The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 7 September 1966 — Page 2

The Dafly Banner, Greencastle, Indiana Wednesday, September 7, 1966

THE DAILY BANNER

and Herald Consolidated

"It Waves For All" Business Phones: OL 3-5151 — OL 3-5152 Elizabeth Rariden Estate, Publisher Published every evening except Sunday and holidays at 24-26 South Jackson Street, Greencastle, Indiana. 46135. Entered in the Pest Office at Greencastle, Indiana, as second class maii matter under Act of March 7, 187S. United Press International loase wiro service; Member Inland Daily Press Association; Hoosier State Press Association. All unsolicited articles, manuscripts, letters and pictures sent to The Daily Banner are sent at owner's risk, and The Daily Banner repudiates any liability or responsibility for their safe custody or return. By carrier 40c per week, single copy 10c. Subscription pricos of The Daily Banner effective March 14, 1966; In Putnam County—1 year $10.00—6 months $5.50—3 months $3.0C; Indiana other than Putnam County—1 year $12.00—6 months $7.00—3 months $4.00;-Outside Indiana—1 year $16.00—6 months $9.00—3 months $6.00. All mail subscriptions payable in advance.

Bible Thought For Today

Obituaries

Putnam Folks Meet In Florida

Cowan Services Set For Friday

William P. Cowan, 74, who resided at 415 East Washington Street, passed away unexpectedly early this morning in the Putnam County Hospital where he had been admitted Monday.

Those spending the winter in Florida held their annual picnic at the park Monday. There were several families absent this year. Those present were:

Mr. Cowan was bora October 26, 1891 in Pulaski County, the son of Elijah Simeon and Emma Bell Cowan.

•He was a member of the Presbyterian Church of this city.

Mr. and Mrs. Claude Newgent; Mr. and Mrs. Russell Scobee; Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Nichols; Mr. and Mrs. Earl Alexander; Mr. and Mrs. Merle Livinghouse; Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Grimes; Mr. and Mrs. Glen Michael; Mrs. Ethel Snider; Mr. and Mrs. Jake Martin; Mr. and Mrs. Wm. A. Patterson; Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Stultz; Mr. Ira Nichols; Mr. W. T. Ramsey; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Carrington; Mr. and Mrs. Harley Smith.

Survivors are; his wife, Esther; four daughters, Mrs. Marguerite Neumann, Mrs. Virginia Phillips and Mrs. Maxine Monnett, Greencastle, and Mrs. Ruby Grimes, Indianapolis; one brother, Sam and one sister, Eula Allen, both of Lexington, Ky.; ten grandchildren - and twenty three great-grandchildren.

Shopping Guide

Funeral services will be held Friday at 2:00 p. m. at the Rector Funeral Home, with interment in Forest Hill Ceme1 tery.

WASHINGTON UPI — The food picture for weekend buying brightens with the news of more produce, broilers-fryers, and beef and pork for the nation’s markets. Turkeys are nationally plentiful.

When I thought to know this, it was too painful for me; until I went into the sanctuary of God; then understood I their end.—Psalm 73:16, 17. Let us go into the house of the Lord and to His Word to resolve our doubts and troubles.

Mt. Meridian Communltyf Club meets September 14, 1:30 p. m. at the home of Mrs. Wilfred Tincher.

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kirkwood and daughter Sally of Hammond visited Mrs. Ross Tennis Labor Day.

Personal And

Local News

Friends may call at the funeral home after 2:00 p. m. Thursday.

Funeral Friday

Funeral services for Mrs. Buelah Watson, Bainbridge will be held Friday at 2:00 p. m. at • the Bainbridga Christian I Church, with interment In Bainbridge Cemetery. * Friends may call at the Hop-kins-Walton Funeral Home In Bainbridge.

f

County Hospital

Dismissed Tuesday: William Crabtree, Quincy Joe Miller, Greencastle Jesse Ader, Greencastle Mary Jeffries, Greencastle Agnes Stewart, Greencastle Mrs. Eugene Sawyer and daughter, Greencastle Mrs. Arthur Evens and daughter, Greencastle Births: Mr. and Mrs. Roger Williams, Jamestown, Route 2, a boy, Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Levine, 421 Anderson, a boy, today.

