The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 27 May 1968 — Page 2
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. uge d. THE DAILY BANNER and Herald Consolidated "It Waves For AH" Business Phone: OL 3-5151 -0L 3-5152 Lu Mar Newspapers Inc. Dr. Mary Tarzian, Publisher . Published every evening except Sunday and holidays at 608 South ^ollege Avenue, Greencastle, Indiana, 46135. Entered in the Post jffice 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 Press 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 return. By carrier 50C per week, single copy IOC. Subscription prices of the Daily Banner effective July 31, 1967*in Putnam County-1 year, SI 2.00-6 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.
The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana
Monday, May 27, 1968
County Hospital
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Completes basic SAN ANTONIO—Airman Terry A. Newby, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hanley L. Newby of R.R.l, Russiaville, Ind. has completed basic training at Lackland AFB, Tex. He has been assigned to the Air Force Technical Training Center at Lowry AFB, Colo., for specialized schooling as a munitions specialist. Airman Newby is a graduate of Clinton Central High School, Michigantown, Ind.
DR. ERNST’S OFFICE CLOVERDALE CLOSED MAY 31 TO JUNE 17
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Bible Thought
Our help is in the name of the Lord, who made heaven and earth.—Psalm 124:8. When we commit ourselves to Almighty God we can depend upon Him to help us at all times.
Personal and Local
Funeral Notices
Dismissed Friday: Anita Fowler, Bainbridge James Dill, Greencastle Anita Barr, Greencastle Dorothy Spencer, Greencastle Freeda Spencer, Greencastle Sharon Beaman, Greencastle Births: Mr. and Mrs. Doyne Hoke, Coatesville, a girl, Saturday. Dismissed Saturday: Emilio Manzano, Terre Haute Reba Clearwater, Greencastle Frank Mimms, Greencastle Births: Mr. and Mrs. James Sharp, Quincy, Route 1, a girl, Saturday. Dismissed Sunday: Lucinda Wrigntsman, Spencer Terri Nees, Gosport John Baldwin, Bainbridge David Freeman, Cloverdale Arthur Kromme, Greencastle Dorothea Clodfelter, Greencastle Births: Mr. and Mrs. Tom Walsh, 721 East Seminary, a boy, Sunday. Papal criticism VATICAN CITY (UPI)— Pope Paul VI gave his blessing to the crowd in St. Peter’s Square Sunday and used the occasion to denounce modern communica. tions media. The Pope said the media “arrogate to themselves more each day the freedom and the license to lead and influence the spirits of the people, who are ever more attentive, passive and diverted.” “The means of social commu. nitation are so numerous, so strong, so seductive and distracting that our minds are invaded,” he said.
Lewis Keller Lewis Keller, 86, Fillmore, Route 1, passed away Saturday afternoon in the Putnam County Hospital. He was born in Jefferson Township May 27, 1881, the son of William and Sarah Brinton Kel-
ler.
He was united in marriage to Lura Dorset! who preceded him in death in 1924. Survivors are a brother, Emery Keller, Indianapolis, and several nieces and nephews. Services will be held Tuesday at 11 a.m. at the Whitaker Funeral Home in Cloverdale with Rev. Arthur Bowser in charge. Burial will be in the New Providence Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home. John Asher John Asher, 66, of Quincy died Sunday at the Putnam County Hospital. Mr. Asher is survived by two brothers, Dale Asher and Ray Asher, both of Quincy and three sisters, Icey Smith of Greencastle, Goldie Smith of Linden and Pearl Shipley of Rossville. Funeral services will be announced later by the Whitaker Funeral Home of Cloverdale. Carl Whitaker Carl Whitaker, 82, of Cloverdale, passed away Saturday evening at the Robert Long Hospital in Indianapolis. He was critically burned at his residence last Wednesday. Mr. Whitaker was born in Owen County, Oct. 23, 1885, the son of Bland Whitaker and Margaret Rule. Mr. Whitaker is survived by one brother, Clint Whitaker of Belle Union, several nieces and nephews. Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the Whitaker Funeral Home in Cloverdale. Officiating minister will be Bro. Clarence Barr. Burial will be in the Samaria cemetery in Morgan County. Friends may call at the funeral home.
