The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 4 April 1964 — Page 6
Page 6 SAT., APRIL 4, 1964.
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
THE DAILY BANNER
Dont Swear! _t's a Bible command...a common-sense law of life. “Thou shalt not take the name of The Lord Thy God in vain.' THEN WHY DO YOU DO IT??? Careless habit? Limited vocabulary? Calloused soul?...JUST WHY DO YOU DO IT? “The Lord will not hold him guiltless that taketh His name in vain.” Man, too, will hold you guilty. The members of your family, — the fellows in your office, — the stranger on the street ...none of them like it! Your family deserves better of you. Your neighbors expect better of you. God requires better of you. Go to church and break the swearing habit. Learn to respect and honor and reverence God’s name. Please don’t swear!
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You Id The Church The Church Id You — form o combination for good. Every man, woman and child needs the influence of the church. So, come let us go into the house of the Lord. Let us support her program of service to humanity, be a faithful worker and attend serv-
ices regularly.
worker ond attend serv- 0 ■ ices regularly.
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This Series of Ads is Being Published Each Week Under the Auspices of the American Bible Society and the Greencastle Ministerial Association, and Is Being Sponsored by the Following Individuals and Business Establishments:
TODD'S ACE HARDWARE STORE 20 X. Jackson St. CLARK’S READY MIX CONCRETE Washed Sand and Gravel Plant Phone 672-3441 HERRIOTT’S PAINT AND WALLPAPER South Side of Square SHERMS IMPLEMENT SALES Allis-Chalniers Farm Machinery 910 X. Jackson St. V MAURICE BROADSTREET Excavating: Phone OL 3-9257 or OL 3-6611 MALLORY CAPACITOR COMPANY
BOOKS PLUS 26 East Washington St. BLACK SERVICE & SUPPLY, INC. RISING'S HOUSE OF FLOWERS Flowers for All Occasions “Say It with Rising’s Flowers’’ 302 So. Bloomington OL 3-9511 OONEI,SON’S PHARMACY 8 X. Jackson St. _ JENKINS’ STANDARD SERVICE Indiana & Walnut Streets Greencastle, Indiana
KIMBALL R. LARKIN Phone OL 3-3522 Dependable Insurance Service IBM CORPORATION SUPPLIES DIVISION CENTRAL NATIONAL BANK In Putnam County Oldest and Largest Bank PUTNAM COUNTY FARM BUREAU CO-OP Greencastle, Indiana GARDNER’S FOOD MARKET 802 E. Washington St. SHOEMAKER OIL CO., INC. Phillips 66 Jobbers Budget A Keep Full Heating Contracts Available Phone OL 3-5913 or OL 3-4832
HOME LAUNDRY AND CLEANERS 217-225 E. Wash St. POOR AND CO. Feed and Grain Greencastle and Cloverdale CASH CONCRETE PRODUCTS Since 1919 Bill and Gene Cash THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK of Cloverdale Over 50 Years of Dependable Banking Service HANDY’S MILK & ICE CREAM Made in Greencastle
PROTESTANT ACTION IN THE SOUTH NEW YORK UPI — The National Council of Churches, in cooperation with the World Council of Churches, will tackle chronic problems of poverty and discrimination in the 15-county Mississippi Delta area from Memphis south to Vicksburg. A task force of trained leaders will undertake projects of direct relief, job training, leadership education and “efforts to open up communication between Negroes and whites” in the area, according to an announcement in The Religious Newsweekly.
BAPTIST GAINS NEW YORK UPI — There now are 91,500 Baptist churches in the United States with membership of more than 22.3 million, compared with 2,468 churches and 190,281 members in 1814, when the first national Baptist organization in America came into being, it was reported in conjunction with the Third Baptist Jubilee Year of 1964. The year will be highlighted by the Third Baptist Jubilee Celebration, to be held at Atlantic City, N.J., May 22-24, w r hich will be attended by Baptists from over the United States and Canada.
