The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 14 September 1967 — Page 4
Pag* 4
The Daily Bann*r, Gr**ncastl*, Indiana
Thursday, September 14, 1967
BELLE UNION COMMUNITY NEWS By Alma Hurst
The good old summer Is drawing to a close when the school buses begin to travel and the leaves begin to fall We think of Autumn as the most beautiful season of all. Mr. and Mrs. Austin Wheeler and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence McCammack attended the funeral services of Reverend Snyder in Indianapolis last Saturday. He was the father of Rev. Howard Snyder, former pastor of the Union Valley Church. Those from here who attended last rites for Mrs. Daisy Mulin in Gosport Thursday afternoon were: Mrs. Gilbert Prichard, Mrs. Lola Voughn, Mrs. R. P. Allee, Mrs. Garnet Patrick, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Ratts, Alma Hurst and Mrs. Leonard Quinlan of Cloverdale. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Meek spent Sunday in Indianapolis. Mrs. Dennis Goodpaster is a patient in the Robert W. Long
TINCHER COAL CO. NOW TAKING ORDERS FOR COAL Indiana and Eastern LUMP AND STOKER D. W. Tincher Rural Rout* 4 OrMficastU, Indiana OL 3-9522
Hospital In Indianapolis. We wish her a speedy recovery. Mr. and Mrs. Paul T. Buis were in Rockville Saturday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Quinlan of Cloverdale spent Friday with Alma Hurst. The Annual Homecoming of the Walnut Chapel Church was held Sunday. A large crowd was present and the day was enjoyed by alL Mr. and Mrs. Robert Murphy entertained with a birthday dinner at their home Saturday evening. Mrs. Murphy was the Honored guest. Those present were Mrs. Murphy’s immediate family. Sherman Hacker and family have moved to their new home which they purchased from Archie O’Neal. The O’Neals have moved to their new home also. Rev. and Mrs. Gilbert E. McCammack visited Eldon McCammack and family of Muncie one day last week. Mrs. Evelyn Cline and Mrs. Morris Williamson visited Mrs. Dennis Goodpaster at the Robert W. Long Hospital in Indianapolis Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Zella Cummings was a Sunday dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Hammond of Greencastle.
"A DRIVE-IN HEMEL HEMPSTEAD, England UPI—The Duke of Bedford, who recently turned on by opening his stately home to hippies for a weekend love-in, was turned off by police Wednesday who accused him of dangerous driving. They said the Duke was passing cars on the righthand lane while driving his Rolls Royce on a freeway.
FILLMORE Volunteer Firemen s 8th Annual Chicken Barbeque September 15 and 16
County Fair at the White House WASHINGTON UPI — The first White House county fair in its 167 years was a pronounced success Tuesday, with Lynda Bird Johnson and her fiance stealing a kiss on the ferris wheel and the First Lady going for a nostalgic spin with Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey in a 1915 Ford. President Johnson played the Pied Piper to dozens of youngsters, the children of congressmen, cabinet members and I agency heads, as he strolled about the grounds shaking hands. Hundreds of other youngsters meantime were having a ball riding ponies, dancing the frug and eating popcorn, purple cotton candy, taffy apples, and frozen custard. The south lawn was transformed into an amusement park for the occasion and barkers were selling rides on the merry-go-round, magicians were performing tricks, and fortune tellers were predicting the future from cloudy crystal balls. The President and Mrs. Johnson introduced Uki, their white mongrel, and daughter Lynda showed off her fiancee. Marine Capt. Charles “Chuck” Robb.
on the
UL arm ront
Two men face prison terms INDIANAPOLIS UPI —Sentencing was scheduled later today for John M. Gregg, 24, Phoenix, Ariz., and Robert J. Satterfield, 25 Taft, Calif., who were found guilty Wednesday in federal court here on bank robbery charges. The two were convicted in a $12,258 holdup last year of an Indianapolis branch bank. The verdict in the court of Judge S. Hugh Dillon came after the defense completed its case Tuesday. One of the defense witnesses was A. M. Gregg, Phoenix, wealthy father of one of the defendants. The elder Gregg had testified his son had been given $10,000 two months before the robbery as money “to go to school.” Gregg and Satterfield were arrested in a motel several hours after the robbery. Police had said most of the loot was recovered. Gregg contended he was with Satterfield after the holdup bud did not participate in it.
