The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 11 November 1957 — Page 2

THE DAILY BANNER Kan - Charie* A. Case, and his MON*., XOV. 11, 1957. Page 2 son CharI ® 8 Jr * fiREEXCASTLp. vfpt Eisenhower’s first oo*n- ' “ ,plet« phVBical checkup sinoe Ott*. 2*. At that time, he was *r<$iind to be ‘‘in excellent

health."

On Wednesday the President will fly to Oklahoma City. Okla., to deliver his second nationwide “chin? up” address to the American people.

Funeral Home

222 C.m»Kir^ton St. Pher* 80 fenbulonce Service

President Faces Heavy Schedule

THE DAILY BANNER

and

HERALD CONSOLIDATED Entered in the posloffice of Greenrafttle, Indiana as second •lass mail matter under ac* •>! 'larch 7, 1878. Subscription price 25 cents per week, $5.00 per year by mail In Putnam County, S6.00 to $10.40 per year mtside Putnam County.

WASHINGTON (1 dent Eisenhower toda his overnight medic

at Walter Re and pronoum tkm as ‘fine.’ Ud at 110.6A

T P)

medical check-up I Army Hospjital d his own condiHe left the hospinedical report on

the White House at 1.30. Hi« physicians said in advance he apppeared in good health Eisenhower entered the hospital Sunday evening after taking his grandson, David, to services earlier at the National Presbyterian Church. The 67-year-old Chief Executive was scheduled to be released in mid-afternoon and will plunge almost immediately into another heavy work week. He was slated to meet this afternoon with Defense Secretary Neil H. McElroy and Deputy Defense Chief Donald A. Quarles. He also will take time out to see an old friend from Abilene,

IN MEMOBIA.M In loving memory of our dear mother, who passed away, June 3. 1950. Today recalls sad memories, Of a loved one gone to rest. Tho e who think of you today, This being your birthday, are the one ones who loved you best. Time moves on and we’re reminded of a day our hearts were crushed. When God took you. Oh, so quickly and we all in gloom were thrust. Time may come and bring changes, fresh with every corning year. But your memory will be cherished, In hearts that loved you dear. Sadly missed by daughters, and sons of Mrs. A. J. Johnson. .11-lp Women of the Moose chapter No. 138 will meet Wednesday at 8:30 p. m. in the Moose Hall, rhere will be initiation.

EITEL'S FLOWERS

8 A. M.-5:30

FEATURE C* m WEEK CHRYSANTHEMUM PLANTS

Short, Bushy, Six Plants Per Pot -- Pink, Yelbw, White

99c

® Large Plante * Begonias in two sizes • African Violefs

( ASH AND CARRY 81-49 Delivered • Gloxinias

PPICED FROM S9c TO S3.35

1 V. F. W. Ladies Auxiliary will i ^ meet Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. at the Post Home. Mrs. Harlan Sorority Hostess The Exemplar Chapter of Xr Beta Eta. will hold its regular stated meeting Tuesday night, at 7:30 at the home of Mona Har-

lan.

Members are urged to attend as a sewing session will be h rid for the Terrie Lee Doll wardrobe. Mrs. Cook hostess To Reelsville WSCS On Nov. 7th. Mrs. C. C. Cook was hostess to the Reelsville W.S.C.S. when several members met at her home for an all day meeting. No work was planned and the day wa« spent socially. At noon a^ delicious chicken dinner was served with prayer of thanks being offered by Mrs.

Cook.

The afternoon business meeting was in charge of the president, Virginia Keiffaber during which time routine matters w r ere taken care of including plans for a turkey supper at the church on November 16 for all members and their families, supper being served at 6 o’clock. Roll w r as called and each one answered by

Hope Wade was here from ' telling something that they were Peru Monday visiting relatives, thankful for. A financial stateSunshine club will meet witn ment was given by treasurer, Mrs. Reba Kivett Wednesday at Irene Barnes, follow'ed by devo1:30 p. m. tions by president, Virginia KeifThe Friendship Club will meet faber from the book of Psalms. Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. with T he next meeting will b e the Mrs. Wanda Hammond. Christmas meeting on Dec. 5th Current Affairs Group of A. when each member is to bring A. U. W. will meet Tuesday at a 50 cent gift for the gift ex8:00 p. m. wath Dr. Anne Nichols, change and wall b e held at the Due to illness, the Mt. Meridi-; h ome Virginia Keiffaber. As an W. S. C. S. has been post- , dismissal the Lord's Prayer w^as poned until Wednesday, Nov. repeated in unison. After which

20th.

Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Epler and Miss Effie Epler of Albion, 111., j

TODAY’S BIBLE THOLGOT Let all things be done in decency and in order. I Cor. 14:40. Life should not be a hap hazard sequence of unrelated events. We have three score years and ten may be to perform deeds that will be remembered

for eternity.

FIRST THOEGHTS

You’ve reached middle age w hen your wife tells you to pull in your stomach—and you

already have.

FIRST-CITIZENS BANK

Personal

And Local News Briefs

the hostess took the members on a tour through the C. C. Cook sawmill adjoining their home, showing them the beautiful new

where the

were week end guests of Mrs. D. !

O Moffett office building and A daughter was born Sunday ! owner S ave them an infonnative

i at the Putnam County Hospital ! ta:lk on the functions of the ir,i11 ’

to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Searles i

jf Greencastle.

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wilson, of ; Greencastle, are the parents of a daughter born Sunday at tne j Putnam County Hospital. The DePauw Womens club will meet tonight at 8:00 p. m. in the

i Union Building. Dr. Raymond

French will have the program. The regular meeting of Beta

! Sigma Phi will be held in >he ! Public Service club room Tues-

34,003 People Country Are

Arcund With a Disease

in This Walking

Sorority Observes

Founders Day

Founders Day was observed by •Kappa Delta Phi Sorority at a beautiful candlellight dinner in the DePauw Union Tuesday, Nov. 5th. Preceding the dinner Karen Hill sang “The Lord’s Prayer." Theme of the banquet was “Our Horn of Plenty.” “The Meaning of the Cornucopia" was given by Mary Hirt and Peggy Headley spoke on "A Comucopia of

.lay, November 12 at 7:00. Mem- | Friendship.” "A Cornucopia of oers please note time. Civic and Spiritual Growth" wap The Happier Humes Home De- empha.si.zed by Christine Wilmonstration club will meet at liams the home of Mis. Helen Johnston The evening closed with everyun Tuesday, Nov. 12, at 7:30 p. one singing the Kappa Delta Phi m. Please br ing money from sale song of Prayer.. Committee in of light bulbs. I charge were Dorothy Harris, MilThe Women’s Missionary So- < lred Todd ' Anita Henderson, Al- | eiety of the First Baptist church 'berta Buis. Wanda Grimes, Jean ! will meet at the home of Mrs. ! Ki dd te. Marguerite Seeley, Mary

Weather Over Nation Claims 11 Clearing weather today eased the sting of a weekend storm that whipped parts of the Great I^akes region wnth one to eight inches of snow and claimed at least 11 lives. Heavy snow squalls and icy winds left a blanket of snow along the lee shores of the Great Lakes Saturday and brought an additional two-to-five-ineh snowcover to parts of western New York, previously hit by a three-to-fi% r e-inch accumulation. Snow- up to four inches snarled traffic in western New- York's Onondga County, and about 150 cars were stalled on the newly opened Penn-Canada highwa)sections near Syracuse. N. Y. A traffic accident claimed the life of a young mother. The death brought to 11 the number of weather-caused fatalities in the northern third of the nation srince Friday. Hardest hit by the storm was Michigan’s Upper peninsula, w-hich was buffeted by strong winds and snow for two days. Up to eight inches of snow- buried ; Saw-yer Air Force Base near Marquette, Mich., and Kinross, near Sault Ste. Marie, had seven inches. Other heavy accumulations included five inches at Erie, Pa., four inches at Olean and Syracuse, N. Y., and three inches at I Buffalo, N. Y. A record cold air blast pushel | as far south as Georgia and Ala- i bama.

