The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 13 July 1955 — Page 2

THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1955.

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):Pauw Runners race Stiff Card

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Thursday's Schedule

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idition to dual competie Bengal harriers will the Indiana Collegiate nee. Little State ,and Big leets, all booked for In-

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of the home meets—with ite Oct. 1, Oberlin Oct. d Wabash Oct. 29 - will be between halves of varsity

all contests.

Coached by Robert R. Harvey, the DePauw squad won three of even meets in 1954 and finished third in both the ICC and Little

State meets.

DePauw’s 1955 cross-country

schedule:

Oct. 1 Ball State (here)

Oct. 1 Indiana Central (here)

Oct. 8 Oberlin (here) Oct. 15 Valparaiso (there) Oct. 19 Butler (there) Oct. 22 Wabash (there) Oct. C9 Wabash (here)

Nov. 4 ICC, Little State, and State meets (Indianapolis)

fhf DAILY BANNER

and

HERALD CONSOLIDATED Entered in the pofrtoffloe at Green castle, Indiana m second class mall matter under act of March 7, L87&. Subacrtptlon price 16 cents per week; $6.00 per year by mall In Putnam County; $6.00 to SI0.40 i<er year outside Pataana Comity* Telephones 74, 96, 114 8. ft- Rarlden, PoMlsber 17-1* Sooth Jackson Street.

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>ie:;ce S.vihart. of Des j es. Iowa, is a guest of Dr. I I and Mrs. D. W. Killinger. Sne ! will leave Friday for Cincinnati. I

Rev. Kenneth Dodson and Mrs. Dodson of Lake Winona were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Baldwin Monday evening and Tuesday. Rev. Dodson is a Baptist minister and is holding a revival at Waveland. Ind. He would be glad for visitors from hei-e to attend the meeting. Mrs Dodson is a niece of Leroy Bald- ! win.

TODVY’S BIBLE THOUGHT Take therefore no thought for the morrow.— Mat. 6:34.—A corlect translation would say take no anxious care for the things of the morrow. A fatal mistake is to try to carry- two days load in owe day.

Personal And Local News Briefs

Friends of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Duncan ■will i-egret to learn that they will leave Greencastle to make their future home in Muncie. Mr. Duncan, who has been associated with the Greencastle plant of Ball Brothers in the sales department for a number of years, will be connected ywith this department at the j main offices in Muncie. Mr. and Mrs. Duncan and their son and Mrs. Duncan's mother, Mrs. Edith Zeigelman, will move to their new home on Thursday.

and during the ceremony. Following the ceremony a re- * ception was held at the home of ] the bride’s mother. A three tier j wedding cake, topped with minia- | ture bride and bride groom, cen- j tered the serving table. Margaret j Lyons and Jane Mercer presided | at the reception. Mrs. Stearley attended Brazil school and Mr. Stearley is a graduate of Reelsville High School. They will reside at R. R. 1, Cen-

ter Point.

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Black;

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EDWARD VOGEL APPOINTED NEW A & P TREASURER

LIN ESTXH'K SALE Of livestock at the ClovSale Barn Tuesday includt hogs which went from down for weights under >s. Sows and pigs soi l $8I to 8102 per head, deig on size and number of Feeder pigs from 40 to 80 ;o!d from 89.90 to 817.60

neau. ealers, n $! 9 1 went

100 to 200 lbs., sold > 822; while 200 to 400 Tom $13.50 to $18.50. aid from 400 lbs.. 813.00. 500 lbs. and.

Appointment of Edward J. Vogel as treasurer of the Central Western Division of A & P Food Stores was announced today by president John M. Toolin. Vogel, a member of the eom- ! pany’s headquarters auditing | staff ir. New York for the past 1.0 years, replaces Stanley F. Dole who will retire from the I company August 1 after 34 years i service. Dole will become vice | president of Olivet College. Vogel will make his headquarters in Detroit with the division, winch operates company jstorcs in Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, | Illinois, Kentucky and Tennessee.

