The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 14 May 1957 — Page 2

THE DAILY BANNER TI ES., MAY I*. 19.VJ Pa£v T GKEfcNCASTLE. LNU. ANNIVERSARIES Birthday Mrs. Cordelia McCullough, CoatesVille H. 2, May 13.

SUBS ARE SIGHTED HALIFAX, N S. (UP)—At i U a»t four unidentified submarines have been sighted off Canada's east coast in less than a month. The Cana iian navy is rot over1' .king the possibility that the mysteiious undersea craft might be Russian.

IN MEMORY

In memory of “Bob” Patterson who drowned May 14, 1955. We hold you in our dreams at night, We call you in the dawn. And yet we have to tell ourselves That you are really gone. Not a day do we forget you. In our hearts you are always near, We who loVed you dearly, miss you When it draws this time of year. Sadly missed by Mom- Dad, Brothers and Sisters. p.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Butts ha v b* ■ n called to Morehead, Hy„ by the death of his mother, Mrs. Dollie Butts. She passed away Sunday night.

THE DAILY BAriricR and HERALD CONSOLIDATED Entered In the postoffice of Greencastle, Indiana as second class mail matter under act of March ", 1878. Sirf>soriptlon price 25 cents per week, $5.00 per year by mail in Putnam County, Sfl.OO to $10.40 per jear outside Putnam County. Telephone 74, 95, 114 S. R. Rariden, Publisher 17-19 South Jackson Street

SOCIETY B. & P. W. Meeting To Be Held Wednesday The regular meeting of the Business & Professional Women will be held Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. at the Union Building. The hostesses will serve dessert preceding the business meeting. Mrs. Mildred Todd will entertain the group with slides taken on her vacation to the western states and California.

Eddie Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Victor Johnson of Cloverdale, and a member of the graduating class of 1957 has enlisted in the U. S. Navy and is taking his basic training at Great Lakes. His address is Edward B. Johnsno, S- aman Recruit 518-49-10, Co. 132, 142nd . Battalion, 14th Regiment, 1407 Lower East U. S. N. T. C., Great Lakes, 111.

TODAY’S BIBLE THOUGHT The sleep of a laboring man is sweet, weather he eat little or much; but the abundance of the rich will not suffer him to sleep. Ecc. 5:12.—The blessings of life are more equally divided than many imagine.

WINDY HILL COUNTRY CLUB Stag & Guest

Wednesday, May 15--2:00 P. M. make reservations for yourself and guests any member of Board of Directors.

Hearing Consultation WEDNESDAY, MAYI5, 1957 I! A. M. to 5:00 P. M. At the office of Dr. W. J. Fuson, M. D., Alamo Building, Greencastle, Indiana. No appointment necessary. However if desired, write Mr. Wade it 830 State Life Building, Indianapolis, or Phone 5(59, Greencastle, Ind. -See it-Hear it-Try it BELTONE HEARING SERVICE 830 State Life Bldg. Indianapolis, Indiana

PUTNAM LOAN CO. * LOANS $20 To $500 Loan payments cancelled in case of unemployment due to sickness, accident or death under an optional plan. Insurance Of All Kinds. All forms of collision coverage including 80 20. LEON BUIS AGENCY

PHONE — 1296- ’ - 129828 South Jackson

andUamlh There no substitute for quality. We are prepared to compound vour prescriptions with the finest medicinal agents obtainable. Only the best u ^o*d enough for our customers. Let us fill

m

(3oan £Pharmacy

\

PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS

V

the label of QUALITY, ACCURACY ASD SERVICE

FIRST THOUGHTS A lonely man is one who buys himself a necktie the day after Christmas. FIRST-CITIZENS BANK

Personal And Local News Briefs

Gobin W.S.C.S. To Meet Thursday The May meeting of the Gobin W. S. C. S. will be held Thursday afternoon at 1:30 in Community Hall. New officers will be installed by Dr. S. E. Carruth and the dessert luncheon will be in charge of Mrs. Grafton Longden Jr. and her committee. Members are urged to remember the baking and other projects of the Mary Circle. Mrs. Clinton Gass is the program chairman. Others assisting will be Mrs. Russell Compton and Mrs. W. C. Zaring.

