The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 15 September 1967 — Page 7

4

Friday, Saptambar IS, 1967

Tha Dally Bannar, Oraaneaatla, Indiana

Paga 7

NATIONAL WEATHER OUTLOOK

INDIANA WEATHER: Clear to partly cloudy through tonight with little temperature change. Variable cloudiness with chance of showers Saturday. High today mid 80s. Low tonight 58 to 66. High Saturday lower 80s. Precipitation probability 10 per cent today, 20 tonight, 30 Saturday. Outlook for Sunday: Showers ending and turning cooler.

Minimum 54 * 6 A.M 5 4 ° 7 A.M 550

8 A.M. 9 A.M. 10 A.M. 11 A.M. 12 Noon 1 P.M.

58° 67° 74° 77° 80° SO"

Ford, union begin full-scale negotiations

By DAVID W. CHUTE DETROIT UPI — The Ford Motor Co. and the United Auto Workers today begin the first full-scale negotiations since the giant auto maker was closed by a nationwide UAW strike Sept. 6. Both Ford and the union seemed resigned to a long and costly walkout and today’s bargaining was not covering the main issue, money. Bargainers concerned themselves today with procedural problems and work standards. The union has demanded a

MAPLECROFT mho mum

10 Minute Drive Wert •f Plainfield on U. S. 40

Fri., Sat., Sun., Sopt. 15, 16, 17

Robert Bedford and Jane Fonda "BAREFOOT IN THE PARK" AND Craig Stevent "GUNN"

MEADOWBROOK DRIVE-IN THEATRE Jet. 36 & 43

FRI., SAT., SUN.

Peter Fonda, Susan Strasberg 'THE TRIP" (COLOR) Glenn Ford, Stella Stevens "RAGE" (COLOR)

GREENCASTLE Drive-In Theatre Jet. 40 & 43

FRI., SAT., SUN. S«pt. 15-16-17

WINNER OF 5 ACADEMY AWARDS!

Elisabeth Taylor—Richard Burton "WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF?"

PLUS James Franciscus Suianne Pleshette "YOUNGBLOOD HAWKE"

Coming Next Week "MUD HONEY" PLUS "NUDE ON THE MOON"

FRI., SAT., SUN.

OTTO PREMINGER

MICHAEL CAINE JANE FONDA JOHN PHILLIP LAW DIAHANN CARROLL ROBERT HOOKS FAYE DUNAWAY BURGESS MEREDITH

_ MURRY SUNDOMW

amr-iBanuR'-AMnMurfaasE KHl ; eatura at 7 A 9:30 p.m.

“substantial” pay increase based on profit sharing and a guaranteed income plan was still on the table. Ford rejected the union proposal. The UAW’s 160,000 members walked picket lines in 25 states. They have lost more than $41 million in wages since the walkout began. Today was the final payday for Ford workers and this week’s check, the last for possibly many days, was an abbreviated one covering only the first days of last week before the strike started. The damage to the nation’s economy continued to mount with hundreds of workers in connected industries idled by the strike. The other major auto producers, General Motors Corp., Chysler Corp. and American Motors Corp., continued turning out cars uninterrupted. AMC’s contract expires in mid-October. Chrysler and GM workers are working* without a contract. The strike Is costing the UAW more than $4 million a week to wage, most of the money going to benefits to the strikers. Before the walkout began the union had piled up a $67 million strike fund. The union has called a special convention for Oct. 8 to levy a dues assessment on the UAW members still at work. It was expected those workers would be asked to contribute $1 per day to beef up the strike fund.

Awarded contract

LOS ANGELES UPI—Planning Research Corp. announced Wednesday that it has received a $190,000 contract for a study of the cost of operating two U.S. Army divisions in South Vietnam. The Army contract calls for a one-year study of both direct and indirect costs of operating the 1st Cavalry Airmobile and 4 th Infantry divisions. The study is expected to give the defense department an improved ability to budget and estimate changes in costs resulting from varying combat activity levels, a Planning Research Corp. official said.

Attention

PARAGON SPEEDWAY

has changed from Saturday Night racing to Sunday Afternoon racing Super modified spring and jalopy racing. Sun., September 17 This Will Be The Last Race Of The Season. Qualifications

12:30 p.m. Race 2 p.m.

Paragon Speedway Paragon, Indiana

Peace corpsman dies in crash

WASHINGTON UPI—A 23-year-old Peace Corps volunteer from Chillicothe, HI., has died of injuries from an automobile accident in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, corps headquarters reported. The victim was identified as Mrs. Susan Traub, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Everett Rose of Chillicothe. A corps spokesman said Mrs. Traub and her husband Charles, of Louisville, Ky., were struck by an out-of-control police van outside the Hotel D’Afrique In Addis Ababa Tuesday night. Traub was reported hospitalized in fair condition. The accident happened several hours after the couple arrived to take up their duties as English teachers. Mrs. Traub was a graduate of the University of Illinois.

