The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 21 April 1965 — Page 1
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Weother Forecost PARTLY CLOUDY High, 70s; Low. 53
The
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"W* can net but speak the things which we have seen or heard." Acts 4:20
VOLUME SEVENTY-THREE
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, WEDNESDY, APRIL 21,1965
UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL SERVICE
NO. 152
COUNTY CHURCH COUNCIL SETS DINNER
Counter Offer
Actress Divorced
PITTSBURGH UPI —The SANTA ANA. Calif. UPI — steel industry may make an of- Actress June Allyson, 43. and fer today to counter a union her barber husband. Glenn Maxproposal for a wage increase well, 33, were divorced Tuesof 17.9 cents an hour in a one- day. year contract. Miss Allyson, widow of Dick The offer may come at a powell, who died from cancer
Spring Meet Here
Monday Evening
joint meeting of the top negoti- in January, 1963. obtained an ators — R. Conrad Cooper and interlocutory divorce decree afR. Heath Lary of U. S. Steel ter she testified Maxwell struck Corp. and David J. McDonald her, issued bad checks from and I. W. Abel of the United gambling debts and called her Steelworkers union (USW). vile names in front of her chilThe meeting was set tenta- dren by Powell, Pamela, 15, lively for 10 a. m. EST. and Ricky, 14.
Funds Received
Armed Holdup At Mt. Meridian
For Tornado Aid
"Dairy Queen" Marks Birthday
Eletita and Kathryn Boyd,
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Paul Griffin To Lecture At DPU
operators of the “Dairy Queen” Robert O'Hair. Chairman of store at Greencastle are among the local Red Cross Chapter, more than 3500 store operators has announced that funds are celebrating the twenty - fifth pouring in as the public is be- birthday of “Dairy Queen.”
RECEIVES A t P COURTESY AWARD
An expert on the laser beam, Paul M. Griffin, will lecture tonight at 7 p. m. in room 16 of DePauw’a Minshall Hall.
mg made aware of Red Cross action in Indiana following the Palm Sunday tornadoes.
First and incomplete reports
The first experimental "Dairy Queen” store was opened in Joliet, Illinois, in June of 1940. This first store was
Marvin Long, manager of the local AAP store, is shown presenting the A4P Courtesy Award to Lois Evens, one of the checkers at the store. The award is presented to employees and ia based on reports submitted by non-partisan shoppers. The shoppers aro unknown to the employees. Vivian Gorham is the customer looking on.
Four Teenagers Placed
Griffin, appearing under the sponsorship of the campus’ physics club, is a research physicist for Union Carbide at the Oak Ridge (Tenn.) Institute of Nuclear Studies.
On Strictest Probation
Discovery of the laser beam, topic of Griffin’s public remarks. represented a great breakthrough in physics and earned its discoverer, C. H. Townes, the Nobel Prize for physics.
Four teenagers appeared before Judge Francis N. Hamilton in Juvenile Court- Men day afternoon - and WBre placed on strict probation following a review of a juvenile petition stemming from charges of possession of alcoholic beverages and drinking of those beverages.
Hospital Guild
The beam itself is eoncentrat-
Lmda Vermillion, 17, Rose Ann Bums. 17, Wayne Crabtree. 17, all of Greencastle, and Christine Altemiller, 18, of Poland. were found to have been in violation of certain juvenile laws and were placed on probation under the following rules and regulations:
Will Sell Tags
the rays of-the sun: In its concentrated presence, therefore, it is a source of very groat energy.
of funds earmarked specifically opened by J. F. McCullough tor disaster recover', in Indiana an( j ^is son, who together first now total $138,000,00. conceived the idea of a softSince last Saturday when the serve frozen dessert product. Putnam County Red Cross " * ien the first store was opChapter published its appeal in ened. Mr. McCullough had not the Greencastle Banner, nearly yet named the new product. $300.00 has been sent to this However, shortly afterward, chapter. due to his pride in the quality and freshness of the delicious Disaster sufferers throughout soft . serve dairy p rduct , he dethe stricken area have begun to cided tQ caU it .. Dairy Que€n/ . register with the Red Cross for long range recovery asisstance. i n April of 1941. the first The bulk of emergency relief store conce ived and built as a to individuals is being provided “Dairy Queen’ store was opby the Red Cross. ened in Moline. Illinois. NowContributions may be sent to twenty-five years since the first the Putnam County Chapter of.-store * opened the "Dairy the American Om**- yyii« have grown t<» House, Greencastle. ove r 3500 in number.
Queen Is 39
Furs Stolen
This Friday and Saturday,
—Each person will surrender their driver’s licenses to the Putnam County Probation Officer.
April 23-24. representatives from the Putnam County Hospital Guild wearing their bright red smocks will be stationed on various corners of downtown Greencastle. By purchasing a tag each citizen of Putnam County can help the hospital provide services to the patients and purchase needed equipment.