like next year. Martha Thomas read the bylaws and it was voted that three revisions be made. Beulah Yochum talked of the mental health fund drive. The next meeting will be a picnic supper at Robe Ann Park at 7:30, June 13. Pearl McCabe presented an interesting lesson on legal proceedures with special emphasis on wills and other ways to dispose of property. Marilee Clodfelter gave an outlook lesson and Delilah Adamson closed the meeting by leading the club prayer. Other members present were Donna Taylor and June Harbison. Guests were Barbara Wysong and Rita Mae Clodfelter.

m. This meeting will be for the team of four amateurs to first purpose of bhhoring the sixth 1 place in the weekly Indiana PGA ' graders and their parents. The ' pro-am tourney yesterday, sixth graders will be in charge The. tourney was played under of the program. the point system and White's The annual r^cogjiition presen- team totaled 173 to 165 for the tation for the patrol boys will bo second place squad headed by a part of this piGgram. Chuck Almony, Elwood pro.

Playing with White were Royer and Damon Hamm of CrawTordsville. Vem Diamond of Lafayette, and Bill Unsworth of Greencastle. White and Jim Guinnup of Lafayette combined for a best ball 67 to win the pro-pro event.

Fathers Auxiliary No. 1 meeting Wednesday, May 15, 8 p. m. Charles Query has been admitted to the Putnam County hospital. Epsilon Sigma Alpha will hold its regular social meeting Tuesday evening at 7:30 at the home of Joyce Jones. The Greencastle Girl Scout Council will meet Wednesday morning at 9:15 at the home of Mrs. Thomas Slaughter, 723 E. Seminary. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hennum of Benton Harbor, Mich., are the parents of a daughter, Ruth Arleen, born early Tuesday morning. Mrs. Hennum is the foimer Susanna Shelly, daughter of Mrs. William Shelly. Mrs. Jean B. Sanders, 435 Anderson St., Greencastle, will continue the study of comparative literature at Indiana University, next school year with a John H. Edw’ards fellowship, most prized awards on the graduate level at I. U. Fourteen Edw r ards fellowships were granted under provisions of a bequest made to the University by the late John H. Edwards, a native of Mitchell and an alumnus of I. U. wiio held administrative posts under Presidents Harding, Coolidge and Hoover in the U. S. Post Office and Interior Departments. Thaw r ards for graduate study range in value from $1,000 to $1,500.

Plan now to store your winter garments including fur and furlike coats in our refrigerated VAULT. Ask about BOX Storage. Home Laundry & Cleaners. 22-tf

TV TONIGHT

Club Met With .Mrs. Clodfelter The Clinton Homemakers met at the home of Mrs. Willard Clodfelter Thursday night with the president, Mrs. John Cantonwine, presiding. Madonna Clodfelter, Anne Barker and Evelyn Wysong helped open the meeting. Charlotte Martin gave a report on the last council meeting and asked each member to check five lessons from a list they would

Mother’s Day Tea Il$ld By Sorority The Epsilon Psi Chapter of Epsilon Sigma Alpha held a Mothers Day tea Sunday, May 12th, at the Student Union Building. Those present were Norma Childs, Mrs. Lewis, Jane Carpenter, Mrs. Ruth Caipenter, Billie Harmon, Barbara Powell, Mrs. Georgia Perry, Lucille Jones. Mrs. Edna Jones, Barbara Lyon, Mrs. Doris Hedge, Norma Ganger, Mrs. Clara Edwards and Joyce Hnlicka.

Miller School P. T. A. Final Meeting Wednesday The last Miller School Parent Teacher Association meeting for this year will be held on> Wednesday evening, May 15, at 7:30 p.

