The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 16 June 1967 — Page 7
T ' "-•rT'
Friday, Juna 16 f IVd/
ih« Daily Baniiat/ GiaancaatU, Indiana
l ija 7
Some students attend college (or higher learning, others go to be a prankster
INDIANAPOLIS UPI — A pretty coed innocently rings the doorbell at the university president’s home with a six-pack of beer tucked under her arm. ▲ freshman stands on a ninthstory ledge of a campus building, but he is not contemplating suicide, he’s winning a bet. Another student opens the door to his dormitory room and can’t go inside. The room is filled to the ceiling with old newspapers. So goes life on the college campus. Most students went to Indiana’s institutions of higher 1+»ming this past year to ad-
vance their education. Some turned prankster, a feat accomplished many times in the past and undoubtedly something that will endure as long as there’s somebody around who will fall for a joke. The incident with the coed toting a six-pack of brew to the president’s door has to rate as the champion prank erf the year. It happened last semester on one of the state’s campuses. It seems a U. S. senator from another state was on campus for a speech and spent the night at the home of the school president. A convincing male student
wForeign News Commentary VSewns
KUALA. DUFFER UPI — Malaysia and the United States see eye-to-eye on practically everything from containment of Communist China to prosecution of the Vietnam war. But their romance is on the rocks over rubber. Malaysians feel, rightly or wrongly, that the United States Is hitting them where it hurts the most—in the pocket. According to some Malaysian estimates, U.S. policy hurt them in the amount of 92 million Malaysian dollars (U.S. $30.7 million) over the past year. Natural rubber is the life blood of Malaysia, accounting for 40 per cent of the nation’s income. With annual production running over one million tons, a drop of just one Malaysian cent (one-third of a U.S. cent) per pound costs the young southeast Asian federation about $0.4 million a year. The unpalatable fact for Malaysians is that the average price of first grade rubber has
The first polo game to the United States was played indoors at a riding academy in New York city in 1876.
The King Ranch in Texas covers about 823,400 acres, ■bout the size of Rhode Island.
WTATM Of INDIANA
m:
COUNTY OF PUTNAM
IN THE PUTNAM cnicurr court
APRIL TERM. 1M1
IN THE MATTER
OP ESTATE or AUBERT LEWIS MEREDITH. DECEASED. Eit»t» No. 8M» NOTICE TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OP AUBERT LEWIS MEREDITH In a* matter of the Estate of Aubert Lewie Meredith, deceaeed. No.
Notice la hereby slven that Plossle Allen Meredith as Executrix of the above named estate, has presented and filed her final account In final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for the examination and notion of said Circuit Court, on the 13th of July. 1967. at which time aU persons Interested In said estata are required to appear In said court and ahow causa. If any there be, why eald account should not be approved. And the heirs of said decedent and ail others Interested are also required to appear and make proof of their heirship er claim to any part of said
estate.
mwoie E. Masten,
Clerk of the Put-
nam Circuit Court.
rntnk'o. Stoessel June lS-33-3t
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Bi the Putnam Circuit Court. Estate No. 67-45. _ Notice le hereby «lven that PlrstClUiens Bank 6 Trust Company was on the 13th day of June. 1967. appointed Executor of the will of Grace Arnold, deceaeed. AU persons having claim against •aid estate, whether or not now due, must file the same In said court within six months from the date of the first pubUeation of this notice or eald claims will be forever barred. Dated at Oreencastle. Indiana, this 13th day of June. 1967. Ennis E. Masten, Clerk Of tho Putnam Circuit Court. Attorney* Lyon A Boyd June 16-33-30-3t
fallen more than 12.5 Malaysian cents per pound over the past year. And rubber dealers are not predicting a comeback for years. Unless there is a sharp rise in the natural rubber price, the same exports will earn $60 million less in 1967 than they would have at the price in early 1966.
How does the United States fit into the picture? According to Malaysian Finance Minister Tan Slew Sin, the major reason has been American stockpile releases. Even though it is not a producing country, America’s stockpile releases amount to roughly five per cent of the natural rubber available on the world market. And while this is a small proportion, rubber producers point out that the U.S. stockpile sale of 157,000 tons In 1966 changed a natural shortage of 70,000 tons Into an unnatural surplus of 87,500 tons on the world market. Tan says he asked the United States to cut her stockpile releases by half but “t h e Americans have so far refused tq make even this small gesture.” He rejects U.S. reasons for disposing of stockpile rubber: “The reason given — that they require the ready cash represented by rubber stockpile sales for the purpose of the war in Vietnam — does not stand up to close examination. This amount of rubber would bring in 30 million U.S. dollars . . . which would pay for about half a day’s fighting in Vietnam.”