_

Students Stage Demonstration | lt> I iiited I’reK.x Four hundred Syrian students j demonstrated today in the I streets of Damascus against King Hussein of Jordan. Wert- | ern diplomats feared new attempts to overthrow Hussein or even to assassinate him. Jerusalem dispatches said the I anti-Hussein forces w-ere gaining strength in Jordan. The students were described as Palestinian refugees who cried “Hussein must go” and "Hus- I sein our traitor” as they paraded ‘ hrough the Damascus streets | with their school books and atchels. There was no "olence during j Tie 20-minute demonstration, but Western observers noted it

followed anti-Hussein broadcasts by both Syria and Egypt. If there were Jordanians who would I ik^ to kill the young king. Cairo Radio constantly egged rhenl on. It has accused the monarch of seeking peace with Israel, an act the 800.000 Palestinians in Jordan would regard as

outright betrayal.

Western diplomatic somvos said the crisis in Jordan itseli thieatened Middle Eastern peace. But new tensions were arising between other Mideast nations and the Syrian-Turkish conflict still was not a dead issue. Back With Parents After Seven Years BOSTON UP — Eight-year-old Aurora Way, who has spent most of her life in Red China, today was getting acquainted with the parents she had not seen in more than seven years. “Remember me? I’m your mother,” said Mrs. John Way of Boston as the little dark-haired child stepped from a TWA Airliner early Sunday. She had

flown here from Hong Kong In a biting northwest wind. But where she was concealed for she said in Chinese that she some time from Red police. , recognized her mother.

Aurora's 11-year-old brother. Douglas, advanced shyly, hugged his sister and gave her a toy poodle. Her father, a graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, canied her from the airfield. Auro: : vos only six months old when her parents left Chinn to visit the U. S in 1949. She was too sick to travel and stayed behind with her grandmother. Twenty days later the Reds captured Shanghai and Communist officials refused to let the child emigrate to the Unit eel States. Last winter she was smuggled to Hong Kong from Shanghai. She could go no farther because of United States immigration regulations. Sen. Leverett Saltonstall RMass. intervened on behalf of the Ways and her emigration was arranged. The World Council of Churches booked passage for the youngster. Aurora was unable to speak a word of English as she setpped off the plane at Logan Airport

DISCUSSES SATELLITE WASHINGTON UP — Dr. John P. Hagen, director of the U. S. earth satellite project, said today he probably could have launched a satellite by now if the Army’s Jupiter C rocket had been available from f he start. Now, he said. It is “rather la f e” to bring the Army na-ket into the program. Justice Joseph Force Crater of the New York State Supreme Court disappeared at 9:15 p. m. Aug. 6. 1930.

Blanche M. Patterson Foot Specialist Will be in Greencastle at $08 Spring \\c. WED., NOV. I3TH Hours: 9:00 A. M. to 5:30 P. M. Phone I 168 For A|>|M»intment

FASHION SHOW AT WARDS THURSDAY EVENING

* Mrs. Gilbert Heath, Fashion Manager at Mo f °rmerv Ward store, is showing Mrs. BettyCop--'•w dress to he modeled at the Beta Sigma Phi sorority Fashion Show-Card Party to be hud Thursday evening, November 15th, at Wards.

m

And don’t k^ooit. ARE YOU? The only w-ay to make sure that you’re up to par is to see your physician for a full checkup- at least once a year.

Ffeenor Drug Store

YOU DESERVE THE BEST IN AMBULANCE

SERVICE TO BE SURE YOU RECEIVE T PHONE 61 HOPKINS-WALTON

/

W‘

unera PHONE 61

eme

Tressie Flint, 332 Arlington St. Tuesday at 7:30 p. m. All ladies of the church are invited. The PEO dinner meeting will be held in the home of Mrs. Waiter Ballard at 6:00 p. m. November 13th. Members please call Mrs. Howard Williams by Tuesday noon of any changes in res-

ervations.

Mrs. J. F. Spurlock has returned to her home from Topeka, Kan. where she visited her son Dr. Fay Spurlock, she also visited Mrs. Vanhorn, of Kansas City, Mo. and Mrs. J. F. Dawson of Dearborn. Mo. Hospital dismissals for Nov. 9: Hobert Gibson, Coatesville; Mrs. Eugene Monnett and daughter of Greencastle; Kenneth Salsman, Fillmore; Belle Keck, Roachdale; William Newgent, Judson and Mrs. Grover Young and daughter

of Brazil.

