The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 19 February 1966 — Page 2

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LOVE'S SUBSTITUTE Wc com* to The* because, Thou hast mad* us a part el thyself. BsaHilng we are but man, We need Thy help. Left to ourselves, Thy Holy Temple we defaeo. Left to ourselves, ' We dishonor Thy gift of Grace. Left to ourselves, W* choose the base. And Less nobler way of life. Left to ourselves. We create sorrow, distrust and strife. Yet what Is man that Thou hast loved him so? That Thou hast cared enough To shield him from his woe? Thou hast given aadi of us Significance and worth. From the moment of our conception, To our last breath on earth Thou hast planned a place for us In Thy Kingdom before our birth. Forgive our unwillingness. To accept the stranger. Whose spirit is one in relation To the Babe in the manger. Forgive us when we shorten Thy cords of love. Thy love is an open channel. And ever outging. For us Christ tasted death. To release us from the cloud of unknowing Not because it was His sacrifice As a suffering servant. But because He knew, O God, Thou formed us from above, And love us still. Betty Kirkbride Matt 12:10-21 John 14:8-11 Heb. 1:2

Many Attend County Weed, Pest School

The participation was excellent in the Weed and Bug School held Tuesday evening by the County Extension Service. Most of the questions from attending concerned the use of herbicides and insecticides on grain, erops and for-

tkm. Kenmt Hartman, the 1985 Central Region 5-Acre Corn Yield winner, reports that this insect did considerable damage in their fields this past year. Applying an insecticide and working it into the soil will control this insect.

* Herbicides recommended by Purdue specialist Meril Ross for pro-emergence application to com in 1968 arc Atsaxine, Ramrod, Randan, and 2-,4-lX 2-4-D Is recommended as a pre-emer-gence spray on muck soila only. 2-4-D amine or low volatile ester is recommended as a quay to eliminate broad leafed weeds on all types of soil after the corn is up. Lorox is also on the recommended list as a directed spray for post emergence application to com. It must be directed so that it will cover weeds thoroughly but not contact corn leaves. The herbicides recommended for weed control in soybeans are Treflam, Amiben, Alanap, and Randox. Treflan must be in. eorporated into the soil before planting the beans and the other three are applied to the soil surface before beans emerge. Entomologist Deve Matthews warned farmers to particularly be on the lookout for an invasion o f alfalfa weevil and com root worm this year. The alfalfa weevil adult is a snout beetle about inch long. The beetle deposits eggs in the stems of alfalfa, the larvae hatch, move up to the leaves and proceed to eat up the plant. This pest has been moving in from the southwest and last year found almost as far north as Putnam County. The northern com root worm which has caused excessive damage in other areaa also is approaching Putnam County. The larvae of this insect feed on com roots and the adults cut off silks and prevent pollina-

■xtenston Agent Paul Jackaon offers an apology for putting the wrong date on the story in Wednesday’s Benner concerning school. Jackson said he wan pretty awn that If he lived long enough ho would make a mintaka and ha did. Hie Tuesday was right, but the date was the 15th instead of the 23rd.

Cubans Receive Soviet Missiles MIAMI UPI—A former ambassador to Cuba said Friday night that five Russian ships “very recently” unloaded missiles in Cuba for installation there. Spruille Braden, once an ambassador to Cuba and three other Latin American nations and a former assistant secretary of state for Latin American affairs, made the statement in an address to Cuban exile organizations in Miami. He said he reported to President Johnson that the ships unloaded the missiles at the port of El Mairel, about 28 miles north of Havana on the north coast of Pinar Del Rio Province. Braden did not specify whether the missiles were defensive or offensive and would not elaborate. Nor would he disclose the source of his information. The former diplomat also said the war in Viet Nam and Cuba’s role in expected new guerrilla campaigns in this hemisphere am closely related.

THE ROCKVILLE CIRCUIT EratpUcil United Brettrei Church announce 4-C EVANGELISTIC MISSION CRUSADE SAND CREEK CHURCH — FEB. 20 OTTERBEIN CHURCH — FEB. 21 thru 24 BEECH GROVE CHURCH — FEB. 25 thru 27 THEME: "Bring Christ To Tho Pooplo And Pooplo To Christ" SERVICES AT 7:20 PM. R«V. Mr. Robort M. Todd NoMo Longordnor Mi—ionsr, of Indianapolis Music Director, of Brasil Rov. Luthor E. Pogo PASTOR

