Banner Graphic, Volume 17, Number 27, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 October 1986 — Page 4
THE BANNERGRAPHIC, October 2,1986
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SimpsonSullivan vows Oct. 26 Lori Ann Simpson and Mark Wayne Sullivan will be married at 2:30 p.m. Oct. 26 at Ebenezer Church in Brazil. The bride-to-be, a 1983 graduate of South Putnam High School, is employed at the Indiana State Farm. Sullivan is a 1983 graduate of DePauw University and is employed at IBM in Greencastle. No wedding invitations will be sent, but family and friends are invited.
Rogers-Franklin vows are exchanged in Greencastle
Rae Jean Rogers and Thomas Ray Franklin were married Aug. 2 at the Church of God in Greencastle. Rev. David Clark officiated at the 6 p.m. ceremony. The bride is the daughter of Douglas and Connie Trueblood, Greencastle, and Larry and Linda Rogers, Greencastle. Tlie groom’s parents are Ward and Ardella Franklin, Route 2, Poland. Sue Ann Trail, Greencastle, served as maid of honor. Douglas Trueblood, Greencastle, was best man and Andy Cox and Robert Higgins, both of Greencastle, served as ushers. A reception followed at the church with Sherry Taylor and Terry Tuttle serving.
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LORI ANN SIMPSON MARK WAYNE SULLIVAN
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MR. AND MRS. FRANKLIN The groom is a 1984 graduate of South Putnam High School.
Calendar of events Friday World War I Auxiliary 114 will have a pitch-in dinner at noon Friday, Oct. 3, at the VFW Post in Greencastle. Saturday Techniques of breast self-examination will be taught at 10 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 4, in the ground floor classroom of Putnam County Hospital. Instructors will be hospital nurses and volunteers from the Cancer Society. Sunday The Sixth District fall meeting of the World War I Auxiliary will be Sunday, Oct. 5, at the American Legion Post in Crawfordsville. A pitch-in dinner at noon will be followed by a business meeting. Monday The Monday Book Club will meet Oct. 6 at the home of Mrs. C. Hickman. An organizational meeting for the Cloverdale Community Christmas Play will be held at 7 p.m. Monday, Oct. 6, at the Cloverdale United Methodist Church on West Robert Weist Ave. The meeting is open to the public and no acting or singing experience is required. On-stage roles and backstage help are needed. For more information, contact Vicki Parker at 539-3262, Judy Hacker at 7954925 or Larry Dixon at 795-3704 or 795-3567. Play dates will be Dec. 6 and 7. The Civic League will meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 6, at the home of Mrs. Robert Miller, 1908 Sandalwood Dr., Greencastle. Monday Club will meet at 2 p.m. Oct. 6 with Mary Ann Collins. Phyllis Padgett will present the program. Alumnae of the Delta Zeta Chapter will meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 6, at the home of Jan Firebaugh, 102 DePauw, Greencastle. Tuesday Theta Alumnae Chapter, Delta Theta Tau will meet at 10 a.m. Tuesday, Oct. 7, at the home of Mrs. John Whitaker. Mary Glenn Hamilton will be assistant hostess. Theta Chapter, Delta Theta Tau, will meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 7, at the Public Service Indiana building. Techniques of breast self-examination will be taught at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 7, in the ground floor classroom of Putnam County Hospital. Instructors will be hospital nurses and volunteers from the Cancer Society. Over the Tea Cups Club will meet at 2 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 7, at the home of Mrs. Michael Harmless, 307 Greenwood Ave., Greencastle. William Knight Chapter, Sons of the American Revolution, will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 7, at the Double Decker Restaurant. Members and friends may meet informally for dinner at 6 p.m. Jim Zach will present the program. The newly formed AARP group, “On Top of the Hill,” will meet 10 a.m. to noon Tuesday, Oct. 7, at Emmanuel Baptist Church, located two miles west of North Salem on Ind. 236. Anyone 50 or older is welcome. Those attending are asked to bring snacks for a brunch. Wednesday The West Floyd Home Demonstration Club will meet at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 8, at the home of Susie Lyttle. Letha McCloud will be co-hostess and Virginia Miller will present the lesson. Chapter 22, R.A.M., will have a stated convocation at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 8 at the Greencastle Masonic Temple, followed by a stated assembly of Council 107, R.&S.M. Refreshments and a social hour will follow.
