The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 22 April 1965 — Page 8

8 The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana Thursday, April 22, 1965

NOW THRU SATURDAY

last Showing Friday—Saturday At 7:30 Foaturing Song — "Doar Hoart Wish You Wort Horo"

GLENN FORD

and

GERALDINE MGE

in

“DEAR HEART

A MARTIN MANLIUS*.*.:

The unconventional

love affair that began

at a

convention' in New

York

ENCORE FRIDAY - SATURDAY AT 9:30 First Tim* Shown

ik

Hmera's FBI g yew new sew it kfot 1

mi com: 98

w i J aaxa) kf SBMLft KS lesc 9i to aw

SATURDAY AT 2:00 — OVER AT 4:30 YOUNG FOLKS SHOW "VOYAGE TO THE BOTTOM OF SEA" Flus Cartoons Child. 35c Adults 50c

SUNDAY-MONDAY-TUESDAY "BLACK ORPHEUS"-IN PORTUGUES

MEADOWBROOK DRIVE-IN THEATER FRIDAY - SATURDAY - SUNDAY April 23-24-25 Tippi Hodron — Soon Connory "MARINE" (Color) Konny Soli A His Jaxxmon "SING AND SWING"

SeMYM IHIJ!

By UBSTEB L. COLEMAN, MJD.

Doctor, Fd Like To Know-

Siding, Paint Rank First In Title I

More FHA Title I property improvement loans are granted for “exterior finish” than for any other category that includes only a single kind of work. Exterior finish also ranks first in the amount of money lent Under Title I, the Federal Housing Administration is per-

MIDWAY DRIVE-IN Jet. 40 & 43 FRIDAY - SATURDAY - SUNDAY April 23-24-25 Ths Animals A Dave Clark Fivo "GET YOURSELF A COLLEGE GIRL" — Flus — Tony Curtis A Christine Kaufmann "WILD AND WONDERFUL" Next Week—"KISS ME STUFID" Flus "WOMAN OF STRAW"

MAPLECOFT AUTO THEATRE R. 1., Clayton, Indiana Triple Bill! FRIDAY - SATURDAY - SUNDAY April 23-24-25 Debbie Reynolds — Harve Fresnell "THE UNSINKABLE MOLLY BROWN" And Tab Hunter — Rossana Fodesta "THE GOLDEN ARROW" Also "CURSE OF THE LIVING CORPSE"

lap Students, Police Clash TOKYO UPI—Police clashed tonight with ultra leftwing students protesting U.S. policies in Viet Nam and the arrival here Of Walt W. Rostow, chairman of the State Department policy

planning council.

A few minutes before Rostow’s arrival at Tokyo International airport riot police pushed £ group of several hundred slo-gan-shouting Zengakuren students back from the edge of the observation platform over-

looking the airfield.

Police pummeled the students with truncheons but there were no reported injuries or arrests. About 1.000 students were involved in incidents inside and

<rptside the airport.

: STATE OF INDIANA

COUNTY OF PUTNAM

IN THE MATTER OF ESTATE OF Chry«t»l M. Huff. DECEASED

TN THE Putnam CIRCUIT COURT April TERM. 1966 !

E'tate No. 10.393

NOTICE TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE

OF Ckrystal M. Huff

In the matter of the E*tate of Chrrttal M. Huff, deceased.

Nobleman Dies KGHAM, England VPI—Sir Pierson Dixon, veteran British diplomat who retired earlier this year as ambassador to France, died at his home here during the night. He was 60. His retirement ended a 36year career, much of it in top level diplomacy during and after World War IL

No. 10 39}

Notice Is hereby given that Keith 8 Roberts as Administrator of the above named estate ha; presented and filed said estate, and the same trill come up for the examination and action of his final account in final settlement of said Circuit Court, on the 10th of May. 1965, at which tsme all persons Interested In said estate are required to appear In said court and show cause, if any there be, why said account should not be approved. And the heirs of said decedent and all others interested are also required to appear and make proof of their heirship or claim to any pan of said estate. Jack P Hinkle Clerk of the Putnam CIRCUIT COURT Attorney for Estat* Frank O. Stoessel

Many Title I loans are used for reroofing. Here, heavyweight asphalt shingles are being applied directly on old roof surface, a procedure more inexpensive than removing the old material first. The average Title I roofing loan is for more than S700. nutted to insure loans up to $3,500 in amount for periods up to five years. The money actually is lent by savings and loan associations, banks, or other lenders. The government sets a limit on interest rates. Exterior finish includes painting or re-siding with materials, such as mineral fiber, which is finished during manufacture with a weather-resistant acrylic color coating. In 1963, the average Title I loan for exterior finish was $1,353. Other popular uses to which FHA property improvement loans are put include reroofing, insulation, heating, interior finish, and plumbing.

