The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 22 April 1955 — Page 2
THE Daily BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1955.
Vets Remembered By Jr. Red Cross Easter for veterans at the Fort Harrison Hospital and the West Tenth Street Veterans Hospital in Indianapolis, was made a little brighter through the efforts of the Junior Red Cross members of Putnam county. Cloverdale, Bainbridge and the Ridpath and Miller Schools here
in
for the most attractive and colorful tray mats, nut cups and bunny favors used on the trays
for the veterans.
Mrs. W. A. Shelly, executive
secretary of the Putnam County Red Cross has received letters of appreciation from both hospitals j stating how much the patients enjoyed these little works of art made by the youngsters of our
county.
Shut-ins in the nursing homes here in the county also received the Easter favors.
Bio. James Wright will preach ' at Long Branch Church of * Christ. Sunday morning and evening, April 24th.. 11 a. m.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Robert Keith Girton, farmer,
Greencastle were responsible Reelsvllle Route 1, and Peggy j
Ann Hammond, bookkeeper, j Greencastle Route 2. * Lewis Thomas Smith, fanner, ^ New Ross, and Bernice Virginia Frazer, at home, Roachdale.
THE DAILY BANNER
and
HERALD CONSOLIDATED
Entered In the poetotnoe *1 j and 7:30 p. m. DST.
Greencastle, Indiana am second class mall matter under act of March 7, 1878. Subscription price 28 cents per week; $&.00 per year by mail in Putnam County; $6.00 to $10.40 per year outside
Putnam County.
Telephones 74, 06, 114 8. K. Rariden, Ihibtisher 17-19 South Jackson Street.
Jackson Twp. Farmers Meet
DO IT YOOfRSELF
Personal
And Local News Briefs
Anniversary Luncheon
Is Held By Club
The April meeting
FOR
SURE BEAUTY
k development of Generel Electric
.39 QUART ★ 16 beautiful colors ★ Dries in on hour ★ Durable because it's rubberized! When you “Do-it-yourself”, you want a paint that’s easy to use. But you want it to look good when you’re finished, too. And you’re sure of both when you use Super-TEX Surfa-Tone. Made for “amateurs”, it flows on easily with either brush or roller. Dries in an hour. Gorgeous decorator colors. FREE "How to Point" BOOKLET. Ccme in today for free booklet that tells you how to "Do it yourself", G.C. MURPHY
- -3
AS NATI0NAIIY ADVERTISED
• • V
in LIFE
i nnia
• -
SEEN
LOOK
mmim
DEEMSH0NKWILER
DIAMOND AND WEDDING RINGS For over 100 years the name Artcarved has stood for unquestioned quality and value-and each Artcarved diamond ring is registered and guaranteed for your
Jirotection.
And in wedding rings, too, there M nothing finer than Artcarved— guaranteed for a lifetime.
A. TENDERNESS SET
tfoe-C. Ri.g $35.00 ltd. s Ring $32.50
■ ■ ASHCROFT SIT
Kse9.rn.n1 Ring .... $250 00 •rid. * CirOM $135 00
C. FAIRFIELD SET Kf09.rn.nt Ring
Md«'s Circlfl
tdl
$550 00 $225.00
PrlrMlatl. r*4 Tu. Au<* c.ug«4 to .*«.
DEEM-SHONKWILER . “DISTINCTIVE JEWELERS” South In liana St. AvdwiiAd Artcarved j#w«i«r
of the r
West Madison Home Demonstration Club was a luncheon at Old Trail Inn in honor of the twentyfifth anniversary year on Wednesday, April 20. Twenty-two members, two children and three guests were present. The guests were Mrs. Ross Furney, Mrs. Joe Robinson and Mrs. Mildred Cassady. The regular meeting following the luncheon was presided over by the president, Mrs. Everett Ellis. The lesson on program planning was led by Mrs.
Paul Aker. A donation was Roy Hillis is rushing the sea- j made to the cancer Fund. Sevsoji by wearing his straw hat. j eral pictures were taken of the
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Neier and I group.
