The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 6 November 1957 — Page 2

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THE DA»IY BANN« t<Tn>. NOV. 6. 1957. - ri«e 2 (rKKKNCASTLE. IND.

Russellville To

THE DAILY BANNER

and

Host Fair Dinner hera 10 consolidated

Amtzins M-O-LENEI A* Demonstrated on TV.

Wonderful new cleaner for all ur * holaterr. r««a. neckties, draperies, etc. Easy to «*«. Safe. Fast. Guar-

anteed. Get H-O-LENB today! Wuertz 5r to $1.00 ?*torr K*l SSFKIA II.I F HIGH

STHOOL BASKETBAFF 1957-5% Nov. 1 WaveLand — T

Nov. 8 Darlington — .

Nov. 15 Linden : Nov. 22 Tangier Dec. 0 Belle Union

11 New Winchester .... 13 Mecca Their game) 18 Bainbridge H 3 Bellniore (TReir game) H 8 Aianio - H

T H T T H H

Plans have been completed for the annual meeting and dinner of the Putnam County Fair and 4H Club Association. This dinner meeting wiU be held at the Russellville Christian Church on A* r lay evening, November 18th.

a. d:30 clock.

Following the custom of the

Entered in the posloffice of Greencastlc, Indiana an secom* class mail matter under a"*’ of March 7, 1878. Subscriptioi price 25 cents per week, Jo.O r»er year bv mail In Pntnar "oiinty, S^.OO to $10.40 per year

•utside Putnam County.

TODAY’S BIBLE THOUGHT Lead a life worthy of the call-

past seveial years featured at- J mg to which j'ou have been call-

traction will be the presentaLidn of some twenty trophies to winning 4-H Club members. Recipients of these trophies will be guests of the Fair Association and donors will present them in 10 Bloomingdale H ; P erson jj J Election of township directors, 1 building progress reports and a detailed treasurer’s report will be on the business agenda of the meeting. Township directors and departmental superintendents will elect their 1958 officers at a later date. Tickets have been distributed to present township directors. They may also be obtained at the extension office or from John Poor, Tom Hendricks, Doris Salsman and Francis Lane. Tickets should be bought no later than November 15th to insure reservations at this event.

Dec. Dec. Dec. Jan. Jan. Jan.

Jan. 17 Fillmore

Jan 23, 24. 25 County Tourney Jan. 31 Reelsville — —^ H Feb. 5 Newport T Feb. 7 Roach dale T Feb. 14 Cloverdale H Feb. 19 Lizton at North Salem Feb 21 Marshall J....- H

RFDS RETURN POLES

WARSAW. Poland UP — Russia has repatriated more than 06,000 Polish citizens during the first nine months of this year, the Polish News Agency said today. Many of the Poles have no families in Poland, the report said. The are received at two frontier and nine resettlement points in the western territories, where the majority of them in-

tend to live.

;-d. Ephesians 4:1. Take pride in your work and your workmanship. Artists and artisans signed their work in ancient and

medieval days.

FIRST THOUGHTS One of the great mistakes is continually fearing you will

make one.

FIRST-CITIZENS BANK

Jersey Knit

PAJAMAS

$ 5 98

Letter Tells Of Trip To Hawaii Maurice Sutherlin, of Roachdale, has written the following letter describing his vacation to

Hawaii:

1 landed here on Oct. 30, sailing from San Francisco on Oct. 25, on the S. S. Leilani and I will be going back to Los Angeles on Nov. 20. This trip on the Pacific is one to be remembered. The ship is 622 ft. long and five decks and we have free access to all of it. On the last day out we saw a potpoise and flying fish. Honolulu and the Island of Oahu is beyond doubt the most i beautiful place I’ve ever seen in 1 my whole life. Tropical floweis and fruits are everywhere. I took a bus trip around the island, (8 hrs., including the stops) we saw the tomb erected i to the memory of Amelia Airhart and the home of Kaiser, also that of Doris Duke. A part of the trip was r ext to the sea and returning through the fields of sugar cane and thousands of acres of pineapples. Ripening bananas, coconuts, bread fruit, bamboo and banyan trees are all prevalent. Tropical flowers of all colors are in profusion: We stopped at the Mormon Temple and came along side Pearl Harbor, where the U. S. flag is raised each morning to the top of the mast of a sunken vessel. On another trip I went to the aquarium and I’ve spent much time at Waikiki Beach. Hundreds ot people are on the sands amt in

Personal

And Local News Uriels

Miss Carolyn Irwin Elbert Irwin announces the ngagement and approaching narriage of his daughter, Caroyn. to Don Flint, son of Mr. and Mis. Herbert Flint. The wedding will be solemized on Dec. 8th, at 2:30 at the First Christian

church.

