The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 8 June 1966 — Page 2

Thm Bally Bannar, Braancastla, Indiana Wadnaaday, Juna t, 1966

Fluoride Program Is Underway In County

Th* Summer Topical Fluoride Program began June € and eon* tinuea thru June 10. Hie Putnam County Topical Fluoride Program was developed on an education basis to encourage the observation of good dental health practices. It includes personal care, professional care, and the development of proper diet and oral hygiene habits. Hie treatment is performed by dental hygienists under the supervision of the local dentists in keeping with the Indiana law. The Topical Fluoride treatment consists of a dental prophylaxis (cleaning of the teeth) and the application of the stannous fluoride solution. Hie dental hygienist function In an educational capacity of doing chairside education and working with parents and children. Referral to the family dentist are made when dental correction is needed. This year approximately 500 children are scheduled to participate in the program. This year there are three set-ups in

Putnam County for the convenience of the patients. Hires hygienists will be working. They are Miss Susan Brown of Indianapolis, Miss Susan Rauschke of Rochester, and Miss Jeri Bly of Indianapolis. One hygienist. Miss Sylvia Smith of Lafayette will be at Roachdale. Miss Marcia Wilks of Indianapolis will be the hygienist at the Cloverdale set-up. Grades 2-5-8 are participating in this program. The health chairman from each school in Putnam County are working with the members of the Putnam County Dental Stannous Fluoride Program in co-opera-tion with the school nurse and the Dental Division of the State Board of Health. Officers for the year 1965-66 are: Chairman, Mrs. Alden Webber, R. 3, Greencastle; Vice Chairman, Mrs. Robert Cummings, Cloverdale; Secretary, Mrs. Earl McCullough, R. 2, Greencastle; Treasurer, Mrs. T. H. Graff is, Greencastle; Advisor, Mrs. Kelsie Warne, R. 1, Greencastle.

•Airport

(Continued From Page 1) maintenance on aircraft, ambulance, passenger, charter, and freight service, plus taxi service to and from town. Estimated cost for these improvements will be 8300,000. Federal funds are available on a matching basis. (Every dollar that the community raises, the Federal Government matches.) The Greencastle Development Corporation, backing this project, has proposed a county sponsored airport instead of one city owned. More Federal funds would be available as the airport would service more people. The Jaycees, anticipating development of the airport, has acquired use of 38 acres adjoining the airport to develop into a recreational area. After It has been developed, caring for the area will revest again to the city.

•-DPU Campus (Continued From Page 1) sor Hugh Henry. Both programs are structured to offer collegebound students a glimpse of career possibilities. Four of the five remaining summer conferences are keyed to training sessions of The Methodist Church. They include the 300-member WSCS School of Missions session July 10-15, the Wesleyan Service Guild July 16-17 for 90 women, the Aug. 26-28 Institute for 500 Methodist men, and the Aug. 29-Sept. 2 School of the Prophets, with an anticipated enrollment of 300 men. Most of the church-related conferences will be coordinated by University Chaplain Elmer L Carriker. In mid-July DePauw inaugurates a Girls’ Sports Camp for approximately 40 seventh through ninth graders. Under the direction of the department of physical education, the recreational program will be held July 10-16.

Sen. hlundt Wins In South Dakota PIERRE, S. D. UPI—Sen. Karl Mundt, a pipe-smoking Republican, won his party’s nomination for a fourth straight term Tuesday by turning back a weak challenge from a former John Birch Society member. Mundt, 66, rolled up a landslide victory over Richard Murphy, his first primary opponent in 18 years, by a margin of nearly 4 to 1. He was so confident of victory he spent election day in Washington. With all but 77 of the state’s 1,759 precincts reporting, Mundt had received 64,701 votes to Murphy’s 14,120. About 46 per cent of the state’s registered Republicans turned out, a larger proportion than expected. Mundt and other party leaders ignored Murphy’s ninemonth campaign, but made an intense appeal the week before the election for a large vote. Mundt centered his last-minute campaign on his seniority rating in the Senate. Murphy, 36, had hoped to overturn Mundt’s bid for reelection wtih a war on federal programs and an attempt to tag Mundt a liberal.

Rockville Rites For Ralph Cooper Ralph G. Cooper, 52, Rockville R. 4, died at the Union Hospital in Terre Haute Tuesday. Mr. Cooper was a veteran of World War n, a member of the Fellenzer Post No. 48 American Legion, Paul Taylor Post No. 1752 Veterans of Foreign Wars, Rockville, Indiana Sheriffs Association and the Sand Creek BUB Church. Survivors are: his wife, Maxine; two daughters, Mrs. Marlene White, Waveland and Nina Lynn Cooper at home; three sons, Joe Allen, Ralph Dale and Ricky Dean at home; three brothers, Virgil, John and Sheriff Charles Cooper, all of Rockville; four sisters, Mrs. Evelyn Cooper, Mrs. Alberta Spencer and Mrs. Lois Bohannon, Rockville and Mrs. Helen Biggerataff, Spokane, Wash., and three grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Thursday at 2:00 p. m. at the Butler Funeral Home in Rockville, with burial in Memory Garden Cemetery. Rev. James O. Truesdale will officiate. The American Legion will give military rites at the grave. Friends may call at the Butler Funeral Home in Rockville.

