Banner Graphic, Volume 18, Number 149, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 March 1988 — Page 4

THE BANNERGRAPHIC March 2,1988

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Mari Sells

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SAVE $ 3 13 Color Portraits 1-Bxlo, 2-sx7’s*, 10-Wallets

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ONLY Plus a 95$ Sitting Fee $6.95 (Reg. $9.95) Advertised specials include traditional poses only. Limit one special package per subject. Black and white backgrounds and special effects portraits NOT available in advertised package NOT valid with any other offer. ALL AGES WELCOME. FAMILIES AND GROUPS $1.50 EXTRA PER PERSON. POSES OUR SELECTION. ’Approximate Size .WAL-MART DATtS: Thursday Hire Monday, March 3-7 Qmencßn PHOTOGRAPHER'S HOURS: Doßy 10:00-7:00 p.ai. <t Lu d,os Sendoy 12:30-4:30 p.m. I ’ LOCATION U.S. 240 A Round Bern Roed Groencoitk, In. 46135

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Dear Abby Woman thinks dirty words are linked to dirty world

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DEAR ABBY: I’m glad I’m not the only person in the world who finds vulgar language offensive. Thirteen years ago, I went to a movie, and in the opening scene a little girl (about 6 years old) was talking to her doll. She used a gross four-letter word! I was so shocked, I walked out, and I haven’t seen a movie since. In addition to the language problem, I recently received an ad in the mail soliciting customers for porno videotapes. I went to the post office and filled out a form to get my name off the list of the people who were selling that garbage. I also wrote them a letter telling them how I felt about that kind of sewage. Norman Cousins wrote an article titled “Dehumanization” in the Saturday Review (Sept. 20, 1975). I kept it because it expressed my view so perfectly. He wrote: “The trouble with this wide-open pornography is not that it corrupts, but that it desensitizes; not that it unleashes the passions, but that it cripples the emotions; not that it encourages a mature attitude, but that it is a reversion to infantile obsessions; not that it removes the blinders, but that it distorts the view. Prowess is proclaimed, but love is denied. What we have is not liberation, but dehumanization.” We are like the frog that was placed in a pan of cold water over a low flame. The heat was turned up gradually. The poor frog didn’t realize he was in hot water until he was cooked. Thanks for listening. MAXINE DUMONT, BUENA PARK, CALIF. DEAR MAXINE: Thanks for speaking up. I loved the Cousins quote. It’s worth keeping. ♦ * * DEAR ABBY: I am a beautician and own my own shop. While a customer’s perm was processing, I picked up the newspaper and read the letter in your column from a beauty shop owner who complained about her customers’ kids running wild around her shop. I knew how she felt because I had the same problem. It was a hassle for me trying to keep kids quiet so they wouldn’t bother my customers.

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Abigail Van Buren

I also spent a lot of time chasing them out of the dispensary where the chemicals were kept. It wasn’t easy. Finally, I got a great idea. I bought a child-size picnic table for $35 and put it in a corner. I bought some crayons and coloring books, gathered up some toys my children no longer played with, tacked a few posters and pictures on the wall, and called it “The Kids’ Corner.” If the children don’t know about it when they come in, I show them. Those who do know head for it the minute they get here. Now some kids are upset because Mom gets finished with her hair too soon. My Kids’ Corner has saved me and my customers many a headache. Not everybody can get sitters. Pass this along, Abby. PAT MILLER, DASSEL, MINN. DEAR PAT: A great idea. Children become restless and unruly when they’re bored. You’ve hit on a wonderful way to keep the little ones out of your hair while you’re working on their mothers’. ♦ * * DEAR ABBY: I read you in the Clearfield Progress, and did I ever relate to “Ma in Melrose”! My grandfather had five strapping teen-age boys who could clean out a fridge of a whole week’s groceries in one day! Nothing could be left alone for another meal: cheese, lunch meats, poultry always gone. Solution: A good old-fashioned padlock was placed on the icebox door. And he held the key! My aunt had four teen-age boys and they all ate like horses. She says it was years before she realized that refrigerators didn’t come with behinds sticking out of the door. Now I have a 13-year-old son, and when I can’t find him, I always know where to look in the fridge. The “reserve shelf for off-limit stuff’ per your suggestion was a good idea until the famous teen-age excuse, “I forgot,” came along. MA EISENHAUER, MORRISDALE, PA.

Butcher P'r'l Block JnW *P? TtmnouM It. 65 3-863 2U tTF W.I.C. Vovchert Food Stmnpi Accaptad Prico* food thru March 5,1911 |'HfflTT3TnTfl%\ turn SMALL AD-BIG VALUES! BIGIOIBjSAII 110 lb. Boneless m VAQ CHUCK STEAK I / | I let Cut 1 099 [PORKCHOPS*jJ| I 10 Lb. ickrich Smoked 1 790 SAUSAGE I # 10 Lb. ■ aa a PORK 1 9*® STEAK