Mrs. Mary Loir Albin Hostess To Club The Friendly Circle Home Demonstration club met with Mrs. Mary Lou Albin on Friday, May 3rd, at 1:30. The meeting was called to order by the president, Mary Stone. Roll call was an exchange of flowers. Thirteen members and two children were present. The flag w r as presented and pledge repeated in unison. Song of the month was sung. Secretary's report was read and approved. The outlook lesson on farm prices was given by Mrs. Woodall. Lytha King gave the safety hint. Garden hint was given by Mrs. Harrold. Lesson w’a-s given by Mrs. Bernadine Woodall. Two contests were given by Josie Smiley and won by Rosa Knauer and Mary Lou Albin. Delicious refreshments w r ere served by the hostess. Meeting closed by repeating the club prayer. The next meeting will be Friday, June 7, with Mrs. Josie Smiley. Mrs. Blanch Harrold wdll be assisting hostess.

4 ' ' •

MONUMENTS. ..MARKERS

Phone-72

Open 9 ’til 5 daily and Sunday afternoon till Decoration Day.

BILL UNSWORTH ON WIN NING GOLF TEAM Ken White, C;-awfordsville Country Club golf pro, led a

LL YOUR CHILD IN MUSIC Law Ccsf Rental Instruments Available. PRIVATE INSTRUCTIONS Offered on band instruments, organ, piano, guitar, baton, twirling. Summer classes beginning by May 18. KERSEY MUSK STORE Slale Road 43 Phone 113

6:00 6:15 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30

10:00 10:30 10:45

WISH-TV—Channel 8 News; Weather CBS News Name That Tune Phil Silvers Private Secretary To Tell the Truth Red Skelton $64,000 Question Spike Jones S Martin Kane News Late Show !

WTTV—Channel 4 6:00 Little Rascals . 6:45 News 7:00 Navy Log 7:30 Wyatt Earp 8:00 Broken Arrow 8:30 TV Theater 9:00 Ray Anthony !

9:30 Conflict 10:30 News 10:45 Hollywood Movie

6:00 ...

News

6:15 ....

Doug Edwards

6:30

Name That Tune

7:00

Phil Silvers

7:30 ...

Private Secretary

8:00

To Tell the Truth

8:30 ....

Red Skelton

9:00

$64,000 Question

9:30

Spike Jones

10:00

Video View's

10:20

Sports

10:30

Gale Storm

11:00

Wfcstinghouse

WRIGHTS ELECTRIC SERVICE 2 LOCATIONS SOS N. Jackson St Phone 64 GREENCASTLE, IND. MAIN ST. CLOVER DALE APPLIANCES ANB TELEVISION SALES * ND SERVICE

Mercury sets the pace at 1957 Indianapolis 500-mile race

‘■the honor always goes to the car that, in our opinion, shows the biggest advance in styling and performance.”_TONY HULMAN, Chairman of the Board, Indianapolis Motor Speedway. At right, F. C. Reith, Vice President, General Manager, Mercury Division, Ford Motor Company. At left, Tony Huiman. i ) t ..sets the pace in size and style

sets a record for low-cost luxury

The choice of Mercury to pace the Indianapolis Classic dramatizes the fact that The Big M is the new yardstick of your money’s worth. In size. Mercury brings you the biggest size increase in the industry_more room and comfort in every important dimension. In styling, only Mercury offers you Dream-Car Design. Here’s completely different styling, shared with no other car. In ride, only Mercury offers you Floating Ride_

the most effective combination of hump-smothering features ever put between you and the road. In performance. Mercury leads with the highest standard compression in its field, highest torque for regular production engines. Yet never has so much bigness and luxury cost so little! The Big M is priced an easy step above the low-priced three. No wonder Mercury is setting the pace everywhere for style, size, performance, luxury —and value! Why not stop in at our showroom today?

M E R C U RV -fo r 1 S7 with dream-car design

mi YOUR LINCOLN-MERCURY DEALER -STILESVILLE ROAD -GREENCASTLE -oa t the big tele-iron hit. Ed Sullivan's "TOAST OF THE TOWN'" Sunday evening 7:00 to 8:00 WISH. TV. Channel 8

ifci^