The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 5 October 1966 — Page 2

S Th# Dally Bannar, Graaneastla, Indiana Wednesday, October 5, 1966 THE DAILY BANNER^ ~ and Herald Consolidated "It Waves For All" Business Phones: OL 3-5151 — OL 3-5152 Elizabeth Rariden Estate, Publisher Published every evening except Sunday and holidays at 24*26 South Jackson Street, Greencastle, Indiana. 46135. Entered in the Post Office at Greencastle, Indiana, as second class mail matter under Act of March 7, 1878. United Press International lease wire service; Member Inland Daily Press Association; Hoosier State Press Association. All unsolicited articles, manuscripts, letters and pictures sent to The Daily Banner are sent at owner's risk, and The Daily Benner repudiates any liability or responsibility for their safe custody or return. By carrier 40c per week, single copy 10c. Subscription prices of The Daily Banner effective March 14, 1966; In Putnam County—1 year $10.00—6 months $5.50—3 months $3.00; Indiana other than Putnam County—1 year $12.00—6 months $7.00—3 months $4.00; Outside Indiana—1 year $16.00—6 months $9.00—3 months $6.00. All mail subscriptions payable in advance.

Bible Thought For Today For a day in thy courts is better than a thousand. I had rather be a door-keeper in the house of my God, than to dwell in the tents of wickedness. —Paslm 84:10. This entire Psalm is a bright and gay-hearted song concerning the delights of worship. Personal And Local News Mr. and Mrs. Harold Reckley | have returned from an extended stay in Las Vegas, Nevada. ! Herschel Sheldon is recovering from surgery at the Putnam ! County Hospital. His room number is 228. Mr. and Mrs. James Goodin south of Mt. Meridian have i moved into their new home which was just recently completed. City firemen made a run at 12:20 Tuesday noon when a grass fire was reported in a i fence row west of the Dr. James comer just north of the city. Mrs Harold Brown, 203 Wood Street, is confined to the Putnam County Hospital due to injuries she suffered in a fall last Thursday in a downtown store. The Goodwill truck will again be in Greencastle on Tuesday, Oct. 11th. If you have worthwhile donations, please call OL 3-6587 before 6 p. m. on Mon day the 10th.

Couple Exchange Vows in Hanna Street Baptist Church

Hanna Street Baptist Church was the setting Friday evening, September 16 at 7:30 p.m. for the beautiful impressive candlelight ceremony uniting Miss Rebecca Lea Reed, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George L. Reed of this city and David Dane Clark, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Clark also of this city, in marriage. Rev. Norman Hill, uncle of the bride, officiated at the ceremony with Rev. Paul Robinson assisting. The vows were read before an altar decorated with palms, candelabra, and white gladioli. White satin bows decorated each pew. Mrs. Wilma Robinson played preceding and during the ceremony. Susan Clark, sister of the groom, sang “One Heart, One Hand” and “The Lord’s Prayer."

Prospects Bleak In GE Dispute WASHINGTON UPI — Negotiators in the General Electric contract dispute today resume an uphill struggle to settlement. Prospects for accord were bleak. There were no signs harsh administration warnings of a

strike’s impact on defense

production had eased the way j receive( i

to a new pact between GE and brother of t ' he bride>

The bride’s mother

The bride was given in marriage by her father and was lovely in a floor length gown of lace over taffeta. The fitted bodice had a scoop neckline with long sleeves tapering to bridal points. A bow of satin accented her waistline. Her skirt was straight with a panel of taffeta in front. The shoulder length illusion veil was held in place by a tiara of lace and pearls. She wore a single strand of pearls belonging to her grandmother Reed. The bride’s bouquet was beautifully done in white rosebuds on lace and rib-

bons.

Maid of honor was Miss Marcia Hill, cousin of the bride, and Miss Karen Akins, school friend of the bride, was bridesmaid. The attendants wore matching floor length soft blue crepe gowns with a sleeveless lace bodice and scoop neckline. A garland band surrounded their empire waistlines. They each wore head veils of soft blue. Their colonial bouquets were of blue and white miniature carnations on lace with ribbons. James Clark served as his brother’s best man and Larry Clark, another brother, as

groomsman.

