The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 6 January 1965 — Page 5
~ -J
'*• : - - ■ ~ - v - —-
—
- wmm
V
< ■'.
BIWEETXIXa Bite-sized ribboned butterscotch squares are made from a mix. except for the meltaway topping. Prepare and bake 1 box of chocolate chip butterscotch brownie mix as label directs, but reserve enclosed, packet of chocolate chips for flaw. Frost the cooled cake with a topping made by blendtng;^4 cup of butter with 1 ta- ’ ble spoon of milk or cream. 2 cups of sifted confectioners’ i 1 »■ ^ ■
sugar and 1 teaspoon of vanilla. Chill. Drizzle with sauce made by melting chocolate chips with 1 tablespoon of butter. When set, cut into 1-inch squares Makes 64.
NOTICE TO BIDDERS NoUce Is hereby given that the Board of Works and Safety of the City of Oreencastle. Indiana, will receive bids for the purchase of a Sewer Rodder for the department of Sewage Disposal. Specifications therefore now on file In the office of the Clerk-Treasurer of the City of Oreencastle, Indiana. Bids must be properly and completely executed with a non-collusion affidavit as required by law and upon
forms prescribed by the State Board of Accounts. All bids must be accompanied by a bid bond or certified check In an amount equal to ten percent of the total bid payable to the city of Greencastle. Indlaoa. Bids will be received at the office of the Clerk-Treasurer of the City of Oreencastle. Indiana. unUl the hour of 7 o’clock, Monday. January IS. IMS. The Board of Works end Safety reserves the right to reject any and all bide. ' WITNESS my hand and the seel of the City of Oreencastle, Indiana, this 28th day of December. 1M4. Raymond 8. Fisher Mayor of tho City of Greencestle, Indiana. 30-6-2t
STATE OF INDIANA )ss: COUNTY OF PUTNAM IN THE PUTNAM CIRCUIT COURT VACATION TERM, 1964 IN THE MATTER OF ESTATE OF MAE CLICK. DECEASED Estate No .0.365 NOTICE TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF MAE CLICK In the matter of the Estate of MAE CLICK, deceased. No. 10.365 Notice Is hereby given that ROACHDALE BANK and TRUST COMPANY as Executor of the above named estate, has presented and filed Its final account In final settlement of said estate, and that the same wilt come up for the examlnaUon and acUon of said
CIRCUIT Court, on the 1st of February, IMS. at which Uma all persons inter, ested In aald estate are required to appear In said court and show cause, if any there be, why said account should not be approved. And the helra of said decedent end all others Interested are also required to appear and make proof of their heirship or claim to any part of said estate. ROACHDALE BANK end TRUST COMPANY PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE Executor Jack P. Hlnlke Clerk of the PUTNAM CIRCUIT COURT
Attorneys for Estate LYON k BOYD
30-7-2t
f ■. >.
* .»
Percy Comments NEW YORK UPI — Charles H. Percy said Tuesday night that Republican National Chair- ■ man Dean Burch was in “an untenable position.” Percy said he hoped Burch would search his conscience to find a good : replacement for himself as party chief. Percy, a defeated Republican candidate for governor of Illinois, made his statement on a nationally televised network show.
Th« Daily Banntr, Graancastla, Indiana Wadnasday, January 6,1965
Plan To Wod LOS ANGELES UPI — Actress Annette Funicello of | “Mousketeer” , fame and her agent, Jack L. Gilardi, plan to be married Saturday night in St., Cyril’s Roman Catholic Church.
| Miss Funicello, 22, and Gilardi, 34. applied Tuesday for a marriage license. She said she has known him since she was 12 and a “Mousketeer,” that he became her agent two years ago, and they have been engaged about six months.