John W. King is in Indianapo-

lis attending the annual Govern-

ment Income Tax School. Spt. of the City Park Omor j

Reeves today announced the I park has been closed for the

winter months.

Edwin Hunter of Indianapolis, spent Tuesday night with his mother, Mrs. Mary Hunter, In-

dianapolis Road.

Mr. and Mrs. Doyne Appleman of Aransas Pass, Texas are visiting Mrs. Appleman’s sister,

Mrs. Lura Crawley.

Mr. and Airs. Donald Kerns and family and Mrs. Anna Kerns have moved to Terre Haute to make their future home. The Woman’s Study club will meet Friday at 2:30 p. m. with Mrs. Harry Wells. Airs. L. C. Conrad will have the program. W.S.C.S. of Clinton Falls ohfurch will meet at the church basement at 7 o’clock Thursday night Nov. 7. Roll call. What are

you thankful for.

The Christian Church Mens Fellowship will meet at 6:30 p. m. Thursday. The guest speaker for the evening will be Steve

Pec of Seoul, Korea.

Paul Gibbs, charged with nonsupport in a Putnam circuit court warrant, was. turned over I

Delta Kappa Gamma Meeting Held Recently

The recent meeting of the Delta Kappa Gamma Sorority was held at the home of Airs. Dorothy Miller of Reelsville. Louis H. Dirks, Dean Emeritus of DePauw University, was guest speaker for the meeting and presented a most stimulating talk on the “Role of the Teacher.” The points stressed by Mr. Dirks included, what else other than subject matter the teacher should know; the necessity for loving and understanding children; the ability of adjusting one’s personality and expressing oneself; and lastly, stated Dean Dirks, "The teacher must have a sense of humor which, after all is, life’s saving

grace.”

Mrs. Dirks accompanied her husband and she, having been a teacher at one time, shared with the members present, in the delightful stories told by her husband of incidents relating to the

teaching profession.

The meeting was conducted by Miss Audrey Beatty, president, and Alls. Mildred Todd, vice president, presented the speaker.

Net Action Carded In County Friday Putnam county high school basketball teams will play their second week of the 1957-5B season this coming Friday night with six squads seeing action. The Cloverdale - Eminence game, originally scheduled to be held at Eminence, will be played in the Reelsville gym. The Indians will be away from home as they clash with the Hawks at Roachdale. The tilt between New Ross and Bainbridge was postponed Tuesday afternoon at the request of the New Ross school officials. They said four of the starting five were ill of the flu and it was feared that more members of the squad might be ill by Friday M. Ray Alishouse, Bainbridge principal, said the game has been tentatively rescheduled for some time in February. The complete schedule for Friday evening is as follows:

F riday

Eminence vs. Cloverdale, at Reelsville Reelsville at Roachdale New Ross at Bainbridge, post-

poned

Fillmore at New Winchester Russellville at Darlington Belle Union at Coal City.

Tonight

Reelsville Junior High —Freshmen at Bainbridge Old Gold Points To Butler Game When DePauw challenges Butler in Indianapolis next Saturday, more will be at stake than the identical four-game winning i streaks owned by the Indiana Collegiate Conference opponents, i For one thing the 1:30 p. m. contest in Butler Bowl almost, certainly will determine finai ownership of the league’s second | spot, with the championship all 1 but sewed up by St. Joseph’s. ; Another factor of importance to both teams is Butler’s 30year domination of the series, which lists 12 straight victories for the Bulldogs between 1926 !

and 1956.

