The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 8 July 1966 — Page 5

Th« Daily Banner, Greancastle, Indiana Friday, July 8, 1966

Devotion To Career Is Important To Job Success

KOBKRTA ROKSC H “Unless you care about your job, you can't make it mean very much,” says career girl Lore Moser, who is deeply devoted to hers. As the lady banquet manager of New York's Tavern on the Green restaurant. Lore has been responsible for arranging for over 4,000 weddings and more than 25,000 parties, dinners, luncheons, and banquets. Back For The Wedding In managing these affairs, she has cared so much about her job that some of the girls who had her arrange their parties at “Sweet Sixteen" have also come back for their weddings and, later, named daughters after her and asked her to be a godmother. “Once you are in this field, you have to care about it,” Lore said. “You have to care so much that people sometimes ask you if you are the owner's daughter. “But if you like people and large scale planning, a job as a banquet manager is a wonderful career for a woman,” Lore said. “Mainly, it is doing on a large scale many of the things most women plan in a small way. “If that kind of work appeals to you and if you have wellrounded training, I feel the banquet management field is wide open for women.” How She Started Lore prepared herself for her career by working as a waitress, cashier, receptionist, switchboard operator and dining room hostess in restaurants and hotels part-time and summers while in high school and college. She was graduated from Cornell Hotel School. While in college, she taught herself shorthand and typing at Bight so she would have a prac-

tical skill to add. to her broad general training when she looked for a job in the industry. “As it turned out," Lore said, “I needed that shorthand and typing, because my first work after college was a job as secretary to a buyer in one of New York's big hotels. If I hadn't had a skill. I wouldn't have landed the job.” That job was invaluable to |

TORNADO—One of more than a dozen tornadoes reported in the nation’s midsection In a 24-hour period reaches down from storm cloud north of Minneapolis. They did little harm.

IVoffiw Part Continues Meet BUCHAREST UPI — Russia and its Warsaw Pact allies gave little indication at the end of their four-day summit meeting today that they were able to settle the internal difficulties plaguing the anti-Western military alliance. East Germany’s Communist party leader Walter Ulbricht left Thursday night with his delegation for East Berlin fol-1 lowing a “capitalistic-style" I banquet. The Polish delegation, headed by party chief Wladys- ; law Gomulka, left at the same time by plane for Warsaw. The other top leaders, including Soviet Communist party Secretary General Leonid Brezhnev and Premier Alexi Kosygin, were scheduled to leave sometime during the day.

Amo Baptist Church Celebratss 100th Year

On July 18, lS6t». charter papers for Amo Baptist Church were signed in a small frame school house one-half mile northwest of town. Delegates attended the organization meeting from Plainfield, Danville, Stilesville, Clayton, Bethel,

As the church celebrate^ i* hundredth year, it has grov more than the town. The pie.-, ent membership is not smipl; resting in the past. An expan sion steering committee is nov at work on projection plans to ward the year 1980.

Belleview and New Winchester, i Centennial celebration acliv The charter was signed by 15 ities include a parade on Satur people that day. They were R. day, the 16th, which will begil N. and Sarah Harvey, Manley at 2:00 at the school. Owners o; and Milessa Justice, Cipio West, horses, antique cars and othei

Lore Moser, Banquet Manager Of Famous N. Y. Restaurant Lore, because as she worked hard at it she made many contacts in the industry. Later she beard of the job opportunity at Tavern on the Green when the banquet manager’s spot opened up. In the 14 years that she has worked at this landmark, which was built as a “sheepfold and shepherd’s house” in 1870, she has never stopped caring about her job. Gazed Where Sheep Grazed “This is my world,” she told me, as we stood at the restaurant’s door and looked out at Central Park where flocks of sheep grazed nearly a century ago. “I work in the park and play in the park,” Lore Moser said. “And I love it and care about it so much that I live right across the street”

Queen of Yankee Stadium

NSW YORK UPI—They call her “Fancy Nancy” and she’ll never play on a major league team, but for a few hours Thursday night she was the princess of Yankee Stadium. It took some nerve and a little luck to become a royal personage. Nancy wanted to be a batgirl In the contest sponsored by a petroleum company, but the rules plainly stated it was for boys 6 to 16, who become honorary Yankee batboys if they win.