Half shot

EDINBURG, Tex. UPI—Police said Wednesday they found an unidentified man who really enjoyed a good party. The man refused to leave a party at a local tavern even though he had been shot through the leg. “I’ll take care of it when I get home,” he said.

Bogus payroll checks cashed

SPRINGFIELD, 111. UPI — Success may spoil a “paper hanger” who has taken nearly $2,500 from Central Illinois supermarkets by passing at least 25 phony state payroll checks. The bogus check casher has devised an apparently fool-proof modus operand! and by sticking to it has given authorities the chance to end it all by forewarning merchants. Investigators for State Auditor Michael J. Hewlett said in each case the rubber check was passed on a weekend at a busy supermarket, was made out to “James L. Stultz” for $97.83 or $97.53, was signed by “Arthur Banks” or “Raymond Berry." The checks have been cashed at supermarkets, generally by young clerks, In Danville, Urbana, Champaign, Kankakee, Joliet, Bloomington, Decatur and Charleston, Investigators said.

Spy sentenced

PARIS UPI—A state security court Wednesday sentenced a Czech-born member of the Paris police to seven years in prison for spying for Czechoslovakia. The former policeman was identified as Edouard MoI linier, 33.

DAILY CROSSWORD

ACROSS 1. Trite 6. Work hard 11. Hippodrome 12. Shade of green 13. Perclude 14. Quoted 15. Large worm 16. Sculptors’ tools 18. Synthetic ruby 19. Skin opening 22. Elevated train 23. Girdle 26. Ledge 28. River in Alaska 30. “ of Satan” 31. Behold! 33. Unit* 34. Member ota. native race of India 36. Suitor 39. Presidential nickname 42. Cede 43. Subside 45. Gamut 46. Page 47. Bearded, as rye 48. Pounds down

4. Mother of Irish gods 5. Slow: music 6. Within a given area 7. Living 8. Morsel 9. Across 10. Marx men 17. Regret 18. Logarithm unit 19. Greek letter 20. German physicist 21. Ribbed fabric

23. Island group

off

Honshu 24. Japan-

ese

festival 25. Writing fluid 27. Coquet-

ted

29. Eskimo

knife

Single unit

Door joint

35. Current

of ahr

36. Location of Taj Mahal

iisiqss HHHoa (isaas asHna

32 34

Yesterday's Answer

37. Etch

38. American

educator

39. Unruffled 40. Sloping 41.13 Popes 44. Feathered

scarf

DOWN 1. Ordered 2. War god 3. Bills

l

2

3

4

s

6

7 i

e

9

10

TT“

12

13" ~

14

1

lb”

%

18

19

20

21

23

24

IS

2fe"

27

w

29

30*

iT

1 3S-

JT E

1

!

34

3b

37

38

39

40

41

42“

44

aT

aT

47”

48

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE — Here’s how to work II: AXTDLBAAXB is LONGFELLOW One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is used for the three L’s, X for the two O’s, etc. Single letters, apo*trophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different.

A Cryptogram Quotation YM IUX TO XZC LRUAH CZ LYOW QYO TYMR, FQRLR YO QYO AYJXYCH?—UXALR IU T L U G S Yesterday’s Cryptoquote: DICTATORSHIP IS A GREAT ADVENTURE . . . WHICH CRUMBLES IN MISERY AND BLOOD.—CHARLES DE GAULLE iO 1967, Xing Features Syndicate, Inc.)

Two tips to cut oil bills

1. Don’t block heat outlets. Keep both heat and cold air return ducts free.

2. Use a heating oil that helps keep your burner clean. In a clean, well-adjusted burner, Shell Heating Oil can reduce fuel consumption significantly.

ELLIS OIL CO.

Fhene Ol 3-5115 - Res. Ol 3-90S4 Wayne Neitan — OL 3-9523

FILLMORE Volunteer Firemens 8th Annual

Chicken Barbeque September 15 and 16

Blondie

By Chic Young

^AND ONLY YESTERDAY SHE BAWLED ME OUT, FOR READING ^ _ the papes at Jam. RRFAkfFAFT 5. Or t)

Johnny Hazard

By Frank Robbins

Re-assuming- his pisguise as the ag-epmr.

belos.

AW NEIGHBORS,MUST THINK! A\E A REC LUSE, AM L BROOK/ WE MUST CORREC T THAU IMPRESSION B> GIVING A PARTVy KINPLY PRETORP A LIST..

A MOST > WELCOME EVENT IN THIS INGROWN COMMUNITY IF I /WAV SAY SO, SIR!

jU Ti*

Beetle Bailey

By Mart Walker

Buz Sawyer

®

By Roy Crane

^HERE'S A RIFLE/CHRISTY.Y BUT I COME ALONG, WE NEED ) I...I 1 SOME FRESH MEAT FDR /CAN'T N^JHE TABLE. Si HANDLE

Walt Disney's SCAMP

»

BARNEY GOOGLE and SNUFFY SMITH

®

By Fred Lasswell