Open At 6:45 CONTINUOUS Sat. Sun. From 2:00
ENDS TODAY
Cary Audrey Grant/Hepburn
SUNDAY -. MONDAY - TUESDAY
A MOTION PICTURE ABOUT
THE INDISPENSABLE
ENEMIES MAN AND WOttAtt
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TECHNICOLOR
SPRING FESTIVAL OF BIG HITS IN APRIL! Rock Hudson — “MAN’S FAVORITE SPORT” “LAWRENCE OF ARABIA” “PALM SPRINGS WEEKEND” “UNDER THE YUM YUM TREE”
CHATEAU
YOU MUST SEE THIS FROM THE START
JEWS TO MEET NEW YORK UPI — A call for a national conference of all Jewish religious leaders on the question of inter-marriage, which “jeopardizes the survival of American Jewry,” has been issued by Rabbi Uri Miller of Baltimore, President of the Synagogue Council of America. Rabbi Miller said the conference would take place in New York “sometime later in the year.” The Synagogue Council of America is the national coordinating body of the three branches of the Jewish religious community. Conservative, Orthodox and Reform.
Tonight—7 & 9:10 p.m. Sun. 2 - 4:10 — 6:20 - 8:30 p.m. I
Frank Sinati Laurence Hi Janet Leigh
Ihe Manchurian Candidate
ISUy
RELEASED THRU UNITED ARTISTS
LITHERANS LEAD NEW YORK UPI — Three of the 10 largest Protestant church bodies in the United States are Lutheran, according to the Yearbook of American Churches. The Lutheran Church in America ranks sixth in size with 3,080,272 members; the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod. eighth, 2,522,095 and the American Lutheran Church ninth, 2,338,959.
LAD0N — Roachdale 7:30 FRI. - SAT. 2:30 SUN.
ta«r-lfefK
jpi RoiSertson
WOULD UNITE WORK NEW YORK UPI — The United Church of Christ proposed that six Protestant denominations now engaged in long-term unity talks take action at the Consultation on Church Union at Princeton, N.J., April 13-16, to unite their work in specific fields such as home missions, overseas missions and mass communications. Denominations represented in the Consultation include the Methodist Church, Protestant Episcopal Church, United Pres fcyterian Church in the USA, United Church of Christ, International Convention of Christian Churches (Disciples) and the Evangelical United Brethren.
URGE BILLS PASSAGE NEW YORK UPI — The National Council of Churches has urged church people to send letters and telegrams to U.S. Senators to press for passage of the Civil Rights Bill. The Council noted that the bill was passed by the House on Feb. 10, when 138 Republicans joined 152 Democrats in its support, and said “the efforts of the religious forces of our nation may again be a declining factor.’’
AID NEEDY’ NEW YORK UPI — Church people in the United States, through their agency, Church World Service, last year sent overseas 433,191.234 (m) pounds of food, clothing, drugs and other needed commodities, valued at almost $34 million. CWS rushed this aid to victims of the year’s unprecedented number of typhoons, earthquakes, floods and hurricanes while carrying on regular programs of self-help, mass feeding and rehabilitation- around the globe, according to The Religious Newsweekly.
FULL-TIME SERVICE NEW YORK UPI — Two out of every three rabbis ordained at Yeshiva University’s Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary are actively engaged in full-time service to the Jewish community, according to a survey of the 926 living rabbinic alumni. The survey also disclosed that 80 per cent of the rabbis are under 45 years old.
MAPLECROFT AUTO THEATRE East of Stilesville
TONIGHT AND SUNDAY TRIPLE FEATURE ALL COLOR PROGRAM Jerry Lewis, Jill St. John & Agnes Moorehead “WHO’S MINDING THE STORE?” Kirk Douglas Anthony Quinn & Carolyn Jones “LAST TRAIN FROM GUN HILL” Rod Taylor Yvette Mimieux & Alan Y’oung “THE TIME MACHINE”
WEBER BIKE & TOY SHOP “Toys 52 Weeks in the Y’ear” 14 W. Washington Street CLAIRMONT TRANSFER CO. The Only Single Line Service Between “The Ohio & Lake Superior” Phone OL 3-5212 3-D TIRE COMPANY 209 N. Jackson St. Phone OL 3-3035 IDEAL CLEANERS 22 So. Vine St.
