The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 July 1963 — Page 2

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GIRL, li, DROWNS GARY UPI — A teen-age Gary girl drowned Monday while swimming at Marquette Park Beach on Lake Michigan with her father, brother and sister. Margaret Walla, 14, was pulled unconscious fixmi the water and mouth-to-mouth resuscitation efforts were unsuccessful. The girl’s father. Joseph, 52, said the four members of the family were playing in 4 or 5 feet of water when Margaret suddenly wis discovered missing. He shouted for a lifeguard, and the girl was found a short time later. RECORD EARNINGS CHICAGO UPI—Standard Oil Co. of Indiana today estimated first-half eirnings at a record S91.75S.000, against *67.658.000 a year ago. Earnings equalled *2.55 a share for the first six months of this ye r, compared with *1.89 a share last year.

THE DAILY BANNER Tl ES., JI LY 30, 1963. Page 2 (.KEEN CASTLE. 1N DlA N A THE DAILY BANNER and HERALD CONSOLIDATED 17 S. JacKson St. Oreencastle, Ind. Entered in the Post Office at Gteencastle, Indiana, as Second Class Mail matter under Act of March 7, 1,378. Subscription Prices Home Delivery 35c per week Mailed in Putnam County $7.00 per yeai Outside of Putnam County $8.00 per ycai Outside of Indiana $12.00 per year TODAY’S BIBLE THOUGHT The fool hath said in his heart, there is no God. Psalm 14:1. This is plain and pointed speech. God's Word seldom calls anyone a fool. But, according to the Bible, the atheist is a fool. Somewhere he got fooled.

Personal And Local News Uriels

STILL SEARCHING FOR BODIES Rescue workers continuing their search for bodies of victims of the disastrous earthquake that nearly leveled Skopje, Yugoslavia, look at stone slabs that were parts of a building. It now is believed the toll will be about 2,000 dead.

Women's Summer Dress and Casual Shoes

SOOO Values To SI5.95

SJOO Values To $10.95

$200 Values To S8.95

ALL SALES FINAL

MOORE'S SHOES

WEST SIDE OF SQUARE

Mrs. Wilbur Arnold is recovering satisfactorily from surgery in Methodist hospital in Indianapol-

is.

Mr. and Mrs. Larry Day, of Marion, are the parents of a. daughter born Monday at the Putnam County Hospital. Castle Toppers Home Demonstration club will not meet July 31st, the next meeting will be August 7th at the home of Mrs. Carl Myers. The Fillmore High School Band has been officially entered in the Indiana State Fair High School Band Contest by its director James Miller. Band members will be marching before the State Fair Grandstand in Indianapolis in a p rade beginning at 8 a.m. on High School Band Day, Wednesday, August 28. The Shetrone Real Estate Ball Team defeated the Plainfield Merchants club in a recordbreaking eighteen inning game last evening. No score was made by either side until the eighteenth inning. The game lasted well into the night with excitement running high. Sergeant Youngpeter pitched the entire game for the Shetrone Nine. anniversaries Birthday Jeffery O'Neal, son of Mr. and Mrs. Chester O'Neal R. R. 4, 3 years old today. TOWER SITTER FORT MADISON. Iowa UPIA convict was perched atop a 125- foot water tower at the state penitentiary today, and W’arden John Bennett said, “we’re just going to let him stay up there.” The convict. William T. Bradley, 46, climbed the tower Sunday morning. He took food and water in a bucket from the prison kitchen, where he worked.

Pho’os by Ralph Taylor

Mr. and Mrs. Jack C. Whitley

The wedding of Miss Shirley streamers. She was dressed in

Jane Arnold, daughter of Mr. and a blue dacron dress with white The marriage of Miss Eleanor Mrs. Ezra Arnold of Fillmore and lace hat and gloves. Margaret Northrup, Chicago, and

Jack C. Whitley, son of Mr. and The ring bearer, Mark Stephen Hal Stephen Hall, Chicago, took Miss Marilyn Brown, GreencastMrs. Oral Whitley of Ladoga. Ai nold. nephew of the bride, wore place July 6, 1963 in Gobin Mem- le. James Feeman was best man.

