The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 13 October 1964 — Page 2
Page 2 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1964
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
THE DAILY BANNER
Delta Kappa Gamma Held Meeting Epsilon Chapter of Delta Kappa Gamma opened its fall activities with a carry-in dinner at the home of Mrs. Joe Davidson. Coatesville. on October 3. Following the bountiful meal Mrs. Waneta Gibbs presided over the business meeting. ‘Changing Patterns in Other Cultures” will be the theme for the 1964-65 programs. Mrs. Minnie Mae Rightsell announced special speakers who will contribute to this challenging program. Mrs. Edna Boyd presented four areas of consideration for the Personal Growth and Services Program
Martha Cornich to the research chairmen of all the chapters of| Delta Kappa Gamma in Indiana. was announced by Mrs. Merle Eggers. present chairman j of the research committee. The topic for research this year will be “What is being done toward education of retarded
children?”
Special recognition has been given to an active member of Epsilon Chapter of Delta Kappa Gamma. It has been announced that Miss Audrey Beatty has been selected to the Who's Who among alumni of South Dakota State University. Miss Beatty has served the Epsilon Chapter in various offices and as Presi-
which will include participation dent, 1956-60. Miss Pauline
in Books USA. and individual personal growth program through a members book library. a free will donation for the national scholarship fund and the Books for Asians. The research program of last year covering a resume of dropouts in Putnam County under the guidance of Mrs. June Irwin has become the model for the state research program and is being included in all mail distributed by Dr.
Biddle. State Executive Secretary, will be a special guest and speaker at the November meeting. which will be held at the home of Mrs. Percy Masten.
FISH FRY OCT. 17 Sponsored by the Reelsville Lions Club At Th* WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP FIRE DEPARTMENT Plenty of Good Food and Entertainment 5 P. M. Till ?
Mrs. McQueen Is Hostess For Meeting The regular monthly meeting was entertained at the home of Mrs. Belle McQueen on October 1 with 13 members
present.
After the usual good dinner the meeting was called by our
President. Mrs. Edna Cox. with T he S C C Club will meet on the group singing the Club Tuesday evening at the home of son ^- Mrs. Ralph West, 7:30 p. m. Mrs. Carrie Ziegelman of- The Happier Home Home fered prayer. Economics Club ill meet this
evening at 7:30 with Mrs. Flor-
ence Bell.
THE DAILY tANNER
AND
HERALD CONSOLIDATED 26-28 S. Jackson St.
GrooncastU, Ind.
Busmots Phono 01 3-5151 Samuol R. Raridon, Publisher Elisabeth Rariden, Business Mgr. James B. Zeis, Managing Editor William D. Hooper, Adv. Mgr. Entered in the Post Office at Greencastle, Indiana, as Second Class MaH matter under Act of March 7, 1878.
Subscription Prices
Home Delivery 35c per week Mailed in Putnam Co. $7.00 par year Outside of Putnam Co. $8.00 per year Outside of Indiana $12.00 per year
Bible
Thought It is of the Lord’s mercies that we are not consumed, because His compassion fail not. Lamentations 3:22. The fact that a Holy God does not strike dead the railing atheist proves just one thing— not that there is no God — but that the God who is — is merciful far beyond our power of
comprehension.
Personal And Local News
Dr. and Mrs. Edward Thomp-[ niipcfjnn I pff son will move to their newj WIGwllUII LGIl
home next week at 8 Kentwood i
Drive.
Women of the Moose will meet Wednesday Lt 8:00 p.m. at the Moose Home. Members
please bring salads.
To Legislators
The Friendship Culb will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. with Mrs. Raymond Baldwin. Members please note change in
meeting place.
The Missionary Ladies of haf . New Providence Church will' have their regular meeting Friday night at the church. There |
INDIANAPOLIS UPI — The question of whether a man is as well-qualified as a woman to serve as superintendent of a correctional or penal institution for women will again face l the 1965 Indiana Legislature. Indiana Department of CorI rection Commissioner Arthur i Campbell says a bill already ° r has been written which would amend existing legislation so that either a man or a woman
will be a masquerade party in ^hp 3 TnrT ^ ® upet th, church basement at 6:30 l “ t ° f the G,r ' S Sch0 ° 1
p. m. Everyone is welcome to come. Prizes will be given for the best masqueraders. Hostesses are Sarah Goodin and
or the Indiana Women’s Prison. At present the law specifies the superintendent of these two institutions must be a woman.
