The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 September 1954 — Page 2
THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10,1954.
FAI.SK
s ^ kj:
HAViHG BUDGET T50U2LE? Let Family Finance CONSOLIDATE Your present unpaid biLs with a if Budget-Built Lean” - $2C to SotO 1178 “Vo'ir Friend In Ne. tl” 9 E. Walnut St.
THE DAILY BANNER ond HERALD CONSOLIDATED Entered In the ptxtoffice at fireencaHtle, Indiana aa second r la-**s mail matter under act of * March 7. 1878. Subscription price 2.» cents per week; So.00 per yepr by mail in Putnam County; Sd.00 to $10.10 per year outside Putnam County. Telephones 74, 95, 114 S. II- Rariden, Publisher 17-19 South Jackson Street.
RECTOR FUNERAL HOME AMSULANCE SERVICE Phone 341
"i!
SOCIETY
I ant
O. L. John
uin. Sup
value
Braden-Alien Weddinjf Nov. 7
Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Craig of | Boston Club
at 10 A F.
ANNIVERSARIES
TODAY’S BIBEE THOUGHT I was glad when they said unto ne. Let us go unto the house of he Lord.—Psalm 122:1.—We are lot always rewarded by a great ipiritual uplift from the sermor, heie are not enough great dm achers, but try praying for .he preacher.
Birthdays
Cline Ratcliff, Bainbridge, I Sept. 10th. Mrs. Worth Arnold, Fillmore,
Sept. 8th.
Bedford, announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter. Miss Marjorie Allen of Lafayette. to George Braden, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Braden * of Greencastle. | Route 2. j The wedding will take place | on November 7th at the First Christian Church in Lafayette.
News CM Boys
School Days Are >re Aaain And don't forget Sunday Sri: >1 :it 10:00 A. M. ( .. ’{( II Ol- <,OI> — .V." Main Street \ ( la"i for e\ery age and {her -’s a class for you. BE LOOKIN'; FC:t YOF! K. C LAFt-TY, Fnisfer
THOSE GEOWINa BODIES _ INST WMKS WIND AND SNOW ^ >w is the time to fortify the youngsters against the ideas of 11r\ i s alie.ul. He siir«- that tin-;.' receive only the lies! food,
perly prepared.
Jon't Compromise With Quality
A COMPLETE L;ME OF
O-WE-BA FOODS
If
•o
ol McIntyre s
quality mmn SOFTII \ INK ST.
PIIOXE 42
CARS AWASH IN PROVIDENCE
<* 9 RHODE ISLAND was the hardest-hit state, counting 18 dead in the wake of Hurricane Carol. Autos caught in the accompanying torrential downpour are nearly covered by floodwaters near Union station in Providence. (International Soundphotoj
BIGGEST PARADE SINCE CIVIL WAR
n ^
MARCHING ALONG the traditional parade route, the 36th annual American Legion convention parade ia the biggest in Washington ■Ince Civil War days, (International Soundphotoj
Personal And local News Brief*
The new addition being built to the M. E. Church in Cloverdale is near ing completion. Four j j Sunday School rooms are being added. Anyone having used school books they wish to sell may bung them to the Book Store in tii.- High School building Monday morning. The Monday Club will meet Monday, Sept. 13th at 2:00 P. M. at the home of Mrs. J. W. Herod. I Mrs. Paul Cox will have charge of the program.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brackney and Miss June Dickey have gone to Geneva, N. Y., to visit A. B. Brackney who is stationed at the Sampson Air Force Base. The Band Boosters of the Reelsville school will meet Monday evening. Sept. 13, at 7:30 DST at the school. Everyone inti rested is urged to attend. Mrs. Harry McAllister and daughters of Bainbridge, spent thr week end in Indianapolis with Mr. and Mrs. Harry McAllister Jr. and attended the State Fair. The W. W. S. S. Class of Union Valley Church will meet with Mrs. Dallas Hodge Tuesday evening Sept. 14th at 7:30 P. M. DST Members please note change of place. Mr. and Mrs. Forest Ashworth and family and Mrs. Fred Williams have returned to their homes in Miami, Florida, after visiting friends and relatives in this city. « Miss Marylou Murrie, a 1954 graduate of Cloverdale high school, will attend State University. During the summer she was a life guard at Hulman Beach at Cataract Lake. The first meeting of the Cloveidale P. T. A. will be held Moniay evening. Sept. 13, at 6:30. There will be a pitch-in supper. Everyone is urged to come and bring well filled baskets. Prof, and Mrs. Frank S. McKenna have returned from New York, N. Y., where Prof. McKenna attended sessions of the national convention of the American Psychological Association. The new modern home being built by Mr. and Mrs. Jewel H. Vaughan on south Main St., Cloverdale. will soon be completed and will add much to the appearance of this section of the metropolis of south Putnam. The Deer Creek Coon Hunter’s Association wil meet this evening at 8 o’clock at the home of Woody SutheiTin. All members ire requested to meet Saturday morning at 9 o’clock at the club house to work. Rev. B H. Franklin, Pastor of the 1st. M. E. Church at Logansport. Ind., who is attending the Pastors Conference at Greencastle. visited his farm near Cloverdale and spent the night with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wilson, who live on the farm and operate it. The Catholic Ladies Guild wid hold its first meeting of the year Monday. September 13th, in the "hurch Chapel. Mrs. John J. Van Alstyne, chairman and her committees, will be in charge of the pitch in dinner at 6:30 p. m. All ladies of the parish are urged to attend. Mr. and Mrs. Jos. B. Crosby’ and Jack Crosby have returned from a vacation at Lake Manistp on the northern peninsula o f higan. Mr. and Mrs. Crosby ort lake fishing poor, but k Crosby had excellent luck ^t fishing in the secluded streams around Manistique.