The guests were seated by Jerry Clark, brother of the groom, and Peter Reed, brother of the bride. Miss Brenda Sutherlin, cousin of the bride, registered the guests. The gifts were

by Timothy Reed,

Russ Myers says— There is no wholly satisfactory substitute for brains, but silence does pretty well. Old Reliable White Laundry A Cleaners.

Clary Is Head Of New Center A new Educational Center was inaugurated Tuesday at Indiana State University to serve approximately 50,000 students in eight counties — Vermillion, Clay, Greene, Owen, Parke, Putnam, Sullivan and Vigo. Head of the Wabash Valley Supplementary Educational Center will be Dr. William M. Clary, formerly superintendent of the Greencastle schools and now of the Department of Education, Indiana State University. The principal areas in which the center will assist the participating schools include: Testing — improving pupil appraisal; Music — providing enriched musical experience for junior high schools; History — provision of teaching exhibits from the Wabash Valley Historical Society museum and other sources and teacher workshops; Guidance — the establishment of four demonstration centers; Elementary Language Arts — provision of three demonstration centers for teachers; and Evaluation — assistance in the development of new programs.

ANNIVERSARY Birthday Michael Anthony Arnold, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Miller, 7 years old today, Oct. 5th. Mrs. Olive Dowling, The County Rest Home, will be 96, October 9. Weddings Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Covert, 26 years October 5th.

$100 Scholarships Young people from Farm Bureau families are invited to apply for $100 Scholarships being offered by the Women’s Department, Indiana Farm Bureau, Inc. Application blanks are available from County Farm Bureau Women’s Leader, Mrs. Maurine Aker. November 1 is the deadline for filing. Awards to boys apply to the Winter Short Course at Purdue; for girls it is the college where they are enrolled at the time of presentation. Winners are selected from each district based on activities and interest in local area; not on high school grades.

the International Union of Electrical Workers (IUE). IUE President Paul Jennings, leading bargainer for 120,000 members of the IUE and 10

wore a

camel and white knit suit with brown accessories. The groom’s mother wore a dark brown jacket dress with matching acces-

other unions, said a strike could sories. Both mothers wore a come “if at the end of two 1 corsage of white carnations with weeks we do not have an ^ yellow sweetheart roses, agreement.’’ After the ceremony a recepGE’s chief negotiator, Philip; tion was held in the church Moore, said only a few of the basement. The table was lovely company's plants were vital to with the three tiered wedding the war effort. The union team c& ke topped with a miniature Jennings heads the workers in bride and groom. Refreshments

57 GE plants across the coun-

try.

The most powerful Pentagon

of blue punch, cake, nuts, and mints were served to the many guests by Miss Tara Jean Pitts,

Brown-Artman Nuptials Nov. 20 Mr. and Mrs. Lonzo R. Artman, R.R. 3, Sheridan, wish to announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Joyce Kay Artman, to Ronald Virl Brown. The wedding will take place on Sunday, Nov. 20, at 2:00 p.m. in the Lamong Friends Church. The bride-to-be is a 1965 graduate of Westfield High School and a graduate of the Indiana School of Automation. She is presently employed at the American State Bank of Sheridan. The prospective groom, son of Mrs. Evelyn Brown and the late Russell D. Brown of Stilesville, is a 1965 graduate of Cascade High School, Stilesville. He also was graduated from the Indiana School of Automation and is presently employed at the Indiana State Office Building.

Dixie States Report Showers By United Press International While Hurricane Inez lashed the Florida coast, a massive high pressure front pushed a line of thundershowers across Louisiana and southeast Texas today. Behind the shower line, clear and cool weather prevailed over the western and central

states.