Have An Entry 9 National Chicken Cooking Contest Open To Children And To Adults
JOAN O'SULLIVAN r Hoy, kids, like to cook? fhen try cooking chicken. |faybo you can whip up a dish |hat will take a prize when the National Chicken Cooking Contest is held this June in Salisbury, Maryland, in the heart of Delmarva chicken country. The whole family can enter because, in addition to the
junior competion (ages 8 through 17), there’s a senior contest as well as portable appliance and barbecue divisions. Write Now! Interested? Then waste no time in writing to the National Chicken Cooking Contest, G. P. O. Box 2715, New York, N. Y. 100Q1, for an entry blank. The deadline is
AFTER CANTON-EASY Chicken has cooked for an hour, water chestnuts and frozen green peas are spooned over it
February 15, 1965. Prizes include trips to Europe and the Bahamas, a 81,000 shopping spree at a na-tionally-famed store plus a 81000 electronic range, appliances and other awards. As a long-time judge of Junior entries at this annual contest, I can predict that competition will be keen, for kids are creative cooks. Memorable Winners One especially good winning recipe I remember for a Sputnik Chicken was created by Jacqueline Wertsch of Oshkosh. Wisconsin. Her trick — mixing pancake flour with com flakes — made a smooth breading that gave her chicken real taste-appeal. Also memorable was Can-ton-Easy Chicken cooked by Moreen Gail Ivice of Chicago. Illinois, who used her noodle (egg noodles, too) to make a soy-sauce-flavored Oriental casserole. To give you an ider. of what goes into a winning dish, here are these two recipes. SPUTNIK CHICKEN 2 sticks margarine or butter 2 fryers (2-2) a lbs.» quartered 1 egg, slightly beaten 1 tbsp. milk 1 c. crushed corn flakes plus 2 tbsp. pancake flour 1 tsp. salt tsp. paprika % tsp. pepper 4 baking potatoes,wrapped in foil Melt margarine in roaster in
1
Many New Cars DETROIT UPI — More than eight million new' cars were sold in the United States last year, the first time the milestone has been reached. Ward’s Report said 7.614.000 domestic-made and 486.000 imports were sold last year to push combined sales to 8.1 million units. The statistical agency said j the 7.614,000 domestic-make i sales topped by 2.8 per cent the j 1955 record of 7.480,000 cars. The figure was 3.8 per cent ■ above the 7.334.260 American cars sold in 1962.
WASHINGTON
MARCH OF EVENTS
JJ INAUGURATION :OMFY (FOR HIM)
HE'LL SEE PARADE FROM HEATED 'BOX'
— j:..
4 m a % j
BREADED WITH corn flakes and pancake flour, chicken is served with foil-wrapped “sputnik” baked poatoes.
oven at 375 c F. Cut fryer into quarters. Wash, dry on paper towels. Mix egg and milk. Dip chicken in mixture. Roll in corn-flake-pancake flour mixture. Place in melted margarine in roaster. Sprinkle with salt, paprika and pepper. Put baking potatoes in pan. Cover and bake at 350’ F. for one hour., turning once so chicken browns on both sides. Reduce heat to 325° F. and cook 30 minutes longer. Arrange chicken on platter with foil-wrapped potatoes. Insert toothpicks in potatoes to give them a sputnik look. Garnish with parsley. Serves 6. CANTON-EASY CHICKEN 3 tbsp. vegetable oil 6 oz. fine egg noodles
4 chicken breasts, split in half 1 env. dry onion soup mix, dissolve in 1 c. water 1 (6-oz. l can water chestnuts with liquid 2 tbsp. soy sauce 1 (10. oz. i pkg. frozen green peas Heat vegetable oil in large casserole. Add noodles, moving them around in oil with wooden spoon until they are golden brown, about 5 min. Place chicken breasts in casserole over noodles. Pour onion soup over chicken. Add liquid from water chestnuts and soy sauce. Bake one hour at 350° F. Add thawed green peas and sliced water chestnuts. Bake another 10 minutes. Serves 6.
Acquires Star TUCSON, Ariz. UPI — The Tucson Daily Citizen acquired the Arizona Daily Star Tuesday despite an unsuccessful attempt 24 hours earlier by the Justice Department to block the sale. U. S. Dist. Judge James Walsh Monday denied the Justice Department a temporary restraining order against the sale, but permitted filing of a civil anti-trust suit, to be heard at a date to be set later. The Justice Department claimed that the two newspapers engaged in a conspiracy through formation of Tucson Newspapers Inc. (TNIl to restrain and monopolize the daily newspaper field here.
By HENRY CATHCART Central Press Washington Writer TOJASHINGTON—Come Inauguration Day, Jan. 20, don’t feel W sorry for President xnd Mrs. Johnson as they appear in the reviewing stand in front of the White House for hours on end watching the parade. Unlike some previous occasions when presidents and first ladies have braved the wintry blasts to honor the paraders and the states they represent, the Johnson’s will do their chore in unprece-
dented comfort.
The pavilion will have wall-to-wall carpeting (blue). It will be enclosed by glass panels, and heated by 10 infra-red units. The comfort of the first family will be reinforced with safety features, too. The 10-foot glass panel directly in front of the President will be bulletproof, a feature that is being employed for the first time in the history of inauguration. The cost of the pavilion for the President, and stands for television and the press will run to 8246,000, including the cost for removal, which will take place as soon as possible after the parade is concluded.
The President Guarded by
glass
Pays Back Visit
WASHINGTON UPI — Sen. Edward M. Kennedy . D-Mass.. called on President Johnson at the White House Tuesday to return a visit the Chief Executive paid him at a Boston hospital ; in September. Kennedy, the youngest bro- : ther of the late President, I walked with the aid of a cane.