(By BERNARD BRENNER) WASHINGTON UPI — The farm production outlook in Europe and the Soviet Union is generally good this year with grain production in Western Europe heading for what may be an all-time high. This summary came from Agriculture Department experts here today in a report which said there is a “strong possibility” that the Western Europe grain crop — if the weather remains good—could exceed the 1965 record of nearly 106 million tons. Preliminary grain production estimates for the Soviet Union indicate that unfavorable weather in some areas will hold production 12 to 18 per cent below last year’s all-time record. But the Agriculture Department said a crop of the size now in sight should cover domestic Soviet needs and provide some additional supplies for exports and rebuilding
stocks. If the Soviet crop comes up to current predictions, Russian officials probably will not have to boost grain imports beyond the level already programmed under a three-year, three million - ton agreement with Canada, the department predicted. In Eastern Europe, the department said, prospects are good for wheat and other small grains, and production of | wheat is expected to top last I year’s bumper crop. Production of barley, oats, and mixed ! grains may match last year’s harvest. The report said Poland Czechoslovakia and East Germany will need to continue grain imports, but other East European Communist states will have enough to meet their needs and-in some cases—possibly enough for some exports.
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1968 CHARGER, an aerodynamic family-size sports car, will go on display in Dodge dealerships on September 14th. Itallye type suspension is matched with a variety of five V-8 engines to protide a fine balance of handling, performance and comfort. Aircraft-type instruments are featured.
Senate approves R es f ra j n j n g order lifted campaign bill against highway dept.
HOME AFTER FUNERAL TAIPEI UPI — Madame Chiang Kai-shek returned from the United States Wednesday after attending the funeral of her brother-in-law H. H. Kung in New York.
Klon planning Hoosier rally FRANKLIN UPI —The Ku Klux Klan will hold a statewide rally, complete with cross burning ceremonies, sometime before Nov. 1 in Indiana, state grand dragon William Chaney said Wednesday. Chaney said the KKK hopes to have its rally, originally scheduled for August, in Johnson County, but the site will depend on the result of legal proceedings currently under way in Johnson Superior Court here. The Klan chief said Robert Shelton, Imperial Wizard, has agreed to return here for fulfillment of his previously scheduled engagement in August. The Klan’s original rally in Johnson County was called off after Superior Court Judge Jack Rogers issued a restraining order prohibiting such a gathering. The KKK filed a plea in abatement, questioning the jurisdiction of Rogers, and a hearing will be held after Presecutor Joe Van Valer files a reply to the plea. If the order Is lifted, Chaney said, the rally would probably be held in Johnson County. Otherwise, it would be held elsewhere. Chaney also said charters have been granted for new KKK units in Johnson and Grant Counties. He said the units are operating from postoffice boxes at Whiteland and Marion.
H. Rap Brown in more trouble ALEXANDRIA, Va. UPI — Black power militant H. Rap Brown was rearrested Wednesday and held for extradition to Maryland where he faces charges of inciting Cambridge Negroes to riot and arson. Brown’s lawyers immediately sought to get him freed on bond while they continued to fight the efforts to return him to Cambridge. Brown was arrested here July 26 as a fugitive from the Maryland charges, which grew out of a night of racial disturbances in Cambridge, Maryland. Alexandria authorities opposed any bond for Brown. The arrest today was based on a warrant drawn up in accordance with Virginia Gov. Mills E. Godwin’s approval last week of extradition of Brown to Maryland. The chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee had been free on $10,000 bond since his arrest here.
“THE SANITY LOOK” LONDON UPI — The Liss Brothers of New York Wednesday opened the first American fashion house in London by declaring war on the miniskirt. “It’s time to have the sanity look again,” said Brooklyn-born Beth Liss. “There just isn’t any room for hemlines ending at the thigh.”
TENEMENT COLLAPSED HONG KONG UPI—A young boy was killed and two persons seriously injured Wednesday when the front of an antiquated tenement collapsed during a heavy rainstorm.
WASHINGTON UPI — The Senate has voted to make the sky the limit on campaign spending for federal office, but who gives and who gets the money would have to be public
record.
The bill, approved 87 to 0 Wednesday, would do away with the present widely ignored ceilings on campaign spending,; but require full disclosure of political financing at the feder-!
al level.
