The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 8 March 1968 — Page 2

Pag# 2

The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana

Friday, March 8, 1968

4

Funeral Services Jailed Thursday For Clifford Chadd By Local Police

To Be Saturday

Funeral services for Clifford | Chadd, 66. will be held Saturday at 2 p.m. at the Whitaker i Funeral Home with interment in the Fillmore Cemetery. The deceased, who resided at 209 North Indiana Street, died Thursday morning in the Putnam County Hospital. Mr. Chadd had recently been employed as a school crossing watchman at Jackson and Liberty Streets. He was born January 6. 1902 in Marion Township, the son of the late Orphus and Sadie

Chadd.

Survivors are his mother, Sadie Chadd; two sisters, Mrs. Jessie Bourne, city, and Mrs. John Bond, Chicago, and a son, Norman. Friends may call at the funeral home.

Allen P. Stronstad, 30, city, was lodged in the Putnam County jail at 7:15 Thursday evening by Deputy Sheriffs Tom Brown

and Bob Ziegelman.

Stronstad was arrested on a Putnam Circuit Court warrant charging theft by deception.

County Hospital

Stiles-

num, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Conway Newnum.

Personals

Mrs. Essie Trusler went to

Gary for a several-week stay

with her granddaughter. Vern Pickard visited his aunt.

Mrs. Icy Lindley a patient in

Carle Hospital in Urbana, 111.

CLASSIFIED ADS

Carson Rites Held At Gobin Church Funeral services for Mrs. Luella Carson were held today at the Gobin Methodist Church with Reverend Jamison Jones officiating. Burial was in Forest Hill Cemetery. Active pallbearers were Jerome Hixson, Austin Sprague. William Wright, Robert Farber, Harry Voltmer, and Laurel Turk. Honorary pallbearers were Robert Crouch, Robert Pence, Robert Williams, Van Denman Thompson and George Manhart. The Hopkins-Walton Funeral Home had charge of the arrangements.

Rummage Sale. Delta Theta Tau Sorority, Saturday, March 9 at the Courthouse, 8:30 a.m.

8-11

For Sale: March 9, 35 Holstein springer heifers; all calfhood vaccinated and from one farm. Four Jersey springer heifers; 30 purebred Angus 400-450 lbs. at Boone County Sale Barn, Lebanon, Indiana.

8-lt

For Sale: New 12x60 two bedroom mobile home, large kitchen with bay windows, huge carpeted living room with house type door, storms and screens. Extra insulation. Gun oil furnace. Bank financing up to 9 years. MARCH SPECIAL $4,995.00. New owners, Hess Mobile Home Park, 1216 South Bloomington, OL-3-222. 8-3t For Sale: New Maple dinette table with leaf and 4 captains' chairs, $75.00. New Avacado green wing back couch and chair, $150.00. Full size cedar bed complete, $40.00. Other furniture items. New owners-Hess Mobile Home Park, South Bloomington, OL-3-3222. 8-3t

Dismissals Thursday: Marjorie Ann Jones,

ville.

Faye McCradic, Coatesville. Noble Ray Clearwaters, Coat-

esville.

Mrs. Billy Gerber and son,

Poland.

Mrs. David Spencer and TT'//iT Han oh daughter. Roekvilir to 1)6 Wlth the former s daugh

Lillie McFerran, Roachdale.

Sam Miller, Spencer.

Lena Grimes, Greencastle. Darla Smiley, Greencastle. Phyllis Mark, Greencastle. Laurel Corbin, Greencastle.

John Ash, Greencastle.

Helen Knauer, Greencastle.

Births:

Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Williams Brazil, Rt. 3, a boy, today.

1967 Buying Is Reported 17.6% Higher

The group purchases also reflect an active year in labormanagement negotiations throughout the country and changes in plans covering employes of major business firms. Purchases of ordinary life insurance rose in 47 states. Cali-

fornia again bought the largest | standing gains. The states that amount and showed the biggest (increased their ordinary pur-

dollar increase, although the percentage gain in California was sharply below the nation-

wide average.

Several southeastern states were among those that had out-

chases by $100 million or more, with above-average percentage growth, included Alabama. Florida, Georgia, Maryland, South Carolina, Tennessee and Wash-

ington State.

Newnum Brothers Are Performers On Radio Program TANGIER — The Newnum Brothers Quartet sang over the Brazil Radio station. The quartet is composed of Richard, Leon, Keith and Ronald New-

MS sst'r iSSsSi

during 1967. the largest amount

Walter, Art; f, v ™; d Se , d ta 2 Si "*' e J ' ear f to be with the former's daugh- a ™ OU " ed * * n lDCr ^! e of ter, Mrs. Tom (Mary Louise) I J^Sbillion or L.6 per McCleneghan and daughter due c nt over 1966 purchase*, to the sudden illness and death The record 1967 buying was of Thomas McCleneghan. reported by the Institute of Life - Insurance, based on preliminary

figures from a monthly survey by the Life Insurance Agency

Management Association.