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Calendar of events Wednesday Putnam County Firefighters Association will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday, March 3 at the Madison Fire Department Thursday Fillmore Chapter No. 186, Order of Eastern Star will have open installation of officers after their stated meeting at 8 p.m. Thursday, March 3. Members, families and friends are invited to attend. Larrabec Lodge No. 131, F & AM, Stilesville, will hold its regular stated meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, March 3. All officers and members are urged to attend. AU visiting master masons are welcome. Putnam County Clergy will meet for breakfast at 8 a.m. Thursday, March 3 at the Double Decker restaurant in Greencastle. A few business items and opportunity to visit are scheduled. Regulars are encouraged to invite a new pastor in the community or one from a neighboring church. Friday Women of the Moose will sponsor a Family Night dinner of homemade chicken and noodles, mashed potatoes, green beans, cole slaw and cake, Friday, March 4. Serving will be 5:30-7 p.m., with the band First Class performing at 7:30. Members only. Prices are $2.50 for adults and $1.50 for children (under 12). Saturday Men’s Lenten Breakfast will be held at 7 a.m. Saturday, March 5 at Gobin Memorial United Methodist Church. Rev. Williams will be the speaker. Everyone is invited. For more information, persons may call Rev. Dixon at 653-5532. The Friendly Squares Square Dance Club will dance 8-10:30 p.m. Saturday, March 5 at the Putnam County Fairgrounds Community Building. Ron Everhart will be the guest caller. Betty Mueller will cue rounds. Monday Greencastle Civic League will meet at noon Monday, March 7 in room 221 of the DcPauw Union Building. The Monday Book Club will meet at 2 p.m. Monday, March 7 at the home of Mrs. Howard Burkett. Tots Time, free child care for a parents’ “afternoon out,” is held 1-3:30 p.m. each Monday at First Baptist Church, Judson Drive, Greencastle. Children under age five are eligible. The Putnam Shrine Club will hold its monthly meeting at 7:30 p.m. Monday, March 7 at Putnam Inn. Visitors are welcome. Members should turn in Murat Circus coupons to the local club. Tuesday Happier Homes Extension Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 8 at the home of Mrs. Virginia Liston. Ladies Auxiliary of VFW Post 1550 will hold its regular meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 8 at the post home. The Tuesday Reading Club will meet at 2 p.m. Tuesday, March 8 at the home of Kathryn Dcttloff. Shirley Roof will have the program. Four Leaf Clover Extension Homemakers will meet at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 8 at the Putnam County Fairgrounds. Pat Sheldon will be hostess, with Shirley McElroy presenting devotions. The lesson “Clothing for Current Lifestyles” will be presented by Grace Torn Members should bring a magazine or catalogue picture of a favorite style. Stilesville Chapter No. 554, Order of Eastern Siar, will hold its regular stated meeting at 8 p.m. Tuesday, March 8. All members are urged to attend. AU visiting OES members arc welcome.

Heloise Making baking easier

DEAR HELOISE: I have a hint for all your readers who love to bake but hate the mess of greasing and flouring the pan. Use a pastry brush. After greasing the pan, put a little flour in the bottom and dust the bottom, side and corners. Then brush the leftover flour in one comer and discard it. No more turning and turning the pan and getting flour all over. Lori K., Struthers, Ohio Every hint that makes cooking easier is a favorite of mine. Heloise POT SCRUBBER Dear Heloise: Here’s an idea that I think you’ll find handy if you run out of pot scrubbers. I discovered this while camping. After frying eggs, the frying pan was a mess and I was out of pot scrubbers. I used the plastic holder from a six-pack of cold drinks.

Bold-colored sweats are fashion statement

NEW YORK (AP) Even the once-humble sweatsuit, now a major fashion category, is feeling the impact of the bright color mood predicted for spring 1988. Colors ranging from hot pinks and corals to yellow, gold and rich blues will mark the fashion for sweats, says Sarah Britt, director of fashion merchandising for BassettWalker, a major manufacturer of sweatshirts and sweatpants. The bright colors will be complemented by bleached pastel shades in the same family, such as pale peach against coral, she says. “Bold colors, always important in sweatshirt fashion, will have new appeal as the fashion trend filters into all markets from the high-color looks seen for this season on the runways of such designers as Christian Lacroix,” Ms. Britt says. “The color excitement is felt in both women’s and men’s wear, where the ever-popular red, white and blue combination will be even more significant than in past seasons,” she adds. Color in sweatshirts will often be blocked; that is, sleeves may have panels of a color contrasting to the body of the shirt, and pants will coordinate with either color block. The wide blocks of color give a stripe effect and white, as an accent, adds snap to the look, Ms. Britt points out

Now I don’t throw them away; I save them in case I run out of the scrubbers. —. Betty Woods, Newton, Texas CREAM-STYLE CORN Dear Heloise: I just finished reading a hint about cream-style com. I’d like to give you my favorite way to serve it. I heat the com in a pan, then remove it from the stove and crumble some crackers into it. Tastes great! It also thickens the cream. Mary Sheaffer, Mobile, Ala. STICKY DISH Dear Heloise: I have an easy way to remove sticky baked-on food from a casserole dish. Instead of soaking the dish, put the tea kettle on and boil water while you are doing your other dishes. Pour boiling hot water over the dish. It usually removes the food instantly. Janet Mohring, Omaha.

The most popular prints are those with words incorporated in the pattern, she says, adding that her company’s leading screen print for spring interplays designs of sports equipment with the words “Graphic Sports.” She feels that words any words are an important part of the design element for the coming season. Silhouettes in the women’s market for sweats will not change radically; however, oversize fleece mock turtlenecks, tapered fleece pants, shorts and miniskirts will supplement the popular basics. Ms. Britt notes that these items have been in sweats lines previously, but reports that for this spring they are getting a fashion boost from designer sportswear trends. “Fashion may come and go, but the sweatshirt market has consumer appeal that is expected to continue well into the 19905,” Ms. Britt predicts. “Quality producers have had some difficulty meeting the demand for basic fleece, and see alternative fabrics such as rib knits as a possible replacement in future seasons. “For spring, the rib knit will be one of the offerings in our ‘Cotton Works’ line, bridging the gap between active sportswear and fashion.”