The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 16 January 1967 — Page 2

1 Tht Daily Bannar. Graancastle, Indiana Monday, January 16, 1966 THE DAILY BANNER and Herald Consolidated "It Wavos For All" Business Phonos: OL 3*5151 — OL 3*5152 Elizaboth Raridon Estate, Publisher PublMtad •vary avaning except Sunday and helidayi at 24-26 South Jackten Street, 6reenccntle, Indiana. 46135. Entered in the Pott Office at Greencastle, Indiana, at tecend dots mail matter under Act of March 7. 1878. United Pratt Internatienal leate wire terviee; Member Inland Daily Pram Attectatian; Heetier State Pratt Amadatien. All antelietted artidet, manatcriptt, lettert and picture! tent to fhe Daily Banner are tent at •wner't risk, and The Daily Banner repudiatet any liability or responsibility for their tafe custody or return. By carrier 40c per week, tingle copy 10c. Subscription prices of The Daily Banner effective March 14, 1966; In Put* nem County—1 year $10.80—6 months $5.50—3 months $3.00; Indiana othei 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 tubteriptient payable in advance.

New Realtor Officers Renos Haltom, retiring President of the Putnam County Board of Realtors is shown congratulating incoming President, Bill Jackson, Vice President Blanchard Ketchum and Becretary-Treasurer Naomi Boesen.

—Recruiting 12 DePauwites plan is being dons already by high school counselors and college officials. These established anchors, in fact, provide the jumping off and landing spots for this effort, since the trips will be coordinated with the visited schools by DePauw’s admissions

office.

But there is another dimension which the volunteers alone can enter. And it may help them succeed, for It does not depend on experiences so much as age — or rather the absence

of it

“We think we will be able to. talk to these students on a unique level," Jeff Pollock, leader of the 12 thinks, “because it will remove the age gap and the barrier it sometimes creates between the recruiter and the recruited.” As the Akron, O., junior envisions it—and Fontaine concurs - the formal school visits could lead to yet a richer experience. “If we do our jobs well,” Pollock said, “there’s a chance we would have meetings with these students in their homes with their parents. And we hope something could be worked out so that they could come to the campus.” The students have been tooling up for their trips ever since they were screened from 40 applicants by an administrative student committee in mid November. As Pollock puts it, “We’re straining at the bit.” Probably the most enthusiastic and candid advice the students have had so far has come from off the campus. Manny Newsome, the ex-college basiketball ace who now heads Indiana’s TUTEOR (Talent Utilization Through Educational Opportunities Resources) program, conducted one briefing. He told them their targets “will easily pick out the phony” and “respect only those they feel are sincere.” The Dean of Boys at Crispus Attucks (Indianapolis), William E. Jones, and Miss Katherine Bogan, DuSable (Chicago) counselor for 25 years, chaired another session. Before the DePauwites sw r ing into action next month, they will have had at least two more briefings. Pollock said Fontaine wall give a routine admissions presentation, and a campus professorsociologist is being asked to talk about minority group communities. Logistically, the college expects to pay transportation costs, and the young recruiters will pay for their meals. DePauw alumni probably will provide overnight housing. Pollock’s corps of seven men and five women represents six states. Their vocational interests range from social work to foreign service. Their combined grade average hovers just under a 3.00 (“B”). Keen and anxious to blaze a new and substantial path in college recruiting a la undergraduate, the group includes John Germanotta, Milwaukee, Wis.; Darel Lindquist, Portage, Ind.; Doralee Grindler, Brentwood, Mo.; James Nyenhuis, Warsaw; Robert Urbain, East Lansing, Mich.; Christy Kling*

ensmith, Carmel; Kathy Robinson, Glenview, HI.; Floyd Deahl, South Bend, Ind.; Barbara Henry, Indianapolis; Steve Jerrett, Kirkwood, Mo,; Joan Fish, Deerfield, HI.; and, of course, Pollock, who within the past eight months has been a gardener in a home for mentally retarded women in England, a carpenter at an orphans home in West Germany, an irrigation ditch digger in East .Germany, and a general fix-up man at an innercity church in Indianapolis.

—Farm Escapees Canute; Kupka, who was shot twice in the chest, was listed in satisfactory condition Saturday night at a hospital. He was taken to the hospital by an unidentified motorist During the day the Oklahoma Highway Patrol used an airplane and roadblocks were set up along the Texas-Oklahoma

border.

A .38 caliber pistol and a car was stolen at Cloverdale, Ind., shortly after the two men left the nearby penal farm. That car was abandoned in the Princeton area where two other cars and a pickup truck had been stolen and abandoned. The three fugitives were seen in Owensville, Ind., Thursday night, Gibson County (Ind.) Sheriff Robert J. Emmert said. All three have police records which began when they were 12 years old, the sheriff’s wife said. They come from broken homes and “are well on their way to becoming chronic criminals,” Mrs. Emmert said.