Executive Club Council Held Called Meeting The executive council of the Putnam County Federation of clubs held a called meeting at the Roachdale Public library on August 31 with Mrs. A. F. Hig-
gins, presiding.
Reports of Federation progress in the various departments were made by chairmen of the County Federation and plans outlined by club presidents for the y'ears club work. Special announcement was made of the coming fall convention of the ! j Fifth District I.F.C. to be held ■ Sept. 20. at Newport. Mis. S. A. Colliver is the present 5th district president and will be suci { ceeded by Mrs. John Fortner of 716 Howard St., Rockville, Ind. Reservations for the luncheon at the district convention should be sent to Mrs. J. N. Jones. Newport, not rater than Sept. 18. Mrs. Eugene Hutchens, the chairman of Putnam County Federation’s project for furnishing a hospital room in the proposed addition to the Putnam County hospital, held a meeting of her special committee prior to the called council meeting. It was decided to ask each club to ar-
Gaylord G. Parker of Stilesville ( i ange its individual plan for par-
Ind., R. 1. will graduate this week from the Repeater and Carrier Installation and Maintenance Course ,one of the many courses offered at The Southeastern Signal School, Camp Gordon, Georgia. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Tressman L. Parker, Stilesville, Ind. The Repeater and Carrier Installation and Maintenance Course, which is 20 weeks in length, trains selected enlisted personnel in the installation and maintenance of field and fixed plant carrier and repeater equipment. This equipment permits several simultaneous telephWie and telegraph transmissions over a single pair of wires. During his training, Pfc. Gaylord G. Parker received a technical education worth thousands of dollars. He will now be reassigned to an active unit of the United States Army. The Southeastern Signal School is a component of the Signal Corps Training Center, a mammoth communications college, which supplies trained signal technicians to Army units all over the world.
The number of employees engaged in crude oil and natural gas production in Texas in 1953 was 113,400.
TV TONIGHT WFBM-TV—Channel 6
Two shirts laundered FREE if ; we miss replacing a button. Send : your shirts to Home Laundry’ & j Cleaners. Fri-tf
5:00
Chuckwagon
5:30
Superman
6:00
New; Winn
6:15
Winn - Sports
6:30
r CBS News
6:45
Telenewc
7:00
Mama
7:30
Topper
8:00
Star Playhouse
8:30
Our Miss Brooks
9:00
I Led 3 Liv^s
9:30
TBA
10:00
Weather
10:15
News
10:30
The Falcon
11:00
Rogers Hoilr
12:00
WTTY—Channel 4
5:00
Feature at 5
6:00
Front Page News
6:15
Weather; Talk
6:30
Coke Time
6:45
News Caravan
7:00
The Duke
7:30
Life of Riley
8:00
Big Story
8:30
Soundstage
9:00
Sports Reel
9:45
Davenport
10:00
TBA
10:30
News; Weather
10:45
S;> : •
11:00
Spotlight Theater
12:00
News
ticipation in the hospital project fund raising. This will then be fund raising. This will then be ject fund raising if it bebe merged into a county wide project fund raising if it becomes necessary to raise additional capital. Mrs. Cecil Brown, Putnam County Federation Chairman of the Heart Fund, asked that women of the County Federation assist in the Heart Kitchen at the Indiana State Fair on Tuesday’, Sept. 7. Mrs. S. S. Colliver as chairman of this committee, Mrs. A. F. Higgins as County chairman, Mrs. Chauncey Sutherlin, Mrs. Ora VanCleve and Mrs. Ernest Jeffries and Mrs. Earl Hall were hostesses in this demonstration of the Heart Kitchen on Tuesday, the day assigned to the Putnam County’ Federation of Clubs. Mrs. Colliver as chairman, reports great interest was shown in this exhibit