Look, Ma, No Melting!

60ME of the players on our high school basketball team have athlete’s foot. We all use the same showers and locker room. How can the rest of us keep from getting it? Mr. C. G., California Dear Mr. G.: Athlete’s foot is caused by a fungus which thrives on the warm, moist surface of the skin, especially between the

toes.

Athletes are by no means the only people who are afflictDr. Coleman ed with this distressing condi-

tion.

The following are a few suggestions that can help to prevent acquiring this annoying and persistent condition: 1) Dry the feet thoroughly after showering or bathing. Under no circumstances should anybody else’s towel be used for drying, or "standing on" while drying oneself. Use a fine dusting or talcum powder after drying the feet, especially between the toes. 2) Put on clean socks after bathing. Preferably use white cotton socks which can be boiled to kill the spores of the fungus that causes athlete’s

foot.

3) Always wear slippers or some other protective covering on the feet in locker rooms, bathrooms and showers. 4) Change shoes each day. hi between use, allow the shoes to dry. Sprinkle a medicated powder liberally into the shoes before wearing them again.

with prescribed medications. * a • My two-year-old boy appears to be cross-eyed, especially when he is tired. Can children outgrow this condition? Is surgery the only way to correct

it?

Mrs. L. E. W„ / South Carolina Dear Mrs. W.: Too of tea children who appear to bo cross-eyed are neglected for prolonged periods before consulting a physician. Delaying medical attention in the hope that all cases will outgrow it is often just wishful thinking. Cross-eyes are the result of weakness in one or more of the eye muscles. The condition usually becomes obvious at the age of four or five. Sometimes the weak eye muscles of an infant may become strengthened of their own accord, as the child develops. Even though your child is only two, it is important that he be examined by a physician, who will keep a medical record of his progress. If the problem does not correct itself, he will have the advantage of the earliest medical attention t® correct this condition. Cross-eyes may be corrected by visual training techniques, by eyeglasses, surgery or a combination of these treatments. There is an additional benefit in the early recognition and treatment of cross-eyes: a child can be spared embarrassment and emotional distress. While Dr. Coleman cannot undertake to answer individual letters, he tciU use readers? questions in his column when-

On The U. 5. Farm Front

said.

*

START THE SEASON with a “Pop”. Sew a tiny cut-away jacket, carve it into scallops, edge it with braid, and put it over a graceful flared sheath. The easy fit and swing of tht dress are enhanced by the flexible Talon Zephyr nylon coil ripper down the back. Always remember to use press cloth when ironing the zipper area. To add variety to your Spring and Summer wardrobe, maka several colorful . .ckBts, with and without sleeves, to wea* with sheath. It’s McCall’s pafc tern “Adjust-for-you" #767$.

He noted that U. S. success in expanding dollar sales of agricultural products abroad has helped substantially to improve

WASHINGTON UPI-U. S. this country . s of P agriculture is making a formid- ments positioni

able record in development of

foreign markets, according to The Crop reporting Board Secretary of Agriculture Or- has estimated cash receipts ville L. Freeman. from marketings of milk and

1 cream by farmers in 1964 at a

Freeman detailed agricultu- recor(J S502 bmion Thi£ ls , ral trade advances In foreign p er cent niore t ban $4.S6 countries during an awards billion received in 1963. and ceremony for employes of the compares with the pr€V10us Foreign Agricultural Sendee. record ^ gh of 92 bmion m He noted that while the cumu- jqqj

lative Increase in dollar ex-

ports for all goods and com- The average return per hunmodities had totaled $7.3 bil- dredweight for combined marlion, agriculture had contrib- ketings of milk and cream in uted $2.7 billion and industry 1964 was $4.18 compared with $4.6 billion. S4.12 in 1963. "Thus agriculture, while it Milk production in 1964 wajs accounts for only one-fifth of a record 126.6 billion pounds, foreign trade volume, has ac-. This was produced by 16 milI counted for two-thirds of the i lion cows with an average andollar increase in export earn- i nual rate per cow of 7.880 . ings in recent years,” Freeman : pounds.