•„ , i Campbell said he was confi-
Odetta Bowser. There will also |dent the bll , wm
followed by tensions which still exist, according to McCart. “We are a long way from having the institution we want here,” he added. A nine - member legislative committee and a Marion County grand jury are making investigations at the school and from them may come some improvements. Campbell said some of the legislative committee members have told him they would back permissive legislation allowing either a man or a woman to be named as superintendent or both women's institutions.
Greencastle, Route 2. and Linda Darlene McAninch, at home, Poland, Route 2. James Ivan Beaman, J. & L. Steel, Fillmore, and Anna Catherine Dink, at home. Marion.
be a program.
Secretary’s report was read and approved: treasurer was absent on account of sickness.
Flower report was read. Dues and pennys collected.
Dr. L. J. Goldberg Registered Podiatrist Will be in hit office for Treatment of Foot Ailments Wednesday October 14th After 8:30 A. M. at the COMMERCIAL HOTEL Phene OL 3-5617 for Appointments
Mrs. Elma door prize.
Lewis won the
Belle received gift from Mamie.
her hostess
Games were played each receiving a prize.
with
The menu was made out for the next meeting which will be at the home of Mrs. Avenl Allen on Oct. 22. Members please note change in date. This will be the Nov. meeting.
Club 16 will meet October 14 at 7 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Marilyn Wager. Members please come masked. Morris A. Mason spent Monday in Indianapolis on legal and other business at the Indiana Republican State Head-
quarters.
| A son was born Tuesday morning at the Putnam County Hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Warren Terry, 911 East Washing-
ton Street.
Eagle Halfback On Injured List PHILADELPHIA UPI —
| Halfback Timmy Brown, the Philadelphia Eagles' leading ground gainer, will be out of the lineup “indefinitely” because of a thigh injury, the
club announced Monday. Brown underwent “minor and
cor ective” surgery at the University of Pennsylvania Hospital for the injury, sustained during a 35-20 loss in the Washington Redskins Sunday. Dr. James E. Nixon, team physician, said the injury had hemorrhaged. He said Brown
was “resting comfortably.’*
DIAVCNO R I N C* S
Mrs. Ora Eggers will leave for New York Tuesday to meet her sister. Phyllis Hodder of Weymouth England. Miss Hadder j will arrive on the Queen Mary
j Wednesday.
City firemen were called to I the Alpha Phi sorority house. 202 East Hanna Street, at 4:55 Monday afternoon. They reported a hot electric light
1 transformer.
The Sherwood Christian Women Fellowship will meet with 1 Mrs. Charles Saathoff. Wednesday, Oct. 14th. Mrs. John Klebusch will give the study with ^ j worship by Mrs. Saathoff. Co- i j hostess will be Mrs. Wyatt
Brummett.
The Friendship Class of the New Providence Missionary Baptist Church met Saturday evening in the church basement 1 for a pitch-in dinner. Maynard Grubb and Zella Cummings are the class teachers. After every- ' one had enjoyed the good food, a social hour followed. Then all
Case Argued In Supreme Court
WASHINGTON UPI — Lorneys for the states of
bama and before the
At-
Ala-
get a better
reception than did similar proposed legislation in 1963. It died in committee. He pointed to the present situation at the Indiana Girls School as an example. Currently James McCart, veteran penal and correctional administrator, is acting head of the school, and its legal woman j superintendent, Mrs. Frieda ! Lyda, is hospitalized under docj tor’s orders to take a rest following a major riot and a series of incidents at the school. Campbell said Mrs. Lyda is recuperating at St. Vincent’s Hospital. But he added that her doctor had ordered “a complete rest” for her and that it was possible she might not return during the balance of Governor
Welsh's term.
Mrs. Lyda, a 45-year-old widow', undertook the difficult job of heading the girls’ school July 16, 1962. and dedicated herself to a 24-hour-a-day schedule in trying to change the understaffed and under - financed school into a rehabilitative in-
stitution.
She came to the
Marriage Licenses Larry Wayne Rumple, engineering clerk, Coatesville, Route 2. and Marlene Baire, secretary, Bainbridge. Route 1. William Duane Cain, IBM.