Because of the Open House at the High School Building on Wednesday evening, November 13, the Adult Education classes for that night will not be held. Arrangements for making up .his class will be made in the following class on Wednesday.

November 20. ,

Additional winners of awards at Rus-sells Fall Festival Sale are

; Hirt and Dodie Hecko. —NEW MERCURYS pitch and other road and driving j disturbances, is optional. This J suspension uses air as a springing medium instead of steel, and I it maintains the height of the car : at a constant level regardless of \ number of passengers. In a major styling change, all j front end sheet metal in the 1958 : Mercury is new and features a longer, lower hood which carries ! a graceful step up to the cowl. I New sculptured fender lines | blend with a heavier bumper- ; grille and incorporate quadri- | beam headlights as standard

equipment.

Long, deep-channeled side projectiles with unique tubular [ chrome outrigger tail lights and | a restyled thin roof line with narrower quarter posts and | greater rear roof overhang accentuate Mercury crisp appear- ! ance and givs it a low, fast sil-

I houette.

Living room luxury is provide- 1 in the mangnificent interiors, ail ; color co-ordinated to complement i the attractive array of exterior body colors.

ISH MAY COME TRU

GREENOASTLE, IND. PKOflE 151 Yocr stors of friendly, cojrfeoas salespeople -

WARDS ONCE-A-YEAR "WISHING WELL” IS LOCATED ON THE FURNITURE FLOOR - WISH FOR ANY ITEM SOLD IN WARDS STORE!

NAME

ADDRESS

(TTY

TELE.

CARD OF THANKS

[ wish to thank all of my

Frank M. Heavin. 511 S. Indiana friends and neighbors who visitot., table lamps, John Under- and sent me cards and flowers .vood, F iltmore, table lamps. Mrs. during my stay in the Putnam Hubert Cox. Greencastle R. 1, County Hospital. Also I wish to .able lamps. Five additional a- thank Dr. Veach and Dr. Schau*ards will be given this evening, weeker and all of the wonderful Ahich closes the event. nurses and nurse aids. Nutchuk. an Eskimo from William Newgent. pd Alaska, was the speaker featured

Friday in the second of a series jf convocations at the high school. Reared in a Methodist orphanage at Anchorage, Nut-

NEW LINE: SAME RESULTS Rockford, 111. (UP) — John Norlinder, 54. told police he and o woman he met in a bar drove

huk came to the United States out in the country Saturday to o attend college and earned a watch Sputnik II go over. He degree in music. He told of dra- complained that the only thing he natic incidents in his life, inter- • saw was a man wh<x climbed out spercing his story with facts the back seat and. with the about Alaska, the natives and of the woman, took Sl38 in their customs, also exhibiting cas>1 and l ewe * r y-

samples of their handicraft— ; ivory miniatures, baskets. and articles of fur. He concluded his interesting lecture with several of his own arrangements of Eski-

mo folks songs.

Nothing to buy! Fill out and drop this coupon in the \Y -bing Well located on Wards basement floor. Wish for any item on display in store Now 8 thru Nov. 23. MAKE A WISH IN WARDS WISHING WELL Offer fimite.l to persons 16 years or older. Ward oinplo.ei s and their immediate families are not eligible.

I WISH FOR

Just dip this coupon - make a wish - be specific on your wish - on Wednesday, Mcvember 20, at H fi, M, Mr Dave Parr, secre'arv ct fbe Greenca*i!e Chamber cf Commerce, w:i! drew the winnlzz wish from tbe Wichin'T Well - - - Kj

Rector

Funeral Home AMBULANCE SERVICE

PHONE $41

WHAT DO YOU WISH FOR THIS CHRISTMAS? refrigerator, set of tires, television set, living reem suite, bath outfit, clothes for the family, outboard motor, electric mixer, power tools? And -if you win and have purchased the iiem already, you may select another prize of the same price - Wards Wishing Well Starts Tomorrow!