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Bible Thought Keep thy heart with all diligence; for oat of it am the issues of life. Proverbs 4:28. Wisdom and courage and strength are at their best when a person keeps his heart in the fear of God, in loyalty to Christ, and in love for his fellow man. Personal And Local News Miss Lotta Thomas spent Friday in Vincennes, where she formerly lived. Mrs. H. J. Blume returned Thursday from a visit with her son, Jerry, who lives in St. Louis, Mo. Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. King are happy to announce the birth of Paul Daniel Friday, February 18 in Indianapolis. Larry W. Hammond, 23 Greencastle, Route 2, was arrested at 7:50 Friday night by City Officer Russell Rogers and charged with reckless driving on Bloomington Street. Chapter CB of P.E.O. Sisterhood will meet Monday evening at 8 o’clock with Mrs. John Rightsell. Mrs. John Zeiner will have the program. Mrs. Florence Pratt, formerly of Greencastle, visited friends here Thursday. She motored here with Louis McNutt and Mrs. A. L. Pratt. Mrs. A. L. Pratt now lives in Palestine, Illinois. Mrs. Florence Pratt and Louis McNutt live in Robinson, Illinois. Mr. and Mrs. John W. Earnshaw and Mir. and Mrs. Chester G. Goan will leave Sunday afternoon for Hawaii. They will join other members of the Murat Temple for the Shrine Hawaii Carnival. All Girl Scout Leaders are invited to a Song, Game and Ceremony Workshop Tuesday at 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. at the Presbyterian Church Hall in Greencastle. Mrs. John Linderman will be the Trainer from the Terre Haute Scout office. Bring sack lunch, coffee will be furnished. Lee Stewart, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Stewart, R. R. 2, Coatesville, has been elected to serve as recorder of Sigma Phi Epsilon social fraternity at Indiana State University. Lee will serve on the executive board as a result of this honor. He has served and is still serving as house manager and is a 1963 graduate of Fillmore High. Miss Rita Skelton, a Senior at Fillmore High School, has spent the last two weekends at Pur due University. She has been the guest of the Girls’ Cooperative Houses and conferred on matters relative to her entering Purdue’s Home Economics School next fall. Miss Skelton is the daughter of Mrs. Martha Solis of Fillmore. Mrs. Edith Hall of this city has received word from Mayme Lester that his wife has suffered a bad heart attack and is confined to a hospital in Gillett, Wyo. She will probably be confined to the hospital for three or four weeks. Mrs. Lester, the former Verna Mannan was a Cloverdale girl and she taught school at Fincastle before going to Wyoming.

Monday

Current Book Club — Betty Rightsell, 8:00.

Tuesday

A.A.U.W.—8:00 p.m. —

Perry Michael.

Present Day Club—2:00 p.m. —Mrs. James Bittles.

Wednesday

Chapter I, PJJ.O., 7:30 p.m., Mrs. William Kerstetter. 20th Century dub—2:00 p.m. —Mrs. Albert Reynolds.

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WILL PARTICIPATE IN LENTEN PROGRAM Lecturers and discussion leaders for the upcoming Seminar on. Christian Growth at Gobin Methodist Church include (left to right, seated) Professors Matsanao Kano, Charles Stewart and Donald Cook, and (standing) John McFarland and John Wilson, all members of the DePauw faculty. The Seminar, a special Lenten observance for Gobin families and friends, will be held on three successive Sunday evenings at the church—Feb. 27, March 6 and 13—and will include a worship service and supper. Persons interested in registering for the Seminar may obtain further information by contacting the church office. Banner Photo—Frank Puckett, Jr.

Everett Leonard Funeral Sunday Everett Leonard, 76, died Friday in the West 10th Street Veterans Hospital in Indianapolis where he had been a patient for more them three weeks. He was born in Owen County, July 30. 1889, tho son of William C. and Elizabeth Page Leonard. He was married to Nellie Meek. The deceased was a retired Baptist minister and a World War I veteran. He is survived by the wife; a daughter, Mary Endsley, Mooresville, a brother, John, Gosport; a sister, Goldie Hudson, Elkhart Iowa, and six grandchildren. Services will be held at 2:30 p. m. Sunday at the Cataract Baptist Church with burial in the Cataract Cemetery. Friends may call at the Whitaker Funeral Home in Cloverdale.

When you specify “cleaned," you can bo assured this is what will taka place at Old Reliable White Cleaners.

ANNIVERSARIES

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth M. Lyon, R. R, 8, Greencastle, 13 years, February 20th. Birthdays Robert Craig Sibbitt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Sibbitt, R. R. 2, Coatesville, 10 years old, February 18th.

O.E.S. Notic# Bainbridg* O. E. S. meeting Monday, Feb. 21at, at 7:80 pi m. Election of officers. Members please bring cookies. Shirly Baker, W. M.

