The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 24 March 1966 — Page 3
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Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Noel Nicholson were Mr. and Mrs. Dale Richey of Kansas, 111., and Mrs. W. S. Lawter of Russellville. Miss Dorothy Bettis returned to her work at Cincinnati, Ohio, Sunday evening after spending the weekend at her home in Morton. She visited her mother at the Carle Clinic, Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Loren Randall of Arthur, 111., were Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Whitehead and daughter. Randy and David Whitehead spent Saturday night with their grandparents. Sunday afternoon caller at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Hubert McGaughey were Mr. and Mrs. Walter Overstreet and sons of Waveland, and Mr. and Mrs. Gerry Memering and daughter of Washington. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Alexander visited Sunday afternoon with Wayne's parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Alexander of Waveland. Sunday dinner guests of Mir. | and Mrs. Warren Caywood were i Mr. and Mrs. Englehart of Mer- j rillville, Mr. and Mrs. Marion; McIntyre of Richmond and Mrs. Boatright of Greencastle. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Humphrey were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Harbison. Mrs. Dewey Stultz Is recuperating from surgery at the horns o f Mr. and Mrs. Joe Stultz and sons. Mr. and Mrs. Glen Crodian of Indianapolis celebrated their Golden Wedding anniversary on Sunday, March 20th, with open house at the home of their son and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gtodiaa of Indianapolis. Mr. Orodian Is a toother of Mrs. Floyd Yochum. The Yochums and Mrs. D. P. Alexander were present for the occasion. Mrs. Tom Endicott and children spent the weekend with
her sister and Mrs. Harold Chilcote and family. Mrs. Floyd Bales spent Sunday afternoon with her sister, Mrs. Bessie Barnett of Greencastle. Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Ogles of Ba inbridge, Mrs. Marlyn Gibson and Ronnie O’Hair were Tuesday evening guests of Mr. and Mrs. Mike O’Hair and son of Morton. The occasion was the celebrating of Mike O'Hair’s birthday. Tom Miller and children, Pamela and Douglas of Clinton Falls, called on Mr. and Mrs. Clair Albin Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Bennett visited Mr. Bennett's sister-in-law, Mrs. Ralph Bennett at the Robert Long Hospital Sunday afternoon. She is recovering from heart surgery. They also visited a relative, Mrs. Ruth Jeter, who is a patient in the Methodist Hospital. Late eveing caller at their home was Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Adams from Plainfield, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Terhune and children had as Sunday visitors, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Adams from Plainfield, Ind., and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lair.son and daughters from Danville, Ind. Mrs. Terhune is now able to go in the car and has enjoyed getting back to church and Sunday School. Mrs. Russell O’Haver spent from Thursday a. m. until Sunday a. m. in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Cooper of Russellville. Her sister, Mrs. Katherine Call is staying in the home of the Coopers. Visitors of Mrs. Call and Mrs. O’Haver were Mrs. W. S. Lawler on Friday afternoon. Mrs. Earl Sutherlin and Mrs. Lafe McGaughey were Saturday evening dinner guests. Mk\ and Mrs. Emory Roe of Ba inbridge were Saturday evening supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Rosooe Stevens.
A NS4AUNCH LOOK at the Atlas-Agena rendezvous target vehicle for Gemini 8 at Cape Kennedy. BANNER ADS WORK FOR YOU
* WAITS AGAIN—This la a looted men's store in the Watts • metkm of Los Angeles, one of the victims of the new strife
Mercury Drops Over Indiana By United fren International The tattered remnants of a killer blizzard which ravaged the upper Midwest swooped down on Indiana today, sending temperatures on a major skid from balmy to below-freezing levels within hours. Gusty winds blew chilly air and snow flurries into the state by late Wednesday, and temperatures which had wallowed around in the 60s and 70s dropped to or below 32-freezing well before midnight. Snow was reported on roads in the northwest portion of the state early this morning and flurries were recorded well into the southern half of Hoosierland. Low temperatures this morning included 20 at Chicago, 22 at South Bend, 23 at Lafayette, 26 at Indianapolis and Fort Wayne, 28 at Evansville and Cincinnati and 33 at Louisville. Two-tenths of an inch of snow was recorded in the South Bend area. It was a far cry from just a few hours earlier when thundershowers and rainstorms occurred Wednesday and temperatures at high points included 60 at South Bend, 63 at Fort Wayne, 64 at Lafayette, 66 at Indianapolis, 69 at LouisviUe, 70 at Evansville and 71 at Cincinnati. A second cold front was expected Saturday in Indiana. Highs today were expected to range from the low 30s north to the low 40s south. Then the mercury will slip to the upper teens above zero in the north portion an the 20s elsewhere. Highs Friday will range from the upper 30s to the mid 40s. Snow flurries were expected to continue today over the state, but the skies will clear tonight as colder air moves in. It will be a little warmer Friday and warmer still Friday night with a chance of a few showers. Saturday will be mostly fair and colder. Precipitation recorded during Wednesday’s squalls included Indianapolis. 39, Cincinnati .30, Fort Wayne .28 and Lafayette .06.