COMMISSIONERS’ CLAIMS
The Putnem County Board of Commlssionera will meet tat resular session June 19. 1967 at 9:00 a. m. legal time at the Courthouse. GreencaeUe, Indiana
to consider the following claims:
COUNTY HIGHWAY:
Rosemary Davis, Clerk 6163.00 Elsie Fenwick, same 143.10 Joseph H. Ash 144.00 James C. Boiler 139.30 Robert Boiler 154.86 Dean Branham 158.55 Kenneth Broadstreet 144.00 Thomas W. Brothers 140.00 Robert P. Burton 146.00 Woodson Buttery 136.00 Olyn Campbell 144.00 Frank Coble 146.00 Jackie Lee Eyler 144.00 William Griffin 144.00 Lester Hspney 59.30 Paul Hassler 116.55 Steven Lasley 97.30 James M. Love 148.00 Jesse McGuire 144.00 Don Manaus 134.30 Julian Petty* 131.00 Woodrow Poynter 139.60 Jchn Reynolds 82.80 George Talbott 144.90 Thompson Allen 139.00 Noble Austin 149.05 William F. Ball 136.00 Everett Cornett 136.00 Elmer Cox 130.00 Harold Goodman 136.00 Buryi Guy 137.70 Vends Larkin 136.00 Harry Miller 106.80 Robert D. Newcent 136.00 Douglas Ward 134.10 Roy Weller 136.00 Dale K. Williams 30.60 Clarence Lee 89.40 Joe Spencer 300.00
Eston C. Cooper. Auditor
NATIONAL WEATHER OUTLOOK
INDIANA WEATHER: Partly sunny, continued hot and humid today. Slight chance of showers or thundershowers tonight and continued warm. Variable cloudiness, continued hot and humid Saturday with chance of showers and thunderstorms. High today 90 to 95. Low tonight 68 to 73. High Saturday upper 80s to lower 90s. Precipitation probability: 20 per cent today, 30 tonight and 40 Saturday.
Minimum ...»
6 A.M. 7 A.M. 8 A.M. 9 AM. 10 A.M. 11 A.M.
•*****•**•**••*«
•••*•••«
****••*•••*•*••••
12 Noon
1 PM.
72* 72* 76* 80* 83* 87* 90* 92* 93*
telephoned the pretty victim from the senator’s home state and told her he’d like her to stop by the president’s house sp he could get her impressions of life on campus. “Oh, by the way,’* the imposter said, “would you be so kind as to pick up some beer on your way over? I’ll pay you when you get here.” The prankster and a few buddies watched from behind shrubbery as the red-faced coed left the president’s home, the six-pack still tucked under her arm. A freshman boy at Indiana State stepped out onto the ninth-story ledge of a school building while other students watched breathlessly. It wasn’t his intention to end it all. He simply was winning a bet that he couldn’t stand out there five minutes. Our daring young freshman made it and won his bet. He came back inside $1 richer. Showalter Fountain in the heart of the Indiana University campus at Bloomington has been the scene of many a prank. It’s been the frequent site of midnight swimming sessions by students “out on the town.” About three months ago, somebody poured several boxes of detergent into the fountain. The resulting suds foamed over the top and covered the pavement to the Fine Arts Building, the Lilly Library, Auditorium and halfway to the Government Building. A Hanover College student returned to his room to find it empty, down to the pictures on the wall. Later, he found the contents in a nearby field, neatly arranged in the order which they set in his room. The pictures on the wall were “up in correct positions on posts. Girls in a Purdue dormitory helped one of their own celebrate her 21st birthday by winding string spider-web style throughout her home. The idea was that when she entered, she’d run into the string and pull down everything that wasn’t fastened. To make sure she hurried into the room, the pranksters watched for her to return, with the plan to telephone her room as she reached the door. Unfortunately, she was detained by school work elsewhere until late at night and the pranksters had long since given up the Joke when she returned . When she arrived, she spotted the web of string and didn’t knock over anything. In a dormitory, pranksters one night herded dogs into elevators and proceeded to deposit one on each floor.