Butler currently holds down second spot in the ICC with a ; 4-1 record, and DePauw is one-

i. ..co tcicc F' r i en< ^s in Greencastle have re- half game behind with a 3-1 to Sheriff Joe Rollings by Delphi ! ceived invitations to the Joseph j mark. Against all competition authorities on Tuesday. Heritage Alanhart-Lila Jean Han- ! the Bulldogs are 5 and 2, the )■ The Thursday Reading club i na Weddln & which will be solemn-j % Tigers 5 and 1.

will meet Thursday evening a? ! in *^ e Gfobin Methodist 7:30 at the home of Mrs. Frances I Churc h at four o’clock on SaturRunyan. Anyone desiring Dans- j da - v af ternoon, November 30. portation call Mrs. Clarice Lip- I The rece P tlon wiU be held irn - tra p mediately afterwards at the DeThe Harmony Club will meet f >aa w Union Building.

winning scores against the same I clubs were 27-0, 27-0, and 27-7. Evansville was forced to pest-1 pone its schedule game with DePauw last month. In non-conference play, the t Bulldogs have lost to Bradley. : 13-0, and defeated Wabash, 14-6: i and DePauw has a 26-6 victor over Illinois Wesleyan to go vvith its Rochester triumph. DePauw and Butler first met j on the gridiron in 1890, back in I Hoosier football’s dawn era. and the all-time series now include ‘ 22 wins for Butler, 12 for DePauw, and three ties.

ation in the industry. The new Dansmission introduces a new r drive position for solid feel takeoff or all-out acceleration through all three gear ranges. An improved Fordomatic transmission also is available. Also new will be air suspension. optional for Ford Fairlanes, Fairlane 500’s and station wagons with V-8 engines and automatic transmissions in 1958.

Rector Funeral Home AMBULANCE SERVICE PHONE S4 1

Net Results

Ewing

LE

Harrell

Grcenca-tie

Galiene

LT

AIcKenzie

Cross

LG

Furnish

Copeland

Bridgford

c

White

Payne

Dougherty

R.G

Douglas

Stewart

Gibson

RT

Stockslager

Stout

Johnson

HE

Annee

Staub

Goodnight

QB

Moses

McCormick

Hackenberg

LH

Oilar

Thomas

Modzelew’ski

R H

Alercer

Earnshaw

Evans

FB

Nardo

Alice

Kickoffr 1

30 p.

m. CST.

Belle Union

CROSS COUNTRY MEET

Hodge

Headed by

the

1956 Hoosier

Stanger

small-college

champion and le-

Vanzant

cord-holder,

Bill

Blake, De-

Hayden

Paw's cross-country team will

Hendrick ....

compete for

the Indiana Collegi-

Nichols

ate Conference and Little State

Terry

titles in Indianapolis Friday

Nov. 8.

Greencastle

Alore than

100 runners are ex-

Dunn

peeled to crowd

South Grove

York

Gold Course

for

the 11 a. m.

Neumann

qvent, which

also

will include a

McCullough

simultaneous

run-off of the an-

Scott

Manhart-Hanna Invitations

Have Been Issued

nual Big State meet. In last year’s meets Ball State copped its third straight ICC and Little State championships, and the Big State crown went to Indiana by a four-point margin under Notre Dame.

—NEW FORDS

btiretion and exhaust porting and direct flow r intake for peak performance at all engine speeds. Each engine is electronically mass balanced wdiile running at operating speed and temperature under its own power. Cruise-O-Matic, an automatic transmission combining instantaneous "solid” response with nearly imperceptible up-shifting, is new for 1958. Coupled with the four-Venturi 332 and 352 cubic inch engines and a low’ rear axle ratio, Cruise-O-Matic pro- j vides a new power’ train that ! combines overdrive economy | wdth automatic transmission convenience, first such eombin- 1

O’Neal . Bennett Chadd .

2 4 11 0 0 1 0

Belle Union 8th (17) Hacker 0 Irick 4 McCammack 2 Baxter / 1 Dobson 0 Buis 0

FT 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1

BUTTRICK TO SPEAK Dr. George A. Buttrick, widely known minister, educator and author 1 , will speak at the University Chapel at DePauw University on November the eleventh.. Dr. Buttrick is Plummer P ressor of Christian Morals at Harvard University. Prior to this present position, Dr. Buttrick was minister of the Madison Avenute Presbyterian Church in New York City for twentyeight years.