As skies cleared over the Rocky Mountains, snow drifts— some four feet high—began to melt following the season’s first big snow. Two mountain climbers were rescued near Estes Park, Colo. Tuesday after being trapped for a day. Thundershowers dropped more than 2% inches of rain on Houston, Tex., Tuesday night. An inch and a quarter rain fell at Alexandria, La. Scattered showers quenched the Southwest desert early today and heavier rains fell intermittently across the wind-swept northern Great Lakes. The U.S. Weather Bureau said there was a possibility that some rain might fall at Los Angeles—on the f'-'nge of the Southwest di8turba. ee area— where the World Sei>s was scheduled to begin today.

Court Upholds Hoffa Conviction CHICAGO UPI—The U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals, by a 2-1 vote, Tuesday upheld the 1964 conviction of Teamsters Union President James R. Hoffa and six other men of con spiring to milk the union’s pension fund of $25 million through fraudulent loan applications. The conviction was upheld by Judges F. Ryan Duffy, who wrote the majority opinion, and Latham Castle. Judge Luther Swygert wrote the dissenting opinion. Hoffa is also fighting a fiveyear sentence and a $10,000 fine for attempting to fix a federal court jury in Tennessee. Hoffa was convicted of loan fraud by a jury of eight women and four men in Chicago on July 26, 1964, and was sentenced Aug. 17, 1964, to serve five years in prison and fined $10,000. Hoffa has been free on bond ever since and is expected, along with his co-defendants, to appeal his latest court reversal to the U. S. Supreme Court. His position as boss of the nation’s largest union depends on whether he can beat the federal convictions against him.

PTA Membership Month At Northeast School Johnny and Susie are back in school, and Mother breathes a sigh of relief. How do the teachers do it, she wonders? Where do they find the wisdom and patience to encourage the slow, reassure the faltering, and steady the impetuous for nine months out of the year? To educate every child to his topmost limits? The answer is, teachers can’t do the job alone. Parents must help. And the cooperation of parents and teachers in the PTA is our nation’s best hope for helping every young American grow steadily and surely toward moral and intellectual

excellence.

October is National PTA Membership Month. Your child’s PTA needs YOU, whether you are a mother, a father, a teacher, or one of the many other civic-minded adults of our community. Your PTA needs you because there is work to be done for children and youth— work that will not wait. It doesn’t take a child long to

grow up.

By joining forces you can help build a nation of homes in which children are loved, and parents and children alike enjoy a satisfying home life. You can help establish good home-school relations so that each child will be assured of wise guidance and warm understanding both at school and

at home.

You can join with others in taking practical and effective community action to combat all influences that tend to destroy children’s happiness and

security.

You can urge ample funds for school libraries; equipment for science, art, and other subjects; audio-visual aids, and all the various materials needed for effective teaching. Join a local Parent-Teacher Association today. Northeast Elementary PTA invites you to send your dollar (fifty cents per parent) to school with your child during membership month or mail it to Mrs. Elton Weston, 507 Ritter Ave., or Mrs. Norman Knights, R. 2, membership co-

chairmen.

Enemy Suffers Heavy Losses SAIGON UPI—U.S. infantrymen stormed through a former sunbather’s paradise today to mop up remnants of a North Vietnamese force caught in an allied operation that already has killed or captured more than 1,200 Communists and netted 450 suspects. A U.S. spokesman said heli-copter-borne 1st Cavalry Division troops pushed over sandy beaches and across marshes mangrove swamps surrounding a one-time French resort on Nuoc Ngot Bay, 290 miles northeast of Saigon, to deliver the final blow. Late reports from the battlefield said 120 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops were killed and 64 captured in the final surge of a two-week operation that crumbled Hanoi’s plans to launch a major offensive in the Central Highlands with its 610 Division.

voices warned both sides Tues- ^ ss Karen Sears, school friends day a strike would seriously ^h® bride and Milss Sheila impair the Viet Nam war effort, Sutherlin, cousin of the bride.

immediately.

The three armed service secretaries, Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara and the Joint Chiefs of Staff said production schedules were ex-

tremely tight.