Fern News

Saturday morning members of

the Antioch Missionary Baptist number on it, and the Church pulled into the yard of tion that all women

Mrs. Nadene Burks and family with trucks and surprised her

A few days ago there was a phone call to Nancy’s dad, Harold Lotsey, at their heme in Morristown, N.J. When he hung up he said “which one of my kids is named Jimmy?” “Well, I guess I am,” Nancy replied. “I cannot tell a lie, not to you anyway.” Nancy had won the contest, but she couldn’t accept the prize. So she turned the honor over to her 14-year-old brother, Alexander, a young sophisticate, who really wasn’t too excited about it. Nancy’s good try did not go unrewarded. She became a batboy, of sorts. She received a Yankee warmup jacket with Roger Maris’

attencrave.

Bobby Richardson, Mickey Mantle and Whitey Ford greet-

Morton News By Mrs. Russell 0’Haver. Correspondent

Captured Pilots Get Paraded

TOKYO UPI — North Viet Nam broadcast “confessions" of

Lyle Perkins of East Chicago called on Mr. and Mrs. Z. B. Burkett last Thursday afternoon. He was enroute home after visiting his brother in California. Mrs. Clarence Humphrey was a visitor of the Burketts Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. Noel Nicholson returned home last Thursday after spending a few days with her daughter, Mrs. Dale Rickey of Kansas, HI. Mrs. Nicholson visited her mother, Mrs. Ethel Lawter last Saturday. Everett Fonner is a patient in the Putnam County Hospital and has had surgery. He was reported improving on Monday. Mrs. Nelle Bettis returned to her home in Indianapolis Monday after being a house guest of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Bettis since last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Terrell Clones moved June 25th to their home in Roachdale. They had been living with Mr. and Mrs. Leland Allgood sines last January, whils waiting for their home to be vacated. Sandi Holland was honored with a miscellaneous shower held at Union Chapel Church on the evening of June the 10th. Sandi received many nice and useful gifts. Hostesses were Mrs. Holland and several members of the Church. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd O’Haver and son Mike and Danny McCuren of Indianapolis spent the weekend holiday with Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Ensor of Clinton Falls and Mrs. Russell O’Haver

of Morton.

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Snodgrass and family were Sunday evening

The only order of business left was the release of a declaration calling for “strengthening peace and security in Eur-

ope,” which was expected to be j was formed, issued later today.

Sarah Scott, Thomas and Mary Marshall, William Sharp, S. N. and Amanda Hubbard, Hardin and Catherine Tincher, Richard

and Jane Sullivan.

At that time Indiana was 50 years old and the Civil War had just ended. This section of the county had been settled since the 1830 s by pioneers from North Carolina. The new Pennsylvania Railroad had been built and the town of Amo was eight years old when the church

The seven Warsaw Pact nations, holding their first summit meeting in 18 months, issued a 3,000-word declaration Thursday bitterly denouncing American “aggression” in Viet i Nam and promising to send

captured U. S. pilots admitting, “volunteers" to fight U.S. sold-

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mitchell and Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Clodfelter and family. Mrs. Jake Martin is very uncomfortable from a severe case of poison ivy. Sunday afternoon visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Goode were Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Hurst and daughter, Carolyn of Mt. Meridian and their grandson Russ Allen McCammack of Muncie. Mrs. Louise Kelly and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Goode were Monday afternoon callers. Supper guests Sunday evening of Mr. and Mrs. David Clodfelter and family were Mr. and Mrs. Willard Clodfelter, Mr. and Mra. Lyle Clodfelter and children and Mr. and Mrs. Don Clodfelter and family. Mra. Jesa Vermillion visited her mother, Mra. Roscoe White laat Wednesday. Mra. Earley Jackaon and daughter Darlene, called on Mra. White Monday afternoon. . Barbara Wichmann spent Saturday and Sunday night with her grandmother, Mrs. Dewey Stultz, Michael Stultz, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Stultz stayed with his grandmother while his parents were boating Sunday and Monday afternoon at Lake Raccoon. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Whitlock were Sunday evening callers of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Thompson. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Clodfelter were Sunday evening callers of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Yochum

to bombing “schools, hospitals, churches and innocent people" today and said angry mobs de-

manded their deaths.