MARRIAGE LICENSE Charles Robert Wlllia Naval officer. Marysville. O! \ and Sally Jean Petersen. stud« Manitowoc, \\ Tsconsin. REVIEWS COMPLAINTS DAMASCUS, Syria UP A ! ;ng Foreign Minister Khalil b ' las renewed his complai against Turkey Tuesday n i and said he would take the ni | ter to the United Nations uni I Turkey withdrew threaten troop concentrations bef | Christmas. He indicated at a two-h news conference the withdra' 'time limit would be fix<d I Dec. 15 when the General A ; oly is scheduled to adjourn. Syria has charged that T key, with United States snpp< ! is planning an attack. Tut] i and the United States have dei the charges.

Gaillard Takes Premier's Pcsf

PARIS (UP) The French Na tional Assembly approved finan cial exper t Felix Gaillard a - i mier early today, ending a week crisis that brought F

to the brink of chaos.

Gaillard thus became the youngest premier in the history of Republican Franc \ He celebrated his 38th birth y Tuesday. The vote in the Assembly was j 337 for to 175 against. Gaillard and his broad coalition cabinet had the support of every group except for the Communists, toe extreme lightwing Poujadi^ts,

and the peasants.

It meant that barring a new j crisis France w ul 1 have a government to deal with the NATO summit conference the Algerian j rebellion, rocketing living rusts i and a stubborn foreign trad • 1. fi-

, cit.

fiverneo

Funeral Horae ttt C.VfashlngLon 31. Ph«n«tC V Ambutan<« Service k W ^1

with Alice Sparks, November 7th All members of the club please try to be present. New' officers for the coming year will be

elected.

Air. and Alt's. Russell Pierce j ha-ve returned from an automo-

Karmony Club Held Meeting

The October meeting of the Hrmony Club was at the home of Barbara York. The pledge to the flag opened

bile vacation that took them to ! the meeting. Ten member's an-

i the shallow waters. The surf ! Washin & ton » C., Virginia and swered roll call by unmasking.

riders go out a half mile or more I the Carolinas. They were away

and ride back with the waves 1 a hout ten days.

; and often times they get upside j down and their surf boards get j a hundred feet away from them. The people here are mostly Hawaiian and a mixture with the : Japanese. They are short, thick and dark with black straight hair, and they speak a broken English. The mountains are

btnrni In a imnoramtk of mostly covered with vegetation color. \Vn«h In a wink . . . won’t very unlike the Mountains of

Arizona.

• Sleek and nhapely Jerwy wltb that worldly look pamper your

Bhiink, •tretch or create.

Cotton Challis - $3.98 Cotton Flannels - $3.99

TROVER'S

Secretary, treasurer and flower reports w r ere given and ae-

Alrs. Nina White has received | cepted. The Lord’s Prayer adword of the death of her brother- | joumed the meeting, in-law, Ed Burger, on Alonday. I Games were played by all. Nov. 4, m Clay City. Air. Burger. J Prizes w-ent to Barbara York, age 72, had several friends in Ruth Steele Caiol Blue and Greencastle. Funeral services ! Wilma Holsapple. were held Wednesday at 2 p. m. Refreshments of cupcakes, .n Clay City. beautifully decorated, ice cream, Airs. Charles Bamberger and P ota *° chips, soft drinks and cof-

Miss Carolyn Peabody were as-

I fee were served by the hostess.

Sincerely, Maurice Sutherlin.

sistant hostesses at a bridge par- Barbara York and assistant Audty on Tuesday evening for the r y Kriton.

members of the Indianapolis I

ANNIVERSARIES

Weddings

Air. ami Airs. Oiwille Bitzer, 37 years, Nov. 6th.

IVY LEAGUE Black and White Saddles

Mrs. Fenl Lucas Is Club Hostess

The Fortnightly club met Mon- | lay night with Mrs. Ferd Lucas, i Mrs. Stella Peck was the as-

sistant hostess.

During the business meeting, i the film chairman mentioned three outstanding pictures to be shown soon. “The Alan With A Thousand Faces,’’ "Love in the Afternoon" and “An Affair to

Remember.”

Prof. Robert Williams gave* the program, "A Trip to Hawaii” using beautiful colored slides.

Sizes: Misses 124 to 3 Women's 44 to 10

B&BSHOES

Alumnae Club of Alpha . Phi Sorortiy. The party was held at '.he home of Mrs. L. E. Dalton

Indianapolis.

