The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 18 April 1968 — Page 4
Page 4
The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana
South Korea cautions U.S. on peace moves
By FRANK SWOBODA HONOLULU (UPI) - Pres, ident Park Chung Hee of South Korea, bearing tidings of Asian misgivings over current U.S.
The South Korean leader, in a statement Issued in Szoul Tuesday, warned “There is a limit to concessions and pa. tience.” U.S. officials in Hawaii
the United States was aware ally in Vietnam, would have to
efforts to begin negotiating for immediately played down the peace in Vietnam, confers today remark, with President Johnson. Signs of conflicting views They said there would be a between the United States and “full exchange of views on the its allies became apparent even political and military situation before Park's arrival Tuesday in South Vietnam.” At least one night. official admitted, however, that
that “Park has his own views." South Korea’s main worry, along with that of its neighbor allies, is that the United States is prepared to weaken, as a concession for peace in Vietnam, its firm stand against Communist aggression in Asia. Park has made it abundantly clear that South Korea, with 50,000 troops America’s largest
CONRAD'S
consider its own defenses first If Johnson diluted U.S. military commitments in Asia.
U.S. officials said the discus- , x ^
sion would be divided into two Church met Thursday, April 11, main categories: the possibility at , ° f Mrs * ^ Cumof renewed North Korean min e s ^ Mrs - Eileen Furr aggression this spring and what fisting with a covered dish the United States plans to do lunche °n- Mrs * Llllie Bastain about it, and America’s stance [? turned . At ^ 1: . 30 p,m ” on a limit to concessions to *? President, Mrs. Betty Cumbring about peace in Vietnam, mings called the meeting to order
* rith prayer by Mrs. Maude Farmer. Twenty-five members answered roll call with a Bible verse pertaining to resurrection. Devotions were by Mrs. Mamie Bockins. The program was by Mrs. Lillie Bastain and she read a poem “The Legend Df Three Trees” and Easter worship program. The business meeting consisted of reading of die minutes, the treasurer’s report, reports of different committees and cards to the sick were sent. Mrs. Lillie Bastain received the prize for having
Thursday April 18, 1968
I
The W.S.C.S. of the Methodist visited Easter Sunday with Mr. Mr. and Mrs. William Huber Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Stutsman
Cloverdale news
and Mrs. James Sims of Valley Mills. Mrs. Mamie Bockins entertained Easter Sunday for Mrs. Effie Parker, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Parker, Mr. and Mrs. Danny Parker and family, Bruce Parker and Vicky Alexander. Miss Ardith Hanson of Urbana, Illinois, and Miss Pam Sinclair of Indianapolis who are attending Purdue University spent their spring vacation with Mrs. Freeda Sinclair. Miss Donna Fldler spent Sunday night and Monday with her grandmother Mrs. Esther Fidler. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth McCoy of Indianapolis visited Mrs. Lelia McCoy Easter Sunday. They had dinner at McCormick Creek Park. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Arnold
the lucky seat at the dining table, entertained Easter Sunday Mr.
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The club adjourned to meet at the home of Mrs. Stella Vickroy with Mrs. Frances Arnold assisting on Thursday, May 9. The Tuesday Club met Tuesday evening with Mrs. Helen Johnson. The meeting was called to order by the president, Mrs. Nelle Murphy. Mrs. Ruth Morrison led in singing the club collect and club song. Fifteen members were present. Reponse by Mrs. Mildred Cassady. Program by Mrs. Ruth Neier, “Ten First Women Of The World” by Pauline Frederick, news commentator. Closing thought by the hostess. The hostess served delicious refreshments. The next meeting will be April 23 with Mrs. Mildred Cassaday. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Rushton and Gerry of Stratford, New Jersey, are visiting Mrs. Rushton’s mother, Mrs. Gladys Huber and family. Mr. Rushton is home on leave from Vietnam. Mrs. John Bates and boys of Rockford, Illinois, have been visiting her parents Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Neier and Erwin this week. Mr. Bates joined them Saturday to spend Easter with them. Six ladies of the World War 1 Auxiliary met with Mrs. Elmer Lewis for a covered dish luncheon Friday and worked on one of the projects they are sponsoring. Mrs. Ella St. John and Mrs. Alice Deatline of Martinsville spent Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. Herman Stockwell. Mrs. Averil Allen, Mr. and Mrs. Gary Huber of Greencastle
and Mrs. Wayne White and family, Mrs. Nellie Church and Johnny Arnold of Indianapolis. Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Arendt and Nancy over Easter vacation were Mr. and Mrs. Keith Tabor and family of Hebron, Miss Joan Tabor of Indianapolis and Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Knoll of Gary. Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Shumaker entertained Easter Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Forest Shumaker and family of Indianapolis, Mr. and Mrs. Connie Alward and family of Greencastle. Afternoon callers were Mr. and Mrs. Charles White. Mrs. LaRue Gray entertained Easter Sunday her family Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Gray, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Gray and Freddie, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Underwood and family of Coatesville. Mrs. Belle Lasley, Mrs. Mary Logan, Mrs. Nina Gaston, Mrs. Dorothy Rice and Mrs. Osborn, members of the World War 1 Auxiliary, went to the West 10th Street Veterans Hospital in Indianapolis and worked Monday. Don Kelley, of Detroit, Michigan, visited Mr. and Mrs. Ben Clevenger over Easter weekend. The Methodist Church held services Easter Sunday afternoon at the Donna Nursing Home. Rev. James Bastain was in charge of the services. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Sharp of Richmond visited over the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Smiley and also visited Mrs. Sharp’s mother Mrs. Hettie Frasier at the Putnam County Hosp-
ital.
of New Carlisle visited from Thursday to Saturday afternoon with her parents Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Flake.