Ships To Viet Face Boycott MIAMI BEACH UPI—The Maritime branch of the AFLCIO served notice on President Johnson Friday to persuade allied nations to stop trading with North Viet Nam or have their ships boycotted in American ports. The ultimatum came in a resolution by the 33-man executive board of the AFL-CIO’s Maritime Trades Department at the end of its two-day meeting. The resolution originally called for an immediate boycott of all ships of nations trading with North Viet Nam, but it was amended at the last minute to give Johnson “a period of time” for possible new consultations with allied nations. Paid Hall, president of the Maritime Trades Department, said “all interested unions” will covene in Washington within six weeks.

County Hospital Disamlased Friday: Bert Garland, Indianapolis. Wanda O’Neal, Greencastle. Arthur Agnew, Greencastle. Hiram Callender, Greencastle. Diene Haltom, Greencastle. William Wyatt, Greencastle. Births: Mr. and Mrs. Donald Long, Ladoga, a girl, Friday.

Short Circuit BOULDER COLO. UPI— Boulder police thought it might be * sinister plot dreamed up by the Riddler, The Joker or The Penguin when all of the city’s 15 silent burglar alarms went off at the same time. Batman wasn’t there, but squad cars went screaming to banks,.supermarkets, dry goods stores and warehouses. The culprit turned out to be a abort circuit in the master burglar alarwi-

Mabel Edwards Services Sunday Funeral services for Mrs. Mabel Oakley Edwards, 58, wife of Gilbert Edwards of Lebanon, who died Friday, will be held Sunday afternoon at 2 o’clock from the Myers Mortuary at Lebanon, with burial in the Roachdale Cemetery. Mrs. Edwards passed away Friday evening in the Witham Hospital at Lebanon following an extended illness. Besides the husband, she is survived by her mother, Mrs. Arthur Oakley and one sister, Mrs. Cully Price, both of Greencastle. She was preceded in death by her father and one daughter.

Veep Is Booed By Australians CANBERRA, Australia UPI —Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey encountered antiViet Nam war demonstrators today as he plunged into a full day of talks with . Australian leaders on increased economic and military aid to Southeast Asia. While the vice president met with new Prime Minister Harold Holt this morning, about 150 demonstrators booed and picketed across the street from the parliament house. When Humphrey and Holt left the building for lunch, one man called the American official, “The world’s number one warmonger.” Others booed Humphrey and waved signs, some bearing the Nazi swastika, from behind a strong cordon of police and security agents. Apparently unconcerned by the protests, Humphrey grinned at the crowds and drove off with Australian officials. The demonstrators, members of the boilermakers, sheetmetal workers and engineering unions, carried signs calling for ‘Peace For Viet Nam.” “We Oppose Yank and Aussie Support For South Viet Nam Dictator Regime,” said another.

Soviet Central Comaiittee Meets MOSCOW UPI — The Communist Central Committee mot today to approve Russia’s latest five-year plan and make final arrangements for the party’s 23rd National Convention, which opens March 29. Informed sources said party loaders hoped to clean up ponding business today, to clear tho boards for British Prims Minister Harold Wilson’s visit kero next Monday. The 330-man Central Committee was expected to approve the draft for tho next five-year plan, which Premier Alexei N. Kosygin will present to the congress. The convention will give final approval to the plan, which will set guidelines for Soviet industry until 1970. The meeting also was to take up Party Chairman Letnld L Brezhnev’s raport an events

since the last party convention in 1961. The Central Committee, chosen by the party convention, is nominally the party’s ruling authority. It meets several times a year.

Three Gamblers Habbed By FBI CHICAGO UPI—The Federal Bureau of Investigation announced the arrest of three Chicago men on charges of traveling interstate for the purpose of gambling. Will King, 44, and James Blake, 32, were arrested at the Knights of Pythias Club at Indiana Harbor, Ind., and A. B. Jackson, 57, was arrested at his Chicago home. All three were described by the FBI as professional gamblers. They were indicted by a Cook County grand jury for allegedly traveling to East Chicago, Ind., several times in 1965 for the purpose of promoting and conducting a gambling operation.

Campus Calendar Sunday, Feb. 20 Dedication of new Methodist Student Foundation Building, Dr. Hiel Bollinger, 2:30 p.m* Gobin. Tuesday, Feb, 22 Basketball: DePauw vs. Butler, Varsity Jfc Freshman 6:06* ; 8:00 p.m., Bowman Gym. Wednesday, Feb. 28 Worship Chapel: Religious Venture Series No. 1, Dr. Samuel Proctor, Dir. of Economic Opportunity, United States Government, 10:00 a.m., Gobin. Swimming: DePauw at Eastern 111. University, 2:00 p.m. Religious Venture Series: Dr. Samuel Proctor, 4:00 p.m.. Union Ballroom. Special Exhibition and Art Sale, F. Roten Galleries, 1:00-4:00 p.m., Art Center. Student Senate Vietnam TeachIn Discussion, 7:30-10:00 p.m., Union Ballroom. Friday, Feb. 25 Convocation: DePauw Men ef Note, 10:00 a.m., Meharry. Saturday, Feb. 28 Wrestling: ICC Frosh Meet, 10:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m., Bowman. Swimming: Evansville at DePauw, 2:00 p.m,, Bowman.

