The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 28 March 1967 — Page 2
S Th» Daily Bannar, Graancastia, Indiana Tuasday, March 28, 1967 THE DAILY BANNER end Herald Consolidated "It Wavaa Far All* Businass Phenaa: OL 3-5151 OL 3*5152 Elizabeth Raridan Estate, Publisher P«blbh«S «v«ry •vMiiNy exceyt Sunday and baUdayt « 144S Saa* Jackson Stroot, Grcsncastlo, Indiana. 44131. Entarsd la tko rest Offlan at Grssncastis, Indiana, as tacand doss onB awltw aadar Ad of Mardt T, 1S7S. United Prats International teats wfca urdtai Mosnkss Inland Daly Sism Association; Heasier State Press Association. Al unsolicited artidos, manussrlpti. tetters and (skteros sent to lbs Ooly Banner are sent at owner’s risk, and The Daly Banner repudiates any liability or rosponstelHy for their safe custody or return. By carrier 40c per weak, single copy 10c. Subscription prices of Ibo Daily Banner effective March 1< 1944| In Pun nans County—I year $10.00-4 months $5.50—3 months $3.00; Indiana othei than Putnam County—1 year $12.00—4 months $2.00—3 months $C00i Outside Indiana—1 year $14.00—4 months $9.00—3 months $4.00. AH mail subscriptions payable te advance.
1210 only difference between the domesticated and wild turkey is that the latter is slimmer because of its life in the wilds.
In Memory In loving memory of Jeon Coffman, who passed away, March 28, 1963.
Bible Thought For Today A good name is rather to be chosen great riches, and loving favour rather than silver and gold.—Proverbs 22:1. Kindness, consideration, love and understanding to our neighbors, to our children and to all with whom we come in contact are some of the qualities that are assets to a good name.
Personal And Local News The Busy Bee Club will meet with Mrs. Pauline Crawley Wednesday, April 12th.
VONCASTLE
FRI., SAT., SUN.
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Next Weak 'DEAR JOHN'
Four years have passed But it seems like ten We miss you now As we missed you then. Time should heal And ease the pain But in our hearts It’s still the same. Still, listen for footsteps Still long Dear, for you, Sweet memories still linger Lonely nights remain, too. In that Beautiful Mansion Not made with hands We’ll all be united As Jesus has planned. Sadly missed by mother and family.
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Clora Lee Hester was dismissed from the Putnam County Hospital on Monday. Epsilon Sigma Alpha will meet tonight at 7:30 p. m. in the Gas Company room. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Boiler, Russellville, Route 1, are the parents of a son born t^iis morning at the Putnam County
Hospital.
Notice to all Girl Scout leaders. Girls Scout Cookie orders may be picked up Wednesday afternoon, March 29th at 719 S. Locust Street. Otis F. Gorham has retired from active duty with the Pennsylvania Railroad after 23 years of service. His name is now enrolled on the Roll of Honor in Philadephia, Pa. The Greencastle Christian Church will hold Mid-Week Bible Study at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Wager, R. R. 1 Fillmore. Everyone is welcome to this study of God’s Word and Christian Fellowship. Howard Myers, Roachdale R. 1, is a patient in the Cleveland Clinic for observation. His address is Cleveland Clinic Foundation, 83 A Euclid Ave., Room 451, Cleveland, Ohio. Ha would enjoy hearing from hie friends.