A strike's disruption of GE jet engine production, muni-

tions and radar

Mr. and Mrs. David Clark are now at home to their friends at 636 East Washington Street,

Greencastle.

County Hospital

Dismissed Tuesday:

Mrs. Mike Stephenson

production twin sons Coatesville.

would constitute

YOU’RE TELLING ME! By WILLIAM Central Pres* Writer

and

an emergency.

GE engines are used in F4 Phantom fighters, and its reconnaissance version, plus four helicopters in military use. The union and the company have until Oct. 17 to settle or face administration invocation ef the Taft-Hartley Act which would keep the union members working for an additional 80

lays.

Mrs. John James and son,

Brazil.

Ora Sims, Stilesville. Jane Marshall, Mooresville. Robert Hacker, Cloverdale. Daisy Mullin, Gosport. Wayne Roach, Greencastle. Ruby Moore, Greencastle.

Births:

Mr. and Mrs. Gary Simpson, Spencer, Route 1, a girl, Tuesi day. i

FOR ITS BOOTH “birthday,” just observed, London’s famed Westminster Abbey was cleaned-up and polished until it looked like a million dollars. In fact, $2.8 million, because that’s what the job cost. ! ! ! A group of London scientists have begun a study of the blood pressure of eels. It’s our guess that of the electric variety ought to be pretty high. ! ! ! There are 450 varieties ef woodpeckers — nature item. Bet they all seem alike to a longsuffering tree. ! ! ! Milt, the sterling printer, claims he was recently served in a restaurant with a piece of gob of those square gieju ifa-

fortunately, he admits, it didn’t follow a meal of the same shape or description. ! ! i You’re really an old-timer, says Grandpappy Jenkins, if you can remember when the only news that came out of Africa was about the shenanigans of a fellow named Abd^el-Krim. ! ! ! To the perpetually tired suburbanite the year seents to hava but three seasons—lawn mower, leaf rake and snow shovel. ! ! I The human brain has approximately 10 billion cells—Factographs. That, of course, must refer to anyone’s—and not just those of stubborn persona with flogjrl iwinrig-

Dims Hopes For Viet Nam Peace HONG KONG UPI—Communist Chinese Foreign Minister Chen Yi diminished hopes for a negotiated peace in Viet Nam today. He told a visiting African delegation there can be no peace talks until the United States withdraws all its forces. “The people of the whole world are clear . . . that the U.S. aggressive forces must immediately withdraw from Viet Nam — lock, stock and barrel,” Chen Yi said. “All proposals and ideas which do not Include withdrawal of U.S. armed forces are only a cover for continued U.S. imperialist reinforcements and expansion of the aggressive war in Viet Nam — no matter whether these are advanced through the United Nations or through conferences of several countries,” he said. His remarks were made at a banquet in Peking Tuesday night for a visiting delegation from Tanzania and broadcast today by the New China News Agency.

Rites Thursday For Baby Boy Darren A. Swafford, 4 days old, Greencastle, R. 1, died Tuesday evening at the Riley Hospital in Indianapolis. He was the son of Daniel and Sharon Sandusky Swafford. Survivors are his parents; the maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Sandusky, Monrovia; the paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert Swafford, Martinsville, and the great-grandmother, Mrs. Elizabeth Swafford. Funeral services will be held Thursday at 2:00 p. m. at the Nazarene Church in Greencastle. Rev. Paul Byrnes will officiate. Friends may call at the funeral home after 10:00 o’clock Thursday morning.

St. Paul's Women's Guild Holds Meeting The Women's Guild of St. Paul’s Catholic church held its regular monthly meeting on Monday evening, October 3. The business meeting was conducted by Mrs. Dominic Romalia, President. Plans were made for a Christmas bazaar to be held the first week of December in the Chapel. Mrs. Foster McClure and Mrs. Thomas Adams were appointed to attend the Deanery District Board meeting in Terre Haute on Oct. 5. A District Deanery meeting will be held at Assumption church in Brazil on Oct. 16. Several members of St. Paul’s Guild will attend. A social hour was enjoyed while the monthly committee served refreshments. Hostesses were Mrs. Lawrence Brant, Mrs. E. H. Billingsley, Mrs. Joseph Archer and Mrs. George Alig.