Communist news agency dispatches also told how "scores” of American prisoners were paraded through the streets of Hanoi while “a human sea” surged forward and shook fists at “the peace disturbers and

child killers.”

iers there them.

if Hanoi asked for

Despite the severe tone of the statement, diplomatic sources in this Romanian capital said the declaration contained nothing that has not been said before or promised by individual Communist nations in the past. In Washington, the declaration appeared to be regarded in

The report said the crowd official quarters as primarily demanded that the government propaganda, although the ad“try and punish the pirates” | ministration was not ready to and cried out for their execu- commit itself on the record,

tion.

In Washington, the U. S. State Department accused North Viet Nam of violating the Geneva prisoner of war convention by subjecting the American prisoners to such humiliation. Department press officer Marshall Wright indicated the United States would protest through the International Red

Cross.

The Communist news agency broadcast two statements attributed to Air Force Capt. David D. Hatcher, 32, of California and Cmdr. James Mulligan, 40, of Massachusetts, expressing

Black Supremacy Bad As White GARY Ind. UPI—Dr. Martin Luther King says “black supremacy is as evil as white su-

premacy.”

King made the statement Thursday as he spoke to about 350 persons, many of them members of the clergy in this area, at a Baptist church. He urged attendance at Sunday's "Freedom Rally” he has called in Chicago’s Soldier Field. “There is a lot of talk around

their regrets for taking part in now saying, in a misguided the bombings and assuring the: sense, that the Negro must North Vietnamese people they solve his problem by himself,"

FHA Hikes Interest Rates INDIANAPOLIS UPI — The Farmers Home Administration hiked the interest rate on a Hoosier utility and required a revised order from the Indiana Public Service Commission. And-Tro, Inc., had made agreements to borrow $255,000 from the federal governmental agency to build a water distribution system in Perry (,ounty. However, the PSC Thursday issued an order revising its previous order to increase the interest rate from 4.5 per cent to 5 per cent

hi GISTFRED NURSES

Your training is urgently needed by the U.S. Army Nurse Corps

items or interest are invited ti participate. Sunday, July 17, is Homecom' ing Day. Sunday School will bi at 9:00, worship at 10:00. A basket dinner will begin a’ 12:30 in the Community Build ing and a historical pagean' will be presented at 1:30 Friends of the church, formei members and pastors will be attending. The eldest member of thi church is Billy McCammack who celebrated his 94th birthday in May. He still attends aj he has opportunity. Mary Ells Phillips of Danville is another members who is past 90 and who attended until recently.

AIR CONDITIONED

OPEN FRI., SAT., SUN.

TheS/aygir/s wit! slay you!

DEAN MARTIN as MATT HELM _ Thr Silencers

yaw Anwy *»tnjil.r loafvj

will win the war. towns were given.

No home-

“Since my capture, I have realized that the war which is waged by the United States government is dirty and bad,” Hatcher was quoted as saying. “. . . . U. S. aircraft have bombed . . . various targets in

King said. “I don't believe that. There must be an empathy with whites who have escaped the

ghetto.”

King has opposed the current calls for "black power” in the civil rights movement. “We emphasize non-violence and creative channel," he said. “Black supremacy is as evil as

PUTNAM COUNTY PLAYHOUSE Present* "SEE HOW THEY RUN" July 1, 2, 8, 9 > 8:00 p.m. Speech Hall — DePauw Admission: 75c and $1.25 Tickets available at Coan's Pharmacy and Prevo's Store

and Mrs. Daisy Alexander. I North Viet Nam, resulting in j white supremacy.” Dottie Lou Janson returned to; damage to dams, dykes, schools,! King made an obvious refer-

callers of Mr. and Mrs. Vern her home at Rockford, 111. Sun-1 hospitals, churches and inno- ence to the Rev. Joseph H.

Sigler. Mrs. Kenneth Nelson

day after spending two weeks ! cent people. I have to be re- Jackson, head of the five-mil-

and daughter were callers last her grandparents, Mr. and sponsible for these crimes also, lion member National Baptist; TATzb/ln Acs^otr i *|

Convention, although not men-!

Wednesday.

Mr. and Mrs. Harold

Barker

Mrs. Wayne Bettis.

