The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 11 May 1968 — Page 2

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The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana

Saturday, May 11, 1968

THE DAILY BANNER and Herald Consolidated "It Waves For Air’ Business Phone: OL 3-5151 — OL 3-5152 Elizabeth Rariden Estate, Publisher Norma L. Hill, Assistant Publisher Published every evening except Sunday and holidays at 608 South College Avenue. Greencastle. Indiana. 46135. Entered in the Posi Office at Greencastle, Indiana, as second class mail matter under: Act of March 7, 1878 United Press International lease wire service: Member Inland Daily Press Association; Hoosier State Pxess Association. All unsolicited articles, manuscripts, letters and pictures sent to The Daily Banner are sent at owner's risk, and The Daily Banner repudiates any liability or responsibility for their safe custody or retuei. By carrier 50C per week, single copy 100. Subscription prices of the Daily Banner effective July 31, 1967-in Putnam County-1 year, $12.00-6 months. $7.00-3 months. $4.50 Indiana other than Putnam County-1 year, $14.00-6 months. $8.00-3 months. $5.00. Outside Indiana 1 year. $18.00-6 months. $10.00-3 months. $7.00. All Mail Subscriptions payable in advance. Motor Routes $2.15 per one month. >

“Shanty town” for Poor People’s march

WASHINGTON (UPI)- The first architect-designed “shanty town” in history will be erected in the nation’s capital next week to house 3,000 participants in the Poor People’s March. Originally designated “The City of Hope,’’ the instant village is now being called “Resurrection City” by leaders of the march. Government officials and march leaders, who have been holding talks all this week on a suitable site for the encampment, were reported near agreement today on a treefringed park alongside the famous reflecting pool, between the Washington Monument and the Lincoln Memorial. Officials said the government is prepared to issue a permit for that site, restricting occupancy to 3,000 persons. Sewer and water lines are available in the area. Although Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) officials like to refer to the encampment as a “shanty town,” it will be a far cry from the slapdash conglomeration of makeshift buildings which that phrase implies. Designed by D.R. John Wibenson, assistant professor of architecture at the University of Maryland, the “shanty town” will consist of prefabricated canvas and plywood shelters, erected in clusters around toilet facilities. Volunteer workers have prefabricated parts for the shelters in a well-organized production line on the campus of Xaverian College in suburban Silver Spring, Md. The first marchers, due to arrive in the capital by bus Sunday afternoon, will assemble the shelters on the site next week. The decision of SCLC officials to rename the site “Resurrection City” apparently resulted

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from a protest from a 55-year-old national medical center near Los Angeles, which is called The City of Hope. Recount seen in Second District LAFAYETTE, Ind. (UPI)Observers indicated today a recount is posSible in the close 2nd District Republican congressional race which unofficial returns showed was won by State Sen. Earl F. Landgrebe of Valpar also by 80 votes. Landgrebe was shown to have defeated nine other candidates, his plurality over his nearest rival being only 80 votes among more than 58,000 cast in the district. Second in the unofficial standings was O. U. Sullivan, former Tippecanoe County Republican chairman and Lafayette city controller. The vote showed Landgrebe 12,487, Sullivan 12,407, with the eight other candidates sharing the remaining 33,000 votes. State Rep. Quentin Blachly, also of Valparaiso, was third with 8,926. Sullivan said it was “too early” to say whether a recount would be requested. He pointed out that returns from no county are official until they have been certified by a local canvassing board, and the district results are subject to auditing by the secretary of state’s office. The outcome was considered important because the 2nd District is considered heavily Republican, and the seat of the veteran Rep. Charles A. Halleck is at stake in the election next November. Halleck has been in Congress since 1935. His decision to retire at the end of this year brought out a crowd of candidates hoping to succeed him, ineluding 10 Republicans and 10 Democrats. The Democratic winner, by more than 3,000 votes, was Edward F. Kelly, a Lafayette attorney. That race drew about 50,000 votes. Tippecanoe County nearly controlled both races. It gave Kelly a margin of nearly 2,400 over his nearest rival, only a few hundred votes short of his winning plurality. And it gave Sullivan a 5,300-vote margin over his nearest rival, Landgrebe.

Hippies Out BANGKOK (UPI)— Thailand officially banned hippies Friday. Minister of Interior Gen. Prapas Charusatien announced visas and admission to the country will be refused to “flower children.” Immigration authorities were warned to watch for bearded wayfarers coming from neighboring Laos, which has grown into a hippie heaven during the past two years.