[THREE DAY SPECIAL Thursdiiy -- Friday ■■ Saturday | COTTON SKiRTS . S2.00 & $3.00 j CULOTTES $2.00 SUMMER JEWELRY .... 50c

PLUS TAX

ADLERS

East Side Square

The Good Cheer Club will meet Thursday morning at 9:30 at the home of Mrs. Ralph Carico. Don Marketto, music instructor, has announced there will be no lessons until Friday, July 15, due to a death in the family. Mr. and Mrs. Willie Henry of Peru were guests of Mrs. R. P. Moore and daughter last Saturday. Mrs. Moore and Mr. Henry are cousins. Virginia Jones, of Plainfield, was lodged in the Putnam county jail at 6:15 p. m. Tuesday by local officers on a public intoxication charge. A/1C Ralph L. Mason has returned to Offutt AFB, Omaha, Neb., after spending a w-eek with his mother, Mrs. Helen Mason and sister, Sandra. Mrs. Robert Feemster and daughter, Linda, of Tarrytown, N. Y., will arrive today for a tw-o weeks visit with Mrs. Feemster's mother, Mrs. D. O. Moffett. Marilyn Overshiner, Laconda Black and Peggy Nichols are attending the Assembly of God church camp at Lake Placid at Harford City, Ind. They will return home on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Mason have returned home from a vacation at Lake Shafer. While there Harold E. Mason and daughter and Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Windey of St. Louis paid them a visit. Mr. and Mrs. Don Marketto have been called to New Palestine due to the death of Mrs. Marketto’s uncle, Floyd Wheeler. Mr. Wheeler passed away Tuesday. Funeral services will be held Thursday afternoon. Revival services now in progress at Brush Harbor, 2 miles north of Greencastle on Dunbar Hill. Hear Brother Homer Miller, evangelist. Special singing. Greencastle’s only full Pentecostal message. Acts 4-12 and Acts 2-38. Oness Pentecostal church. Doris Elaine Day, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Day, Fillmore, has enlisted in the Marines and left Friday for Parris Island. South Carolina. Her address is Pvt. Doris Day, Women Marine Recruit Training Bn., Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island. South Carolina.

SOCIETY Hawaiian ‘Luau’ Planm-d At Yacht Club An Hawaiian ‘luau’ is being planned at the Cataract Yacht Club to be held on Saturday, July 23rd, at six o’clock. During the visit of Commodore and Mrs. Fred Keuthan tc Hawaii this past winter, arrangements were made to make this an authentic iuau.’ Invitations were sent by the Hawaiian Chamber of Commerce in the Hawaiian tongue and a translation of it followed. A iuau’ is held in Hawaii to celebrate the first birthday of a child, wedding anniversary, or some other celebrated occasion. This, being the first anniversary of the Cataract Yacht Club, a iuau’ is in order. According to the Hawaiian Juan’s,’ there must be plenty of food and celebration during the evening. The dishes of food planned are a whole roast pig, roasted turkeys, smoked turkeys, snrimp, poi, taekoi sticks macedamia nuts and many varied dishes, too numerous to mention. There will be an Hawaiian orchestra, dancers, grass skirts, orchid leis flown from Hawaii, Hawaiian shirts and hats for the men and hibiscus flowers for the ladies to wear in their hair. Members from Greencastle are assisting Commodore and Mrs. Keuthan in planning the luau.

RaxkH Dinner Hold At Ho*m* of Mr. and Mrs ' Leonard Children of the late Jess Minnick and their families gathered at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lester O. Leonard in Bainbridge on Sunday, July 10th. Dinner was spread on tables under the shade trees. Those that enjoyed themselves were: Mr .and Mrs. Lloyd Allsman, Mr. and Mrs. Ted Ambhul and daughter Marcia, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Minnick of Indianapolis; Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Gorham, John Ash of Greencastle; Mr. and Mrs. Joe Allen of Rockville; Harold Minnick and daughter Roberta of Greenfield; Mr. and Mrs. Estal Minnick, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Minnick and daughters Jacquelin and Patty Jo and son Edward Leroy; Mrs. Elizabeth Canada and sons Gary and Larry; Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Minnick of Bainbridge and the host and hostess Mr .and Mrs. Lester O. Leonard. Some of the families w'ere unable to attend.