Mrs. Harvey Bressler returned The next meeting will be May home Thursday after spending 125 at 2:00 p. m. at the home of
the winter in Florida.
Mrs. Paul Aker. Members are
Little Miss Cindy Sue Arnold asked to wear a basic dress or
| of Danville is spending a few days with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ward Arnold of Clinton
Falls.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wood and son, Frankie, are spending a vacation of several weeks with | Mr. and Mrs. Frank Elliott in
Ojean Springs, Miss.
A program of compositions by Chopin will be presented by Prof. Franz Bodfors in recital at 8:15 p. m. Monday, April 25, in the
►Student Union ballroom.
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Kilgore
of Princeton, N. J., are spending .Modern Priscilla Club i the w-eek-end with Dr. and Mrs. j To Meet Monday
j J. A. Throop, and will also be vis-
j itors at DePauw
suit and bring accessories.
Chorus To Sing For Tea, .May 6
The Putnam County Horme Demonstration Chorus will meet for rehearsal Monday evening, April 25th, 7:15 DST, at the home of Mrs. Evan Crawley, 712 E. Seminary St., Greencastle. All members are urged to attend in preparation for the chorus to sing for Home Demonstration
Tea, May 6th.
i 'Hie Jackson Township Farm Bureau held their annual com bread and bean dinner in the Barnard School building. April 19th w r ith seventy-two people present. Mr. J. E. Page gave thanks for the bounteous meal. Afterward the meeting was opened with group singing and Mrs. Guy Dean gave the devotions. The secretary’s report was read and approved. After some discussion as to providing expense money for our 4-H leaders, a ways and means committee consisting of G. W. Dean, C. G. Sutherlin. and Wm. T. Rayfield,
were appointed.
Mr. Gene Ozment, county chairman of F. B. was presented and made a short talk. He then introduced Mr. Frank Ovens of Craw’fordsville, who gave a talk on Farm Bureau organization and explained the relations existing between Farm Bureau and the Farm Bureau Co-operative. His talk was very informative
and interesting.
The hosts for the May meeting are: Mr. and Mrs. Perry McMurtry, Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Elza Page and Mr. and Mrs. Claud Malayer.
at DePauw during the
week-end.
Miss Audrey Beatty, Mrs. Paul Thomas and Mrs. Herold Ross will be in Evansville Saturday and Sunday to attend the State meeting of American Association of University Women. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Spurlock have returned from a three months trip in the West, visiting relatives in Oklahoma, Texas, Missouri, and their son, Dr. Faye Spurlock and family, in Topeka,
Kansas.
Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Wilde Thursday were, Mrs. Ernest Stout, Casper, Wyo., Mrs. William Crawford, Chicago, Mrs. Charles Benjamin, Scircleville, and Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Benjamin of Lafayette.
rtate and federal budgets Lesson leaders attending thv session will present the information to their local club members at their May and June meetings.
The Modern Priscilla Club will meet on Monday afternoon, April 25th, 2:30 p. m., at the home of
Mrs. W. O. Timmons.
Kiwanis Holds Luncheon Meetinc
Over one hundred persons at tended the Greencastle Kiwanis luncheon meeting at the Memorial Student Union on Thursday. Cloyd Moss presided. Robert Gould introduced John Thornton of Terre Haute, president of the Wabash Valley Brokerage Co., the speaker. Following a few remarks complimenting Greencastle on its cleanliness and diversified in
Any homemaker in the Man- dustry, Mr. Thornton commented
hattan community who is interested in belonging to a Home Demonstration club is invited to an organization meeting at the home of Mrs. Walter Hutcheson on Tuesday afternoon, April 26, at 1:30. The Putnam County Historical Society will meet at Old Trail Inn Wednesday evening, April 27. The program will be an account of the first trans-contin-ental trip by auto. Reservations must be made with Mrs. Wm. Boatright not later than Tuesday. The head of DePauw’s speech department. Dr. Herold T. Ross, will speak April 29 at a meeting of Indiana’s Audio-Visual Instruction Directors in Terre Haute. His topic for a 2:30 p, m. session in the studios of Station WTHI-TV will be “Educational Television in Indiana.”
