The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 13 July 1966 — Page 2

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1 The Dally Sannar, Oraancastla, Indiana Wadnaaday, July 13, 1966 THE DAILY BANNER and- - Herald Consolidated "It Wavas For All" Buslnats Phonas: OL 3-5151 — OL 3-5152 Elizabath Raridan Estata, Publishar PwhBilnd •vary avaniny axcapt Sunday and holidays. Entarad In tha Post Offko ot Grooncostlo, Indiana, as socond doss mail mattor undor Act of March 7, 1070. Unitod Pross Intamational laaso wiro sorvico; Mam bar Inland Daly Pross AsMaation; Hoosior Stoto Pross Association. AH aasolidtod artidsc, manuscripts, lottors and pictvros sent to Tho Daily loaaor ora soot at ownar's risk, and Iho Daly lannor ropudiotos any liability or rosponsihlity for thoir solo custody or return. Subscription Prices of Tho Daily lannor offoctivo March 14, 1964: In Putnam County—1 yoar $10.00—0 months $5.50—3 months $3.00; Indiana other than Putnam County—1 yoar $12.00—4 months $7.00—3 months $4.00; Ousido Indiana—1 yoar $10.00—0 manlks $9.00—3 months $0.00. ly Carrier 40c por wash, sinplo copy 10c AO Mai subscriptions payable in advance.

OBITUARIES

Miss Cora Brown Funeral Thursday Miss Cora Brown, 88, Coatesville, died Tuesday at the Eventide Rent Home in Greencastle. She was born May 20, 1876, the daughter of Samuel and Sarah Jana Brown. Miss Brown had made her home with her brother, Frank for the past several years, prior to entering the Rest Home. She was a member of the Coatesville Methodist Church and the Coatasville Library Club. Survivors are: tha brother, Frank Brown; one niece, Frances Setterblade, Connecticut and one nephew, Waldo Brown. Funeral services will be held Thursday at the Weaver Funeral Home in Coatesvllle at 2:00 p. m.

Many Guests At Christian Home Tha Misses Agnes and Edith Spencer of Speedway, Indiana were Sunday dinner guests of Miss Winona Welch at the Greencastle Christian Home. Miss Agnes Spencer teaches Latin and English at Speedway High School, and her sister Edith Is the State and National leader for Job’s Daughters. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Rowe of Johnstown, Pa. were recent guests of Mrs. Roy ling. Rev. and Mrs, R. Aim of Marsta, Sweden were guests

last week of Rev. and Mrs. John Bowden. Recent guests of Mrs. Adda Hutcheson, Mrs. May Hammond and Mrs. Jane Hays, have been Mrs. R. H. VanSant, Mrs. Milton Shepherd and Dr. R. O. Koehler of St. Petersburg, Florida, Mr. and Mrs. Harold R. Milburn of Indianapolis, and Miss Ethel B. Kellar of Fayetteville, Ark. Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Wasson of Lowell, Indiana, F. H. Maier of Muncie and Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur E. Newlin of Mooresville have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Johnson. Mrs. Fred Gossett of Hollywood, Florida, is visiting her brother, Dr. and Mrs. Frank G. Helme. Weekend guests of Dr. and Mrs. Helme were Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Weinland, and sons Jack and Jeffrey of Columbus, Ohio. Mrs. Irwin H. Cutler and her daughter of Louisville, Ky., recently visited her mother, Mrs. Frank Thomas. Other guests of Mrs. Thomas have been Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Jacobs, with Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Willcox of Jeffersonville, and Mrs. C. Earl Littell of New Haven, Connect! cut. Mr. and Mrs. Ollie Riffey of Lafayette recently visited her sister, Mrs. Sadie Hawkins. Also visiting Mrs. Hawkins were her brother and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Johnson of Lombard, Illinois.

Penny Scramble DECATUR, Ind. UPI—There was to be a big scramble for pennies here today. As a promotion, Decatur merchants are scattering 10,000 pennies in sawdust on the sidewalks of the business district for lucky youngsters who can find them.