Elect ed Moderator HANOVER UPI — The Rev. Paul E. Chalfant, minister of Sunnyside Presbyterian Church at South Bend, Tuesday was elected moderator of the Indiana Synod of the United Presbyterian Church. Rev. Chalfant will preside over the three-day meeting of Hoosier Presbyterians which opened at Hanover College today and will also preside over the synod’s legislative body in its deliberations throughout the year. Ursel Parmele, Rensselaer, was elected vice moderator.

Defer Showdown WASHINGTON UPI—A Senate agriculture subcommittee Tuesday deferred a voting showdown on a controversial cotton market promotion bill by reporting the measure up to the full Agriculture Committee “wtihout prejudice.’’ The action, in effect, puts the bill into the hands of the full committee without a formal endorsement or rejection. All committee members are left free to back amendments and to support or oppose the bill itself.

Personal And Local News

Mrs. Ruth Fry of Billings Montana, is visiting Mrs. Iva Hammond. Mrs. Paul Von Burg of Indianapolis, visited Friday with her mother, Mrs. Margaret Glide-

well.

Indianola Council 472 will hold its regular meeting Thursday at 7:30 p. m. at the Odd Fellows Building. Mr. and Mrs. Ted Glidewell spent the weekend with their daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Leonard at Kentland. Mrs. Pearl Harris left Saturday morning, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Ridgeway, her daughter of Muncie, for California, for a few weeks

visit.

The Goodwill truck will be in Greencastle on Tuesday, June 14th. Anyone having repairable items of clothing or household items, please call OL 3-6494 before 6 p. m. the 13th. Mrs. Marjorie Miller, of Brick Chapel, was the winner of the Queen-Size Beautyrest mattress given away by Horace Link and Company during the recent Simmons Sleepstakes Contest. Miss Stacie Chadd and Miss Janice Barrett are taking teacher swimming instruction lessons at the Red Cross Water Safety Institute in Hardinsburg, Kentucky, for the next 10 days. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Riley attended Commencement exercises at Indiana State University June 5th. Their daughter, Patricia Ann received her Bachelor of Science degree in Accounting Business Administration. City firemen made a run to the Jebb Gas Ammonia Service, on Keightley Road, at 9:02 Tuesday night when reports of smelling ammonia were received at the Fire Department The firemen, however, reported they could not find any leak. David L. Priest, Bainbridge, is among 430 candidates for de grees to be awarded by Butler University at its 111th annual commencement exercises at 4 p. m., Sunday, June 12, in Clowes Manorial Hall. He is a candidate for a B.S. degree in radio. Mr. and Mrs. Hal Miller were called to Indiana Sunday, because of the death of Mrs. Miller’s half-brother, David Wright, Wabash. He was drowned just a few days after his graduation from Wabash High School. He was the grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wright. Jens and Alison, the children of Mr. and Mrs. Hal Miller were here with Mr. Miller’s mother Mrs. Hal Miller, Sr. They returned to their home in Cincinnati today.

Flans Open Hons* For Son, Family

On Saturday and Sunday, June 11 and 12, Mrs. Mae Green of Harmony, is planning an open house at her home for her son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Green, Scott and DeLynn, who have just returned to the States after spending three years in Japan. Herbert has been with the Navy in Japan. He and his family will be spending a few days here before going to Memphis, Tennessee. Everyone is cordially invited to welcome them home.

We store for free all fur-like fabrics. Return next fall spot less, ready to wear. Old Reliable White Cleaners.

County Hospital Dismissed Tuesday: Mrs. James Miller and son, Crawfordsville. Sharon Miller, Cloverdale. Mark Cox, Greencastle. Anna Hall, Greencastle. Irene White, Greencastle. Dorothy Pelfrey, Greencastle. Elsie Marlar, Greencastle. Births: Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Estes, 303 Shadowlawn, a girl, Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Dewayne Parrish, Greencastle, Route 5, a boy, Tuesday.

Marriage License Bill Allen Nicholson, farmer, Greencastle, and Donna Sue Lich, Teller, Greencastle.

ANNIVERSARIES Birthday Diana Shaw, daughter of Mrs. Mary Shaw, 10 years today, June 8th.

Hollywood By VERNON SCOTT HOLLYWOOD UPI—They’ve dusted off George Stevens’ classic movie western, “Shane,” for next year’s television season.