I
FISHING FUN
on the importance of the inde pendent grocer in a community. In this respect he praised Green castle on its several progressive independents, who are citizens of the community and who pay their share of taxes for the support of schools, streets and other facilities that make for a better community. Mr. Thornton urged more support be given the inde pendent grocers. Guests of the Kiwanians were Paul Gould and Joe Ryan, guests of Robert Gould; • Art Agnevv. guest of Cloyd Moss; John Grismer of Indianapolis, guest of Earle Boyd; N. G. VanNett, Indianapolis and Clum. Bucher - of Bedford.
Dent Chaney has been having some mixed luck with his fishing this spring. He was telling me that he hooked into a nice Smallmouth Bass, about a week ago, and after a nice fight, brought the beauty in to take him off the hook, when ZIP, and he was gone. Now the sad part of the story is that Dent was using a three and one half pound test spinning line, which he says I talked him into buying. I’m sure that it is a good thing that I didn’t happen along at that moment, or I might have joined brother Bass in the water. However, maybe everything is all right now, as Dent hooked, and successfully landed another Smallmouth this week that weighed three and one half pounds . . . THE SPORTSMAN'S SHOP “Putnam County’* Tackle Box”
TV TONIGHT WFBM-TV—Channel 6 5:00 Chuckwagon 6:00 News; Winn 6:15 Winn Trio 6:30 Sports 6:45 Witness; New's 7:00 Rin Tin Tin 7:30 Big Town 8:00 TV Theater 9:00 I Led 3 Lives 9:30 Wrestling 10:00 Weather 10:15 News 10:30 The Falcon 11:00 Night Owl Theater WTTV—Channel 4
5:00
5:30
Western Ledger
6:00
Front Page News
6:15
Weather; Talk
6:30
6:45
News Caravan
7:00
7:30
8:00
- Big Story
8:30
9:00
. . Cavalcade of Sports
9:45
— Sports Previews
10:00
- Badge 714
10:30
— Indiana Tonight
11:00
12:00
WRIGHT'S ELECTRIC SERVICE
\\estin<‘liousc <7
DEALER SOS N. Jackson St. Pfcaae §4 APPLIANCES AND TELEVISION HALES AMD SERVICE
—FARMERS FACE is 50 cents a pound. Then the computations would be as follows : (1) The difference between the incentive price and the average price is computed—12 cents; •.2) 80 percent of this difference 13 derived— 9.6 cents; (3) the derived figure of 9.6 cents is multiplied by 5—48 cents, which is the payment per hundredweight. (The 80 percent differential is because pulled wool is normally of coarser grade and shorter staple length than shorn wool. The 5-pound figure used as a multiplier is an average for the wool per hundredweight of animal.) Here again, be sure to sell your animals for what they are worth, because the compensating payment is a flat rate per 100 pounds. For example: Let’s suppose that the compensating payment turns out to be 48 cents a hundredweight. If you sell a 100-pound lamb for $20, your total return will be $20.48. But if you sell the same lamb for only $18 (on the false assumption that the payment will “make up the difference”), your return will total only $18.48. Good marketing in this case wxmld mean $2 more in your pocket.
WINS SERMON AWARD First winner of the $500 Lewis Sermon Award at DePauw University is Robert Currie of Pekin, 111., it was announced here today. Established last June by Dr. Franklin Lewis, Webster Grove, Mo., the award is presented to the junior pre-ministerial student who writes and delivers the best sermon in the annual competition. A native Hoosier and former Methodist minister in Indianapolis, Dr. Lewis endowed the award with a $10,000 gift in memory of his daughter, Florence Ruth Lewis. Currie, whose sermon subject was “Peace, But Not the Kiss of Peace,” bested seven other preministerial students in the 1955 contest.