Mr. and Mrs. James Wagner

“I was one of the United

tioning him by name. Jackson

with their ladders, brushes and | e< ^ ^ er with gifts, and advice on

paint, to paint her house. The j baseball.

women and children came and Nancy, pig-tails and all, is a brought a pitch-in-dinner for all, P itcher in her own right. She which they all enjoyed in the i ^ as been the only girl on the back yard. Nadene and her Morristown (NJ ;> small fry

family feels like they can never 1 lea ^ ue ’ an achievement that — repay the members of Antioch ‘ prompted Life ma ^ azine to do O^r^stswere Mr. and Mrs.^H^ a nd family.

a picture series on her “back in | Robert C. King of Greencastle.

all enjoyed watching the

celebrated their wedding anni- and ch ii dren enjoved boating at States pilots who carried out has cr iti C ized King's non-violent

versary Sunday, July 3rd having Lake Ra c Coon during the week ' "" "

dinner at Hollandsburg. end holidays.

Mr. and Mrs. Rex Call were Marlyn O Hair who is employ-1 Monday evening supper guests ed in 1^^0113 spent the of Mr. and Mrs. Phil King and; holiday we ekend with her' daughter Lisa of Greencastle. ; parents Mr and Mrs . Gale

the criminal order of our gov- civil rights doctrine, ernment and bombed North “i’ni not going to talk against Viet Nam. that preacher,” he said, “be-

cause I am for non-violence.”

Church for all they have done for her since the sickness and death of her husband, Robert

Burks.

Sunday evening callers at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Heber were Mrs. Nadene Burks children, Patty, Barbara, and Robbie, Mr. and Mrs. James

1963 when I was just a kid.' 1

Bombers Return To Hanoi

They

fireworks.

Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Clodfelter of Detroit, Mich spent the weekend holidays at their cabin near Clinton Falls. Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Anderson were Air. and Airs. Harold Anderson

SAIGON UPI—Return raids

Clark, Air. and Airs. Bill Perry on North Viet Nam’s largest oil and Airs. Naomi Hayworth, and daughters and Airs. Vivian depot on the outskirts of Hai-; Miss Katherine Harbison and Hutchison and sons of Alanhat- phong Thursday dealt a “dev- Mrs. Clarence Humphrey visited tan Road. astating blow” to the Commu- M rs . Earl Alitchell of Indian-

nist war machine by knocking a p 0 ij s i as t Tuesday afternoon. Air. and Mrs. Bill Perry and ou t pumping stations that daughters spent Sunday at La- handle 95 per cent of all petrol-

eum imports, U.S. officials said

today.

A military spokesman said Navy jets also knocked out three North Vietnamese patrol boats and successfully evaded air-to-air missiles fired at them

Air. and Airs. Dennis Raymer by Soviet -designed AUG 21s, and family spent Saturday R uss * a s niost advanced fighter-

afternoon in Indianapolis visit- interceptor.

Injured Woman

Gives Birth

1 INDIANAPOLIS UPI — Airs, j Alarvin Thompson, 22, Akron, | Ind., was reported in critical I condition Thursday night, after she was involved in an auto-

Cycling is America's leading In 1965, more than 41,400 participating sport, with near- wells were drilled in the United ly 60 million taking part each States in search of oil and gas year, says the Athletic Insti- —according to the American tute in Chicago. : Petroleum Institute.

MEADOWBROOK DRIVE IN THEATRE lnt*r U.S 36 l Slot* Read 43 Tonight and Saturday Don Knotts, Jean StaUy THE GHOST AND MR. CHICKEN Cameron Mitchell, Eva Bartek BLOOD AND BLACK LACE (Color) SUN. THRU WED. Lana Turner, John Forsythe MADAME X (Color) Wendell Corey, Barbara Beuchet AGENT FOR H.A.R.M. (Color)

GREENCASTLE DRIVE-IN (Formerly Midway) Jet 40 t 43 FRIDAY SAT-SUN.-MON.-TUES. ADMISSION $1.00

Frankie

AND

Johnny

W s - AND

love every

minute

of it!

Johnny

Flvk K ELV1S PRESLEY

10 . DONIM'DOiiSlAJ

Johnny

COLOR

Plus

Frank Sinatra — Deborah Karr Dean Martin in MARRIAGE ON THE ROCKS

fayette Park.

Airs. Alary Head and Alichael Brown of Brazil called on Air. and Airs. A. P. Stoner and Mr. and Airs. Ernest Heber Alonday

afternoon.

Sandi Holland is now employ-

ed as a secretary in the survey-

ors office in Greencastle.