The wide screen 1953 epic the title role, Jean Arthur, Van Heflin and Brandon De Wilde as the boy. At the time of its release one 13-year-old sat goggle-eyed in a theater enraptured by the heroics of the gunfighter Shane. He was David Carradine, son of character John Carradine. Now, 13 years later, Carradine finds himself in Shane’s boots as the star of the television series for ABC. At first glance, David is an unlikely Shane. Where Ladd was diminutive and silent, young Carradine is six foot, two inches and garrulous. He’s also fuzzy cheeked in comparison with hardbitten Shane as played by Ladd. But Carradine is nothing if not confident. ‘T don’t think I’m following a difficult act,” he said a few days before reporting for work. “If the picture was a classic, I think the series will be more so. “The show has a modern attitude despite being set in the 1870s. We’ll have up-to-date situations in the old setting.” In the movie Shane was a loner, a gunfighting saddle tramp who moved from tqwn to town wherever someone was willing to pay for his talent with a sixgun. A hired killer isn’t exactly the stuff of which television heroes are made, but Carradine thinks otherwise. “Five years ago it might have been impossible for us to do the series because we couldn’t have sustained a heavy hero,” he explained. “But in this day of the anti-hero Shane is essentially a villain acting like a hero. “In the show he’ll be sort of a professional gunman between engagements, if you know what I mean. He won’t actually be seen as a hired gun, but you’ll know that it’s his profession. Carradine’s profession has been acting since he was 18. Four years ago he appeared with his father in “Hamlet,” an experience that heightened his self-confidence. David’s biography, written by his former press agent, describes the lad as having “the virtue of patience, a heart of gold, filled with love, strong as an ox and as loyal as St. Peter.” Confronted with this printed praise, David blushed and said, “he’s not my press agent any more.” Carradine only faintly resembles his famous father. He’s bigger, stronger and more a Western type than a Shakespearean. But you can see for yourself next October.

A Correction In the South Putnam School Corporation article yesterday, the amount should have read 51,540,000 instead of 51,540 in the petition of additional appropriations for the construction of a new high school. The Banner takes this means of correcting this error.

THURSDAY SPECIAL BAB-B-QUE BIBS

‘1.25

3 VEG. OR SALADS, ROLLS and COFFEE

DOUBLE DECKER DINING ROOM

People are drinking and using the same water that existed when the world began. Water is used over and over again according to the National Geographic.

RECTOR FUNERAL HOME mONI Ol *4910 AM8UUNCI SERVICI

OFFICE CLOSED Juna 18th to July 14th W. R. Tipton, M.D.

State Moisture Prospects Good By United Preu International Rain-laden clouds teased dry Hoosier aeas today by releasing little or none of their moisture accumulation. But the situation may improve in a matter of hours. Only traces of precipitation were recorded in the 24 hours ending at 7 a.m. today around the state. However, forecasts called for showers or thundershowers today, tonight and Thursday. The prospects of moderate moisture were good throughout the state. The Weather Bureau said precipitation “probability percentages” ranged from 50 to 60 today, 60 to 70 tonight and 60 to 80 Thursday. The showers are expected to end by Friday and it will turn cooler that day. The five-day outlook said “frequent periods of showers or thundershowers” are “likely” during the period from Thursday through next Monday. Rain will total three-fourth to an inch. Temperatures at high points Tuesday ranged from 79 at Fort Wayne to 84 at Evansville. Overnight lows ranged from 62 at South Bend to 67 at Indianapolis. Highs today will range from 75 to 80 north and central to the lower 80s south. Lows tonight will range from 58 to 63 north, 63 to 68 central and 65 to 70 south. Highs Thursday will range from the 70s to the 80s. For the next five days, temperatures will average near normal highs of 77 to 86 and normal lows of 56 to 64. “Warmer south Thursday, turning cooler Friday or Saturday and warmer Sunday or Monday,” the outlook said.

No U.N. Meddling TOKYO UPI — The Peking People’s Daily said today the Chinese would never permit “U. N. meddling in the Viet Nam question.” The article, which repeated the standard Chinese charge that the U. N. is a U. S. “tool,” said the international organization has no right to intervene in Viet Nam.