Government Is Held Liable COLUMBUS, Ohio UPI — A federal judge ordered the U.S. government to pay more than $247,000 damages in a traffic accident case involving an Air Force man driving a private car to a new assignment. Judge C.G. Neese of Greenville, Tenn., who sat as visiting judge in the non-jury trial, ordered the settlement paid to Sibyl I. McCluggage and her husband. Wade. Mrs. McCluggage was injured Dec. 30, 1961, when her car was hit broadside by a car driven by Airman Edward G. Kyle. Kyle was driving his own car, en route from Paris, Ky., to Fort George Meade, Md. Neese ruled that since the airman was under orders to report to a new duty station he was acting in the line of duty and the government thus was responsible for the liability payment.

Indiana Traffic Toll Hits 1,163 By United Press International Indiana’s 1966 traffic death toll stood at least at 1,163 today compared with 1,089 a year ago. Two double-fatality accidents took place Tuesday, the latest south of Knox. Oliver Gunder, 56, and his son, John, 1, of Ora, were killed when their car was struck by the engine of an Erie Railroad freight train at the main crossing in their hometown. Hours earlier, a New Albany man and his wife were killed in a car-motorcycle collision near their home.

-South Putnam (Continued from Page 1) Charles Byfield, the architect working on the plans for the new Senior High building, Truman McCammack suggested the Board accept the final plans, seconded by Glenn Skelton, subject to minor changes required by school board and School Building, Inc. The School Board will at a later date decide whether to build the basic building composed of 85,000 square feet, or accept the four alternate com prising 105,000 square feet. The final decision will be influenced by the amount of money available when bids are ready to be advertised approximately at the end of November or early De-

cember.

Approval was given to Superintendent Hedrick to make application for Title I and Title II funds. He stated that these funds are for use for a Speech and Hearing therapist, class for M-l pupils, teacher aides, and school nurse. Remedial reading had to be dropped due to the 25 per cent reduction in funds, but Hedrick commented, “Since our elementary classes are small, the materials bought last year are now being used by the teachers in their classrooms.” Following the regular meeting, the Board held an executive meeting with P. G. Evans, owner of the proposed building site.

Manila Meeting To Open Oct. 24 MANILA UPI — The date of the seven-nation Manila summit meeting on Viet Nam, to be attended by President Johnson, today was reset to Oct. 24 and 25. It had been tentatively scheduled Oct. 28. A six-point agenda for the sessions, proposed by the Philippines, includes a review of all peace proposals for settling the Viet Nam conflict. The date change was the second made by the Philippines for the meeting of the leaders of the seven countries, all antiCommunist allies in Viet Nam. It had originally been set for

Oct. 18.

Participating nations, besides the Philippines and the United States, are Australia, New Zealand, South Viet Nam, Thailand and South Korea. Foreign Secretary Narciso Ramos told newsmen the latest date change was asked by Australia and New Zealand. Both countries are closing their parliamentary sessions late this

month,

Passenger cars account for more than eight out of 10 motor vehicles registered In the U.S. says the Automobile Legal Association.

RECTOR FUNERAL HOME AMBULANCE SIRVICl RHONE Ol S-48IO

The set beautiful, bordered with white, buttoned with brast. In easy-pack, wrinkle-shed 100% Wool doubleknit. Oliv®. Koben Blue.

TAMED HIGH FASHION

Quit While Ahead OAK RIDGE, N.J. UPI— William Sockenjos, 96, decided to quit while ahead. He turned his driver’s license in to the state Tuesday—after 60 years of driving without an accident or summons.

Order Class Rings Now!

Sample Class Rings are on display for you to see. Bring Mom and Dad

Prices

14.88 ..j ..

Three Weeks

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