NOTICE TO PETITIONERS AND TAXPAYERS OF HEARINGS ON PETITIONS FOR REASSESSMENT OF REAL ESTATE IN PUTNAM COUNTY, INDIANA. PURSUANT TO THE PROVISIONS OF CHAPTER 319. ACTS OF 1961. AS AMENDEO. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO PETITIONERS AND TAXPAYERS OF PUTNAM COUNTY. INDIANA THAT THE STATE BOARD OF TAX COMMISSIONERS. OR A REPRESENTATIVE THEREOF, WILL CONDUCT A HEARING ON JUNE 12, 1968. IN THE OFFICE OF THE BOUNTY AUDITOR, COURTHOUSE. GREENCASTLE. INDIANA, ON PETITIONS FILED WITH THIS BOARD REQUESTING A REASSESSMENT OF REAL ESTATE FOR THE YEAR 1968. THE HEARING WILL COMMENCE AT THE HOUR OF 9:00 A.M. AND CONTINUE UNTIL ALL PETITIONS HAVE BEEN CONSIDERED. THERE WERE FILED WITH THIS BOARD 14 PETITIONS REQUESTING A TOTAL NET REDUCTION IN ASSESSMENTS OF $11,410, WHICH WILL BE CONSIDERED AT THE HEARING. A DETAILED STATEMENT SHOWING THE NAMES OF THE PETITIONERS, THE DESCRIPTIONS OF THE PROPERTIES AND THE AMOUNT OF EACH SPECIFIC REDUCTION OR INCREASE REQUESTED IS AVAILABLE AT THE COUNTY ASSESSOR'S OFFICE AND ALSO AT THE OFFICE OF THE TOWNSHIP TRUSTEES OR THE TOWNSHIP ASSESSOR OF THE TOWNSHIP IN WHICH THE PROPERTY IS LOCATED. ALL PERSONS WHO HAVE FILED PETITIONS FOR REASSESSMENT AND TAXPAYERS OF THE COUNTY ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED THAT THEY MAY APPEAR AT SUCH HEARING AND SHOW CAUSE, IF ANY WHY A REASSESSMENT OF ANY SUCH ESTATE SHOULD OR SHOULD NOT BE MADE. AFTER SUCH HEARING THE STATE BOARD OF TAX COMMISSIONERS SHALL ORDER SUCH REASSESSMENT AS IT DEEMS APPROPRIATE. STATE BOARD OF TAX COMMISSIONERS Ourwood W. Strang. Commissioner May 27 - IT
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Dance Revue Pupils of Jonie Skaggs will present a dance revue in the Greencastle Junior High auditorium on Saturday, June 1. No admission will be charged. 50 • Year graduate Mrs. Naomi Pruitt and her husband were here for her 50th reunion with her classmates of DePauw and visiting friends. The live in Delphi and returned
Monday.
Restoration fete MOSCOW (UPI) — Christian leaders from throughout the world participated today in the start of a weeklong celebration of the 50th anniversary of the restoration of the Moscow patriarchate—the supreme authority of the Russian Orhodox
Church.
Transplant falters EDINBURGH, Scotland (UPI) — Physicians said Sunday breathing problems gave “cause for concern” about the condition of Alex Smith, 15, the world’s fourth lung transplant patient, who received a lung from an 18-year-old girl who died of an overdose of drugs. Nominate premier KHARTOUM, Sudan (UPI)— The Sudan’s newly elected constituent assembly met today to nominate former Premier Mohamed Ahmed Mahgoub for a second term to head a coalition government made up of Democratic Unionists and the Imam Elhadi el Madi party. Abernathy comments WASHINGTON (UPI)—Rev. Ralph D. Abernathy, head of the Southern Christian Leader, ship Conference (SCLC) saying that he could not believe that Congress would adjorne without acting on the demands of the Poor People’s March: “If it does adjourn, of course, we will go wherever the Congressman goes and we will take our case of poverty with us.”
-Millett
Shower planned There will be a miscellaneous shower for Miss Pat Smith, brideelect of Eddie Lee Brown, at the Fincastle Community House Sunday, June 2, from 2 to 4 p.m. All friends are invited. Home for summer William Eiteljorge, who is attending school at Monmouth College at Monmouth, Illinois has returned for the summer with his parents Mr. and Mrs. William H. Eiteljorge. DePauw visitors T. W. Conner of Seymour came to Greencastle Friday bringing his mother Mrs. J.H. Conner, a graduate of DePauw in 1913. He and his family of his wife and two daughters and a son came over Sunday to return with Mrs. J.H. Conner to Seymour. He and his wife are also DePauw graduates. Here from Ohio Mr. and Mrs. Harry Johnson were here the past weekend from Ohio visiting DePauw friends and his sisters, Mrs. Lucy Washbon and Mrs. Ruth Erbe. Weekend visitor Miss Norma White of Indianapolls was here this past weekend and returned to her home Sunday.