Announce Engagement Mr. and Mrs. John Boswell, 1123 Ave. D, are proud to announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Gloria Ann Francis, to Airman Third Class Joseph Atkins, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Atkins, Sr., 11 North College Avenue. The wedding date has been set for Saturday, January 21st, 8:30 a.m. at St. Paul’s Catholic

Church.

All friends and relatives are invited. A reception will follow the wedding ceremony at the home of Mr. and MTs. Joseph Atkins, 11 North College Ave. Airman Atkins is stationed at Barksdale Air Force Base

Louisana.

Bible Thought For Today Hie common people heard him gladly. —Mark 12::S7. Ordinary men still welcome the simple truth* of the Master. “Love ye one another." Personal And Local News The Penelope Club will meet with Mrs. L. W. Crump at 2 p.m. Tuesday. The Third Wednesday Club will meet Wednesday Jan. 18 with Mrs. Eula Wells. The Golden Link Club will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. with Mrs. Irene Grubb. Mrs. Iva Hammond will have the program. Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Tillotson and Mrs. Vera C. Stephenson of Portland, Oregon visited Mr. and Mrs. Joe McCord last week. They flew to St. Louis Saturday en route home. Mothers Service Club will meet Tuesday, Jan. 17th at 7:30 p. m. with Mrs. Mae Twigg. Roll call is a first aid hint on fainting. Each member please bring a small gift for contests. The Garden Club will meet Wednesday, January 18, at 9:30 with Mrs. James Hughes on a. m. Dr. Forst Fuller will have the program on winter gardening under fluorescent lights. City firemen made a run to the Putnam County Hospital parking lot at 8:20 Sunday night. They reported a rag on fire in a 1959 Ford belonging to Lucille Williams, but no damage resulted to the car. Twenty-eight students at Indiana State University were initiated into the Indiana Delta chapter of Pi Mu Epsilon math honorary before Christmas. New members included Linda Baumunk, sophomore, • South Arlington, Greencastle. The Ladies Missionary Society of the New Providence Baptist Church will meet on Thursday at 11:30 with Mrs. Guy Gaston, Sr., for a pitch-in dinner. Mrs. Hubert Sellers will be co-hostess, with devotions given by Mrs. Joe Neumeister. The roll call will be choral response, and Mrs. Guy Gaston Jr., will have the program. All ladies of the church are cordially invited to attend.

Russ Myers Says, Love for your fellow man is not the opposite of hate it’s the opposite of unconcern. Old Reliable White Cleaners.

In Memory In memory of John L. Patterson, who passed away Jan. 16, 1964. Three years has passed since you went away, It only seems like yesterday. That we’d come home and find there, Sitting in your familiar chair. Your laugh, your touch, your smile we miss, As time goes on, we won’t forget The love we shared thru out the years, God knows all sorrows, all this he bears. Wife, Opal, Children and families.

Mrs. Francis Lane Is Club Hostess The Brick Chapel Home Demonstration Club met Jan. 10th at the home of Mrs. Francis Lane. Martha Harris opened the meeting, leading the club in the pledge to the flag and the club creed. She then turned the meeting over to Betty McFarland who installed the following officer: Pres., Lucille Bock; Vice Pres., Iren# Lane; Secy., Earline Webber; Treas., Jean Danberry. Each officer was presented a vining plant to nurture, symbolic of the continued growth of the club. The new president introduced Nellie Flint who gave the lesson “Stretching the Family Income.” We may supplement our income many ways, but we should not base income en money alone. The happy person is one whose income includes service to others. Secretary’s and treasurer’s reports were read and approved. Roll call, “A New Year’s Resolution I have made,” was answered by 10 members and one guest. Door prize was won by NC1U6 Flint. The mooting elosod by the club repeating the club prayer. The next meeting will be at Mrs. Andrew Sutherlin’s Feb. 14 at 1:30 with Mrs. William E. Reynolds giving the lesson “Diet Supplement,’*

