The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 February 1968 — Page 8

Page 8

The Dally Banner, Greeneastle, Indiana

Morton News

Jess Cavaness Is a patient In; sons attended a birthday dinner Aileen Overstreet the Veterans Hospital at 1481! Sunday in honor of Mrs. Olma Clodfelter.

10th Street, Indianapolis. ! Stultz’s brother, Ted Frazier, Mrs. Jean Huffman and ehil-l an< ^ ^ er s i s t er < J°y Thomas, at

dren, east of Bainbridge,

and Mrs.

were

Wednesday afternoon callers of Mr. and Mrs. Rex Call. Floyd Yochum and Mrs. D. P. Alexander were in Indianapolis last Friday and Mrs. Alexander visited with Mr. and Mrs. Glen Crodian. Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Harbison

; the home of Mr. and Mrs. James Frazier. Others present were Mr. and Mrs. William Woodrum, Jr. and sons. Art Thomas. Marilyn Kincaid and

Ron Frazier.

Sunday afternoon and evening visitors of Mrs. Maude O’Haver were Mr. and Mrs.

Hope to pass bill by tonight

LONDON UPI — Labor Government

demanded immediate legislative curbs to stem a panic flood of thousands of Asians. It warned

and Mrs. Clarence H umphrev L,0 > d 0 ' Haver ' of ealed on Mr. Humphrey’s cous- Mr. and Mrs. Moms Irwin. Mrs. in, Mrs. Howard Martin, last i

Sunday afternoon.

Mr. and Mrs. Clair Albin were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin I Priest of Crawf ordsville last Sunday. Chris and Troy Albin. children of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Albin, spent Saturday night; with their grandparents, Mr. i

and Mrs. Clair Albin.

Brenda Terhune celebrated her 7th birthday last Sunday at her home. Guests were her family and her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Bennett. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Barker wish to thank their neighbors and friends for the beautiful floral offerings and food at the time of the death of Mr. Bark-

er's mother.

Mr. and Mrs. Donald Albin attended party in honor of Bill Rossok last Saturday evening at the home of Mr. and

Carolyn Inman was a dinner guests in the Earley Jackson home Sunday and attended worship services and church school at Union Chapel Church. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Scobee and daughter, Janet, were Sunday callers of Mr. and Mrs. David

Clodfelter and family.

The Union Chapel MYF will have a joint meeting at Brick Chapel with the MYF there on

Sunday, March 3.

Thursday, February 29, 1968

Britain’s parliament that up to 1.1 milTuesdayj lion colored immigrants from

New Maysville

News

the Commonwealth could flood into Britain unless legal barriers are set up. Home Secretary James Callaghan told the House of Commons it would be “irresponsible” not to legislate at once.

Cascade High School News By JANET WILDMAX Carol Stephenson has been named the 1968 winner of the Betty Crocker Award, which makes her eligible for the State and National scholarship

awards.

Gallic Skinner has been named pin chairman for the Hoosier Student Library Association. She is the third Cascade student librarian to be named to the state council. Shelly Lindsey served as publicity chairman in 1964-65, and Mark Miller was treasurer in 1965-66. Brenda Fuson and Sigrid Bolinger have been selected as Oustanding Teenagers of America for 1967. Mr. I. E. Lewis attended the 52nd Annual Principal’s Convention in Atlantic City, New Jersey, for 5 days with Secretary of State Dean Rusk, addressing the first session. Mr. Whitaker had two etch-

Report from Washington by congressman John T. Myers Dear Friends:

monetary reforms will simply blems must be found at horn*, paper-over our basic problems, FOREIGN AID _ In testi-

mony before the House Foreign

Mr. and Mrs. Roland Henderson's twin daughters, Donna and Doris, and Joelane McGuire spent one afternoon last week with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John McGuire. Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Leach and

Mrs. family, of Dunkirk, were dinner

“I regret the need for this bill,” he said. “But I repudiate

emphatically that it is racialist in £ s and an engraving exhibited

in organ, conception or in the

Steve Winters. Bill recently returned to the States from South Vietnam. Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. George Stultz and son of Greeneastle and Mrs. Russell Mahan of Raccoon. Sunday afternoon guests of

guests of Mr. and Mrs. John H. McGuire. In the afternoon they all called on John D. McGuire. Mr. and Mrs. Orval Belcher and family, of Cayuga, were Sunday afternoon callers on John D. McGuire. Marion McGuire visited Dale

manner in which it is being carried out.” The government hoped to ram through a bill to curb the colored immigrant flow and make it law r by Thursday night. But it faced fierce opposition from sections both of the governing Labor Party and the Conservative opposition.