Personal And Local News Morris A. Mason returned yesterday from Cincinnati, Ohio, where he had been visiting the last ten days. Miss Beatrice Appel of Crawfordsville is visiting her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Mason 111 N. College Ave. The Dickey reunion will be held Sunday, July 17, at Robe Ann Park in Greencastle. Friends and relatives are invited. There will be a meeting of the women of the Moose tonight at 8:00 p.m. at the Moose Home. There will be initiation of candidates. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Crousore have returned home from a vacation in Fort Wayne, where they visited their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Clair Williams and family. Jimmy C. Combs, 20, of 1023 South Indiana Street, was arrested at 6:40 Tuesday evening by City Officer Larry Rogers at Liberty and Indiana Streets. Combs was charged with having no operator’s license. Mr. and Mrs. Gareld E. Stone entertained Sunday dinner for their son, Marine Private Gary A. Stone, who has just completed 10 weeks training at San Diego and Camp Pendleton, Cal. Gary left the first of the week for Camp LeJeune, North Carolina for jungle training. The Union Valley Church Sunday School will hold a picnic at Robe Ann Park Sunday. There will be Sunday School and church services at the usual time Sunday morning. Bring well filled baskets and service for own family. There will be a service and special singing at 3:30 p. m. with no service Sunday night. Miss Nancy Mann, of Lansing, HI., has been awarded a Germon Government Grant for the academic year 1966-67. She will study organ in Hamburg, Germany under Charles Letestu. Miss Mann is a 1966 graduate with high distinction of the DePauw University School of Music, majoring in organ and church music with Arthur Carkeek.

Closed for a combined vacation and reinstallation of more modern methods and equipment. Coin-op. laundry and do it yourself dry cleaning open as usual. White Cleaners.

tne Rural Youth will be neid at the Fairgrounds on Monday night, August 8, at 7:30 p. m. A nominating committee will be appointed to select new officers for the coming year.

Mr. and Mrs. Noble Costin wish to announce the engagement of their daughter, Wanda Jean, to James C. Chadd, son of Monte Chadd and the late Mrs. Dorothy Chadd of 711 So. Main Street, Greencastle. The young couple are 1966 graduates of Greencastle Senior High School. No wedding date has been set.

County Hospital Dismissed Tuesday: Rosemary Fenwick, Cloverdale Mamie Sparks, Gosport Gilbert Knetzer, Coatesville Stella Miller, Greencastle Dorothy Shoptaugh, Greencastle

In Memory

In loving remembrance of our sister, Zella Gobel, who passed away July 13, 1962. Mrs. Imo Staley and family, Mrs. Esther Fidler and family

DPU Grad Dies In Plane Crash LAS VEGAS, Nev. UPI — Three persons, including an independent geologist from Indiana, were killed Tuesday when a private plane crashed on a charter flight from Las Vegas to Denver. The Hoosier victim was John W. Organ, 29, Sullivan, Ind. Also killed were the pilot and co-pilot of the 15-passenger plane. Authorities said Organ was the only passenger on the plane on its flight to Denver to pick up eight coal company representatives for a return trip to Nevada. Organ was a former geologist with the Peabody Coal Co. of St. Louis. His father, John Organ of Sullivan, also is a geologist for Peabody. The son, known as Jack, was married and the father of three children. He was a graduate of

DePauw University at Green- will range from the 80a to the

caatle, Ind.

90s instead of the 90s to the

100s.

Storms, Heat Wave In State By Unitod Pross International Severe thunderstorms hit Indiana late Tuesday for the fourth day in a row at the peak of a stifling heat wave which recorded a top 1966 temperature of 102 in the state and rolled into its 23rd day today. Two men were killed as a result of lightning bolts, near Mishawaka and Tell City, and a child drowned in a swimming pond. The heat produced a record one-hour electricity consumption for Indiana’s largest power utility Tuesday afternoon while temperatures were mounting to the season’s highest levels. A reading of 102 at Evansville was the warmest temperature recorded in Indiana in more than two years. A high of 99 at Indianapolis was the hottest since 1954 in the Hoosier capital. The mercury was expected to hit 100 or better over the southern half of tiie state again this afternoon, but forecasters indicated a slight break in the heat was due Thursday when highs