Prevention of infection Is | ever possible and when they most important. If infection is J are of general interest. Address present, it must be treated | your letters to Dr. Coleman in HOder • doctor’s supervision j care of this newspaper,

(O 196* King Features Syndicate. Inc.)

usual was still delayed by cool and wet weather. With the amount of moisture now present in the *oil. vegetation should develop rapidly as the temperature become warmer. ‘Topsoil moisture again increased, from adequate to mostly surplus the previous week to mostly surplus last week. Subsoil moisture also increased. being rated as mostly adequate to surplus by the end of last week." The report said pastures improved again and now are I “mostly fair,” without about 15

! per cent of the feed for cattle coming from that source, the same as last year but below the normal 20 per cent. ‘The percent of land that is intended for corn and soybeans was 25 per cent plowed by the weekend, the same as a year I ago but below the five-year average of 30 per cent. Seeding of spring oats at 20 per cent completed Ls largely confined to : the southern counties. This is far behind both the 60 per cent seeded a year ago and the 1959-63 average of 60 per cent," !the report said.

Dogs Like Butts CHICAGO UPI — Dogs sometimes get sick on their first cigarette but soon learn to like them, a cancer researcher said Wednesday. ‘They wag their tails, hold up their heads, scratch at the cage door and seem to be asking for a cigarette when an experimenter comes into the room,” said Dr. E. Cuyler Hammond of the American Cancer Society.

YOU'LL N£VER KNOW

Whether or Not You Have The Best Car Deal UNLESS YOU CHECK WITH KING MORRISON FOSTER CO. "Your Ford Otaler Sine* 1910" 119 N. INDIANA ST. PHONE OL S-4171

Diamond—April Birthstone

A never-before kind of chocolate flavored ingredient for baking is now at jour store. It’s Nestl6’s Choco-bake®. a no-melt unsweetened chocolate flavored ingredient that may be used in place of unsweetened baking chocolate or unsweetened cocoa. No more messy chocolate melting or fussy sifting and measuring for the modern cook Choco-bake comes eight to tha box in individual plastic packets, each containing one ounce, equal to one square unsweetened chocolate or Vi cup unsweetened cocoa Just open the end of the individual packet and squeeze the contents directly into batter or frosting of any recipe that calls for unsweetened chocolate or unsweetened cocoa. You’ll find a recipe leaflet with 14 delicious treats in each red and white box of Chocobake. a get-acquainted bonus you’ll appreciate. AH this—and no melting, too)

April is the month for diamonds—and what girl doesn’t dream of getting one, particularly in an engagement ring? Since your diamond will be a life-time purchase, it should be chosen with considerable care. If you are thinking of buying, or even eying, a diamond, here are some important things about them you should know. Choose a reliable jewelerTeU him approximately what you intend to spend and then he guided by the 4 C’a—carat, cut, color and clarity. CARAT is the unit weight Used for diamonds. It is divided into 100 points, like cents in a dollar. CUT refers to the shape of the stone and the placement of facets to eatch the light and make the diamond sparkle. The popular shapes are round, emerald-cut, marquise, pear, heart shape and oval. One cut

is not more expensive than another, but the quality of th® workmanship affects brilliance and price. COLOR. The traditional engagement diamond is dear and colorless, like a drop of water. The “whiter” the diamond, th® more valuable it is. CLARITY means absence of carbon spots, bubbles or other imperfections. A diamond that shows none of natures blemishes to an experienced eye under a glass that magnifies ten times is called flawless and is priced accordingly. Ask your jeweler to show you your diamond under magnification. He will be glad to explain how the 4 C’s contribute to the beauty of your diamond. That beauty, and the sentiment behind it, will make you happy with your diamand forever.

Farm Work Is Behind Normal LAFAYETTE, Ind. UPI — Wet soil has delayed spring plowing in Indiana, and cool weather has put development of vegetation six days behind normal. That was the report today from Robert E. Straszheim, agricultural statistician at Purdue. “Spring rains continued to delay progress of field work,” the weekly crop report said. “With only one day favorable for field work last week, p^ogres was 10 days behind usual. “Progress of vegetative development at six days behind

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