.Mr. and Mrs. Hal Stephen Hall Jon Peebles, Speedway, Ind., Mr?. James Orlosky, Indianapolis and

R. R. 1, was held at the Sherwood a summer suit and carried the Christian Church Sunday, July rings on a lace trimmed satin

orial church in Greencastle.

21st at 3:30

Mrs. Bruce Albright, organist, played the bridal aires with soloist Circle Gossett singing, “Always,” “Why Do I Love You” and

“The Lord's Prayer”

The Rev. Elgin Smith read the Maina nephews of the bride.

double ring ceremony. ...

_ . . . ... The bride s mother wore

The alter was decorated with

pillow.

John Whitely, brother of the bridegroom, was best man

Ushers were Jimmie Arnold, bro- Djakarta, Indonesia,

ther of the bride, Gerald Scobee, Randy McMains, Steven Mc-

Parents of the couple are: Chaplain and Mrs. Albert H. Northrup and Dr. and Mrs. Hal O. Hall, who are now residing in

a corsage

After a wedding trip the couple

Groomsmen were Charles Scheuer, Albert Northrup and Joseph Northrup. The bridesmaids wore medium blue linen dresses with A-line skirts, sleeveless and high necks. with blue accessories. Their flowers were white glamelRobert Gingery perform- ias.

ed the double ring ceremony. Mrs. The bride's mother wore a navy Evan Crawley was organist. The silk linen suit with navy and

a bride wore a white floor length pink accessories and Palms and lighted candelabra brown scalloped lact dress with gown( fashioned with an appliqu- of white flowers, and baskets of blue and white Mocha accessories. She wore a ed pattern on the bell shaped

carnations, with entrances to corsage of y ellow carnations. skirt f en int o a chapel train. The will be at home at 7428 N. Da-

pews marked with bows of white The bridegroom's mother wore jacket was empire length. She men. Chicago,

satin and nylon net. a beige, two piece dress suit. Her carried white orchids and ivy. The bride is the granddaughTlio bride, given in ms.rriB.g’e by cors<ige \\3.s <ilso yellow C3.rn3.- IVTiss Beret Ccirlson was m&id ter of IXTrs. A. C. rsorthrup,

her father, wore a nylon sheer tions. of honor, bridesmaids were Mrs. Greencastle.

wedding’ gown fashioned with Immediately following the garlands of embroidery flowers ceremony the reception was held on the bodice and sleeves, and church. The table was encircling the neckline and bord- decorated with a three tiered ering the tiered front and back wedding cake and blue vases of skirt. A full gathered back skirt P’ 11 ^ an d blue sweetpeas. Assistinset, extended into a chapel were Miss Doris Lisby, Mrs.

Tom Long, sister of the bridegroom, Mrs. Ivor McMains, sis-

ter of the bride.

Mrs. Jim Braden registered the gifts and Mrs. Robert Corns assisted at the gift table. Thev wore corsages of blue and white

carnations.

Mrs. John Whitley, sister-in-law of the bridebroom, registered the guests. She wore a eors-

YOU'RE TELLING ME!

— By WILLIAM RITT— Central Press Writer

train. Her finger-tip veil fell from a half hat of white satin with embroidery flowers match-

ing her gown and outlined with

sequins and seed pearls. She wore

a pearl necklace, a gift of the bridegroom, and carried a white Bible topped with a white orchid and pink sweetheart roses. Mrs. Irwin Wallace, sister of

the bride, served as matron of-

honor and carried a colonial type a & e of pink sweetheurt roses, bouquet of white carnations and Tbe couple left on a wedding pink sweetheart roses with ^ r *P through the Smoky Mounmatohing streamers. tains. For traveling the bride Mrs. Fred Girton and Mrs. Jim- chose a yellow dacron and cotton mie Arnold, sister and sister-in- ^ resa with white accessories and law of the bride, served as brides- wore the orchid from her bridal

maids. They were gowned in bouquet.