G. A. A. Bowling News The standing of the G.A.A. inner school Bowling tournament is as follows: Juniors, 3; Sophomores, 2; Seniors, 1; Freshman. 0. The Juniors won this weekend The following scores were bowled with handicap: Juniors, 738; Sophomores. 724; Freshmen, 621. High actual Individual games were bowled by: Jolly Ann Cooksey, 125, Junior; Anita Hurst, 105, Sophomore; Sandy I Dudley, 101, Freshman.
White Way Beginners
Rivers Electric
... 49
38
Hopkins-Walton ....
.... 49
38
Starr
.... 48y 2
381/&
Home Laundry
... 431/2
431/2
Nurses Home
.... 43
44
Irene’s Cafe
42i/ 2
441/2
Shetrone
.... 37
50
I.ucas-Collins
.... 351/2
51i£
High Team Single Game: Rivers 710 High Team Series: Rivers 2035 High Indiv. Single Game: M. Shaw 180 Hi Indiv. Series: M. Shaw 458 Over 400: Shaw 458, Arbuckle 430, Lear 413, Moore 403. Over 350: Raas 398, K. Gooch 389, Bullerdick 383, Justus 382, Shimer 381, H. Gooch 368, Hopkins 368, Jackson 362.
RECTOR FUNERAL HOME
AMBULANCE PHONE
SERVICE 341
ANNIVERSARIES Weddings Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Skinner, 52 years today, April 22.
There will be a joint meeting of the Deer Creek Coon Hunters and ladies this evening at 8 o’clock at the new club house.
Librarians invited to attend the .annual spring meeting at Indiana University April 29 of the Ohio Valley Regional Group if Library Catalogers include Mrs. Vera S. Cooper and Marian Mullendare of DePauw University.
LEADERS ATTEND MEETING
An all-day session dealing with the responsibilities and privileges of being a citizen of these United States was arranged for and attendel by lesson leaders from all 28 of the Home Demonstration Clubs in Putnam County. Professors J. B. Kohlmeyer and J. C. Bottum, members of the Agriculture Economics Extension staff of Purdue University presented the lessons. According to Professor Bottum, being a good citizen includes: (1) getting the facts and understanding the issues as well as possible, (2) learning the political party, by being a party worker, or by joining a pressure group. How the party system works and functions of county and city officials also was presented to the group. The afternoon session started with a true, false quiz on state and governmental finance which pointed up some misconceptions regarding goverment spending. These misconceptions were cleared up during the afternoon as information was presented on tax rates, and local,
CLOSE OUT EVERGREEN TREES VALUES TO S4.88
Only $1.?9 To $2.99 G. C. MUR’HY
YOUTH AWARD NIGHT Tuesday, April 2olti - 6:30 P. M. CHICKEN DINNER IN HONOR OF OUTSTANDING SENIOR BOY AND GIRL OF GREENCASTLE HiGH SCHOOL Meeting Follows Dinner All Members Urged To Attend B. P. 0. ELKS No. 1077
WXLW
is your station !
Now that 5,000 watti of taper-power make it possible for WXLW to beam to everyone, we Invite you to our popular dawn-to-dusk type of delivery. Music ... oil you wantl The kind you request. And new* . . . every half hour I WXLW it proud to be the Hoosier's favorite itation. Thousand* in the Indianapolis area love their “Good-time, doy-tim# station," and you will, tool 950 on your dial insures your getting your kind of music ... your kind of newsl WXLW welcomes you to its ever-growing, appreciative familyl INDIANAPOLIS "Your Good-Time Day-Time Slolion"
< A.VXO.Y HAS THfi ANSWERS TO THE QUESTION
S
il. Smm
dtaduat £ aim
9
J' M
/
CANNON’S OFFERS THE GREATEST SHOPPING C3N-
VENfENCE RELATIVES
EVER OFFERED AND FRIENDS
WHO WISH TO SELECT GIFTS REALLY WANTED BY THE YOUNG MEN GRADUATES---WHETHER IT’S CUFF LINKS, LUGGAGE OR A NEW SUIT OR SPORTCOAT---r.vwo.vs
0
I