Mrs. Esther Fry was a guest of Mrs. Beulah Spelbring and son Gordon of Poland Sundaj and they had dinner at the Goodie
Shop in Terre Haute.
Victor Duncan celebrated his 84th birthday April 16. His daughter Mrs. A.G. Shireman of South
Bend came for the day.
Recent visitors of Victor Duncan were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Duncan, Mr. and Mrs. W.L. Goodman of Lookout Mountain, Tennessee, Mr. and Mrs. A.G. Shire-
man of South Bend.
Mrs. Mary Cox has returned home from the Putnam County Hospital where she had surgery.
X % v i . i Fincastle news
entertained Easter Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Kent Huber and Karen of Browns burg, Mr. and Mrs. Billy Williams and family and
Kay Jordan of Gosport.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Staley, Mr. and Mrs. Kyle Staley and girls and Mrs. Mary Runnells had dinner Easter Sunday at the Goodie Shop in Terre Haute. Vernon Mann of Indianapolis visited his father Vet Mann at the Donna Nursing Home Fri-
day evening.
E.A. Bryant, who has lived in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Coil Richardson for six years, has entered the Donna Nursing
Home to live.
Gary, Mark and Brian Shumaker of Indianapolis spent their spring vacation with their grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Emmett
Shumaker.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Baird, Doug John Harless and children spent and Sara, entertained with a six Saturday with Mrs. Melvin Cor ley o’clock dinner Easter evening, and children near Lafayette.
The infant son of Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Scobee is seriously ill
in the Methodist Hospital. Mrs. Maude Brothers and Mrs.
Mary Virginia Clodfelter enter, tained their family with a pitchin dinner Sunday. The grand, children enjoyed an egg hunt on
the lawn.
Eddie Beams had Miss Pat Smith of Linden, Gene Wagner and Nancy Hughes as supper
guests Thursday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Sessions returned home Friday evening from a visit with relatives in
Oklahoma and Kansas.
Mrs. Olive Baird, accompanied
Those present were Mrs. Olive Baird and sons, James and David, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Baird, Miss Betty Rady and Mrs. Lucille
Everman.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Shillings and family were Easter dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Baker in Indianapolis. Later they visited Mr. and Mrs. Max Blackmore and family in New
Winchester.
Barbara Beams entertained a group of friends on her birthday Friday afternoon. Mrs. Mary Virginia Clodfelter, Mrs. Olive Baird and Mrs. Maude Brother attended the united
church services at Russellville by Mrs. Mona Shumaker and Mrs.
Tuesday and on Wednesday evening they called at the McGaughey Funeral Home in Russellville to pay respects to
Floyd Gardner.
Mrs. Howard Myers and Mrs.
Maudie Garrett of Roachdale, visited Mr. and Mrs. Everett Graham of near Russellville and they also called on Mrs. Frank Obenchain in Roachdale Saturday
afternoon.
Guards fire shotgun volleys into 400 rioters
By RICHARD W. HATCH RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI) — Guards fired shotgun vollies from rooftops into 400 rioting inmates at North Carolina’s Central Prison early today, killing five prisoners and wounding “a large number” of others. Five officers were injured in the melee, which included hand, to-hand fighting in the prison courtyard. Eight doctors were rushed to the prison before dawn to treat the wounded, some in serious condition. The riot erupted from a sitdown strike by convicts Tuesday to back up demands for incentive pay for inmates in prison industries, hot lunches, more television privileges and extended visiting hours. “I would call it an inmate uprising,” said Corrections Commissioner Lee Bounds, who flew home from'a hospital study tour in Maryland to take charge of the situation. “The situation fully warranted opening fire and they fired completely in accord with instructions from me,” said Bounds. He said the riot was put down within eight to 10 minutes after the gunfire. Around half of the prison’s 800 prisoners apparently took part in the riot, which raged in an
interior courtyard roughly 100 yards on all sides. The rioters burned a building and then snatched up torches and hurled a “wall of fire” at guards. Using makeshift weapons, the prisoners struggled with offi. cers, armed with riot sticks and baseball bats, in a bloody battle in the courtyard. Some of the guards used police dogs. Newsmen were kept from the prison, but heard the burst of gunfire around 1:40 a.m. EST. Later, Bounds conducted newsmen on a tour of the prison battleground. The courtyard was littered with garbage, debris, the ashes of bonfires and the hulk of a burned out shower building. Prison officials showed reporters sticks, pipes, rods, and other deadly -looking in. struments they said the prisoners used to battle the guards. Music Fete in Lucerne LUCERNE, Switzerland <UPI) — This year’s International Festival of Music Lucerne will be held from Aug. 14 to Sept. 8. There will be' 10 symphony concerts by the Swiss Festival Orchestra, the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra and the New Philharmonia Orchestra London. Other musical events include a concert of sacred music. organ recitals.
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