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Modem Homemaker* Club will meet with Marjorie Torr, Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. Mr. adn Mrs. Frank Doheny of Louisville, Ky., were Easter guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Frazier. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Talbott of Lansing, Mich., were here as Easter guests of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold W. Tal-
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Miss Carol Holley, of Cincinnati, Ohio, is the guest of Miss Janice Barrett Spring Avenue. The two are roommates at Purdue University. Miss Joyce Warren Is here for her Spring vacation from Penn State, Pennsylvania, visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Warren. Mr. and Mrs. James Bamberger and son, John, and daughter, Jane, of Birmingham, Mich., weer weekend guests of Mrs. J. A. Bamberger. Mr. and Mrs. Willis J. O’Neal have had as guests the past seven days their two granddaughters, Brenda tuid Kathy from Delaware, O. They were joined by their parents for Easter. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Ford and children and Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Ford and children of R. R. 1, Roachdale, enjoyed Easter Sunday dinner with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jessie Ford, R. R. 1. Mr. and Mrs. Mickey Myers and daughter, Michele, of Nashville, Term., were here the past weekend visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Turner of Cloverdale, and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Myers. Mr. and Mrs. Julian Smith of Pittsboro, R.R. 1, left Saturday morning by plane for two weeks vacation to Spain, Italy, France and England. Mrs. Smith is a granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Gough of Roachdale, R. R. 1. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Sayers and daughter Sally, called on Mr. Sayers’ aunt, Marjory Gordon, who now lives at Wesley Manor in Frankfort, Sunday. She has been suffering from an attack of shingles and is now improving. Mr. and Mrs. John Venning and their four children of Arlington, HI., were here for Easter, visiting Mrs. Venning’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Williams. While they were here they and Mr. and Mrs. Williams motored to Madison, where they visited a brother of Mr. Williams.
EASTER WEEK GUESTS I AT GREEN VIEW APTS. Mrs. Frank McKenna, with Pamela, Jennifer, Tom and Megann, of Monmouth, 111., spent several days here last week visiting her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Thomas St. Clair. Dr. Batie White of Lafayette was a Sunday guest of Miss Eleanore Cammack and her mother, Mrs. Dinah Cammack. John Talbott of Indianapolis was a Sunday guest of Mrs. Adda Hutcheson and Mrs. Jane Hays, at dinner and for the afternoon. Mrs. Thad Jones was an Easter guest of her sister-in-law, Mrs. Frank Jones. Mrs. Harry Allan entertained Sunday for Mrs. Eugene Allan and her son, Jim, of Greencastle, and Mr. and Mrs. Jay Allan of Indianapolis. Miss Grace Banta and Mrs. Oliver Cartmel of Rushville were guests last week of Dr. and Mrs. Frank G. Helme. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Johnson had a family dinner Sunday for their son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Philip Johnson, Kathy, Marsha and Lisa, of Bloomington and their daughter, Mrs. Charles Carmichael and granddaughter, Ann, of Greencastle. Mrs. Glenn Jeffries had her sister and brother of Spencer, Mrs. Jessie Curtis and Lawson Arend, as her guests on Sun-
day.
Miss Kay Riggs and Mrs. Joe Ryan were Easter guests of Miss Margot Andrade. Charles Hutcheson returned to his apartment from Putnam County Hospital on Saturday and is receiving visitors there. Slight Increase In Prices Seen WASHINGTON UPI — A high administration official said today that prices will probably rise “a little less” this year than had been predicted by President Johnson’s Council of Economic Advisers. Assistant Commerce Secretary Willisim H. Shaw said that the nation’s economy has been performing “only slightly below the level” anticipated earlier this year by the council. He said it would be “premature” to abandon the council’s projection of faster economic growth after mid-year. Shaw’s implication was that there was no reason either for the administration to jetison plans for a tax increase July 1 to fight inflation.
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“True, price pressures could increase a bit later this year, but on balance, the likely year-to-year change in over-all prices now looks to be a little less than the slightly more than 2.5 per cent projected in the economic report,” he said. In 1966, prices rose 2.9 per cent. The President based his request for a tax increase on the assumption that the economy would be building up steam again in the second half of 1967 and would need some insurance
against inflation.
since had filed numerous federal court appeals, several of which were turned down by the U. S. Supreme Court. The motion before Wilson was Hoffa’s fourth requesting a new trial. A pre-trial conference on the request wels set for April 21.
Says India Can Produce A-Bomb NEW DELHI UPI — India has the "nuclear capability” to produce an atomic bomb, Foreign Minister M. C. Chagla announced Monday. He told Parliament, however, India’s nuclear knowledge would be used for “peaceful purposes
only.”