FBI Recovers Valuable Articles MIAMI UPI—More than a half million dollars in jade art objects and jewelry stolen from a Palm Beach, Fla., art gallery late last year, have been mysteriously recovered by FBI agents. The FBI, in announcing the recovery, would not reveal any details. Agents said no arrests were made. The jewelry and art objects, mostly Chinese dating prior to 1500 BC, were stolen in an armed robbery of the Norton Art Gallery in Palm Beach Nov. 23, 1965. The stolen items were recovered at an undisclosed place in Broward County Fort Lauderdale. Among the recovered pieces were Chinese archaic jades and Chinese ceremonial jades from the famed Stanley Charles Knott Collection. Art collectors place a value on the collection of about 5600,000. FBI agents said the recovery was made with the assistance of a Miami insurance adjustor.

Short Sudsed LONDON UPI —A member of Parliament, Geoffrey Rhodea, has complained that Britons are being short-changed on beer. “Some brewers,” he said, “sell low-gravity beer at high prices. The government should insist that the gravity is printed on bottles, cans usd draught ale pumps.”

High Shimmy RAWLINS, Wyo. UPI — Shirley Male, a dancer from Dallas, Tex., passed out while auditioning for a job in this town at an elevation of 6,775 feet. Firemen helped her with a few sniffs of oxygen, and she proved her recovery by showing them a few experimental shimmies.

Big Walnut Group To Meet Fob. 24 Tho Mission Society of tho Big Walnut Baptist Church will hold its regular monthly meeting Thursday, Feb. 24, at 7:00 p. m., at the home of Mrs. Carol Gray. Mrs. Betty KUlion will present the lesson on “Looking for Leadership.” The Bible Book of the Month Quis on “Jonah” will be given by Mrs. Lena Trussell. Our church will be hostess to the White Lick Assodational Spring Conference April 1.

High Priced Flag LONDON UPI—An American flag presented to Abraham Lincoln three days before his assassination was sold at auction for 516,240 at a gallery here today. The flag made in 1865, is said to be the first made from bunting produced in the U.S. It was purchased for an unnamed private buyer. On April 11, 1865, the flag was presented to Lincoln for his approval. Three days later Lincoln was shot. In June of 1965 the flag was given to Thomas Winter of Brighton, England, for his work in improving Anglo-American business relations. The flag was sold by Bernard Stanley of Beckenham, England.

Bow Vs. Radio JACHECO, Calif. UPI —It had to come to this: Three teenagers tried to hold up a service station with a bow and three arrows. However, attendant David Cline, 23, had a 20th century trick up his sleeve. During the attempted robbery they let him wait on a customer who he recognized as having a citizen’s band radio installed in his car. The trio fled, but was picked up minutes later by a patrol car alerted by the radio plea for help.

Haltom-Drury Nuptials Fob. 26 Mr. and Mrs. Herman Drury of 4340 Lafayette Road, Indianapolis, wish to announce tho approaching marriage ef their daughter, Miss Jane Ann Drury, to Michael Jon Haltom of Cloverdale, the son of Mrs. Harold V. Smythe, Cloverdale and Leon Haltom, Cloverdale. The wedding wil take place on Saturday, Feb. 26, at 7:30 p. m., at the Bethel Methodist Church, 5200 West 52nd 8u Indianapolis. A reception will be held following the ceremony at the church. All friends and relatives of the couple are invited.

RFC Awards

NEW YORK UPI— Radio Free Europe anounced Friday it is offering 5500 prises in it is categories for reporting on Eastern Europe during the present war.

Cord Of Thanks I want to thank Dr. Veach, the nurses, and the friends that sent flowers, and cards, while I was in the hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Forest O’Hair

MOOSE DANCE Saturday, Feb. 19 10:00 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. Music By JOHN WOOD Upstairs Club Room Opon For Mombor Sport Fans

DR. F. M. BURNS CHIROPRACTOR Mon. thru Fri. 9-12 1-5 Mon., Tuts., Thurs. Evtnings 7-9 CLOSED SATURDAYS Phan* Ol S4S14 Saadi Jacks** 8 Saacat ftrias

WHITAKER FUNERAL HOME

Ol 3-6511

Hl-Y CAR WASH $ 1.50 per car

Saturday, Feb. 19th. Begins 8:30 A.M. All Day At Coca-Cola Bottling Company - North Jackson Fret Ctkts To Patrons - Compliments Coca-Cola Battling Co.