—That they shall be prohibited from being in an automobile except at those times when accompanied by their parents atfer the hour of 6:00 p.m.
—That they will not associate with each other and that they remain at their residence after 10:00 p.m. during week days and 11:00 p.m. during Saturdays and Sundays.
Mrs. Robert McCormick and Mrs. Howard Harmless, cochairmen. announce the following workers to collect for Tag Day. Working as teams under the supervision of the following captains are: Mrs. Richard Flynn. Captam. and Mesdames Harvey Treible, Foster McClure, Don Riley, H.
—That they comply with all other rules set forth by the probation officer. The juvenile petition charges each teenager with being in violation of four points of the juvenile law: That they were incorrigible, beyond the control of their parents. — That without the consent of their parents, guardian or custodian, repeatedly deserted their home or place of residence. That they were in violation of curfew. That they knowlingly associated vvtih an adult who was intoxicated and has or had alcoholic beverages in his possession The adult was identified as Gary Terrell.
Music Festival Concert Tonight
The first major performance of DePauw University's Contemporary Music Festival unfolds tonight at 8:15 p. m. in Meharry Hall.
Appearing in the three-phase public concert will be the wind ensemble. The Aeolian Trio and the guest musician, Dr. Vincent Persichetti, and Mrs. Porsichetti.
The wand ensemble, performing under the baton of Persichetti, will play his “Symphony Number Six for Band.”
20 Years Ago
American troops shattered the la>t organized Jap resistance on Cebu to complete the conquest of the central Philippines. London reported that American and Russian patrols were only 25 miles apart in an unidentified Berlin sector. TJ. S. Superfortresses bombed Jap suicide plane bases on Kyushu.
Ross Lee Finney s ' Piano Trio Number Two” is on tap for the Trio, and the Persichetti’s will present the unique “Concerto for Piano — Four Hands.” a number composed by Per.sirhetti.
DeMolay Notice
Stated meeting Thursday, April 22, 7:30 p. m. at the Masonic Temple. Balloting on new candidates and discusion on coming inspection. All officers be present. Bring books and papers. Murray Lewis, Chapter Dad
J. Blume, Cecil Justus, James Shepherd and Morris Hunter. Mrs. Hugh Henry, Captain, and Mesdames Harvey Owens. Henry Pehan, Howard Youse, Ethel Yuncker. Grafton Longden, Dick Steele and Miss Marie Porter. Mrs. Richard Sunkel, Captain, and Mesdames James Houck, Howard Moore, Paul Harris. Stewart Richards, Bill Sunkel. Jim Cook and Ben Cannon. Mrs. Tom Slaughter. Captain, and Mesdames Howard Burkett. George Gove, Frank Livernoche. Frank Nagley, Forst Fuller, Lee Lowdermilk, Joe McCord and Everett Ellis. Mrs. Joe Todd, Chaplain, and Mesdames Clifford Frazier, Norm Donelson, John Moore, Ned Wood. James Pickett and Ray Herbert. Mrs. Laurel Corbin. Captain, and Mesdames James Hughes, Frank McKenna, Walter Cox, P.obert Schissler, Robert Farber, Rex Boyd and George Anthony. Mrs. Julia Deem, Captam, and Miss Helen Werneke and Mrs. John See. Mrs. Raymond Reeves, Captain, and Mesdames Domonic Romalia. Charles Mays and Ben Hoover. Mrs. Dama Crosby, Captam, and Mesdames D. W. Killinger, Glenn Lyon. Hazel Hanna and Ruth Savage. Mrs. Lauren May, Captam, and Mrs. Mark Kloor. Mrs. William Unsw’orth, Captam, and Mesdames Reid Winsey, Russell Vermillion and Art Letzler. Mrs. Frank Deer. Captain, and Mrs. Frank Jarrell. In addition to Greencastle, Mrs. Charles Whitaker will be the Cloverdale Captain. Mrs. Charles Purcell will collect in Koachdale and Mrs. Don South assisted by the Future Homemakers Association will be responsible for the Bainbridga area. Tag Day is held annually in the spring as the one moneyraising project of the Hospital Guild. Your help is needed to make this day a success.
Hobo King Dies CHRISNEY, Ind. UPI—Herman f Beefsteak Charlie! Campbell, 44-year-old “King of the Hoboes,” died of an apparent heart attack near here Tuesday.
LONDON UPI Queen Elizabeth II celebrated her 39th birthday today. The monarch planed to spend the day quietly at Windsor Castle with her husband, the Duke of Edinburgh, and the couple’s four children.
LONDON UPI — A gang of thieves knocked a hole in the side of a London warehouse over the Easter weekend and stole about 8.000 mink pelts worth between $112,000 and $140,000. Police discovered the robbery today.