Feminine Horizons By Hortense Myers INDIANAPOLIS UPI—Hoosiers who have heard only of the violent things done by trainees at the Atterbury Job Corps Center can see their esthetic side by walking through the north lobby of the Indiana Statehouse. An exhibit of paintings, sculpture, ceramics and other art forms opened Monday and will continue through the month of June. One of the four instructors who works wtih the corpsmen in the arts and crafts program is a woman, and according to James Williams, the program supervisor, “the whole atmosphere changes when a woman is in the room.” Williams said that the lone woman art instructor at Atterbury is Miss Peggy Wirt. “If we could find more women instructors like Peggy, we would hire them,” he said. Williams said the Atterbury Center—part of the federal war on poverty—will reach about 1,500 corpsmen as of today when an additonal 100 arrive. “All are exposed to the arts and crafts program,” Williams said, “but not all return to work in the program.” Arts and crafts compete with athletics and the center newspaper for after-class attention of the corpsmen. The work of about 30 corpsmen is represented in the Indiana Statehouse Art Salon exhibit this month. Some show obvious talent although Williams said that almost all of the boys, art work at Atterbury represents their first efforts in this area.

herself for a job as physical education instructor, which covers many sports but her personal preference is bowling. ‘Bowling is a lifelong activity I can always enjoy. It is something you can de by yourself,” is her explanation for this preference. The Munster girl started her collegiate career at the Calumet regional campus of Purdue, then transferred to West Lafayette in her sophomore year. Although she averaged 183 in her practice and had an all-time high game of 247, she didn’t do as well in the recent women’s intercollegiate bowling tournament in New Orleans as that— but her 164 average and sixgame set of 989 was good enough for fourth in the allevents category. She also was top among the 55 women bowlers from 19 midwestern colleges and universities for the regional all-events title. Her 4th national rating was among about 8,000 women. Her after-school plans are to teach at Evergreen Park which she understands does not now have a bowling program. Sharon hopes to change that.

High and Low NEW YORK UPI—The highest temperature reported Tuesday to the U. S. Weather Bureau, excluding Hewaii »nd Alaska, was lO* degrees a t Presidio, Tex. Th»' lowest reported this morning was 33 degrees at Ely, Nev., and International Falls, Minn.

Combine Auto Finance - and Insurance Into One Easy Payment GLEN FURR AGENCY CLOVERDALE, INDIANA ; PHONE 795-4413 -

Evergreen Park, 111. high school students will find bowling on their sports program if Sharon Guber has anything to do with the matter. Sharon, a member of the Purdue University June graduating class who is scheduled to teach at Evergreen Park next semester, is one of the top collegiate women bowlers. She prepared

Four Charged la Burglary Ring BRAZIL UPI—A fourth man was to be arraigned today in Clay Circuit Court in connection with the operation of what authorities described as a threecounty burglary ring. Robert Frederick, 22, R. R. 3, Brazil, was arrested by Sheriff Glenn Van Horne Tuesday night on a second-degree burglary charge. Three others arrested earlier this week pleaded guilty to similar charges Tuesday in Clay Circuit Court. They were Sam uel Butts, 21, R. R. 5, Brazil, Gerald Julbert, 22, R. R. 1, Carbon, and Jerry Jones, 21, Brazil. Judge Robert Stewart deferred sentencing. Van Horne said the first three, who implicated Frederick, admitted taking part in some 20 burglaries in Clay, Parke and Putnam Counties.

FOR SALE Pontoon Boat •quipped with bottled gas cooking and low loader trailer. 309 N. Jackson . Greencastle

Women Perform LEOPOLVILLE UPI—A unit of 12 Congolese army women paratroopers staged a demonstration jump here Tuesday for visiting Israeli Premier Levi Eshkol. Congolese paratroopers are trained by Israeli officers under an assistance program begun in 1963.

Fetal Accident MALAGA, Spain UPI — A bus carrying 41 Spanish passengers tumbled into a steep gorge near here Tuesday, killing the driver and two passengers and injuring 31 other passengers.

DR. F. M. BURNS CHIROPRACTOR SUMMER HOURS By Appointment Mon 9-9 Tues 9-9 Thur* 9-9 Sat 9-1 Closed Wed. & Fri. Phona Ol 3-5814 South Jackson S Sunsat Drivo

MOBILE HOME SHOW Drawing for free gifts. Free Cokes for all. For the finest in mobile homes, come to this show. June 3, 4, 5 RUST’S MOBILE HOMES GOSPORT, INDIANA

STAG VFW POST 1550 Friday, June 10,1966 6:00 P.M. till?? Catfish Dinner end Entertainment Donation $1.50

WEDDING GIFTS Glassware Planters Pottery Vases Cards 10% Off FUEL’S FLOWERS

COLORS: Natural & Mocha Brown Fadad Blue & Navy

WHIRLAWAY Colors ran rampant on this jaunty playtime casual of textured Romanzo linen. Light as a sigh... colorful as a Caribbean Carnival

A SUMMERETTES By BALL-BAND

THE B00TERY Open Wednesday Afternoon For The Finest In Shoe Fashions

TEEN DANCE VAN BIBBERS LAKE RESORT “THE CONDORS” SATURDAY, JUNE 11 t TO 11 P.M. MEMBERS 75c NON-MEMBERS tlJO ADVANCE TICKETS ON SALE AT LAKE

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