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CADETS HONORED BY LEGION-These four DePauw University Air Science cadets received honors this week from American Legion Post 58 Commander Ralph Richards of Greencastle. Left to right are senior Bob Flickinger, Middlebury, Vt.; senior Philip Powell, Brooklin, Ind.; junior Neil Budelsky Elmhurst, III.; and junior Paul Tatham, Granville, 0. Flickinger and Budelsky received

the American Legion leadership award for demonstrating outstanding qualities in military leadership, discipline, character and citizenship. The American Legion scholarship award was presented to Tatham and Powell. It is conferred on cadets who rank in the top 10% of their class academically, who have demonstrated leadership qualities, and who have participated actively in constructive student activities.

Bible Thought

Let us hold fast the professions of our faith without wavering; (for faithful is He who hath promised).- Hebrews 10:23. Without abiding faith in God our lives would be hopeless. Aid Pact SEOUL (UPI)-The United States and South Korea Friday signed an agreement giving $179 million in aid to the Asian nation including wheat, cotton and tallow under the “food for peace” agreement, a direct $30 million grant and $66 million to support the Korean military budget.

Personal and Local

School • -W . « A 4 menu Monday Beef & Gravy Mashed Potatoes Buttered Carrots Fruit Cup Biscuits & Butter Milk Tuesday Chili & Crackers Tossed Salad Peanut Butter Sandwich Peach Halve Milk Wednesday Barbecue on bun Baked Beans Cabbage Salad Oatmeal Cake Milk Thursday Hamburger on bun Potatoe Chips Orange Juice Buttered Peas Ice Cream Milk Friday Macaroni & Cheese Buttered Green Beans Veg. Jello Salad Wheat Bread & Butter Peanut Butter Cookies Milk May 20-23, 1968 Monday Beef & Noodles Buttered Spinach Carrot & Celery Sticks Cornbread & Butter Peach Halve Milk Tuesday Pork & Gravy Mashed Potatoes Tossed Salad Bread & Butter Applesauce Milk Wednesday Fried Chicken Potatoe Salad Buttered Corn Bread & Butter Fruit Jello Milk Thursday Barbecue Sandwich Buttered Green Beans Vegetable Salad Apple Crisp Milk

Mother’s Day visitors Dr. and Mrs. Roy Hunteman of Greenwood will spend Mother’s Day with Mrs. Hunteman’s mother, Mrs. A.N. Wright. Mrs. Pritchard will also be a guest. Singing Sunday The Antioch Baptist Church will have their regular monthly singing this Sunday at 2:00 p.m. Meeting Tuesday Present Day Club will meet Tuesday May 14, at 2:00 p.m. with Mrs. Lloyd Skinner. Meeting Tuesday The Four Leaf Clover Club will meet with Mrs. Forest Hutcheson, Tuesday at 1:30 p.m.

Poland eases restrictions on diplomatic travelers

WARSAW (UPI) — Poland eased its travel restrictions on diplomats Friday but there was no official explanation of Thursday’s ban on their leaving the capital. Diplomatic sources believed the ban was connected with Soviet troop movements near the borders of Czechoslovakia. At least one embassy sent officials out Friday to see if they would be stopped and a diplomat from a Western embassy left with his family on a trip after being told he could travel freely. Western newsmen journeyed as far as 60 miles out of Warsaw without hindrance. The troop movements were reported south of Krakow only a few miles from the Czech border as the official Polich Communist party newspaper Trybuna Ludu was attacking “revisionist” and “anti-Socialist trends” in Czechoslovakia and called for their authors to be “forcibly silenced.” A foreign ministry official told newsmen he would try for an explanation but that the government was “not obliged” to explain to newsmen why diplomats were stopped. Nor, he said, are the police required to tell why they tell a foreigner to turn back. Diplomatic sources said the foreign ministry had not apologized for turning back the diplomats—a violation of diplomatic practice. The British Embassy said it had received an authoritative statement after it made a vigorous protest but it declined to make it public. Some Western observers said the travel restrictions seemed to have been badly organized Putnam Court Notes Crown Finance Corporation vs. Larry Parrish, Jolene Parrish, complaint on note.