Before adopting the reform bill, the Senate narrowly defeated an amendment which would have forced members of Congress and political candidates to disclose their financial assets and liabilities. That proposal, sponsored by Sen. Joseph S. Clark, D-Pa., was rejected 46 to 42, the closest the public disclosure move has ever come to Senate ap-
proval.
The campaign reform bill as passed and sent to the House conformed closely to recommendations made by President Johnson. It would: Require every committee that spends at least $1,000 in a year on behalf of any candidate or political party to report where it got the money and what it did with it. Require the listing of the names of every contributor who donated as much as $100 over the year, and the names of anyone who received more than $100 from the political organi-
zation.
For the first time, compaign financing of primaries and nominating conventions would be federally regulated under the
biU.
A presidential hopeful, for example, would have to reveal who is backing him financially before the party’s national convention, how much money he is getting and how much he Is spending.
INDIANAPOLIS UPI —Indiana highway officials breathed a little easier today with the lifting of a Porter Circuit Court restraining order against work underway on the Tri-State Expressway. Chief highway engineer Fred L. Ashbaucher said the work presumably blocked by the temporary order obtained Aug. 14 by the town of Portage was on a bridge outside Portage and that construction had continued despite the court order, which technically might have put the highway officials in danger of going to jail. “Their lawyer wrote our lawyer and said we should stop work but it would cost us money to stop because we would have had to indentify the contractor,” Ashbaucher said. “The order wasn’t against me nor against the contractor, it was against the chairman and the director. We never stopped. We just kept on working.” Ashbaucher said the real argument between Portage and the State Highway Department is not over the bridge being built now but over the town’s
objections to highway plans to close Samuelson Rd. in Portage. He estimated construct ion which would close the road will not be reached until next year. “If Portage wants to pay to keep Samuelson Rd. open, it can, but we did a survey and there is not enough traffic for the state to pay for the extra work,” he said. Porter Circuit Judge Alfred J. Pivarnik, had granted the restraining order, dissolved it Monday after hearing arguments on both sides. However, he retained jurisdiction so the question of whether the TriState turns Samuelson into a dead-end road still is open.
WEST CENTRAL INDIANA ANGUS ASSOCIATION 4-H Club Calf Sale Friday, Sept. 15, 1967 7:30 P.M. Daylight Saving Tim* AT 4-H FAIRGROUNDS CRAWFORDSVILLE, INDIANA 15 Heifers 55 Steers Sal* Manager, Dan Uh*y Dana, Indiana
Garden Tractor Pull Fillmore Firemen's Chicken Barbeque
5:00 P.M. SATURDAY, SEPT. 16
GOULD'S FOOD MARKET 704 South Jackson Street
Holland Dairy Specials Gallon Carton MILK
CHOCOLATE or BUTTERMILK ^ Quarts ^ J*
ICE CREAM
"’WIENERS 59‘ Eckrich Specials SMOKED SAUSAGE POUSH SAUSAGE u,. 69‘ BULDGNA u. 59‘
FOLGER’S Coffee 1 Lb. Can
5
SUGAR ib 59
79
GOLD MEDAL FLOUR 5 ^ 59‘ SEALTEST ICE CREAM h Gallon 79 C
Always FRESH FIRST QUALITY CUT MEAT FRESH DRESSED FRYERS ib. 39<
PLATTER BACON LB. 59c
TENDER LEAN RIB STEAKS Lb. 89c
Gallon
CHIP DIP or SOUR CREAM 29c each
GROUND BEEF Fresh Ground 2 Pounds $1.19
NABISCO CRACKERS 1 Lb. Box 29c
CAMPBELL'S TOMATO SOUP 3 Cans 29c
STOKELY'S TOMATO JUICE 2 46 Oz. Cans 69c
CHUCK ROAST Lb. 55c
CRISCO ^ Lb. Can ^
Pillsbury Cake Mix Choc. - White 2 Box * $ 69 c
GRADE A LARGE EGGS 49c Doz.
REX DOG FOOD 3 Cans 29c
MILNOT 3 Cans 29c
LEMONS 49c Doz.
CELLO CARROTS 2 Pkgs. 29c
BANANAS 10c Lb.
20 LBS. POTATOES 79c
YOUNG BEEF LIVER Lb. 59c LEAN SLICED PORK STEAK LB. 59c
TENDER ROUND STEAK ib. 98c
