The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 11 August 1966 — Page 4
4 TIm Dally Bannar, Oraancaatl#/ Indiana Thursday, Auyut* II, 19M
Bainbridge News By Mn. Murid Ndsaa, Cuifiimdwt ▲ meetlnr ef th* Cemetery Houser axu) family, Mr. ani
Association will be held in the Lions Club building Friday evening, Aug. 12th at S p. m. The purpose of the meeting is to give reports and elect officers. Everyone interested in the cemetery Is urged to attend. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Michael, Mrs. Vesta Mitchell and Kandee Michael attended the Henry C. and Nancy J. Blue reunion at Robe-Ann Park on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Steele accompanied Dr. and Mrs. Scherschel and three of their sons to Culver Military Academy Sunday to visit Gregory, another Scherschel son, who is a summer student there. It was a special day for many of the academy’s activities. Mr. and Mrs. Gene E. Pruitt and sons, Christopher and Gary attendded the Blue re-union at Robe-Ann Park on Sunday. They visited, Mrs. Vesta Mitchell on Sunday evening and Christopher stayed for a few days visit with her grandmother, Kandee Michael of Greencastle also visited with them Sunday night and Monday and with her grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Michael on Tuesday night Doris McMurtry ef Indianapolis was the guest last week of his sister-in-law, Mrs. Juanita McMurtry and family. Other guests during the week end were Mrs. Elza Tate and son Don on Saturday and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sutherlin of Cloverdale on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Moores of Indianapolis, have moved into the house ef the late Harvey Lane. Mr. Moore, was the band teacher la Shortridge High School aad win teach band here this winter. Mrs. Victor Walter, Mrs. Ollie Davis, Mrs. Frances Cunningham, Mrs. Ruth Steele, Mrs. Lester Leonard and Mrs. Elizabeth Ash, attended the play "Silk Stockings” at DePauw Little Theatre Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Houser and son and Mrs. Carrie Miller took Mike Bartley to Cincinnati Tuesday evening where they all stayed that night and saw Mike take his plane at 8:42 Wednesday morning for Tampa, Fla. Mike had spent the summer here with his aunts and other relatives. Mrs. Arthur Weller was taken by ambulance, Saturday to the Putnam County Hospital for treatment end observation. Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Minnick and daughter, Mrs. Carrie Miller, Mrs. Lillian Smith, Mrs. Lorene Cloyd of Greencastle, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Minnick and daughter, Mr. and Mn. Bob
Mn. Bill Houser and family held a farewell picnic at Manifltld Lake Tuesday evening in honor of Mike Bartley, who left Tuesday. Mn. Raymond Hart Sr. Is vacationing in Minnesota, where she will visit bur toother and family. Mn. Ralph Fosher accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Donovan Hendrich and family to Wisconsin where they will camp aad fish this week. Mrs. Edward Minnick was pleasantly surprised Wednesday, Aug 3rd on returning home from eating supper at a restaurant, she found a group of relatives and friends had arrived to celebrate her birthday. Those present were Mr. end Mn. John Ash aad seas, Larry and Gary, Miss Diane Nichols, Mn. Carrie Miller, Mn. Sally Minnick, Mn. Lester Leonard and Bob Houser and family. Refreshments ef cake, iee cream and punch were served and an evening of visiting was much enjoyed. Mr. and Mn. Jim Sharpe have moved to Cloverdale where she will teach this coming year. Mr. Sharpe win commute from Cloverdale to Bainbridge, where he will be teaching. Mike Whitaker aad friend of Miami, Fla., visited with friends here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wayne Hanks have been on a two week vacation and visited her mother in Delaware. Mn. TT»nic« is a nurse in Putnam County Hospital. Mr. Hanks is employed at the Regal 8tore. Mr. aad Mrs. Cedi Bullerdick aad Geraldlae have vaeatiawd ia Canada aad flpheS the papt two weeks. The Eskimo Bridge Club met with Muriel Nelson last Thursday evening for dessert bridge. Mrs. Lucille Curran aad Mn. Norman Shoakwiler received score prises. The September meeting win be Sept 1st with Mrs. Vesta MitchelL Mrs. Harry Elliott and baby daughter returned home Monday from Putnam County Hospital. The baby weighed g lb. 7 os. and was named Brook Sudanne. Harry Elliott returned home Friday after spending three weeks in Kansas and the past week in New York. He was in training for IBM. Recent visitors ef Mr. and Mn. Andy Gooch was their daughter, Rebecca Kirkpatrick of Milford, Ohio. Miss Linda Pounds of Fairbanks was with her grandparents last week and her mother, Beulah Pound spent the week end with them. Mn.
WASHINGTON v*
MARCH OF EVENTS
NEW NADER CRUSADE HITS PERILOUS PIHUNfS
I
GAS, OR CONVEYORS ms LATEST TJdttffS
By HENBY CATHCABT Central Press Washington Writer xrrASHIN'GTOX—fCrusaders are nothing new to Washington. W There usually is an army of them ef varying degrees of effectiveness trying to fight and win their battles against same real or imaginary wrong-doing. Ralph Nader is an unusual crusader. He i» younger than meet, in the lower 30s. He is already involved in one crusade—to make the gieat auto industry design safer cars. And, with this effort barely under way, Nader has now embarked e« a new tack in an entirety different field—removing what he considers dangers to life and property in the nation's pipelines. At his own request, Nader was permitted to address a recent local meeting of the Amer- . lean Society of Safety Engineers on his new iHar M project For a non-engineer and a man whose mmm eagerness to project himself into the center of controversy, Nader's talk waa wall received by
the old pros.