OBITUARIES

Albert W. Heavin Funeral Tuesday Albert W. Heavin. $8 years old, Greenfield, a longtime schoolteacher and principal in Central Indiana, died yesterday in Lilly Clinic at Marion County General Hospital after a long illness. A graduate of Indiana Uni varsity, he had been a teacher and principal at schools at Fillmore, Bainbridge, Greenfield and Fairmount. He also had received a law degree from the former Lincoln Law School and was a member of the Hancock County Bar Association. Mr. Heavin was a veteran of World War II and a member of the American Legion, Masonic Lodge, Moose Lodge, Indiana Schoolmen’s Club and Phi Delta Kappa Fraternity. Funeral services will be held at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday in Pasco Memorial Mortuary in Green field. Burial will be in Park Cemetery at Greenfield. Survivors include the widow, Mrs. Ruth Heavin, Hancock County welfare director; a son, Edwin Heavin of Columbus, Ind.; two grandchildren, two sisters and a brother. Also surviving are two sisters, Mrs. Earl Nichols of near Belle Union and Mrs. John McCammack of Greencastle; one brother Frank Heavin of Greencastle, and a sister-in-law Mrs. Fred Heavin of Coatesville. _ -» Nellie Nichols Services Held Funeral services for Nellie Nichols, wife of Wilbur Nichols, a former resident of Russellville, were held today at the Russellville Christian Church. Rev. Charles Davis officiated. Burial was in the ML Hebron cemetery. Mrs. Nichols was born in Putnam County Feb. 23, 1893, the daughter of Isaac and Olive Scott Beckelhimer. She was married to Mr. Nichols Jan. 10, 1920 in Indianapolis. Mrs. Nichols, 73, lived at Guion. She had been in ill health since November. She died Saturday afternoon at the Union Hospital at Terre Haute. The deceased was a member of the Union Chapel Church at Morton, the American Legion Auxiliary of Russellville and the Pythian Sisters of Russellville. She was formerly employed at the Bon Ton Restaurant at Bainbridge. Survivors, besides the husband, are one daughter, Mrs. Estill Cunningham of Bainbridge, one son, Roscoe Nelson of Danville, HI., one sister, Mrs. Mary Boswell, Greencastle, Route 4, five grandchildren, several nieces and nephews. The Machledt & Servies Funeral Home of Waveland had charge of the services.

Service$ Tuesday For Osa Grider Mrs. Osa M. Grider, 81, Fincostle, died Sunday evening at the home of her son, Paul Grider. She was bom In Indiana, the daughter of John and Lucretia Penny Newgent. She was married to George Grider in 1911. Mrs. Grider was a member of the Fincastle Community Church and the Loyal Neighbors Club. She had spent all her life in the Fincastle Community She is survived by: one son, Paul; a daughter-in-law Annis; and nieces and nephews. Funeral services win be held Tuesday at 2:00 p.m. at the Perkins Funeral Home in Roachdale. Interment will be in Roachdale cemetery. Calling hours at the funeral home in Roachdale after 4:00 p.m. today.

Signs Joycse Proclamation

Mayor Raymond Fisher signing a proclamation of Jaycee Week, as Steve Dickson, chairman of Jaycee Week, and Jim McCarter, Jaycee president look on.

Birthdays Larry Wayne Wood, son of Mr. and Mrs. James E. Wood, 6 North Central, 11 years old, Saturday, Jan. 14.

Family Night Held By Lions The Warren Township Lions Club celebrated Saturday with a family night pitch-in supper, family style, at the newly furnished club house. The event was in observance of the 50th anniversary of the Warren Township Club, chartered April 7, 1947, with 50 members and with six added during the year. The club regretted to learn of the death of the wife of Lee R. Lewis, a former member and a pbst president, now residing in Ktodallville. A floral tribute was sent to Mr. Lewis by the club.

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Elva McCloud Rites Wednesday Mrs. Elva McCloud, 68, Monrovia, died Sunday at the Morgan County hospital. She Is survived by her husband, George, six children, Helen Faletio, Stilesville; Marian Weiser and Dorothy Yalmokos, both of San Diego, Cal.; Glen, Pottstown, Pa.; Jerry, Monrovia, and Luellen McKamey, Greencastle, R. 1; nineteen grandchildren and five great grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 11:00 A.M. at the Whitaker Funeral Home in Cloverdale. Calling hours at the funeral home are after 2:00 p.m., Tuesday.

County Hospital Dismissed Saturday: Bruce Nelson, Amo Merle Masten, Amo Irwine Bennett, Coatesville Martin Kelly, Fillmore Robert Jackman, West Lafayette Bruce Eccles, Greencastle Albert Allee, Greencastle Betty Warman, Greencastle William Ellis, Greencastle Dismissed Sunday: Mrs. Arvel Hinton and son, Poland Mrs. William Cain and son, Reelsville Walter Rushton, Danville Alice Richarqson, Greencastle Births: Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Kays, Bainbridge, a boy, Sunday.

h Memory

HENDRIX—In loving memory of C. Mae Hendrix who passed away January 16, 1964. God saw you getting weary and He did what He thought best, He put His arms around you and whispered come and rest. The golden gates did open three years ago today, And with farewells unspoken you gently passed away. Husband—Ralph Daughters— Norene and Louise

RECTOR FUNERAL HOME AMBULANCE SERVICE RHONE Ol 3-4810

ANNIVERSARY Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Robbins, 706 South Locust Street, 30 years today.

ELKS CLUB STAG Tuesday, Jan. 17 Catfish Dinner $1.25 Serving 6:30 P.M. Elks Members Only

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