Students sleeping with their doors open slightly for ventilation were awakened by warm tongues on their faces. Perhaps next semester some dormitory toilet seats at Indiana State will be painted a different color. Right now they're black and considered fair game by pranksters who frequently swab them with black shoe polish. Services held for Cardinal Ritter ST. LOUIS UPI—With the princes of his church in attendance, funeral services were held Thursday for Joseph Cardinal Ritter, Roman Catholic archbishop of St. Louis. Four cardinals, four cardin-als-elect, and more than 100 bishops led the mourners in St. Louis Cathedral for the prelate who died Saturday at the age of 74. The four cardinals—Francis Spellman of New York, James Francis McIntyre of Los Angeles, Richard Cushing of Boston and Lawrence Sheehan of Baltimore—sat on specially constructed thrones. The mass was celebrated by Archbishop John P. Cody of Chicago, a cardinalelect and close friend of the dead cardinal The Most Rev. Charles H. Helmsing, bishop of the Kansas City-St Joseph Dioecese, praised Cardinal Ritter’s leadership in the Vatican Council. When the late Pope John called the First Vatican Council in 1959, Bishop Helmsing said, “no one rejoiced more than Cardinal Ritter, for he hoped that with deeper scrutiny of faith some of the one-sided emphasis and resultant piety in the church might be corrected.” Cardinal Ritter “understood, as Pope John did so well, the deposit of faith is one thing, its expression another,” the bishop said. Bishop Helmsing said that while Cardinal Ritter "longed for a clear understanding and expression, he always deplored any subjectivism in faith or onesider emphasis.” “His concern for a liturgy of the word that would truly inform and enlighten the people of God was reflected in his early speeches in the council.’* The cathedral was filled to capacity, mostly with nuns and priests. Some persons stood along the aisles and in the rear of the cathedral.
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS 1. Fish 6. Masculine 9. Gaze 10. Unrolls 12. People 18. Polka, for
one
14. Islet Ina river 15. Harbinger
6. Armadillo 24. Largest 7. GiH’s name of 8. To shut in the 9. Thick Ryukyu Slice Talavi^ff tL Marsh 25. Biblical plants city 15. The Nether- 26. Part of
land*
17. Girl’s
name
auua^ auajj snaaa aaaaa Lisiia aajaaa aajiiaHaa ju ausuuiiaaaji] □aaa au aai
aa aaaa
□a aaaaaaaa aatfaaa ciaaa aasaa aasau a’juj* aaaaa
16. Seaport on 18. Children’s
game
2L AngloSaxon aerf
22. Like
23. Babe Ruth 33. Bore specialty 35. Vista
“to be” 80. Cap-
sizes
SLSite Y—lw4q*a of a 36. Little Nov. 1948 laiMvi conference 39. Edible 32. Performer tuber
40. Dad’s MO>
psnkn
the Avon
River
19. King of Bashan 20. Indian mulberry 21. Comfort 23. Ancient timepieces 27. Gumbo 28. Scotch
alder
29. Music note SO. Patella 34. Begrudged 37. First-rate 38. Lift 39. Leaves out 4L Distend 42. French
artist
43. Fills with
solemn wonder
44. Cupid
DOWN L Step
2. Caribbean
country 8. Skill 4. Pasha
6. Twiggy,
for one
(fe'lb DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE — Here's how to work It: AXYDItBAAXR Is LONGFELLOW One letter simply stands for another, ha this sample A Is used for the three L’s, X for the two 0’s, etc. Single letters, epostrophies, the length and formation of the words are aU Each day the code lettem are different.
1
2
4
S™
b
7“
5“
io”
it
nr -
I
15
n
»
E
1
1
20
%
21
22
2*
!L
2h
E
2S
1
50
*
-at
54
vT
59
4t"
43"
44
TJTHN VFT YK1CY MEPTYK HT* ITLJTYK; MFR XT YKXY BTTPTYX GLFRTYK. —FTB YTBYMSTFY Yesterday's Cryptoqoote: TALENT IS DEVELOPED fif RETIREMENT: CHARACTER IS FORMED IN THE MIRH Off THE WORLD —GOETHE
Blondie
By Chic Young
Johnny Hazard
By Frank Robbins
Beetle Bailey
By Mort Walker
Archie
By Bob Montana
Buz Sawyer
By Roy Crane |
Walt Disney's SCAMP ®
BARNEY GOOGLE and SNUFFY SMITH ® By Fred Lasswell |
