The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 23 February 1966 — Page 4
Wtmaday, Fibrwry 23, 1964
Bainbridge Masons Enjoy Dinner, Dance
Hm 52nd Annual George Washington Birthday Pitch-in ZXnMr and Dance was held in the Masonic Lodge Saturday, February 19. A large crowd turned out to enjoy the delicious food and the chance to greet old and new frienda. Following the dinner, W. M. Jerry Baker welcomed everyone and then introduced P. M. Howard Hoetetter, who, with several members of the Lodge 1 and Star had prepared a brief history of the dinners up to date. Everyone enjoyed hearing of the first dinner to be held In the present Lodge HaH Over 400 guests traveled from great distanses to take part in the Dedication of the new Lodge Hall. He also related a few of the highlights over the years, and told of several programs that we all wished we could have been there to enjoy. A big thanks to Mr. Hostetter, Ruth VanCleave and the committee for a Job well done. The officers of the Eastern Star, Masonic Lodge, and Jobs Daughters were introduced and given a hearty welcome. Robert Thomas from Indianapolis delighted everyone at Intervals throughout the pro*
gram with several pantomiming routines. His unusual costumes and wonderful talent in this field, as well as his dancing ability rounded out the program for the evening. ‘The Dynamics” a trio with Steve Allee and Ron Barrow on file aocordians and Dave Wagley on the drums, played during the Dinner hour. Later the Trio from Ben Davis High School showed their versatility in playing the popular numbers of the day, . alternating them with tunes of a slower pace for the anas of us who can’t manage the fester dances. It was a very wonderful evening and we are looking forward to oeeing everyone again next year.
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Morton News ly Mrs. Rissdl O'Hiver, Correspondent
Mr. and Mts. Rex Call and MTs. Vera Sigler were at the Bargain Barn in Brasil Sunday afternoon. Mir. and Min. Glen Crodian and grandson, Tom Burnsworth of Indianapolis, were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Yochum and Mir*. Daley Alexander. Mr*. Roscoe White is spending a few days with her mother and frister in Indianapolis. Mir. and Mrs. Joe Stultz and sons were weekend visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Brad Taylor and sons of Howell, Michigan. Miss Mary Thomas, who is a house guest of the Early Jackson family, spent last Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Phillip Goode. Beverly Farrow, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Farrow Is confined to her home with measles. Mrs. Dewey Stultz spent last weekend with her eon, George and family of Greencastle. Mias Barbara Wichmann, a student of Indiana State, Is now doing student teaching in Rockville grade school Mr. and M5rs. Hubert McGaughey attended the National A. A. F. A. meeting at Atlantic City last week. Mrs. Wayne Alexander and Mrs. Russell O’Haver shopped in Indianapolis last Friday. The Union Chapel Church Aid met at the home of Mrs. Floyd Yochum last Wednesday. After devotions by Mrs. Alma Farrow, roll call which was naming one of the Beatitudes and the business was dispensed with, the ladies cut pieces to use In piecing a quilt. Lovely refreshments were served by the hostess. Mr. and Mrs. Morris Irwin, Mrs. Alleen Overstreet and Mrs. Maude O’Haver were Sunday Seek Foodstuffs GENEVA UPI — The Red Cross has appealed to the world to provide food for 20 million young children and two million expectant and nursing mothers threatened by famine in India. Red Cross Secretary General Henrik Beer told a news conference here at least 130,000 tons of powdered milk were needed but only 40,000 tons had been pledged.
Treats Patients Without Lieease FLASHER, N.D. UPI — A woman who says she’s "scared to death of doctors" feces charges of practicing medicine and massage without state licenses. Mrs. lola Gifford, 56, claims she has administered about 7,000 successful treatments for arthritis. Her treatment involves heat massage and a home-made balm. “I’ve had people carried in, but I’ve never had anyone carried out,” she said. ' Mrs. Gifford said she will continue her work in Canada if put out of business by the court Mrs. Gifford, who completed one year of high school, said “I should be commended for the work I’m doing rather than prosecuted." She said she has a bad heart and suffers from varicose veins. "I should have surgery on the varicose veins,” she said, "but frankly I’m scared to death of doctors.” Morton County state’s Atty. William Kelsch said the charges make up a civil case designed to force her out of business or to become legally licensed. Mrs. Gifford has demanded a Jury trial expected to be held in M&ndan sometime after March L Mrs. Gifford, 56, a practical nurse through correspondence study, said she cured herself of arthritis in 1954 and since then has been treating others on the Giffords’ 2,400-acre grain and cattle farm in the rolling hills six miles east of Flasher. She said her treatment is no secret It consists mainly of a lanolin-base balm, which she manufactures herself, and massage under a heat lamp. lbs. Gifford said aha discovered the relieving effects of lanolin while working with sheep and decided to experiment. State Rep. Carl Meyer, who operates a rssteursnt in
dinner guests of Mk. and lbs. Leonard Bishop of Indianapolis. Mk. and lbs. Uoyd Clodfelter and son, Neal, were Saturday evening dinner guests of lb. and Mrs. David Clodfelter and family. Recent callers of lbs. Barbara Terhune were Mrs. Nora Miller, Mrs. Betty Lambermont and Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Bennett of Baxgersville. lb. and Mrs. Walter Welty and Mk. Watty’s sister of Denver, Colorado and lbs. Gsa Brown near Brick Chapel, visited with Mir. and Mrs. Vem Sigler Friday evening. Mrs. Bonnie Berry spent Wednesday evening with Barbara Terhune. They made the center piece for the banquet table of Cub Scouts No. 3 Den. The banquet was held at the Brick Chapel Church last Saturday evening. Mrs. Mike O’Hair and sons and lbs. Clair Albin spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. Glen Clark, mother of Mrs. Albin. Charles and Diane Padgett of Harmony, spent the day Sunday, with Mr. and Mrs. Lee Martin and children and Mrs. Floyd Bales. The children’s mother was visiting the father, who is a patient in an Indianapolis hospital. Mk. and Mrs. Roscoe Stevens and daughter, attended a dinner in honor of Mrs. Stevens’ nephew, who is in the service and was home on a weekend pass from a base in Virginia. The dinner was at the home of the boy’s parents, lb. and lbs. Holland Clark. Friends of lbs. Earl Mitchell may be interested in knowing she has moved to Indianapolis. Mail will reach her by addressing it c/o Donald B. Reid, 1404 N. Alton, Indianapolis.