G COOKIE KEEPSAKES? — At a party given recently by President Johnson and the First Lady for children of news correspondents, youngsters were taken into the presence of a Christmas tree adorned with lots of gingerbread men. One of the guests commented to Mrs. Johnson that with all the children present the tree probably would be missing some of the baked goodies. She replied that the kids should choose carefully because only half were edible, the others being ceramic likenesses. Later on, one of the. reporters sauntered over to the tree to find out how the kids had been making their selections. It appeared to him that the ceramic likenesses were as popular with the kids as the genuine gingerbread men. He did a little more reporting and found that, in fact, the popularity of the item rested mainly with the mothers of the children. They thought it would be nicer to have a ceramic souvenir of the occasion than the genuine article that undoubtedly would disappear in a trice. • • • • • GARBLING IT UP—In these days of keen competition and constant news deadlines, most reporters are in fear of what can happen to their stories when they’re dictated into the office over the telephone, instead of writ- Gordon Walker ten out like in the good old days. . The latest misunderstanding involves the respected Paris newspaper Le Monde. Its cor- 'Goldwater' respondent was dictating a news story against his paper’s deadline involving the new foreign secretary of the British Labour government, Patrick Gordon Walker. The oamo appeared in print ae “Patrick Goldwater." As is usual in such cases, the erroneous was just about at the opposite
j
I
OFFICERS
Fred L. O'Hair .... President Robert H. O'Hair . . Vice-President Ward D. May hall Vice-President and Cashier
F. M. Aker . . Walter A. Letzler. Jr, R. W. Thorlton Edith I. Browning Julian Jarvis Keith A. Monnett H. Parvin Baughn John R. Zeiner .
, . Vice-President Asst. Vice-President Asst. Vice-President , . Asst. Cashier . . . Controller . . Asst. Cashier . . Asst. Cashier . , Asst. Cashier
(
DIRECTORS Ernest H. Collins Woodson A. Darnall D. W. Killinger Fred L. O'Hair Robert H. O'Hair Kenneth E. West
Comparative Statement of Condition Central National Bank of Greencastle, Indiana December 31, 1Q04
ASSETS
1964
1963
Cash and Due from Banks
S 1.659.728.07
$ 2,504,001.41
U. S. Government Bonds
4.697,511.11
4.384,595.03
Municipal and Other Bonds
3.252,415.70
1.659,322.70
Loans and Discounts
3,200,776.13
3,160,961.03
Real Estate Mortgage Loans
2,888,136.80
2,997,458.92
Interest Accrued and Other Assets
148,575.00
104,154.66
Bank Premises and Equipment
87,977.60
98,361.25
Total Bank Assets
$15,935,120.41
$14,908,855.00
Trust Assets
1.570,195.04
1,310,928.59
Total Assets
$17,505,315.45
$16,219,783.59
LIABILITIES
1964
1963
Deposits: U. S. Government Commerical Savings
$ 61,570.65 6,730,979.52 7,373,723.64
$ 84,114.13 6,899,075.35 6,238,295.81
Total Deposits Reserve for Interest and Taxes., Capital Surplus Undivided Profits
$14,166,273.81 362,817.90 500,000.00 106,028.70
$13,221,485.29 364,867.65 500.000. 00 700.000. 00 122,502.06
Total Bank Liabilities Trust Liabilities
$15,935,120.41 1,570,195.04
$14,908,855.00 1,310,928.59
Total Liabilities
$17,505,315.45
$16,219,783.59
The Directors, Officers, and Staff of the Central National Bank join in expressing their sincere appreciation for your business during the past year.
For Your , Complete Financial Service
Let the CENTRAL NATIONAL BANK serve you in ALL your banking needs. For 81 years, this bank has continuously grown in strength and service. The solid growth of the Central National reflects the confidence of the people of the community in this institution and its management. \ ' SOUND BUSINESS MANAGEMENT and careful, experienced supervisor are equally important. They are the underlying factors in the protection of depositors' funds. Our bank policies are formed on this basic principle plus internal audits for accuracy in all transactions, examinations by supervisory officials and independent audits for constant reappraisal of operating procedure and policies.
INSURED PROTECTION: Your deposits in the Central National Bank are insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and all deposits are additionally guaranteed by the largest capital funds of any financial institution in Putnam County.
A FULL SERVICE BANK: Only at a full service bank such as the Central can you centralize all of your financial transactions: checking accounts, savings accounts, time certificates of deposit, home, farm, business, personal and installment loans at low bank rates, trust services, safe deposit boxes, and assistance in all business and family financing. An established bank relationship here pays large dividends in convenience, personal attention and profitable opportunities.
We hope you will continue to think of the Central National as your convenient headquarters for every financial service.