Patricia Neal Receives Award LONDON UPI — Patricia Neal received the British Film Academy’s “best foreign actress of 1965” award Wednesday night for her performance as a Navy nurse in the film, “In Harm’s Way.” Miss Neal, who won Hollywood’s “best actress” Oscar in 1964, burst into tears when she was called forward to receive the British award from Leslie Caron at a televised ceremony in a London hotel Miss Neal is completing her convalescence from a series of strokes she suffered in Hollywood last last year. She is married to British writer Roald Dahl and lives at Great Missenden, outside London.
Man Freed Of Bank Charge SOUTH BEND UPI—One of two men charged in the 830,000 holdup of a Michigan City bank branch was found innocent early today by a Federal Court jury which deliberated for 10 hours. Joseph Guerin, 33, Philadelphia, Pa., was freed although bank tellers identified him as one of the holdup men during the three-day trial. The jury found in favor of Guerin after the defense Wednesday called a witness who testified he saw Guerin at a Chicago horse racing track within an hour of the holdup March 19 of last year. Government atorneys alleged that Guerin and Timothy Moriaiity, 25, Malvern, Pa., were accomplices. Moriarity was convicted on similar charges earlier
tills month and Is sentencing. Two bandits fled from the Trail Creek branch of the Citizens Bank of Michigan City with 830,646—the largest bank holdup in Indiana last year. The loot was never recovered.
Air Force Expert Searches Swamp DEXTER, Mich. UPI — The top Air Force adviser on unidentified flying objects pulled on his hip boots Wednesday and waded into a swamp where a glowing object reportedly landed earlier this week. But Dr. H. Allen Hynek refused to speculate on what he was looking for or on the meaning of what he had found «thus far. The Northwestern University astrophysicist, who has spent two days in the Southern Michigan area searching for clues to what might have caused a rash of UFO sightings, said “I’m still gathering facts.” He said, however, “these reports are more consistent than most of the other sightings I’ve investigated.” Hynek has been involved in the Air Force “Project Blue Book” since 1948 and has investigated hundreds of UFO reports. The swamp he investigated Wednesday was near the home of Frank Manner who, along with his son and several police officers, saw what was described as a pulsating craft and four sister ships hover in the marsh last Sunday night. Manner said he got a close look at the craft and it appeared to be a solid object before it zipped away. Scattered sightings had been reported throughout the area in recent days and 7 coeds at Hillsdale College reportedly saw a similar UFO in a marshland near their dormitory Monday night. “It’s like reports from people who witness a fire,” Hynek said. “You get as many different facts as you get people who saw the fire. So far, all I’ve been able tq come up with is reports of a variety of lights. I wish we had some photographs of this and more technical observers.”
High and Low NEW YORK UPI—The highest temperature reported Wednesday to the U.S. Weather Bureau, excluding Hawaii and Alaska was-86 degrees at Morganton, W. Va. The lowest reported this morning was 7 below zero at Roseau, Minn.
SPOOKY HOLLYWOOD UPI — The three spooks from tlevision’s “The Munster” series — Fred Gwynne, Yvonne de Carol and A1 Lewis — will star in a movie version of the show titled “Munster Go Home.”
The International Pancake race is held annually between Liberal, Kan. and Olney, England.
OFFICE TO CLOSE Dr. E. C. Thompson AnnouncM that hb office in the Alamo Building will dasa on March 25, 1966 As ha is I saving far special training.
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Thuraday, March 24, 1966 Tha Daily Bannar, Greencastle, Indiana
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Grain Elevator Swept By Fire MARTINSVILLE, UPI —The Morgan County Mills grain elevator was swept by fire fanned by brisk winds Wednesday night. The loss included 5,000 bushels of corn, 2,000 bushels of oats, a railroad freight car filled with feed, three trucks, and the company office building. W. Richard Suckow of Franklin, head of the firm which operated the elevator, said he could not estimate the loss. Firemen kept the flames from spreading to nearby houses and a 1,000-gallon liquid petroleum gas tank.
Offers Flying Objects Answer YORK, Pa. UPI—A Pennsylvania man has offered an explanation for the unidentified flying objects which stirred residents of two Michigan communities this week. Alfred Dickens, a maintenance man for the York County Gas Co., said the “objects could be gaseous formations emitted from marshes in Hillsdale and Ann Arbor. Dickens said he witnessed similar phenomena when he waa a boy on his parents’ farm in McAlester, Okla. “We used to see these things quite often,” he said. “We call the ‘jack-o-lantems’ and my brother and I would chaise them through the swamps and thresh them about with sticks, breaking them into smaller shapes.” “Actually, it was a formation of luminous gas from decaying leaves which dropped to the ground the previous fall,” Dickens said. “The rising gas
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would form a big ball of light and sometimes it would float through the woods on soft air currents, often changing color as it hovered about three or four feet above the ground. It would bounce around if there was a slight breeze and sometimes it would travel for a mile or more.”
Card of Thanks LEWIS: We wish to thank our kind neighbors, friends, and relatives for expressions of sympathy, lovely floral offerings and other courtesies extended during the illness and at the passing of our beloved husband and father, Floris G. Lewis. We also wish to thank Dr. John Ellett Jr., nurses at Putnam County Hospital, Rev. Malcolm Neier, and the organist. We are especially grateful to the Weaver Funeral Home and all who assisted in our bereavement for incomparable services. Wife and Children
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