Cong guerrilla obsolete, it promises to be a big help in cutting down highway accidents, making small airplane traffic safer, and protecting warehouses and other industrial properties. In making moving targets audible, as well as visible on a radar scope, the RCA gadget produces a variety of sounds "ranging from low grunts to high-pitched squeals representing targets from crawling men to speeding vehicles." How RCA found this out no one but RCA knows, but it develops that “the audible radar return of a walking man was somewhat as if he were wearing new corduroy pants in an underwater cavern.” The signal from a running man “was slightly higher pitcher and the ‘crunch-crunch’ sound was more rapid." “A vehicle starting and moving away sounded like an offkey siren winding up, and since the up and down and lateral vibrations of a truck are at a different rate from those of a small vehicle such as a Jeep,” RCA said, “the characteristic differences between these two targets were distinctly discern-

ible."

RCA says Its litUe radar Is practically immune to jawing and cannot be used “as a beacon for return fire.” To the enemy, its signals would sound

like meaningless static.

The Man From The BANNER Lady mowing grass with a push reel type mower Shades of Halloween Soap on back window glass of passing car Speaking of Halloween, some residents of our city are quite concerned over their autos being splattered by eggs .. . American Flag being displayed on South Locust street The classic poetic phrases written on the windows of Miller school .... Frank Puckett, Jr., advertising Mgr. of The Banner, has his car hit by a house trailer while parked in front of the Banner Office Railroad gates down for 20 minutes at the Zinc Mill crossing, then they raised, no train ever passed.

—Race Violence (Continued from Page I) Roving gangs, using crudely made fire bombs and molotov cocktails, roamed through a 10-mile-square area setting off what officials described as •countless” fires. The fire bombers for the most part struck and ran before guardsmen and police could close in. En route they smashed windows, looted some stores and hurled stones at passing cars. The violence spilled out of the Hough Avenue area and moved northeast, and south during the night.

BUSINESS HIGHLIGHTS

By United Press International WASHINGTON — The Navy has awarded two king-sized contracts—one to a firm on the West Coast, the other to one on the East Coast. One award, for a quarter billion dollars went to National Steel A Shipbuilding, San Diego, Calif., for 17 tank-landing ships, the second, for $111- million, was won by General Dynamics’ Electric Boat Division, Groton, Conn., for four nuclear-powered submarines.

WASHINGTON — The Commerce Department says the rate of production fell off in the second quarter. The department, which attributed the lower rate to a “marked” decline in consumer spending, said production totaled $732 billion, seasonally adjusted, a $10.8 billion increase from the first quarter. The first quarter pace was $16.8 billion Above the last 1965 quarter. Industrial output in June wax slightly above the May figure, according to the Federal Reserve board, but less than the 1.3 point rise May showed over the previous month.

ST LOUIS—The proposed acquisition of Peabody Coal Co. by Kennecott Copper Corp. indicates the deal would involve about $465 million, according to the companies. This would come to about $47.50 for each share of Peabody common stock. Officers of the firm are currently working out terms of the deal but say the actual purchase— barring any roadblocks—won’t take place until late next year.

NOTICE DR. D. I. STEELE On Vacation July 29th to August 18th Office Closed July 29th to August 16th

MOOSE DANCE Saturday, July 23rd 10 P.M. till 1 A.M. “THE CUT OUTS” Members and Invited Guests Air-Conditioned

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