Meets Monday The Boston Club will meet Monday evening at 7:45 at the home of Miss Eva Milburn. Mrs Geneva Shelly will he assistant hostess and Mrs. Ruth Quebbeman will have the program. Women Voters’ Board Marks First Year The board of the Greencastle Provisional League of Women Voters met in the Parish Hall of St. Andrew’s church Wednesday in its regular monthly session. The meeting celebrated the rounding out of the first year of the League’s activities. During that time the members have made a careful study of the town’s government which they plan to publish soon, attended regularly the meetings of thtcity council and the school board Plano for the month were presented by' the chairmen and the following meetings announced: September 14th 8 p. m. Annua’ meeting National Guard Armory. September 21st 8 p. m. Unit meeting^ September 22nd 8 p .m. Unit meeting. September 23rd 9 a. m. Unit meeting. The principal activity of the League for the month will be the financial campaign to be conducted in the community during the next two weeks under the leadership of Mrs. Robert Fletcher. This drive will be the final requirement of the national organization for the Greencastle group to become a local league. Members of the drive committee are Mrs. Robert Farber, Mrs. James Hughes, Mrs. Austin Sprague, Mrs. DeWan Killinge*-, Mrs. Roy Sutherlin, Mrs. Louis Hay’S, Mrs. Robert Poorman, Mrs. Frank McKenna, Mrs. Malcolm Cornell, Mrs. Joe McCord, Mrs. R. E. Mizer and Mrs. Car: Washier.
NOTICE TO PARENTS OF . ELEMENTARY PUPILS
An unpredicted increase in elementary enrollment and lack of anticipated housing facilities have necessitated some unavoidable congestion and shuffling of pupils from building to building. Parents, pupils and teachers have been most considerate and cooperative; for which we are truly thankful and appreciative. Please continue to bear with ti.
Girl Scout News
Girl Scouting in Greencastle goes into full swing next week with a ’’get-together'’ for Scout Leaders. Brownie Leaders, and Girl Scout Council members. Mrs. Frederick Dettloff, president of the Greencastle Girl Scout Council has announced that the Council will sponsor an Outdoor Training School beginning Tuesday. Sept. 11, and lasting through Friday. Sept. 17. The instructor for these sessions will be Mrs. Robert McFarland of Quincy, Illinois, who is a professionally trained Girl Scout worker. Many Greencastle Scout leaders who have had instruction from Mrs. McFarland on her two previous visits here have found the course to be in valuable. This school is designed tb b< of specific help to Brownie and Scout leaders as they plan their individual programs for thei; - troops. The expanding child population and the rapid growth of the Girl Scout organization means that there is a continuing need for many new volunteer workers. All interested persons are urged to take part in this school. On Tuesday, Mrs. McFarland requests that all persons attending should be at the Christian
unch loon
intil Tht
tructi
in
is will be from 1( :30 P. M committee fixun th
tys the Daily A. M Coun-
cil who has been making plans
for this training < George Williams Rector, Jr.. Mrs Mrs. Evan Crawl mer Harvey.
■ourse are: Mrs. , Mrs. Charles George Gove, ?y and Mrs. El-
F1LEMOKE METHODIST CHURCH William Tressler, Pastor. Raymond R. Pursell. Supt. Church school 10 a. m. Morning worship 11 a. m. Church school picnic and hi ket dinner. Sept. 12.
FORMERLY SAM HANNA'S BOOK STORK BUDKS PUIS BUXTON BILLFOLDS
FALL TUNE UP Lef us inspect your radiator and heater hose. Brakes Refined - Ignition Systm Checked, Sfar'er and Generator Serviced. Motors completely rebuilt or installed. All Work Guaranteed Wrecker Service
MAJOR'S STANDARD SERVICE
BAINBRIDGE, INDIANA
W R I G H IS
ELECTRIC SERYICE
\Vcstih0hoiise
S05 X. Jackson St. Phone 64 APPLIANCES AND TELEVISION SALES AND SERYICE
BEAUTIFUL STOCKINGS “FAMOUS 5”® PROPORTIONED LEG TYPES NOW 60 Gauge, 15 Den. 51 Gauge, 30 Den. Regular $1.65
51 Gauge, Regular
15 Den. $1.35
U b** ul iS: \i ib.iS*
Choose the styles and prices
i’REYirS
V
I