Heloise: Don't put batteries in freezer
DEAR HELOISE: I am the mother of two children who have several battery operated toys. When batteries are on sale, I like to stock up on them. Is it safe to store these batteries in the freezer until used and are there any guidelines or precautions to follow in doing this? Thanks for your help! Linda Clapper ♦ ♦ ♦ A manufacturer I spoke with said batteries should not be stored in the freezer but that it may be beneficial to store them in the refrigerator. This seems to prolong the life of batteries not in use. If you do put them in the refrigerator, place them in a paper bag or wrap them in paper towels to absorb any moisture due to condensation, then place them in an airtight container bag. Batteries on sale are sometimes much, much cheaper than regular priced ones so this should definitely be worth a try. Heloise FANCY LEMONS Dear Heloise: If lemons are used at the table when you entertain, wash and halve them crosswise. Next make
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Dear Abby Story of music in his ears has the ring of truth to it
DEAR ABBY: I just read your column in which “Hearing Things” complained of hearing music in his head. I have just finished reading a book titled “The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat,” by Dr. Oliver Sachs. The author told of more than one patient who heard entire “concerts” in his head. They were not hallucinations, but real memories triggered by a neurological problem. These patients are not “crazy”; some are epileptic, and a few may have tumors that trigger the stored music memories. I am not a doctor, but this person who is hearing things should see a neurologist. ANNA F. JACOBS, TUSCALOOSA, ALA. * * * DEAR ABBY: The problem described by “Hearing Things” sounds remarkably like two case histories described by Dr. Oliver Sachs, a professor of clinical neurology at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York. Dr. Sachs described two women with similar problems, one of whom was having epileptic seizures in the temporal lobes of her brain. She was placed on anti-convulsants and the “musical seizures” stopped. The other patient went to her otologist who, after finding nothing wrong except usual deafness, referred her to a psychiatrist who, upon finding nothing psychiatrically wrong, sent her to Dr. Sachs who discovered she had had a small stroke in her right temporal lobe. As her body recovered from the stroke, the music subsided. By the way, I am not partial to any specialist. I am married to a psychiatrist and formerly worked as a secretary for a group of neurosurgeons. “Hearing” may want to ask his family physician
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Heloise
fetching covers for them: For each lemon half, cut a 10 inch square from tulle or other transparent fabric as well as an 8-inch length of ribbon. Place a lemon half in the center of the fabric, cut side down. Bring the four corners above the lemon, twist the fabric at the top of the lemon and tie it with a ribbon. To use, squeeze the juice out through the fabric. This eliminates seeds and unsightly discarded lemons on the table. Each half also makes an attract ive decoration and can be color-coordinated with the table setting. Melanie Gremillion
Abigail Van Buren
about a referral to a neurologist. I just hate to see patients go from doctor to doctor trying to pinpoint their problems. It’s a waste of time and money. MELISSA T. FARBER, NORFOLK, VA. DEAR ABBY: The letter signed “Hearing Things,” who kept hearing music in his head, caught my attention because I am familiar with that problem. A friend who worked as a researcher in the Library of Congress once told me of an elderly man who, out of desperation, had traveled some distance to the library to find a solution to that maddening problem. The man, who was intelligent and sane, had been hearing, note for note, the musical performances that he had heard in his youth. He rather enjoyed the music, though many thought him crazy to sit in his chair, smile, and tap his foot in time with the “music.” This condition is not rare; most people who experience it simply don’t mention it for fear of being thought “nuts.” BAZ IN NACOGDOCHES, TEXAS
TRASH HOLDER Dear Heloise: Some grocery stores bag groceries in sturdy plastic bags which have handles. Recently, while preparing a festive dinner, I thought of a good use for them. I put one of the bags over a kitchen door knob and put all empty cans in it, also boxes from frozen foods, used paper towels or anything else to be pitched out. I then put it in the garbage can. Before my company arrived, I had my kitchen looking very neat. Mary Baer PLANT PROTECTION Dear Heloise: I have a suggestion for the lady with the fern-loving cat... 1 too had this problem and solved it by making the plant an unappealing bed. I put short, wooden dowel rods in the dirt in the pot so my cat couldn’t lie down without being poked. Worked great! .Jennifer Thayer WASHING BRAS Dear Heloise: Bra hooks tear, twist and get caught in other garments in the washing machine. To eliminate this problem, I securely hook each one before putting it in the machine. It stays put with no snagging. Elizabeth Kutsche ♦ ♦ ♦ Send a money- or time-saving hint to Heloise, P.O. Box 32000, San Antonio, Texas 78216. She can’t answer your letter personally but will use the best hints received in her column.
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