Cloverdale Past Matrons Meet The first fall meeting of the year for the Past Matron's Club of Cloverdale was held at the home of Mrs. Lena Trus-! sell. Mrs. Marjorie Bitzer, president, presided. She also had the social hour. Mrs. Eva Craggs gave the program. After the hostess served delicious refreshments, the club adjourned to meet Monday, October 19 with Mrs. Ruth Neier. Please notice change of date.
Dies Of Injuries BEDFORD. UPI —Irvin H. Lee. 34. Tunnelton. who waa injured Sept. 26 in a wreck at the Bedford Speedrome. died Monday in an Indianapolis hospital.
BANNER ADS PAY
ANNOUNCING THAT Dr. Ascer Hahne Chiropractor will be located in Dr. M. W. Jessup’s
Office on S. Jackson St. begining Thursday, Oct. 15th Hours: 9 am-8 pm Ot 3-5814
job with
Mississippi argued j little background in penal or Supreme Court to- correctional work but with an day to uphold convictions that impressive career in education, could put several civil rights -We were fortunate to get leaders behind bars. her,” Campbell said. The Alabama attorney 8 were The changes which Mrs. Lyda defending the convictions of 11 sought unsuccessfully to make persons, including four top may y e t be achieved, thanks to aides of the Rep. Martin Luther the chaotic events wdiich led to King, for sitting at a tradition- her hospitalization. A riot at ally oil-white lunch counter in a the School Sept. 10 took 63 law Montgomery bus terminal dur-J officers to quell and has been
ing the 1961 “freedom rider”
campaign.
Mississippi was asking the high court to uphold the conviction and six-month sentence given Aaron Henry, state president of the National Association for the Advancement of, Colored People NAACP, on a morals charge. Louis H. Poliak, attorney for the Alabama defendants, 1 opened his presentation Mon-1 day. He told of how they were | arrested after being accompanied to the terminal by National Guard troops.
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Hospital Notes
CAMELIA
Dismissed Monday:
went upstairs in the church for, Margaret Craig, Sheri
Muriel j Gofer, i
JAVSON Jewelers
Pnvote Diamond Room for Your Convenience ON THE SOUTH SIDE OF SQUARE OPEN All DAY WEDNESDAY
a Song Fest. Those attending were: Mr. and Mrs. Chester Day, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Gaston, Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Joe Grubb, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Williams, Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Seller, Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Grubb, Mrs. Olive Harcourt, Mrs. Flossie Cummings, Mrs. Viola Taber. Mrs. Marie Hunt and Mrs. I Zella Cumings.
Greencastle; John Rupert, Clo-
verdale.
ANNIVERSARIES Wedding Mr. and Mrs. Paul Shillings, Oct. 13. 1934, 30 years. Birthday Tina Godfrey, 6 years today; daughter of Harry A. Godfrey Jr.
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SHOEMAKER’S
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Maple 8 Bloomington Sti.
DR. 0. H. AUSTIN Chiropractor Hours: By Appointment lues. & Thurs. 3:00 P.M. to 9:00 P.M. Fri. 5:30 P.M. to 9:30 P.M. Sat. 9:00 A.M. to 7:00 P.M. Ph. OL 3-3024 If No Answer Call OL 3-9358
W
Sausage with macaroni and cheese Makes 4 to 6 servings 1 tablespoon of salt 3 quarts of boiling water 2 cups of elbow macaroni (8 ounces) 6 smoked sausages 2 cups grated Cheddar cheese (about pound)
1 large onion, chopped fine 1 ’i; cups of milk 1 teaspoon of dry mustard J 2 teaspoon of caraway seed Add 1 tablespoon of salt to the rapidly boiling water. Gradually add the macaroni so that the water continues to boil. Cook uncovered, stirring occasionally, until tender. Drain in a colander.
Split the Eckrich smoked sausage lengthwise and stuff with half the cheese. Combine the macaroni and the rest of the ingredients and mix lightly but thoroughly. Turn into a greased one and one-half quart baking dish, and arrange the stuffed smoked sausages on the
top.
Cover and bake in a moder-
■
ate (350 degree F.) oven 30 minutes. Uncover and continue baking 10 minutes or until the smoked sausages are lightly
browned.
Eckrich sausages are precooked so the browning process takes very little time for them to reach the golden and succuilent stage.
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