THE DAILY BANNER

and

Herald Consolidated

I iflpK::

"It Waves For All"

Business Phones: OL 3-5151 —

OL 3-5152

TIGER CUB, TIGER CUB MAKE IT A DAY BEAT MIAMI GO ALL THE WAY CANNON'S MENS WEAR

8 W. WASHINGTON

OL 3-4615

Kirk To Let Education Package Become Law

Governor Claude Kirk of “Those who wish to remain Florida announced yesterday i militant and on strike, I wish he was letting a $254 million j them godspeed in their new-

education package become law found career.” he said,

at midnight last night. The suit filed by four PittsA Florida Education Associa- hurgh citizens asked that the tion official called the legisla- j s schools be closed for the tive program “unacceptable” I duration of the strike by 1,000 and said it would not end a teachers, members of the Pitts-three-week, state-wide strike of burgh Federation of Teachers, tparhers It c o n t e n d e d that the

city’s 88 grade schools and 24 high schools were operating without sufficient qualified per-

Individual life insurance under ordinary policies accounted for two-thirds of the overall 1967

Elizabeth Ra'ride'nVstoU, Publisher . life Narma L. Hill, Assistant Publisher insurance showed by far tne lar-

gest increase. Purchases of

Published every evening except small industrial policies declined

Sunday and holidays at 24-26 slightly.

South Jackson Street, Greencastle, rp, ' .

Indiana, 46135. Entered in the . T^ unusually large increase Post Office Ot Greencastle, Indi- m group life insurance buying ana, as second class moil matter was due mainly to broadened under Act of March 7, 1878 Unit- coverage for civilian governed Press international lease wire ment workers under the Federservice; Member Inland Daily a i Employes Group Life Insurn res * * AssoCl “* on; Hoo,i * r State ance plan, underwritten by 333

private life companies. More than $8 billion was added to the basic coverage provided by this

plan.

“NR!

'K'ge.r C ^ TYc v/^ /.y

; ■ Ip!

r

W ! “ u

i&A

Nr 1

WESmtmpm

PASpegi

Ipj

jl 1

rami

IR:!, ■ ' *'

Press Association.

RIGHT AT HOME—Printers at the Crawfordsville Journal-Review made printers from the Banner feel right at home when they pasted a large sign in the back shop boosting the Tiger Cubs at the semi-state tourney. The sign is pictured above as Wilbur Kendall, Jack Leonard, and Ralph Fiscus talk about the Cubs chances.

In other developments in the economic conflict between teachers and school boards

across the nation:

1. Public schools closed a t

sonnel. About 2,100 teachers have remained on the job. Judge Anne X. Alpern heard

Washington, D.C., as teachers 90 minutes of arguments and re-

sought to drum up congressional backing for their demands

for a pay raise.

2. Four taxpayers filed suit to close Pittsburgh’s 112 public schools on grounds that a teachers’ strike, now in its eighth day, had made the schools unsafe for

youngsters.

cessed the case until today. Meanwhile. Judge John P.

day on charges of violating his antipicketing injunction. Fortytwo pickets were arrested and

fined Wednesday.

William R. Manning school

3. Teachers returned to superintendent in the nation’s classes at Manchester, N.H., 1 capital, ordered all schools shut after voting to impose “pro-1 down for the day after almost fessional sanctions” against the ‘ half the 7,000 teachers asked city school system in a dispute for “leave of absence’’ to particover a new contract. ipate in a walkout sponsored by 4. Oklahoma teachers were the Washington Teachers Union, being polled whether they want Four hundred teachers held a

pep rally near the Supreme

to invoke sanctions on walk out to show dissatisfaction with a compromise legislative program. Kirk said he hoped the Florida

Court building, then broke up into teams to collar Senators and Congressmen and ask sup-

education package, which also port for higher pay. The teachcarried $351 million in new | ers are backing a bill by Senataxes, would bring most of the tor Wayne Morse, (D-Ore.) to 18,000 striking teachers back to raise the starting salary from classrooms. $5,880 to $7,000.

TIMEOUT SI 5.00

Town 8 Cowlry Shoes

T&CS TIME OUT IS A COLORAMA OF CALFSKIN Town & Country Shoes' terrific Time Out pump is now available in a whole range of colossal calfskin colors. So take Time Out. your favorite low-heel pump, in the i newest fashion colors for spring: Colors, Calf: Swinging Blue, Brown, Bone, Black; Patent: Black, Orange, Yellow, Hot Pink, White.

The BOOTERY

CONRADS Stop n Shop

SHOP OUR FULL SERVICE MEAT DEPARTMENT QUALITY MEATS - CUT TO PLEASE YOU

MARHOEFER CANNED HAMS

5 * *3 89

FRESH Ground Beef 49 c “

FANCY Rib Steaks 89 Cit

COTTAGE CUT Pork Steak 59 C b

FRESH Side Pork 49 Cit

BABY Beef Liver 59 c *

Salt Fish 59 C b

FRESH Beef Tongues 59 c “

LEAN MEATY Spare Ribs 59 c *

STARK & WETZEL KING SIZE CAMPFIRE BACON

- 59 c

WEST KING SIZE BREXVD 3 I 1 / 2 lb- loaves for 38°

ROSE S FRESH Medium Doz. 00

CHASE & SANBORN Coffee 2 I

PURINA Dog Chow 10 it s l 29

ECONOMY 75 FOOT ROLL Alcoa Foil 69 c

QUALITY FRUITS AND VEGETABLES - ALWAYS LOW PRICES

SOLID CRISP Celery 19 c

JONATHAN • WINESAP Apples 4 * ■*’ 49 c

LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN Red Radishes ^ 5 C

FRESH CRISP Head Lettuce 2-3 9 C

U.S. NO. 1 RED POTATOES

20 Lb bq 9 49

GOLDEN RIPE BANANAS

lb. 9 C

NO GAGS-N0 GIMMICKS- N0-C0ME-0NS QUALITY-FOODS-LOW PRICES-COURTEOUS SERVICE