A state wide League of Women Voters meeting was held at the Indiana University Medical Center Union Building WednesI day. Airs. John Clark, Airs. Edward Gailigan. Airs. Robert Lcrd.g. Aliss Virginia Harlow, AI:-£. Carl Washier, Airs. Burke Coyner, Mrs. Robeit Weiss, Airs. Laurel Turk, Mrs. Paul Thomas, and Airs. Clark Norton represented the Greencastle League

of Women Voters. ~

—DEMOCRATS WIN —W. \V. I. N ETS , of Southern white opposition to be pitifully inadequate. It is prin- , school integration and to the cipally for these men and theii President’s use of federal troops families that the Veterans of W in the Little Rock, Ark., school

W. I are fighting. You can help case,

by joining.

There are some who will say,

"Why join, it will not help me, seme contest four years ago, reThe proof of need lets me out” ceived about 36 per cent of TuesThese men are not selfish; they day’s record vote. He also camhave just forgotten that all are paigned to preserve a segrated not as fortunate a^» they. , schools but favored a plan which The Greencastle Barracks would permit token integration. ' meets at 7:30 p. m on the first In big city elections Tuesday, and third Fridays of each month David L. Lawrence was elected in the rooms at the Pubic Service to a fourth term as Democratic Company of Indiana on south mayor of Pittsburgh. Democrats Jackson street You are always also won mayoral elections in welcome, whether you belong or Buffalo and AJbany, N. Y.. Louis- j not You may attend a meeUng ville, Ky., New Haven and

as a non-member but few leave Bridgeport, Conn,

that way IN. J.

Marring both records are I losses to the St. Joe Pumas, j with DePauw being edge at ; home 7-0. and Butler di opping a road decision one week later,

! 34-13.

DePauw Coach Bob Hick will j be hoping for continued passing | accuracy from quarterback Alor rie Goodnight, who has completed 63 percent of his tosses this season and a phenomenal 82 percent in the last three games. Last week in DePauw’s 39-18 romp over Rochester, he hit on 10 of 11 for 304 yards and three touchdowns, giving him seasonal totals of 32 for 69, 725 aeria 1 yards, and nine scoring passe: Goodnight’s favorite target L halfback Dick Hackenberg, wh< has snagged 12 throws for 284 yards and four TD’s. Hackenberg also is the Bengal’s third leading ground-gainer behind Dick Alace and Ernie Atodzelewski. A sopohomore from Indianapolis Teen, Alace owns a six-yard rushing average and, like Modzelewski, has tallied four times. Hackenberg is the leading scorer with 30 points. In addition to Goodnight, DePauw s best bets for all-confer-ence—and perhaps Little AllAmerica—recognition are two of the ICG’s toughest linemen, tackle Ron Galiene and end P?.c

Ewing.

The keys to Coach Tony Hinkle’s Butler attack usually ace found in the passing of Jonn Moses, the receiving ^of John Harrell, and the running of Nick Nardo, Cliff Oilar. Phil Mercer,

and Kent Stewart.

During last Saturday’s 19-7 win over Evansville, Moses twice hit Harrell with touchdown passes, and the Nardo-Stewart combination picked up a total of 152

yards on the ground.

_ . Although both teams seem tn Dalton, who polled a surprising . have aurvived , he flu epidemio 43 per cent of the vote in the neiUler is „ 1Uloul injurlei

Dwight Tollman, DePauw’s allconference tackle, and Ken Spraet. Butler’s starting rig.)',

end, sat out last week's games Also ailing are a DePauw end,

Mike Bentzen, who suffered a shoulder separation against Rochester, and two Butler halfbacks, Stew'art and Oilar, both

hampered by leg injuries. DePauw’s league wins have

been earned over Indiana State

1) THE WEATHER MAN SAYS:

COLD WEATHER AI

j* Wfl 5?

The switch Ls “ON.” Today the smart outer <-oal is the Husky. Brief in length, hut long on wear! I'raetieal, warm and comfortable. The Husky i> handsomely tailored of all cotton poplin and is quilted lined.

ffflW ■ mm! x

$

24

SLACKS he'll like for sure

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$9.95 • $18.95

SPORT SHIRTS

and Paterson. 126-6), \ alpo (34-1), and Bail

State (40-14), and the Bulldogs

MAC’S

Nice selection of sport shirts from coficns to flannels by Van Heusen.

$4.00 to $5.95 APPAREL FOR MEN

18 W. Washington St.