The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 1 December 1966 — Page 3

Bainbridge News By Mrs. Muriel Nelson, Correspondent

Mr. and Mrs. Archie Pingleton entertained with a Thanksgiving dinner for her mother, Mrs. Grace Landreth. and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Claxton of Paoli, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Evans and children of Dallas, Texas, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Frazier and children, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pingleton and family all of Greencastle, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pingleton and family, and Mr. Harry Pingleton of Muncie. Mr. and Mrs. Archie Pingleton will leave December 1st for their home in Cortey, Florida. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Coffman and son entertained with a Thanksgiving dinner for Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Martin and children, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Trotsky, Mrs. Helen Hoffman and father, Mr. William Dipple all of Indianapolis and Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Witt of Zionsville, Miss Linda Coffman of Indianapolis Nursing school was also home for the holiday. Mrs. D. O. Tate was a holiday guest of her son Mr. and Mrs. Elza Tate of Christman,

111.

Mrs. Alva Williams was the guest of her son Morris and family on Thanksgiving and visited her other son Howard and wife on the weekend. Mr. Danny Doley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Doley is now stationed in Viet Nam. The sixth grade basketball team have played two games and won the one against Green Township and lost to Russellville. The seventh grade has won jone against Granville Wells and lost one against them, also won against Greene Township. The sixth and seventh grades play Greene Township here on Wednesday and Roachdale, there on Dec. 7th. They are coached by-

Mr. Jim Sharpe.

i Mr. and Mrs. Fred Thompson and daughter, Judy and their house guests, Mrs. Norma Jean Thompson Champ and children of California, Mr. and Mrs. James Hammond and family of Stilesville and Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Baker and family were all dinner guests for Thanks-

at the noon hour the table was spread with turkey and all the trimmings and prayer was offered by Mr. Hart The afternoon was enjoyed by playing Euchre and listening to the Stereo, on Friday the Harts were surprised by a visit of Mrs. Harts’ sister Dorothy and husband of Homestead, Florida. Holiday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Minnick and daughters were Mr. and Mrs. Dolby Ceilings, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Houser and family, and Mrs. Carrie Miller, It was also the birthday celebration for Pr.tty Jo Minnick. Mrs. Carrie Miller was taken ill in the afternoon and was rushed to the Putnam County Hospital where she is recovering nicely. A play entitled “Christmas Miracle” will be presented at the Methodist church at 7:30 p.m. Dec. 11th, by the senior and junior youth groups of the church. Mr. and Mrs. Gene Pruitt and sons Christopher and Gary were Thanksgiving day guests of his mother, Mrs. Vesta Mitchell. Little Christie Dove is visiting her mother, Mrs. Jacquelyn Henry in Indianapolis this week. Mr. and Mrs. Willis Dickson and Mrs. Maude Crodian were Thursday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Crodian of Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Bullerdick and Geraldine entertained with a family Thanksgiving and preChristmas dinner recently, those present were Mr and Mrs. Ralph Bullerdick and family of Clarksville, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bullerdick and family of Manhattan, Mrs. Josephine Fosher and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Bullerdick, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Bullerdick are leaving Dec. 5th, for Florida to spend the winter. Mrs. Josephine Fosher entertained Sunday with a family Thanksgiving dinner in honor

daughter, Mrs. Barbara Parker, and Linda and Rick Mayhew of Indianapolis, other callers were Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Ward and Mrs. Moine Keck. Mr. Carl Allen returned home to Indianapolis on Monday after spending several days here with relatives. Mr. Allen, Zennie Hall, Mrs. Blanche Cox and Mr. and Mrs. Estall Minnick spent the holiday with Fred Hall and family of Roachdale. Miss Blanche Ader, Virgil and Clarence Ader attended a family dinner on Thursday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. James Robbins of Ladoga. The family of Mr. and Mrs. Wentz Gilley enjoyed a reunion at the home of their parents on Thanksgiving Day. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gilley, Rita and Karen of Indianapolis, Mr. Stanley Davis of Greencastle, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gilley, Marvin and Kevin, Mr. and Mrs. Robert GilFy, Kim and David, and Mr. and Mrs. Noble Alexander, Miriam and Iris all of Fillmore. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Crowe and Brad of Spencer spent Sunday with Mrs. Blanche Darnall. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Johnson were guests of his sister at a family Thanksgiving dinner in Indianapolis. Mary Lynn Hanks of Indianapolis and Mr. and Mrs. Ted Bock and family visited over the holiday with their mother Mrs. Jessie Hanks and family. Mrs. Pauline Grass of Waverly and Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Dickson of Indianapolis were callers during the holidays of Mr. and Mrs. Willis Dickson. Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hess entertained with Thanksgiving dinner for Miss Lynn Moore, Mr. David Archer of Plainfield, Mr. and Mrs. Ormond O’Hair and son of Fillmore, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Robinson of Coatesville, Mr. Larry O’Hair of Terre Haute, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Miles and family, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Bachert, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Harris and daughters and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hess and fam-

ily.

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Miller enjoyed several callers during the weekend in honor of their

guests were their i Thanksgiving guests of Mr.

of her sister, Mrs. Cecil Buller-

dick and husband, before they j 50th wedding Anniversary leave. j which was Tuesday the 29th. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Gorham j Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Roth and and family and Mr. and Mrs. j family entertained during the Ronnie Dove and Christie were I holidays, relatives from New dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. York and Kansas City and

giving of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sam Dove on Thanksgiving.. friends from Indianapolis.