LOST HIS LEG—Col. Michael Yunck of Santa Ana, Calif, flashes a big smile as he is presented with the Silver Star, one of the nation’s highest awards for gallantry, by Brig. Gen. Keith B. McCutcheon, 1st Marine Air Wing commanding officer, at Da Nang, South Viet Nam. Yunck’s leg was amputated after he was struck by machinegun fire.
Flasher, said many area residents have been helped by Mrs. Gifford’s treatments and there are no objections to the court action against her.
BUSINESS HIGHLIGHTS
WASHINGTON UPI—While incoming factory orders and durable goods shipments gained in January, the big increases were in military business, the Commerce Department reports. There would have been a decline without the military surge.
WASHINGTON UPI — The
upward spiral of factory wages has been tapering off in recent years, the Labor Department reports. Annual pay increases for the 12.5 million most strongly unionized factory workers have averaged 2.9 per cent for the past five years, compared with 4 per cent yearly during the preceding years.
NEW YORK UPI — General Electric and Eastman Kodak both reported sharply increased sales and earnings for 1965. GE, for the first time, consolidated reports of its foreign operations with domestic operation. The result indicated that GE "has been losing money abroad.
Fincastie News By Mrs. Maude Brothers^ Correspondent
hostess, Mrs. PhyBs Passwater Bridges purchased
served lovely refreshments of ice cream, cup cakes, coffee and
Valentine candies.
Earl Bridges and Ronald Scott attended file Hoosier Hampshire Swine Breeders Association Show and sale held at Rushville Tuesday. Mr.
the Reserve
Grand Champion Boar of the
show.
Mirs. Russell Beams and Barbara Ann visited the Northeast Elementary School's Valentine P. T. A. meeting and school parties on Monday afternoon at
Greencastle.
Hs 4MIU1
I* OOUDIAir, XJft.
Doctor, Td Like To Know—
Mrs. Reginia Shannon was hostess to the Country Club Wednesday afternoon. There were twenty-two members who answered roll call by giving the name and date of their first automobile. One guest, Mrs.
Olive Baird, was present also. After the business meeting the treasurer reported we had made our donation to the Heart Fund and the usual games were played. Mrs. Shannon and her co-
MY friend is 35 years old and has had hardening of the arteries. Last year he had a spell of coronary insufficiency. Since then he has increased his smoking to three packs a day and he drinks two cases of beer a week. He does not follow his low cholesterol diet. How long can he last doing this? Mr. D.AK, Kansas Dear Mr. K.: Your friend 1 needs an additional friend, particularly his doctor, if he is Dr. Coleman to "last” any time at aiL Your intimate knowledge of his condition and his medications indicates a clear understanding of his behavior and an apparent inability to be of help to him. At his very early age of 35 he has arteriosclerosis, or hardening of the arteries. This narrowing of the blood vessels, most unusual at this age, also affected the coronary blood vessels to his heart and interfered with its pumping mechanism. After such a seven episode, he is alive and well. Now, the sheer nonsense of self-destruction begins. He increased bis tobacco, increased his beer, went off his cholesterol free diet and almost perversely is committing suicide the hard way. Most mature adults, after such a harrowing coronary experience, are so glad to he alive that they rigidly conform to
every limitation of food, alcohol and tobacco that is suggested to them. You, too, will need a friend, for this one with his stubbornness won’t stay around long enough to be one. His physician and his friends can yet persuade him and keep him sufficiently in line so that he can continue to be a service to himself and a friend to you. • • • Can anything be done for the stretch marks on the abdomen caused by childbirth? Mrs. C. C., New Jersey Dear Mrs. C.: The stretch marks can be called the "hash marks” of a proud mother. Why would anyone want to get rid of such happy marks of di^ Unction? There Is virtually nothing that can be done to erase these marks made when the skin of the abdominal wall and breasts is expanded during pregnancy. Special hormone creams, exercising gadgets and other quackeries will not affect the stretch marks but will definitely fill the outstretched hands of the "quackateer.” • • • SPEAKING OF YOUR HEALTH—Never ignore persistent fever. Fever is the body’s signal that an infection may be present. Dr. Coleman welcome* letter* from reader*, ant, while he cannot undertake to unmoor each one, he wiM nee question* in hi* column whenever possible and when they or* of general interest. Address your letter* to Dr. Coleman in care of tM» newspaper.
to 1966, King Features Syndicate; fee.)
I haven’t seen much of you since we moved. How come?
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Electric Heat put me on the shelf
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CJeuniiness te just one of the big money-saving "extras’* you get wlim you "go first class" and go all-electric. Quietness, economy of installation, draft-free heat, and wide choice of heating systems are ail yours with electric heat. Yet, dollar-for-dollar, it costs no more than heating the old-fashioned way. You owe it to yourself to 1st us prove that the fined costs no more, dust call your focal healing contractor or Public Service Indiana Office. FIRST CLASS COSTS NO MOREI
& PUBLIC SERVICE INDIANA
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