THANKS TO THE VOTERS OF PUTNAM CO. FOR THE SUPPORT THEY GAVE ME IN THE PRIMARY ELECTION. THANKS AGAIN Harold M. Berry

Funeral Notices

Visiting parents Mr. and Mrs. Clair Williams and family of Fort Wayne are visiting in Greencastle this weekend with Mr. Williams’ mother, Mrs. Walter Williams, and Mrs. Williams’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Crousore. Seniors initiated Thirteen Delta Zeta seniors were initiated into the Delta Alumnae Association Monday evening at the chapter house. Greencastle alumnae, who conducted ceremony after having dinner at the chapter house were Mrs. Robert Breese, Mrs. Ray French, Mrs. Arthur Shumaker, Mrs. Jonathan Houck, Mrs. Russell Miller and Mrs. Tony Manuel.

and perhaps were even a mistake. There was no official explanation but one diplomat was told by the foreign affairs ministry it was a misunderstanding. Visit China KATHMANDU, Nepal (UPI) — Deputy Premier and Foreign Minister Kirti Nidhi Bista will visit Communist China for 10 days beginning May 22 “to develop cordial and friendly relations,” it was announced Thursday. Money Change LONDON (UPI)—Britain, in the process of switching currency based on the decimal system, will issue the world’s first seven-sided coin, equal to half a pound or’ 10 shillings, the currency board announced Thursday. In Memoriam In memory of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Jones, Mrs. and Mrs. John Davis and daughter Aurelia, who departed this life May 12, 1956. The call was sudden, the shock severe, We little thought, such grief was near, The ones who have loved, can only tell, The pain of parting, without farewell. Sadly missed by Father and Mother Curtis and Esther Jones. a 1 In Memoriam In memory of Jesse Sears, who passed away May 11, 1963. In Heaven, we know he’s waiting, His loved ones to meet him there, With tears in his eyes he left us To wait in God’s garden of prayer. We miss him as we loved him, And each step along life’s way, Brings back his precious memory As we miss him more each day And remember how much we loved him And find we’re often sad For five years ago we said goodbye To a dear and wonderful Dad. * Sadly missed by Irene and daughters, Eva, Betty, Imogene, Caroll and Rose Marie.

Annabel le Duel I Funeral services for Mrs. Annabelle R. Duell, 56, Greencastle R. 2, will be held Sunday at 2:00 p.m. at the Rector* Funeral Home. Interment will be in Boone-Hutcheson Cemetery. Mrs. Duell died Thursday morning at the Robert Long Hospital shortly after being admitted. She was a passenger in the station wagon involved in the three car accident on U.S. 40 earlier Thursday morning. She was born August 9, 1911 in Parke County, the daughter of Erwin and Sylvia Shull Roberts. Mrs. Duell was a member of the Croy’s Creek Christian Church and had been employed at Allison’s in Indianapolis for the past twenty five years. Survivors are: her husband, David R. Duell; one son, David E. Duell, Greencastle and other relatives. She was preceded in death by an infant daughter. Calling hours at the Rector Funeral Home after 5:00 p.m. Saturday. Morton proposes dividend plan WASHINGTON (UPI) -Supreme Court Justice Earl Warren Friday issued an order temporarily blocking the huge Northern Lines railroad merger. Warren’s order froze the merger until at least May 20. The full Supreme Court will hear arguments that day on the merger. It was scheduled to go into effect this morning. The merger would weld the Great Northern, the Northern Pacific and the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad into one line, making it the longest railroad in the nation. Originally, the Interstate Commerce Commission rejected the merger at the same time it approved the Penn-Central merger in April, 1966. Later the ICC reversed its decision. Warren’s action followed a request from the Justice Department Thursday for an injunction to block the merger. Under the proposed merger, the Great Northern, the Northern Pacific and the Chicago and Burlington and Quincy lines would be combined into a new company called the Northern Lines. The merger was once turned down by the Interstate Commerce Commission, which later reversed itself and approved the combined operation. The Justice Department attacked the ICC decision as being “arbitrary and capracious” and showing an “abuse of discretion.” The department also attacked what it called the anticompetitive aspects of the merger. In memoriam In loving memory of our mother and Grandmother, Alma Gooch, who passed away May 12, 1964. I look upon my mother’s hands And her life and there I see Aging hours lines of love Spent in molding me. I know these hands And the work they’ve done Now grown old with toil. I’ve known the beauty in flowers they grew And how they loved God’s soil. I remember the times they’ve comforted me And helped me along the way And clasped together, humble in faith They taught me how to pray. These hands....today Mine can no longer hold But their duties shall not shirk For they will be young and busy still In Heaven doing God’s work. She could not paint or write a rhyme Her footprints on the sand of time As some distinguished women

do;

Just simple things of life she knew Like tucking little folks in

bed

Or soothing someone's aching head. She was no singer, neither blessed With any special loveliness To win applause and passing fame No headlines ever blazed her name. But OH She was a shining light To her loved ones day and night. Her home was her kingdom, She was its queen Her reign was faithful, honest, clean Impartial..Loving, just to each And everyone she sought to teach. Her name...There is no other In all the world so sweet as My Mother. Sadly missed by the Family