For starters, Nader discussed the need for uniform safety standards on the construction of gas and oil pipelines across the nation. Ho pointed out that 24 of the states have no
ilpeline codes although they have 58 per cent of the natural gas >ipeline mileage and 80 per cent of the production. Of the 26 hat do have codes, all but one are inadequate and little enforced,
te said.
Nader commented on a gasline explosion that killed IT perons in their homes in a southern commuaity. Re said that t-hile accidents have been infrequent so far, thqre is a mounting [anger from aging pipelines that were of inadequate strength riginaliy, their shallow placement in the ground, eng the fhet hat houses are being built in areas that were planned as vacant
rhen the pipelines were laid.
The auto industry is tough, but the pipeline people are tougher, fader may be an <dd, old crusader by the time Up wan are won. I there OUGHT TO BE A LAW—Ben. WgUam ftwpnin, )-Wis., sponsored a “Ihero Ought to be * X4* w waiart that hM iroduced more than 800 legislative suggestions 00 fN& The idea
te disliked moat read as follows:
“The ancient Greeks had the right idea tm
ioctI. Any legislator who wished to prop— » GM Wfy
:w law had to appear in public wife a hang- ^
Ralph Nailer An unusual
crusader
NNwlRW*
an's neaes around his neck. If Us meaguft was steed, he was strangled to death. Na new lawp
ere Introduced there for 200 yean. If aw resent efflrtaip would like to revive tUs «U tdts, II twmkh
te rope.”
Proxmire patiently explains that the idea eapae
Gooch la recovering from eye
Mrs. Edna Baker is staying with her sister, Mrs. Nellie White of Greencaatle. Mr. White has been released from Putnam County Hospital. Mrs. William Buzzard and little daughters, Carole and Shirley are here for an extended visit with Mr. Buzzard’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sterrett, while her husband ia in school for the service in Texas. He is taking helicopter training and is making a career of the Air Force. Mn. Buzzard ia from Paris, France. Mr. and Mrs. Willie McCammack and family of Belle Union spent Sunday with his brother, Lowell and family. There will be a church picnic at Robe Ann Park Sunday, Aug. 14th. Everyone meet there at 12 o’clock. Church service will begin at 10:45 a.m. for this Sunday only in order to get to the park by noon. Mrs. Nelson Agin of Blanchestar, Ohio was the guest on Monday of her brother, Mr. and Mrs. O. L. VanCleave.
British Cruiser Fires Live Shell DEVONPORT, England UPI — The Royal Navy cruiser “T^ger” waa a soaked pussycat today. The “Tiger” sailed into port here Wednesday and quickly created more havoc than townspeople could remember since World War H. As it churned in, the cruiser “inadvertently” fired a dummy practice shell. It wasn’t a dummy. The missile hit a dock wall, shattered windows, ripped down telephone cables and showered the dock with debris. No one was injured; dockworkers had left the area minutes before the “Tiger” arrived. The Defense Ministry promised an immediate inquiry.
mi i imp a year narcotics operation in Harlem was set at 4156,000 pending an appeal. Leroy Davis, 39, described as Aiken’s top lieutenant, was sentenced to 15 years and fined 420,000. His bail was set at 475,000 pending appeal. Three other men, described as pushers, were Webster Bivins, 88, (12-year term and 415,000 fine), Charles Cole, 43, (10 years and 410,000) and Clifford Rogers, 31, (6 years and 45,000). They were released on bail pending appeal.
BANNER ADS PAY
Kingpin Of Drug Ring Sentenced NEW YORK UPI —Leonard Aiken, 55, convicted as the kingpin of the country’s largest narcotics ring, was sentenced in federal court Wednesday to 25 years in jail and fined $20,000. Bail for Aiken, whom the government said ran the 48
Speck Still In Jail Hospital CHICAGO UPI — Richard Speck, the 24-year-old accused of slaughtering eight nurses on Chicago’s south side, will remain in his iron bed in the Cook County jail infirmary for at least two or three more days. Warden Jack Johnson said a lingering heart ailment has delayed Speck’s transfer to an isolation cell within the jail
complex. “He's not in a serious condition or anything like that,” Johnson said Wednesday. “All other physical reports are good, but there is a slight problem with the EKG (electrocardiogram).” Johnson said doctors ordered almost constant bed rest for Speck, who has been recovering from an inflammation of the sac surrounding the heart. Johnson said the increased physical activity involved in Speck’s transfer — he would have to walk about half a block — might aggravate the heart condition.
House Approves Militory Bill WASHINGTON UPI — The House approved Wednesday a measure to add facilities at military bases and to regulate the Defense Department’s authority to close them. The 41 billion defense bill would authorize construction at
280 military bases around the world during the next 12 months. But the bill’s challenging feature was a provision that would require the President to notify Congress 30 days before he decided to close down or reduce any domestic military installations employing over 250 persons. This proviso, omitted from a similar construction bill passed by the Senate, may invite a presidential veto if it gets through Congress. Last year President Johnson vetoed a more stringent base closing prohibition on the grounds it limited his defense flexibility and was “repugnant to the Constitution” as well.
Towed Off To Jail OPA-LOCKA, Fla. UPI — “Look, Harrison, we know you stole it,” the police radio barked Wednesday. “How about bringing it back?” The police were broadcast-
ing to George Harrison, 52, who was identified stealing a radioequipped tow truck that was parked across from the po. lice station. “Don’t worry, I’ll bring it back,” Harrison replied. “Harrison, where are you?” police asked. By late afternoon they were sure of Harrison’s whereabouts. He was in the jail charged with auto theft, careless driving, leaving the scene of an accident, driving without a licease and drunk driving.
Rf Gl r ,TLRF D n.Jf’St
Your trainiig is urgently needed by the U.S. Army Nurse Corps
II— wur Awy Mcwmof lodmy]
yWoNTGOME RY WARD
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