MEN’S PANTS - SPECIAL GROUP (Sorry, No Alterations) Values fo SI0.00 NOW $3.00

MEN S SUMMER WEIGHT SPORT COATS Values io S29.95 NOW $15.00 MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS S2.12 each 3 fOf $6.25

MEN S SUITS SPECIAL GROUP Values to S47.50 NOW $25.00 MEN'S KNIT SPORT Shirts $1.97 each 3forS5.75

Here are two great Back-to-School Items BOYS' SPORT SHIRTS BOYS' KNIT SPORT SHIRTS $1.97 $1.87

uvwo.vs Clothiers for Men and Boys Since 1891

were

pastel colors of pink, yellow, and blue full skirits, street length dresses of dacron and cotton, trimmed in white dacron inserton inset in the bodice, with matching shoes. Their head pieces were matching pastel rolars trimmed in seed pearls and matching veils. Their

bouquets were blue and

carnations.

BRITAIN and Russia are exchanging equal amounts of Scotch whisky and vodka for sale in their respective countries. Looks like international good will is being liquified—not

liquidated.

! ! !

Maybe there's nothing like alcohol, suggests Milt, the sterling printer, to thaw out a cold

war.

! ! ! Surfboarding is now one of the fastest growing sports, we read. Riding the crest of a wave of popularity? ! ! ! Thieves chopped down a tree to which an Edmond, Okla., man had chained and padlocked his boat, then made off with

the craft. Just another good idea, opines punster Zadok Dumkopf, that, unfortunately,

wooden’t work.

! ! !

First compulsory education law was pass(d in 1852—Factographs. To all schoolboys, that must seem the date the ‘'good,

old days'’ ended.

i t j

African Basenji dogs snarl, chortle anil yodel but don't bark —nature ilem. THAT'S an improvement?

! ! !

U. S. tropical fish lovers spent some $10 million on aquarium accessories last year, just released statistics show. Now, that's what we call going overboard for a hobby!

Mr. and Mrs. Whitley will reside east of Greencastle. R. R. 3. in their newly built home. The bride is a graduate of Fillmore high school and is employed at I.B.M. The bridegroom is a graduate of Roachdale High School and is employed at I B M. Out of town guests attending

white were from Amarillo, Texas. Mt.

Sterling, Kentucky. Indianapolis

The little flower girl, Jamie Cravvfordsville, M a r t i n s v i lie, Ann Arnold, niece of the bride, Plainfield, Brazil, Clay City, carried a white basket of blue Coatesville, Fillmore, Roachdale, and white carnations and blue Ladoga, Cloverdale, Clinton.

125 Arrested For Protest Marching About 125 Negroes and whites protesting segregation were arrested Sunday in demonstrations in California and Virginia. It was a relatively quiet Sunday on the racial front with ar-rest-producing protests reported only in Danville, Va.; Farmville, Va.; and Torrance, Calif. Demonstrations also were staged in Denver, Colo., and Pine Bluff, Ark., but no arrests were reported in those cities. Danville police sweltering in 102-degree heat, intercepted 77 Negroes marching on city hall a march by thousands but the demonstration fell far short of the they sprawled out on the pavement.

“The heat is on,” one expensive prostitute complained. “The Ward trial has been very bad publicity for us and many of our clients are afraid they might be implicated in some way.”

“ON VACATION” LONDON UPI—Many of London’s prostitutes, from highpriced callgirls to bargain basement street-walkers, were “on vacation” today until the sizzling vice trial of Dr. Stephen Ward is over. The trial of the suave, 50-year-old osteopath-artist, charged with procuring and living off the earnings of prostitutes, went into recess for the weekend Friday. It will resume at Old Bailey Court on Monday when the defense presents its last two witnesses.

ADDED ATTRACTION The fast growing crowd at the 4-H Horse and Pony Show at the Putnam County Fair will have a special added attraction Wednesday night. For the youngsters and adults, ‘‘many who have never seen a race horse in action,” there is a surprise. You will see a standardbred trotter in action, sulky, silks and everything that goes with a race horse. This harness horse lover and many others in Putnam County would like to see some interest built up in horse racing A half mile track at the Putnam County Fair Grounds would make it one of the outstanding Fairs in Central Indiana. Putnam County now has many fine horses and ponies and especially good is one of the top Quarter Horse Farms in Indiana, near Greencastle. This would be a big project, but many of our counties in eastern and southern Indiana have done it. If you are interested, give it your support. It could be a dream come true.

NOTICE WATER CONSUMERS

It has been necessary to inaugurate a flushing program of our entire distribution system. This is done so that you, the user may enjoy the best possible service in the future. We have completed this project for the summer and wish to thank you for your understanding. Dept, of Water Works

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