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By HELOISE CRl’SE

DEAR HELOISE: As Drapery Specialty cleaners, it is our policy to always ask our customers the <iye of their draperies when we pick them up. The older fabrics do require special handling, due to sun damage and routine wear. I wonder if your readers know that draperies which have yellowed from fumes, fading sun and oxygen in air will not come out in dry cleaning even if we cleaned them a hundred times? As professionals, we suggest to our customers that they allow us to wet clean them, but we always ask the age first so that they can have extra special care. Mrs. Rose Adamowski * * * Now, our dear Rose really threw us a good clue when she said to tell our cleaners how old our drapes were before dry cleaning, didn’t she? Me, myself - and -1 never thought of that before! Could make a whale-of-a-difference in a cleaning job. We do thank her much for this wonderful hint. Helolse

Miss Coffman Graduate nurse Miss Linda Kay Coffman,daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clifton E. Coffman of Bainbridge, Indiana, will be graduated from St. Vincent’s School of Nursing of Indianapolis, on May 26. Graduation will be held at St. Peter and Paul Cathedral, with the Most Reverend Paul C. Schulte, DD, Archbishop of Indianapolis,presiding. The Right Reverend Raymond Bosler, S.T.D., will address the graduate nurses. Graduation will take place at 3 p.m. Miss Coffman has attended Marian College and St. Vincent’s School of Nursing to obtain her diploma. She has been interested in her school activities throughout her training and has participated in Student organization in numerous ways. Linda intends to work at St. Vincent’s Hospital in Indianapolis after graduation, and at the same time, continue her education, working toward her degree at Indiana University.

Expert blames faulty gas lines WASHINGTON (UPI ) - Ralph Nader, who champions safety for consumers, said at a news conference here Friday there is a “strong suspicion” the explosion which killed more than 40 persons at Richmond, Ind., on April 6 was caused by faulty gas lines. Nader said the gas company at Richmond was notified three days before the explosion that there were 55 leaks in its system. Nader said sections of the city’s gas lines were laid in 1889 and no new lines had been installed since 1914. The capse of the explosion has been under investigation since the day it occurred. Local authorities and the Indiana Public Service Commission have sought to learn the reason for the blast. Nader spoke at a news conference featuring Rep. Brock Adams, D-Wash; Rep. John Moss, D-Calif.; Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., and Betty Furness, President Johnson’s consumer affairs expert.

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Deep within the Sun 564 million tons of hydrogen are converted to 560 million tons of helium each second, National Geographic says. The remaining four million tons radiate away as heat and light.

DEAR HELOISE: For anyone who has a set of bunk beds and no longer uses the ladder, here’s an idea. I attached an 8x10 picture of each child (there’s room for four) to a larger piece of heavy white art paper. Then stapled the art paper to the back of the ladder. I had my husband hang some hooks on a wall in the children’s room for the ladder. Now I’ve got a lovely group frame which hangs horizontally and matches the furaiture, too. I’ve received many, many compliments on it. * * * That’s a cute idea, Jan. And you’re a smart cookie to think of it. Thanks. Heloise * * * DEAR HELOISE: About ten ‘ years ago my husband built me a beautiful birch and mahogany kitchen. He told me to heat olive oil and brush it on all my new cutting and pastry boards until the wood wouldn't take any more. Both boards still look almost like new. Although I've cut onions, rhubarb, etc., all these years on the cutting board, it still isn't stained in the least. Grace Iden * * * LETTER OF LAUGHTER DEAR HELOISE: I hope this will help other housewives to get in the mood for spring housecleaning with the promise of getting their figure in shape in the process! I’ve just finished washing my w r alls, windows and all the other things that require reaching and stretching. Lo and behold I’ve taken inches off my waist and hips. Happy cleaning and good luck to you gals with inches to SPARE' . . . Peggy » • * DEAR HELOISE: Since I do alterations, I have to press a lot of hems and cuffs. I’ve learned a way to do this without putting a shine on the cloth. I put a piece of heavy biown paper bag over the material, moisten the top of the paper with a damp cloth and then iron. It leaves a nice press with no shine whatsoever. This works well with all types of materials, especially with wool, and is excellent for trouser cuffs. Jean Pokorny * * * DEAR HELOISE: We save our used coffee grounds, dry them and stoi-e in coffee cans kept in the garage. My husband dampens them later and uses them to sprinkle over the garage floor before sweeping. It works great, Heloise no dust w'hen he sweeps, and a nice clean garage floor. After sweeping, he empties it all on our flower beds, w'hich is good for aerating the soil when you dig it in . . . Virginia DeBruin

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