Negroes Ignore Appeal By King CHICAGO UPI—Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., faced one of his toughest challenges today— racial violence in hot Chicago where he had tried to bring peace. For the first time in his life, King went into the streets of a Northern city and implored Negro youths Tuesday night to stop an outbreak of vandalism, looting and the throwing of Molotov cocktails. He failed. While King, leader of the non-violSnt wing Of the civil rights movement, implored police to turn arrested teenagers loose, other youths were tossing bricks and smashing windows outside headquarters. When he gathered young rebels in the Shiloh Baptist Church, pleading for peace, some walked out. Some scoffed at the Nobel Prize winner. Twenty-tnree persons were arrested. Five person s—two youths and three policemen— were injured. A police paddy-

wagon was burned to a cinder by a gasoline bomb. For King, it was tense as for the 300 policemen summoned to put down the uproar. Indiana Traffic Tell Now 783 5 0y Unitod Pros* International Indiana’s 1966 traffic fatalities toU stood at 783 today compared with 728 a year ago. Cinda Watt, 9, Indianapolis, was killed Tuesday when she was hit by a taxicab driven by Everett Hamilton, 39, Indianapolis. Hamilton told police the child stepped off a curb into the path of the cab in the same neighborhood where a boy was killed by a car last Friday. A youth found dead beside his wrecked motorcycle in- a 40foot ravine along a winding blacktop road near Lafayette Tuesday was identified later in the day as Richard T. McLaughlin, 17, Lafayette.

RECTOR FUNERAL HOME PHONO Ot 3-4S10 AMOULANCi SiOVICI

Marriage License Duane Allen Collier, U. 8. Marines, Cloverdale, and Jacquelyn Jean Cassady, at home, Cloverdale.

CLEARANCE AT TROVER'S

You Must Come Early For Best Selection!

Sorry, No Exchanges or Refunds on Sale Merchandise! . j

i i

ALL SUMMER JEWELRY PRICED 1/ AT 72

STRAW A WHITE PURSES VALUES TO 3.00 1.97

LADIES LACE BRAS VALUES TO 4.00 2.77

LADIES FULL SLIPS VALUES TO 5.00 3.77

LADIES FULL SLIPS VALUES TO 6.00 3.97

LADIES NYLON PANTIES VALUES TO 1.00 77c

LADIES SUMMER DRESSES VALUES TO 1S.00 12.77

LADIES SUMMER DRESSES VALUES TO 12.00 8.77

CO-ORDINATED SPORTSWEAR SAVE ^

LADIES PANTY GIRDLE VALUES T6 10.00 7.77

LADIES HALF SLIPS , VALUES TO 3.00 1.97

LADIES HALF SLIPS VALUES TO 4.00 2.77

LADIES SUAAMER SKIRTS VALUES TO 7.00 4.77

LADIES SUMMER SKIRTS VALUES TO 10.00 7.77

ALL WEATHER COATS VALUES TO 2S.00 16.77

TREMENDOUS SAVINGS AT TNOYER’S

Visits Telephone Co: On Monday night, July 11,

the Young Adult Rural Youth, under the direction of President Jack McCullough, visited the Telephone Company of Greencastle. They were given an educational and enjoyable tour of the whole telephone company

by its manager, J. R. Gaboon. In the tour, which lasted an

hour and a half, the ten members were shown how the telephone system works and the

many departments involved.

The next regular meeting of

^yw JULY FASHION Clearance

4^ |N OIIINCASnS A UNCI 1900

SAVE NOW ON LADIES AND CHILDREN’S SUMMER APPAREL AND ACCESSORIES...

there's something new in town...now you can charge it

with tire

SCS CHARGE PLAN

All you do is fill out an SCS form, SHOPPERS CHARGE SERVICE, wait till you receive your SCS credit card and then when you buy just tell the sales person to... “Charge-lt.” (And by the way - there’s no service charge up to 30, 60, and 90 days with SCS.) You can get an SCS application form from these merchants:

MASON’S JEWELERS 18 W. Washington St. SUTHERLIN’S TV & APPLIANCES 12 N. Jackson Straat TROVER’S "For Smart Feminlna Fashions" THE BOOTERY "Open All Day On Wednesday* MOORE’S SHOE STORE 16 N. Jackson Street

MAC’S INC. "On the south side of the square" WEBER BIKE & TOY STORE 14 W. Washington St. SHONKWILER JEWELERS 13 S. Indiana St. TODD’S ACE HARDWARE 20 N. Jackson Street DONELSON’S PHARMACY 8 N. Jackson Street