The disclosure came as the
after spending one week under United States > Russia and nu - arrest in Communist China and ! clear have-not nations at being lectured by Red Guards. l Geneva sank dee P er into The trio left the British stalemate over a treaty de-
Three Return To Free World
HONG KONG UPI — Two Americans and an Australian have returned to the free world
crown colony 10 days ago sailing a yacht toward the United States but were captured by armed Chinese Communist junks on March 18. The Americans were identified as William A. Hanke, 33, and his wife, Carol, 29, of Newport Beach, Calif, and the Australian as Garry Sharp, 26, Sydney, New South Wales. Hanke is a high school history and geography teacher and his wife an English teacher, officials said. The three set out in their 30foot sloop The Adventure but the junks overtook them while in international waters about 35 miles from the mainland coast. Hanke said the Chinese searched their yacht and made them sail to Ping Hoi, a large fishing port near Hong Kong. Hanke said they were kept on their yacht for four days and were allowed ashore for three hours to exercise on the fifth day. He said no one tried to harm them and that they were given fresh water, vegetables, meat, fish, eggs and fruit to eat. An English-speaking Chinese Communist official finally boarded their six-ton yacht said told them the Chinese had “no hatred” toward Americans but were “completely against the policies of the American government.” Hanke said some Red Guards also boarded the yacht “and discussed Chinese policies with us.” He said they also brought magazines and books, including Mao Tse-tung’s thoughts. The next day they were told they could sail with the tide, Hanke said. Their yacht was slightly damaged and had to be repaired in Hong Kong, but the trio intends to sail again as soon as repairs are made, Hanke said.
signed to ban the spread of nuclear weapons. U.S. Vice President Hubert Humphrey arrived in Geneva on & seven nation swing designed to convince Western European nations, notably West Germany, they should
ban the bomb.
The United States, Russia, Britain, France and Red China now are members of the “nuclear club” and possess weap-
ons.
Scientists in Sweden announced March 16 they had developed plans for a “clean” nuclear weapon which would leave no radioactive fallout. But Sweden had no plans for building a weapon. There was no indication how far India has progressed in nuclear development and Chagla made only a bare-bones announcement.
FBI Calls OH Corpse Search JACKSON TOWNSHIP, N. J. UPI—The FBI said it would not dig for more corpses, leaving the macabre story of a rural chicken farm used as a repository for bodies of slain underworld figures shrouded in mystery. “We have finished our search, but the investigation is continuing,” the FBI said in a terse statement. Federal agents disclosed Friday they had found the skeletal remnants of two slain Cosa Nostra figures. One, identified as Angelo Sonnessa of Nutley, N. M., was found In a small tunnel which once had been used as a moonshine mash pit, a plastic bag over his head and his ankles bound with wire. The second, identified as Kenneth Later of New York City, was found beneath an abandoned chicken coop, in a rusty oil drum filled with hydrochloric acid. He had been mising since April, 1963. It was reported Sunday that the body was not that of Sonnessa, but FBI agents maintained it was. They said Sonnessa, missing since September, 1961, had died while struggling against his murderers. The FBI refused to confirm or deny reports that a third body, or parts of a body uncovered Saturday when federal agents with spades and bulldozers combed the chicken farm in central New Jersey in an effort to find more makeshift graves.
School children miss 2.2 million school-days a year because of accidents, says the National Safety Council.
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Hoffa To Have Day In Court CHATTANOOGA, Term. UPI —A federal judge Monday granted Teamsters President James R. Hoffa’s request to leave prison to appear in court for hearing of his motion for a new trial. Hoffa two weeks ago began serving an eight-year prison term at Lewisburg, Pa., for his 1963 conviction on jury tampering charges. He will remain in federal custody when freed to appear in court May 8 in Chattanoga. U. S. District Court Judge Frank Wilson, the jurist who sentenced Hoffa, granted the request of the Teamster’s attorneys who argued that the union leader should be present when evidence for the new trial motion is heard. Wilson also ordered the court appearance of three other persons convicted with Hoffa on jury tampering charges. They included Larry Campbell of Chicago, and Ewing King and Hiomas Parks, both of Nashville, Tenn. Hoffa was convicted in February 1963 on charges of attempting to bribe or otherwise influence jurors when he was on trial in Nashville earlier in a conspiracy case. The conspiracy case ended in a mistrial. Hoffa and his co-defendants
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