The State Police Post m Putnamville reported Tuesday afternoon that two persons, one of which was identified as a man, robbed the Shoemaker Marathon Station in Mt. Meridian at gun point Monday night and escaped with $242.70. Dale Allen Steele, Cloverdale. R. No. 1, the attendant on duty at that time, reported to the authorities that around 9:45 p. m. a red Ford convertible pulled up to the station with two persons in it. Steele stated that a man got out of the vehicle and pulled a short barrelled revolver. The man. he said, was wearing a nylon stocking over his head. The armed bandit then ordered Steele to put all of the money into a paper sack and then lie on the floor of the station. Steele complied with the order and then called the police after the bandits fled. The gunman was described as being 5’ 11” tall and wearing a light shirt and black trousers and gloves. State Trooper Don Collins, who investigated the holdup reported that an automobile beUggaiL to have been the ropery vehicle vvaa tounu abandoned a half mile north of V. S. 40 on the Airport Road at 12:30 Tuesday morning. The vehicle was stolen earlier from the P. R. Mallory parking lot and is registered to an Ernest Jones.
The Putnam County Council of Churches will hold its Spang dinner meeting in the Presbyterian Church, 110 South College, Greencastle, Monday, April 26, at 6:30 p.m. Dinner will be served by women of the host church promptly at 6:30. Reservations should be sent to Mrs. Norman Evens, Bainbridge, by Friday, April 23 or reported to Rev. Claude M. McClure, Execu t i v e Secretary, Greencastle, telephone OL 3-4339. Thanks for the evening meal will be expressed by Rev. Charles Davis, Russellville.
Glenn Skelton, president of the Council, will preside at the meeting.
A brief business session wiB follow’ the dinner hour. Committee chairmen will report on the year’s activities and will discuss projects proposed for the new year beginning June 1st. The Nominating Committee composed of Clyde Hunter, Reelsville, John See, Greencastle and James Summers, Barnbridge, will submit the slate of officers for the year 1965-66. The program for the evening which will begin at 7:30 will be in charge of the youth of th« county. The Big Walnut Baptist Youth Choir, under the direction of Airs. Coy Thomas, will present special musia and a panel on “Christian Youth in Action” with Airs. Mildred Harvey, Cloverdalo, Moderator, wall be given Of the following young peoplo.
Will Return Home
Campbell, a reporter and “road agent” for the Bowery News, a New York newspaper.
Seeks New Home
Heated Nest
LONDON UPI
died in his sleep at St. Mein- Churchill, widow’ of
Lad y the late
MINEHEAD. England UPI A thrush has built a centrally
rad's Abbey where he had ask- Sir Winston Churchill, is apart- heated nest here — on a hol-
ed for a place to sleep Monday ment-hunting in London it was water pipe in the local police
night.
reported today.
station.
PALM DESERT. Calif. UPI Former President and Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower plan to leave the Eldorado Country Club next Tuesday to return to their Gettysburg, Pa. home. The Eisenhowers arrived her last Dec. 18 for their anual winter vacation. This is the seventh year the couple has stayed her*.
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“Youth s Faith in God.” Linda Gross. Russellville. "Youth at Prayer,” Gary- McCullough. Reelsville. “Youth at Worship,” Jenifer McKenna. Greencastle. “Youth Witnessing for Christ,” Charles E. Coffin, Fillmore. The newly elected officer* will be intsalled by Rev. C. M. McClure at the close of the meeting and benediction will be given by Rev. George Pyke, Fillmore. The Putnam County Council of Churches is an officially approved and constituted agency of a group of churches that desire to forward certain phases of their work in co-operation with one another. Every Church in the county is cordially invited to send representatives to the meeting next Monday evening.
Open House Sunday
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An open house is planned Sunday, April 25. m the Community Building at Cloverdal* in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Fry. The open house will be held from 2 to 5 p. m. Mr. Fry is retiring after many years as a rural mail carrier. The public is cordially invited to attend the open house for this well known South Putnam couple.
NOW YOU KNOW
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Sy United Preu International Of 132 ships in the Spanish armada launched against England in 1588 only 50 survived combat with the English fleet and W’ere able to return to Spain, according to the World Almanac.
Weather
Partly Cloudy
Partly cloudy today, tonight and Thursday. Continued warm. High today 73 to 79. Low tonight 53 to 59. High Thurdsay mid 70s. Outlook for Friday: Fair to partly cloudy and colder.
REELSVILLE GIRL SCOUTS TOUR GREENCASTLE
Troop 154 of the Reelsville Junior Girl Scouts recently toured several business establishments in Greencastle. The girls visited the bank, the jail, the Coke plant and are shown above in the press room of The Daily Banner. The girls and their leaders are: Alary Fielding, Rose Ann Furney, Judy Fox, Anita Garrison. Terri Hood, Debbie Foxx, Carolyn Gibbs, Beverly Blanton, Cheri AIcGrannahan, Mrs. Glenn AIcGrannahan, leader of the troop, and Mrs. Kenneth Gilman, assistant leader. Also included in the group are tw o guests. Chuck and Kristie Gilman. Photo by Martin Kruse
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