CATHOLICE INCREASE MARYKNOLL, N.Y. UPI — The Catholic population of the British Crown Colony of Hong Kong increased by 17.806 in 1963, according to a report from Mary knoll Father Eugene A. Thalman, of Wilmette, 111. “There now are 190.461 Catholics among the colony’s total population of 3,133,131 (m),” Father Thalman said. Currently serving the 34 parishes in the Hong Kong diocese are 321 priests, of whom 104 are Chinese.
CROSS ON DISPLAY NEW YORK UPI — The famed Charred Cross of Coventry Cathedral will be on display at the Protestant and Orthodox Center of the New York World’s Fair. The cross is formed from two charred timbers from the roof of the old English cathedral, which was destroyed by bombing in 1940.
MIDWAY DRIVE-IN Jet. of 40 & 43 5 miles south of Greencastle
TONIGHT AND SUNDAY BYE BYE BIRDIE Plus HOOTENANNY HOOT CARTOON
75 NEW CHURCHES KANSAS CITY. Mo. UPI — A total of 75 new Nazarene churches were started last year, according to the church’s Department of Home Missions and Church Extension.
EXECUTIVE BOARD MEETING WEDNESDAY The Executive Board of the Friends of the Greencastle-Put-nam County Library met on Wednesday, April 1, in the library. I The meeting was for the purpose of strengthening our membership. Plans were made for a drive to this effect in an effort to help the townships through our Bookmobile Project. Those present were Miss Sylvia Taylor, C.D. Coppinger, Ernest Roth, and Mrs. William Killion.
News
TO HONOR PASTORS
AUTOMOTIVE LEAGUE
SPRINGFIELD, Mo. UPI —
W
L
An estimated 133 Assemblies of
Moose No. 2
150
82
God ministers, each with more
Eddies
141
90
than 45 years of service to the
York’s Grocery
130
102
church, wall be honored during
Moose N. 1 ....
120
112
the 50th Anniversary Conven-
Monon
118
114
tion scheduled here April 20-
Mason’s
112
120
23.
Mallory’s
92
140
About 10,000 delegates from
Shetrone
64
168
ERECT SEMINARY NEW YORK UPI — The first seminary in the Western Hemisphere for delayed vocations to the priesthood — Pope John XXIII Major Seminary — is being built at Weston, Mass., says the Catholic Digest.
throughout the United States 500 Series: N. Hoffa,592; B. and from other countries are Langdon, 588; F. Orr, 583; D. expected to attend the four-day Lewis, 582; R Crawley, 558; M. convention. Boles, 553; C. Alexander, 540; * C. Crawley, 531; B. Alexander,
ARRIVED HOME BOSTON UPI — Mrs. Malcolm E. Peabody arrived home and said she was ready to go to jail again in the South for the cause of civil rights . The sprightly 72-year-old mother of Gov. Endicott Peabody arrived here on a plane from St. Augustine, Fla.
530; R. Hampton, 521; D. Bowman, 520; N. Mark, 512; A. Fenwick, 509; R. Taylor, 507; G. Crawley, 501; S. Komgenick, 500; and R. Moore. 500. 200 Games: N. Hoffa, 218211; B. Langdon, 214; R. Crawley, 212; C. Crawley, 211; F. Orr, 206; N. Mark, 203; and P. Smith, 203.
AID ALASKA VICTIMS INDIANAPOLIS UPI — The national headquarters of the American Legion here said Friday more than $10,000 has been forwarded for the relief of Alaska earthquake victims. The money represents the early response from a nationwide appeal by Legion National Commander Daniel Foley and Mrs. Lucille Johnson, national president of the American Legion Auxiliary. The money will be distributed by the Alaska Legion Department for use in providing food, clothing and basic needs for disaster victims.