—GHS seniors Phillips; Cheryl Ann Purdy; Michael Wayne Quinnette; Daniel Van Rader; Deborah Jean Rattray; Cathy Ann Records; Linda Ann Reeves; Michele Patrice Reiling; Virginia Lois Ritchie; Michael Burton Roach; Terry Preston Ross; Billy Wayne Scaggs; George Antoine Schneider III; Jane Kathleen Scholl; Linda Mae Schoolcraft; Michael Alvin Sears; Bradley Wayne Shears; Kevin William See; James Lee Shoemaker; Russell Lee Smith; Susan Faye Smith; Wallace Earl Steele; Thomas Craig Stewart; Alice Brenda Stout; Susan Marie Strain; Debbra Kay Sutherlin; Linda Diane Sutherline; Wilma Louise Sutton; Dorothy R. Taylor; Terry Barnette Thetford; Dennis Leon Thomas, Jr.; Peggy Sue Thomas; Ronald Lee Torr; Michelle Rae Varvel; Teresa Lynn VonTress; James Dewain Ward; Donna Jean Whicker; Phyllis Ann White; David Eugene Williams; Jonathan David York; Andrew Michael Zeller; Joyce Anne Zimmerman; Sherry Ann Lyon Zimmerman. Putnam £ourt Notes Margaret Green vs. Randall Wayne Green, suit for divorce. Marriage license Steven Earl Lister, U.S. Army, Ladoga, and Sheila Elaine Hueston, at home, Roachdale.
Agreement reached with French workers
“The persons who fear technology are those who have not tried to understand it, or manage it, or direct it to even more beneficent purpose. Technology, we are told, is impersonal, mass oriented, self-demanding of conformity. But technology has no mind of its own; only you and I have the capacity to instruct and direct our machines....,” Millett reasoned. As for reshaping higher education to suit some students, Millett said that American universities are the conscience— the constructive force for change in an orderly fashion—for a free society. “If we fail to support and defend the mission of our universities, we shall fail to support and defend a free society,” he said. As a member of the U.S. National Commission for UNES CO Millett recalled a conference of ministers of education he attended in Vienna last year. “I found that all the world watches two educational systems with envy and concern. These two educational systems are those of the U.S.S.R. and the United States.” “Our enemies abroad..would like to see the American system of education, and of higher education in particular, imparled, curtailed, or hopefully destroyed. Only in this way they believe can the economic and political power of the United States be reduced. Only in this way they believe can other powers take the place of the United States.,” “...Ask yourselves seriously and carefully: Can the United States survive and become a constructive force in the world if we disband our technology and destroy our universities with our intemperate criticism, our obstruction, our violence? “Whose game do we play when we turn our back upon our accomplishments of the past and refuse to believe that progress can continue to be realized in an educated, a technically operated, a dynamic society which still adheres to the ideals of freedom and dignity for “all” men, and works to accomplish that goal? Whose game to we play, I repeat, when we downgrade or undermine America?” “The June Monday morning in 1933 when I graduated from DePauw University was a dark and dreary time...It was a world with little use for college graduates. “Look at your own world this damp May evening. We of the older generation haven’t solved all the problems, we haven’t reached any standards of perfection, we are still struggling, and we are still trying, we are still faintly optimistic, we still believe that ideas can perhaps some day be made into realities....”
By ALLAN A. PRIAULX PARIS (UPI) — President Charles de Gaulle’s government announced it came to terms today with 10 million workers whose general strike has plunged France into chaos for 10 days. Union leaders emerged from 16-hour, all-night session with management and government officials and said they would submit the settlement to their workers for ratification. “Work could start again soon,” they announced. Premier Georges Pompidou called the agreement a “series of positive conclusions.” The conclusions included a twoinstallment 10 per cent raise for all workers, a reduced work week and examination of lowering retirement age and raising social security benefits. For 50 million Frenchmen it had more immediate impact— the resumption of bus, train, subway, plane and ship traffic, mail delivery and once more, the privilege of making opera-tor-handled telephone calls, the use of theaters and stadiums, the opening of banks and department stores and the death of a bouncing baby black market that grew the past two weeks. More Union Power The government-management-employe agreement also included a long-sought goal of the unions—a commitment to increase the power of the unions throughout French industry. Observers here said the first reaction to the accord is a judgment of almost total victory for the 10 million workers who had frozen France with strikes and the occupation of more than 300 factories. There had been fears the large Communist-led unions would purposely balk at settlement in order to continue the general strike and further deepen the woes of France and de Gaulle’s regime. The agreement was the
Try and Stop Me —By BENNETT CERE
/^ASKIE STINNETT has discovered a hotel in Kyoto. V4 Japan, that leaves no stone unturned to make wellheeled foreign tourists feel at home. Its impressive wine card, for example, lists various Bordeaux, Burgundy, Rhine, and Moselles, with their prices both in Japanese and English. Then, at the very bottom of the card, appears this last-minute tip: “Any other kind of world famous wine prepared to order.” * * * A luscious Italian starlet got her big chance in a new multi - million - dollar film spectacle. Unfortunately, it was shot in Japan, and after five solid months in Tokyo, where she couldn’t speak one word of the language nor eat the native raw fish without getting sick, she confessed to her director that each day made her miss her home in Rome more desperately. “Next time you have to leave Rome behind, he counseled her, “put a Tiber in your tank." * * * Kentucky’s great basketball coach, Adolph Rupp, tells about the hillbilly who passed away and left his estate in trust for his grieving wife. She can’t touch it ’til she’s thirteen. * * * There’s a move afoot to name a new ski lodge they’re building in Vermont the Down Hilton. And a sign at an army recruiting station nearby assures healthy young sports enthusiasts, "We honor all draft cards.” C 1968, by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by King Features Syndicate.