Sunday guests of Air. and turned over four times before Airs. Roscoe Stevens and daugh- coming to rest in a field .

She was taken to Tipton Corn-

mobile accident and gave birth to a son two hours later. Airs. Thompson, who was more than eight months pregnant, lost control of her car on U. S. 31 north of Tipton at 10:10 p. m. Wednesday night and it

ing relatives.

Air. and Airs. Don Fox of Greencastle and Air. and Mrs. Russell Payne of Limedale called on Air. and Airs. Don Heber Sunday afternoon. Air. and Mrs. Charles Carman and family and Airs. Francis Nelson of Greencastle. called on

Mr. and Airs. Joy

Sunday evening.

Air. and Airs. Charles Fidler and grandsons from Mishawaka, called on Air. and Airs. Ernest

The Navy flew a total of 77 missions against North Viet Nam Thursday, the officials said, and lost only tw r o planes despite Communist claims that

six were downed.

An F105 Thunderchief was shot d o w r n by conventional ground fire about 90 miles northwest of Hanoi and the

Cummings pilot was listed as missing, and

A4 Skyhawk pilot, Lt. Cmdr. William J. Isenhour of Lemore, Calif., safely ejected over the South China Sea and was Tes-

ter Judy w r ere Air. and Airs. Clarence Cummings and daughter of Eminence, Air. and Airs. Lincoln Lively of Jamestowm and Mr. and Airs. Robert Evans

of Lebanon.

Mr. and Airs. Earley Jackson and family entertained with a carry-in dinner on Sunday for the following people, Mr. and Mrs. David Clodfelter and family, Air. and Airs. Lee Martin and children, Airs. Floyd Bales, Air. and Airs. Brad Taylor and sons of Howell. Alich., and Airs. Tay-

lor’s mother. Airs. Russick of listed

Watertown, South Dakota., Mr. and Airs. Hubert McGaughey and family and Air. and Mrs. Joe

Stultz and sons.

Sunday dinner guests of Air.

munity Hospital and then transferred to Indianapolis Alethodist Hospital, where she gave birth to a son at 12:52 a. m. The child was delivered by Caesarian section and is reported doing well. Mrs. Thompson was being kept under intensive care suffering from severe head injuries. A 2-year-old son, Aliles, who was with her when the car rolled over, was taken to How ard , Community Hospital with multiple minor injuries. He is

in fair condition.

BAIRE'S LAKE FISHING--$1.25 PICNIC-$1. PER CAR OVERNIGHT CAMPING--$1.50 L*cat*4 IS niUi Wtst *f Danvill* 4 miles Southeast of Bainbridg* 4 miles North af Fillmore

Maplecroft Theatre R.R I, Clayton FRI. & SAT. James Garner—Sidney Pettier DUEL AT DIABLO AND Jean Crawford I SAW WHAT YOU DID

GREEN BERET ACRES One mile east of Bainbridge Well stocked lake . . . fishing, completely modern cottages . . rent for one week or just for the weekend . . . picnic, camping and trailer facilities. "Stocked with bass, bluegill and crappie." We have fish tagged with number—catch one and you will receive ten times the number in cash. Route 1, Bainbridge. For reservations call 5223378.

Heber Alonday evening.

|CUed.

land Airs. Leland Algood were^hive.

Bees have a built-in protractor that enables them to fly in a fixed direction relative to the sun’s position as seen from the

SPORTSMEN’S HEADQUARTERS Cunot oh Cataract Lake For evenings of entertainment and relaxation SPECIALTIES T-Bone Steaks and Channel Catfish Dinners ON WEDNESDAY Enjoy the Music of Vey Carpenter at the Organ FRIDAY The Sportsmans Trio, Gene Jack and Jim Country and Western Music 8 to 1 a.m. SATURDAY Vey Carpenters Trio — John, Gana, and Vay Enjoy Music of all Kinds 9 to 2 a.m. NO DANCING

EDGEWOOD LAKE

Swim • Camp •

Private Membership Club CEC & FRAN NICHOLS

2V2 Miles East of Greencastle on St. Rd. 240

& Vs Mile South at Our Sign.

Fish

S0CK-H0P

PRIZES

Music by The “Sandals” AT THE ARMORY 7:30 SATURDAY NIGHT Dance Contest ADMISSION $1.00