In vegetables, carrots have the spotlight this week, followed by green peppers, cucumbers, lettuce, potatoes and radishes.

In good supply among fruits are grapes, pears, melons and bananas. Many areas report cantaloupe still in abundance.

Nationally, fish sticks and portions, and canned tuna are the all around plentifuls in the fish department. Add them to the weekend shopping list.

Man Drowns

CAMBRIDGE CITY, UPI — Clyde P. Miller, 63, Dublin, operator of a sewer cleaning service, drowned Tuesday after he apparently was overcome by sewer gas while working in a well at a farm near here.

Meeting V.F.W. Thursday evening, 8 o’clock. Troop 43 Boy Scouts will meet Wednesday at 7:00 p.m. at Gobin Church. Mrs. Harry Allen has returned home after visiting friends and relatives in Sullivan, Farmersburg and Shelbum. Mrs. Estella Shonkwiler has been released from the Sunset Manor Nursing Home. Her home address is 504 S. Walnut St. Brazil, Indiana. DeMolay meeting Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Masonic Temple. There will be election of officers. All members please attend. The Needlecraft Club meeting has been changed from September 16th to September 30th. Members please note change of meeting date. Mr. and Mrs. John Ottinger and Mrs. Edith Neptune, of Lebanon, were Sunday visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Omer Beck. Mrs. Don Cranston has returned to her home in Wheaton, Illinois, after spending the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Omer Beck. Mrs. Gertie Sims will celebrate her 80th birthday, Sunday September 11th. She is a patient at the Eventide Nursing Home in Greencastle. She would enjoy receiving cards from friends and relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Earle Talley and son, David, spent the Labor Day weekend visiting relatives in Greencastle. Mrs. Talley is stationed at Glenview Naval Air Base, Glenview, HI. The DePauw Women’s Club picnic will be held Friday at 6 p. m. in Robe-Ann Park. Please bring a covered dish and table service. In case of rain the picnic will be held in Gobin Church basement. At the State Fair Mary Zeller received a first place on her picture in 4-H; also out of over 1200 pictures in the open class hers was one of 300 selected to be displayed in the Woman’s Building.

Group 7 of First Christian Church will meet Thursday at 7:30 p. m. with Mrs. John Whitaker.

The Afternoon Circle of the Presbyterian Church will meet with Mrs. Marie Porter at 2 p. m. Thursday.

The regular meeting of Indianola Council No. 472 will be held Thursday Sept. 8th at 7:30 p. m. in the Odd Fellows HalL

Their first Cinema is a hilarious comedy that should amuse the young and old. One of the funniest sequences is a drag strip car called the Dragula that moves from zero tc 150 miles an hour in a matter of seconds. The green complexion of the main characters in technicolor will keep you laughing through the whole show. For laughs and fun see the show “Munsters Go Home.”

Local AAUW Plans

To Raise Funds

Paul Rossok, Greencastle R. 4, was the winner of the portable Television set given away by the Greencastle Little League.

ORDINATION SERVICE AT CLINTON FALLS CHURCH

Post Sentries At Texas Capitol

AUSTIN, Tex. UPI—Marchers who walked from the Rio Grande Valley to Austin to ask for higher farm pay promised Tuesday tc keep two sentries at the State Capitol until they get it. Then the marchers headed back to the valley—this time in a bus. Some 10,000 marchers and sympathizers rallied in Austin Labor Day on the approaches to the state Capitol and in an Austin park. The march began July 4. The group will pay those standing vigil $1.25 an hour— the goal of the march.

The Clinton Falls Church is planning special services for this Sunday, September 11. Sunday School begins at 10:00 o’clock. Morning Worship at 10:45, and at noon a basket dinner will be served. At 1:30, the pastor, Rev. Riffle C. Howard, will be ordained into the Christian ministry by Rev. John R. Servies, a well known Christian Disciples minister from Crawfordsville.