Heme
By HLLOISE CRUSE
second immediate stroke of good fortune for de Gaulle. Sunday the secretary general of his party, Robert Poujade, won an unexpectedly large and victorious vote in a race for a seat on the Dijon city council. The Dijon seat is relatively minor. But a defeat for Poujade would have damaged the de Gaulle image, already buffeted in the worst domestic economic crisis of his 10 years of personal power. But de Gaulle’s Fifth Republic, only hours ago seemingly on the verge of civil war according to the general himself, still was not out of darkness. The National Students’ organization planned illegal street demonstrations against the president throughout France today. It was the students who began the national crisis known as French Revolution— 1968. Spark Labor Walkout Their campus rebellion against old education policy and cramped quarters led to street fighting with police and the greatest labor walkout since the depressing days of the 1930s. Only Saturday Pompidou ordered the 35,000 police in Paris and the officers in the rest of the nation to break up any assembling crowds. His ban on crowds followed a Friday night orgy of battling in the cities during which some 2,000persons were injured and two were killed. The workers of Paris had been following radio reports of the Pompidou talks as they might news of national war. When the weary premier’s announcement came, they began flooding into the streets and into downtown Paris which over the weekend had been a strange deserted capital, hardly a city of light. The workers’ reaction appeared more a victory whoop than a race for work. Even if the agreement is ratified in the next few days, it was expected to take French industry this week to roll assembly lines, to take business weeks to return to normal and to take months for the economy to recuperate.
DEAR HELOISE: I hope you can help me with this problem. I live in a hard water area and my dishwasher seems to have accumulated a film all over the inside, especially on the trays. Some of my glasses and dishes look foggy when I remove them. Do you know of anything that I can do to prevent this? Mary B.
Yes, hon, there is something you can do. BUT. Iwfore you begin, read this carefully because this is a TWO-STEP METHOD. First, put your glasses and porcelain china in the dishwasher. DON’T put any silver, aluminum or brass, etc., in the dishwasher when this method is used. ONLY UHINA AND GLASSWARE. Then, put one t up of bleach in a bowl in the bottom rack of your washer. Run it through the wash cycle ONLY. Do NOT dry. Fill the bowl again with one cup of vinegar and let run through the entire cycle. This will remove all film from dishes AND the tiny crevices of your dishwasher. Just one more caution, Mary. DON’T try to speed up this method by eoinbining the bleaeh and vinegar in one step. It is definitely a TWOSTEP operation. Your dishwasher and glasses won’t have an iota of fog, spots or film on ’em when you get through. Heloise
DEAR HELOISE: If your silicone ironing board cover wears out first where the iron rests . . . Before discarding the old cover, cut any good parts into strips about eight inches wide. Then fasten one of these over the new cover at the wide end of the board where you stand your iron. As one piece becomes worn, just discard it and put on another. You’ll be amazed at h<>w much longer your new cover will last E. M. Perry
DEAR HELOISE: As an amateur photographer, I have used cheesecloth stretched over frames for drying prints and enlargements. Over a period of time, however. I found that I was plagued with dust, lint and mysterious stains from a previously dried print that had left traces of chemical in the cheesecloth. I tried nylon tulle met) such as that used in making a bride s veil. It really works and can be cleaned or dusted off with a damp cloth Warrie M. * * * DEAR HELOISE: I’ve never been able to wear rubbei gloves. Their "snakey" feeling on my hands really bothered me. Yet my hands have suffered as a result. Last week I thought I'd try them again, so I purchased another pair. When I got home I found 1 had made a mistake in size; I bought thf LARGE size instead of mediContinued on Page 8
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