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Barker Paul, near Groveland, Saturday were Mrs. Helen Bosley, of afternoon. Indianapolis, Mrs. Don Jefferies The three daughters of Mr. and children of near Bainbridge. and Mrs. Robert Leak, Jr. Dale Barker and Mike Ander- spent Friday night with their son, students at Purdue, spent grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Rothe weekend with their parents, bert Leak, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. A1 Gray are the Walter Stevenas, of Bainparents of a daughter bom bridge, and Dale Goodman, of Saturday morning at the Put- near Carpentersville, were businam County Hospital. ness visitors In New Maysville Mr. and Mrs. Vem Sigler Saturday, called on Vem’s sister, Mrs. Mrs. Cy Young and her Earl Sutherlin of Russellville daughter and children, of IndiSunday afternoon. Mrs. Suther- anapolis, called on Mr. and lin returned to her home from Mrs. Clarence Ward Sunday. Culver Hospital Saturday. David Suits, of Plainfield, Mr. and Mrs. Dome Cooper and his mother, Marjorie Suits, and daughter, of Rockville, Mr. of Greeneastle, called on Mr. and Mrs. James Evans and and Mrs. Robert Leak Sunday, daughter, of Danville, called on Mr. and Mrs. Robert Leak Mrs. Maude O’Haver last Wed- spent Saturday evening with nesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Junior Ross at Mr. and Mrs. Joe Stultz and Plainfield.

Mystere search MARSEILLE, Franc# UPI — French military authorities today searched the Mediteranean for the pilots of two Mystere4 jets that Monday collided In flight and crashed in pieces into the sea.

Mass slayers

CINCINNATI UPI — Police in suburban Clifton today held two German Shepherd dogs for the mass killing of 24 ducks in Burnet Woods. Officers said circumstantial evidence pointed to the two dogs as the offenders after they were caught all wet and near the pond Monday.

at the Tenth Annual Contemporary American Printmaker Exhibition held at DePauw Uni-

versity.

The Cascade High School Band proudly presented its final show of the season. Since February is the month of Valentines Day, the tunes were all of love songs. The Varsity Twirlers were featured first with a routine to the song, Almost Like Being in Love, from the musical show, Briadoon. The Juniors were featured first, the Seniors next, and last the Sophomore class. The Pom-Pon girls extended a special Valentine greeting. I'm confessin' acknowledged as follows: JeanThat I Love You. A huge Valentine card was made and set on stage with all Senior band members names listed on it. The Cascade Cadets saluted the visiting team with letter formation and then saluted the Cadets with the big “C”. Before the band played its final selection, Fly Me To The Moon, the Senior Band members were acknowledge as follows: Jeannie Anderson, Terry Arnold, Ryan Barker, Tom Bell, Anita Clark, Tom Dean, Brenda Fuson, Carolyn Greenlee, Helen

The second session of the 90th Congress is well underway as we continue our efforts to find solutions to the many problems we face at home and abroad. The hopes that perhaps the new year offered more promise and less agony for America were quickly shattered in the first weeks of 1968. North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops provided the Communist answer to various peace overtures of this country with a vicious rampage of attacks across South Vietnam. North Korean forces attempted to assassinate the President of South Korea and, shortly after that attack, seized the American ship Pueblo. Here at home, fully evidenced in Indiana by the concern expressed to me at home during Lincoln Day visits, Administration policy statements tend to confuse rather than clarify, and a crisis of confidence seems to be at hand. BUDGET — The President talked of "hard choices” in his State of the Union message — then went on to outline a program which calls for more

in lieu of making the hard decisions that are necessary to restore international confidence

In the dollar.

TRAVEL TAX _ The Ways and Means Committee has before it the President's request for travel restrictions. It appears there is little chance the travel tax will be approved. Many believe as I do that the basic solution to our fiscal pro-

Affairs Committee, I urged new restrictions on U.S. trade with Russia and its satellites and any nation assisting the Communists in Vietnam. We won a preliminary victory in this area when the House voted to prohibit American dollars from financing trade with North Vietnam through the Export-Im-port Bank.

making. We have a right to demand a full accounting from the White House and I will continue to exercise that right until we get some straight answers. CRIME — The President has designated Attorney General Ramsey Clark as “Mr. Big,” the "last word on crime in this Administration.” This is the same Mr. Clark who last May said, “I don’t think we should be alarmed" about the crime rate. This is the same Mr. Clark who has claimed no grounds for prosecution of Rap Brown and Stokely Carmichael. This is the same Mr. Clark who was opposed anti-riot legislation. In the face of ever-increasing crime rates and civil disobedience. it appears we are in for more talk of a War on Crime and very little action. GOLD COVER — President

Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF

spending, more debt and more Johnson’s request that Congress

taxes — all blamed on the Vietnam war. He has called for more sacrifices from the taxpayers — through a 10 percent surcharge, a proposal I will continue to oppose. The significant figure in the

remove the Gold Cover is a tragic confession of failure. World confidence in the dollar has been shaken and the international monetary system is in serious trouble. I am convinced that removal of the Gold Co-

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Federal judge levies fines

NEW YORK UPI —Federal Judge Marvin E. Frankel levied maximum fines totaling $450,000 Wednesday against three of the nation’s leading pharmaceutical manufacturers convicted of a price-fixing conspiracy which cost antibiotics purchasers millions of dollars.

revise and reform existing pro-

grams.

PUEBLO INCIDENT

have urged a full congressional investigation of the North Korean seizure of our intelligence ship Pueblo. The request has been ignored by the Adminis-tration-influenced Investigating committees. There are many questions which must be answered before we can properly evaluate this colossal blunder, one which points up massive failures In our communications, general policy and decision

Stage demonstration

UDORN, Thailand UPI — Eight British and Canadian pacifists Wednesday staged a sit-down inside the huge Udorn Air Base to protest U.S. bomb-

Frankel permitted Chas. Pfiz- j np ra ids on North Vietnam, er and Co Inc., American American fighter-bombers Cyanimid Co. and Bristol-Myers launch strikes against the ComCo. to delay payment of fines of mU nists from the base. $150,000 each pending an ap- The band, carrying a banner peal. The companies were w hich read “non-violent Action found guilty last December of against U.S. Bombing in Vietviolating federal antitrust laws n am” tied up ground traffic in through conspiring to restrain a nd around the installation for trade and to monopolize the 50 minutes before being hauled

manufacture and distribution of

“wonder drugs.”

Still pending are civil antitrust actions against the three firms and Olin Mathieson Chemical Corp. and the Upjohn Co., brought by states including Florida, Texas, Minnesota and West Virginia. The states seek triple damages for excessively high prices paid for antibiotics used In state institutions.

off bodily by Thai security guards. Two other pacifists who were distributing anti-war leaflets at a gate also were arrested and taken to a downtown

police station.

The Udorn base. 400 miles north of Bangkok is shared by the U.S. and Thailand. It also has a commercial terminal and in theory is open to the public. The eight protesters got

~ ~ ~ T "" , .7 V - ,”", ' through the main gate but did Illinois has filed a suit on behalf 6 ® ^

not even get close to the mili-

of all 50 states for recovery of

overpayments.

tary facilities which Is guarded by American sentries.

budget for the next fiscal year ver without making fiscal and

is the President’s proposal for new spending authority totaling $210.7 billion. It is the first time in the nation’s history that a proposal for new spending authority in any one year has exceeded the $200 billion mark. There is little in the way of priority the President talked §0 much about. Practically every category of spending is up. Altogether it Is $15.2 billion higher than for the current period. Only $6.5 billion of this attributed to national defense and Vietnam. That leaves $8.7 billion the President has asked to spend in areas outside Vietnam. We were successful In cutting $5.8 billion from the President’s new appropriation requests last

OAM LEVENSON tells of a cocky Texan visiting Israel vT who told his guide, Mr. Katz. “We could fit the whol« of your dinky little country into one small corner of Texas.** Katz agreed and added cheerfully, “It would do wonders for the place.” • • • When John McGraw managed the tough Giant baseball squad of yesteryear. there was one screwball pitcher named Bugs Raymond who often succeeded in outsmarting him. McGraw finally ruled that Raymond's salary would go -straight to his wife, thus preventing him from making a round of saloons the night before he was scheduled to pitch. Raymond’s response was to volunteer playing the outfield during the Giants batting practice, pointing out that this would work off some at his excess weight above the waistline. McGraw was astonished and gratified. What he didn’t know was that the wily Raymond would pocket about a half dozen of the flies sent his way each afternoon. The game over, he'd wend his way happily to the nearest saloon and swap the bartender big league baseballs for shots of straight Scotch. v • • • QUOTABLE: Father just back from a two-week family vacation: “Have yo« ever spent a fortnight in a baggage-filled station wagon with the five people you thought you loved best?” High school girl to classmate: "I wrote to eleven colleges and this one had the best rating: 1,522 boys and 177 girls.” C 1968. by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by King Features Syndicate.

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