Chez-Nous Club To Meet Thursday The Chez-Nous Club will meet Thursday evening at 7:30 at the home of Mrs. Joseph Campbell, 121 East Walnut street.

TERMITES $ Any llonu Completely Treated Must Have 24” Clearance Space ■

‘Serving You Since '32” TERMITE CONTROL CO. 32 West SO St. Phones \\ A. 3-6038—GL. 3106 Indianapolis. Indiana—N\e Pay All Toll Calls El FETEH E GEAR A AT EE Free Spray For Ants A Water Bugs With Eaeh Free Termite Inspection.

“The Store for Your Floor

• RUGS • CARPETS • LINOLEUM • WAIL TILE • FLOOR TILE • CUSTOM CABINETS 801 E. W ASHINGTON ST.

PHONE 1386

GREENCASTLE, IND. j

Club Met With Mrs. Harold Kennedy The Homemakers Extension Club met July 7 at the home of Mrs. Harold Kennedy. The meeting was opened by the president, Mrs. Eugene Maxwell. Mrs. Tom Sandy gave the history of the song of the month, then led the group in singing •‘Yankee Doodle,” followed by the pledge to the flag and the Home Economies Club Creed. Fourteen members answered roll call, each telling of a vacation trip she’d like to take. The secretary’s report was read and approved. Mrs. Ellis Yanders gave the safety lesson on Community Health, followed by agroup discussion as to what the club ■ould do about health problems n our own community. The lesson on “Dieting” was given by Mrs. Tom Sandy and Mrs. J. V. Routt. The penny collection was taken, and the treasurer's report given. The meeting was then adjourned to meet August 18th for i picnic at Hulman Beach. Anyone wishing transportation, be it the drug store in Cloverdale no later than 10:30. Mrs. Kennedy served refreshments of tea and cookies to fourteen members and fourteen chiiiren.

Miscellaneous Shower Scheduled Thursday The Ladies of the Missionary Society of Hanna Street Independent Baptist Church will have a miscellaneous shower Thursday evening at 7:30 p. m. at the large shelter house in Robe Ann Park, in honor of Mr. and Mrs Fred Partin whose home was destroyed recently by fire. All friends of the young couple are cordially invited to attend.

ANNIVERSARIES Birthdays Jack Dewoese, Fillmore, today, July 13. Mrs. Betty Maddox, today.

IBM REPORT

NEW YORK, July 13—For the six months ended June 30, 1955, International Business Machines Corporation today reported net income of $23,870,992 after estimated U. S. Federal Income tax-

es.

This is equivalent for the six months period of $5.82 a share on the 4,098,471 shares outstanding J at the end of the period, and compares with net income after taxes for the corresponding 1954 period of $21,600,314. equivalent to $5.27 a share on the same capitaliza- j tion. Net income of the corporation for the six months ended June 30. 1955, before U. S. Federal Income Taxes amounted to $50,672,392, compp.red with $46,004,414 in the corresponding 1954 period.

FAIRLY SPOKEN Where Good Taste Meets With True Cultivation By Margaret Latrobe

Just how much “good taste” is obligatory upon us poor mortals ? How much of taste is nothing more than current fashion? And what part of it implies true '

cultivation ?

It depends somewhat, perhaps, on whether you are talking about clothes, furniture, music or literature. (Don't mention painting —though it is sometimes artiest we get all fouled up amongst colored cross- word puzzles.) The great clothes designers— Charles James, Oleg Cassini. Don Loper, Valentina—will leap up to say that a dress can be as much a work of art as a sonnet or prelude or a Goddard desk. But what of the dowdy little beldam, dressed in a conglomerate atrocity, whose stocking seams converge baggily, whose wispy locks defy the coldest permanent wave or the hottest marcel iron? In short, who is a walking denial of all couturier skill, but who has the finest possible taste in home furnishings? This same little lady suffers untold pain when calling on a friend of the purple cut-velvet couch, the prim lace doily and antimacassar persuasion. Her stricken eyes observe not one hideous insult aimed at all decorators—from Dorothy Draper right on up the line—but Victorian hat stand coupled with Chines/ dragons on black silk, Navajo scatter rugs atop a weathered broadloom, pink velvet pillowy (beaded in spotty flamboyancy (snuggled up on a wicker and aluminum porch chair. And that ebony table with its mother of pearl inlay, heavily clawed feet, and ponderous weight? What better spot than in the breakfast nook? Right size, and all. Belonged to the seafaring grandfather, who brought back many treasures from far places. Music? So you can select a dress with good lines, so the house leans to French provincial and doesn’t play footsies with (Duncan Phyfe? So your silver and crystal are in impeccable taste instead of Early picnic basket or Late Peanut Butter? You perhaps fall flat in the musical scale, being unsure whether it