Back to work, ready and willing to serve you at our best. White Cleamers.

Mr. and Mrs. James Goodin and Mr. and Mrs. L. R. McCabe have been vacationing in Canada, Mackinac Island and Mackinaw City. Mrs. Mary Bittles has returned from a summer vacation which she enjoyed in California. Her son, James Jr., lives in Claremont, California. Frances Nelson of Greencastle; Mr. and Mrs. Dale Nelson and daughter of Marion, spent Labor Day weekend visiting friends in Fulton, Missouri. Ribbon and Point show at the Bainbridge Saddle Club grounds, 3% miles west of Brick Chapel, Sunday, September 11, starting at 10:30. Everyone welcome. Members of the Brick Chapel Home Demonstration Club will meet at the home of Mrs. Francis Lane, at 9:30 a. m. September 13, to go to the home of Mrs. Loveless in Paris, Illinois. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Harper and family of Bowling Green, Ohio, were weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. William Mathew and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Jones and son Steve of Putnamville. Mrs. Florence Campbell has assumed her duties at Local Finance Loans, after having had her vacation. Her grandson, Toni has spent most of his vacation with her. His home is at Newport. The Evening Circle of the Presbyterian Church will meet Thursday at 6:30 p. m. for a pitch-in dinner at the home of Mrs. Geraldine Thomas. Following the dinner, Dr. James Elrod will present the program “Religion And Drama.’ Mrs. Rose Elder and sons of Brentwood, Missouri, visited Misses Barbara and Ann Gemeth recently. Also Pat Elder and his three sons from Kirkwood, Mo., flew here Sunday and the group enjoyed a picnic dinner at Robe Ann Park, Labor Day.

Pvt. Max Ray Walker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Marion R. Walker formerly of Greencastle, now residing in Indianapolis. After one year in Purdue he is now with the Army Engineers in Germany after taking his basic at Fort Knox, Ky., and advance training in Fort Leonard Wood, Mo. He will celebrate his 20th birthday in Karlshule, Germany, on Oct. 1st. His address is Pvt. Max Ray Walker, RA 16 - 845 - 256, Co. B. 78th Engr. Bn. APO New York, Ny., 09164.

Voncastle Presents

TV Family Picture

The Fellowship Program of the American Association of University Women advances education of women, widens fields of learning and raises the standard of scholarship. In 1965-66 A.A.U.W. exceeded its goal of half a million dollars for fellowships. A fellowship is a sum of money awarded for advanced study or research for an academic year or longer. It is to be distinguished from a “scholarship” which is an award for undergraduate study; and also from a “grant” which is an award for a short term project or some special project such as travel or publication. The A.A.U.W. awards only fellowships.

Hugh Henry, OL 3-3853, Mr*. Joe McCord, OL 3-6980, or Mrs. Herald Ross, OL 3-9085.

The Voncastle Theatre will have a favorite American TV family in their first picture “Munster Go Home” starting Friday, Sept. 9 through the 10.

The Greencastle Branch of A.A.U.W. will raise its contribution to fellowships in November by holding a sale of used books, music and records. Anyone wishing to contribute to this project may call Mrs.

Reverend Howard, who has served Churches in western Indiana for many years, began his early ministry as Chaplain of the Old Log Church at Turkey Run for four years. Two of his rural churches won state honors for rural church Improvement. His work has always been with town and country churches, ex1 cept for the years he lived in | Attica. While there, he was President of the Attica Ministerial Association. Before coming to Clinton Falls a year ago he lived in Center Point and served four churches there for three years.