Thompson of North Salem. j Sunday

Guests of Mrs. Chrystal Priest for six o’clock dinner Thursday | were Mr. and Mrs. John Miller Steve and Jimmie from New Uln, Minn. Mr. and Mrs. James Pickett, Mr. and Mrs. Dick Judy, Troy Toni and Terri and Wally Steele of Greencastle and Donna Boswell of Bainbridge. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence O’Hair and his parents are on vacation

in F'orida.

Thanksgiving Day guests of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Hart Jr., j and daughter, Deborah, were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Church, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Nichols and family, Mr. and Mrs. James Church and sons all of Coatesville, Ind., Miss Mary Church of Danville, Ind- and Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Gicks of Greencastle

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and Mrs. Jewel Blue and Mike were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Miller, Mr. and Mrs. William Harlan and Muriel Nelson. Mrs. Muriel Nelson has spent part of the last two weeks with Mrs. Claude Logan in Danville, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Steele were holiday guests of Dr. and Mrs. Scherschel and sons at Bedford. Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Gibson and daughter and Mr. and Mrs. John Smith and son were dinner guests of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Don Shoaf on Thanksgiving Day. Mr. and Mrs. John Mason of South Bend visited her mother Mrs. Jessie Koessler over the weekend. Other guests for all day Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Jack Martin and Mr. and Mrs. Benton Giltz and daughter.

Prime Ministers Meet In Malta SALISBURY, Rhodesia UPI — Prime Minister Ian Smith slipped out of Salisbury at dawn Thursday bound for a meeting with British Prime Minister Harold Wilson to make one last effort to settle the Rhodesian independence dispute.

Leaving at daybreak with Smith aboard a Royal Air Force plane were British Governor Sir Humphrey Gibbs, envoy Sir Morrice James, Rhodesian Chief Justice Hugh Beadle and several of Smith’s aides. Wilson had set Wednesday as the deadline for Smith to reach agreement on a future constitution for Rhodesia that would guarantee movement toward rule by the breakaway colony’s 4.2 million blacks. But Wilson was reported to have waived the deadline for a last minute effort at negotiations with Smith. Smith unilaterally declared independence from Britain last November in a move to perpetuate government by the colony’s 225,000 white settlers.

One Survivor In Lake Tragedy HARBOR BEACH, Mich. UPI—Coast Guard ships plowed through blinding snow today in a search for the last of 28 men killed when their ship broke in two in a howling gale and sank without sending a distress signal. The only survivor, a father of

four who Hated the water, told how he stayed alive by burrowing beneath the bodies of his captain, first mate and second mate during a macabre 36hour ride on a pontoon raft. He was rescued by a helicopter. The ship, a 600-foot ore carrier named the Daniel J. Morrell, buckled under the brunt of 60 mile per hour winds and 20-foot waves early Tuesday. But no one knew about the tragedy until another freighter spotted a body at mid day Wednesday, nearly 36 hours after the ship went down. I J The frozen, bobbing body was clad in a lifejacket bearing the inserpition “Daniel J. Morrell,” a name which foretold the Great Lakes’ grimmest disaster since the freighter Carl D. Bradley carried 33 men to their death in Lake Michigan Nov. 18, 1958. Seven bodies floated ashore and five were plucked from the water. Volunteers joined police in a ground search today, slogging along 26 miles of snow covered beach in a hunt for more bodies. Police and the Coast Guard first reported 32 died. But officials of the shipping firm arrived early today and said the Morrell shipped out with 29 aboard, four men short of its normal crew.

The Dally Banner, Greencastle, Indiana Thursday, December 1, 1966

Four Coast Guard boats crisscrossed the waters near the site 18 miles north of this summer resort town where the Morrell, owned by Bethlehem Steel Co., sank during Michigan’s worst storm in a decade.

Sources said the meeting between Smith and Wilson, probably to take place in Malta, was arranged Wednesday during a 45-minute visit Smith had with an envoy sent here by the British prime minister. In London, Wilson confirmed early today that he would meet with Smith “at an agreed rendezvous” to discuss the independence issue. He said he! planned to leave London later today.

NOTICE - NEW HOURS Effective Nev. 28, '66 31onday Open 6:00 Close Tuesday Open 6:00 Close W ednesday Open 6:00 Close Thursday Open 6:00 Close Friday Open 6:00 Close Saturday Open 6:00 Close Sunday Open 6:00 Close Thank You THE WAFFLE HOUSE

Soviet Premier Flies To Paris PARIS UPI—Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin flew here today for a nine-day state visit aimed at opening up new areas of Franco-Russian political cooperation. It was his first visit to a Western allied power as head of the Soviet government. President Charles de Gaulle greeted the Kremlin official at Paris’ Orly Airport after the six-hour flight from Moscow. Soviet and French flags bedecked the airfield and a 101-gun salute boomed out a welcome. Kosygin was accompanied by his daughter, Mrs. Ludmilla Gvighiani, who was replacing the premier’s ailing wife at ■A / > /

state functions during Kosygirt’i stay in France. Although the 62-year-old Soviet premier has made trips to neutral India and Finland, this was his first visit to an allied power since replacing Nikita Khrushchev as government chief in 1964. Kosygin’s trip was in return for De Gaulle's official tour of the Soviet Union last June that resulted in a series of new agreements covering the scientific, cultural, space and economic fields.

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