is Beethoven’s “Ninth” or “Red River Valley" beaming the ocarina your way. The opera? Kiddo, “Faust" has four acts, not three. Don’t put your hat on 1 vet. Brought jlour Italian friend : to interpret the clamor? “Fails'”

! is sung in French.

Literatmv? You thought “Moby Dick” was a cop? That Dickens was what you got for being late again That "Alice in Wonderland" was a yam written by Walt Disney? Hmmm. You “know what you like.” though? Me too. Money, for one

thing.

IN MEMORY Yn loving rerrtemb:i James Sutherlin. July 11 They say time heals all And helps us to forget. But time so far has on!’ How much we miss you ; God gave us strength t<> And courage to bear th But what it means to 1< No one but God know.. Wife and childn grandchildren.

Many lizards have tai can be regrown if tin y moved.

xmv OPE A EOlt BUSINESS OLD RELIABLE! WHITE TEE AYE ICS

309 X. JACKSON ST.

JULY SALES AT TROVER’S

GIRL'S SKIRTS Reg. 2.50,2.98.3.25, Now . Reg. 3.98, 4.98, Now . . GIRL'S MIDRIFFS Reg. 1.00 Values, Now . .

$2.00 $3.00

67c

BOY S - GIRL S SHORTS Reg. 79c, $1.00 Value?, Now...67c Boy's - Girl's SUNSUITS Reg. 1.29, liO, Now ... $1.00

READ THE DAILY BANNER ADS

steinsberger-Stearley Wedding Solemnized Miss Betty May Steinsberger, daughter of Mildred N. Steinaberger, 550 South Alabama St., Brazil, became the bride of Don Earl Stearley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gust Stearley, R. R. 2, Reelsville. Saturday evening at 8 o'clock in the Bethel Methodist Church. The Rev. Robert Shanklin read the double ring vows before an altar banked with white gladioli and pahns. Frances Wyndham playbd a program of wedding music prior

RECTOR FUNERAL HOME AMBULANCE SERVICE PHONE 841 TV TONIGHT WTTV—Channel 4 7:00 Request Theater 7:30 Ames Brothers 7:45 Fishing Club 8:00 Mark Saber 8:30 Man Behind the Badge 9:00 This Is Your Life 9:30 Big Town 10:00 Jalopy Races 11:00 Tonight

WISH-TV—Channel 8 7:00 Godfrey 8:00 Millionaire 8:30 I’ve Got a Secret 9:00 Front Row Center 10:00 News 10:15 Grand Old Opry 10:45 Late Show

WTHI-TV—Channel 10 7:00 Godfrey 8:00 Masquerade 8:30 I’ve Got a Secret 9 00 Liberace 10:00 News Roundup j 10:15 Sports Huddle | 10:35 Late Show ' WRIGHT'S ELECTRIC SERVICE

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SC6 M. Jackson St. Phone 64 APPLIANCES AND TELr* VISION ■ALEE AJO* SERVICE

CANNON’S ANNUAL SHOE

STARTS TOMORROW

THURSDAY, JULY I4TH

IS6 PARS SF MEN'S SHOES PEICED LOWER THAN COST $16.95 !o $19.55 Only $9.99 $12.95 1o $14.95 Only $7.49 $10.95 to $11.95 Only $5.99

SUMMER WEIGHTS REGULAR WEIGHTS ALL SALES FINAL.

CANNON’S

THE MEN’S STORE

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