LOCAL CHIROPRACTOR

DR. D. H. AUSTIN

’WILL CONTINUE THIS FALL ON THE TEACHING STAFF AT THE LINCOLN CHIROPRACTIC COLLEGE, INDIANAPOLIS. HE WILL ALSO ACT IN THE CAPACITY OF CLINIC DIRECTOR AT THE OUTPATIENT CLINIC. DUE TO THE ABOVE SCHEDULE, DR. AUSTIN WILL HAVE NEW OFFICE HOURS STARTING SEPT. 12TH. Hours are to be the following:

Mon. 1:30 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. Wed. 1:30 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. Fri. 1:30 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. Sat. 8:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Closed Tuesdays & Thursdays Phone OL 3-3024

“Fair On The Square” Specials

Plenty of warmth, plus lots of fashion with a sweater from Mac's.

Assorted colors and styles for the campus minded.

I j* £

v***.rf

MAC'S Inc

ON THE SQUARE FOR MEN'S WEAR

Reverend Howard, who resides north of Bellmore, would be glad for you to be in this special service with him.

OPEN ALL DAY

SATURDAY, SEPT. 10TH AMERICAN LEGION

SPECIAL PARTY

Entertainment and Refreshments 12:00 Naan to 6:00 P.M. Guests Invited.

DANCE

10:00 P.M. TO 1:00 A.M. MUSIC BY SYLVIA SIMPSON TRIO FEATURING DENNY DUTTON ON THE DRUMS

WEDNESDAY

9 to 5 FOR WINTER MONTHS

IN GREENCASTLE

SINCE 1900

Good ole Fashioned

>v

at DONELSON'S

8 N. Jackson

Phone OL 3*3710

Earthen Ware Trivets 49c Bowl Brushes 39c All Purpose Scotty Mops 49c Genuine Nylon Comb & Brush Set. . . 29c Pik-nik Portable Grille with Instant Starting Charcoal . . . 69c Deluxe 5-Piece Bar-B-Q Set . . . .$1.19 Ladies' Umbrella with Plastic Case . $1.19 Folding Camp Stools 69c Thermo-Tote All Purpose Fiber Glass Bags 98c

Group Meetings Are Scheduled Thursday Christian Women’s Fellowship of the First Christian Church will hold group meetings Thursday as follows: Group 1 at 2 p. m. with Mrs. William Patterson. Group 2 at 2 p. m. with Miss Carrie Pierce. Group 3 at 2 p. m. with Mrs. Paul Heaney. Group 4 at 7:30 p. m. with Mrs. George Williams. Group 5 at 8 p. m. with Mrs. Staten Owens. Group 6 at 7:30 p. m. with Mrs. Algan Moore. Group 7 at 7:30 p. m. with Mrs. John Whitaker. Group 8 at 9:30 a. m. in Fellowship Hall.

Couple Celebrates 25th Anniversary

Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Berry, of Kendallville, celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary Sept. 1, 1966. On the first they dined at the St. James restaurant in Avilla, Ind. In attendance were Mrs. Sharan Gibson and daughters Charlene, Cheryl and Charlotte, Donna and Douglas Berry, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Sprague, and Mrs. Berry’s mother, Mrs. Ezra Newgent of Greencastle. On September 2, Mr. and Mrs. Berry were surprised with an anniversary party given by their children. Thirty close friends and neighbors attended.

—Race Violence

(Continued from Page 1) youths and chased with bricks, rocks and bottles. One reporter, Andy Still of station WSS, was hit in the face but was not seriously hurt. Sporadic violence continued through the night. Two supermarkets were robbed and the windshield of a police cruiser was smashed.

Annual Event

The annual smorgasbord and bazaar of the Beech Grove E.U.B. Church will be held Friday, September 30 at the community building at the Putnam County Fairgrounds. This is the one big project of the year of the church and the women work from one year to the next on sewing, handwork and articles for the bazaar. They specialize in good country style home-cooking for the smorgasbord. Proceeds are used for the church. Tickets for the smorgasbord will be available from church members or at the door. Jean Bruner is charge of the tickets with Mary Helen Martin and Helen Knauer co-chairman of the bazaar with Pat Harlan and Melva Caldwell assisting her.

RECTOR FUNERAL HOME

AMBULANCE SERVICE RHONE Ol 3-4810

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Colors • Loden • Plum fe Taupe • Indigo Blue

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