The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 20 April 1967 — Page 2
Pag* 3
Tha Daily Bann*r f Oraaneastla, Indiana
Thursday^ April SO, 1907
THE DAILY BANNER and Herald Consolidated "It Wavas For All" Butinass Phonas: OL 3-5151 — OL 3-5152 Elizabath Raridan Estata, Publishar Publithad avtry availing except Sunday and holidays at 24-26 Sooth Jackson Street, Green castle, Indiana. 441M. Sntered hi the Poet Office at Greencasile, Indiana, as sacond don mail mattor under Act af March 7, 1S7S. United 7rats International leaso wire servieei Memher Inland Daily Tran Association; Hoosier State Tran Anadatian. AH unsolicited artidos. manoscripH, letters and pictures seal to The Daily tamer ora sent at a woof's risk, and Iho Daily tanner repudiates any liability or responsibility for their safe custody or return. ty carrier 40c par week, single copy 10c. Subscription prices of The Daily Banner effective March IA 1044i In Ouu nam County-1 year S10.00-4 months $5.50—3 months S3.00; Indiana other than Putnam County—1 year SI 2.00—6 months $7.00—3 months $4.00; Outside Indiana—I year $16.00—6 amaths $9.00—3 months $4.00. AN mal subscriptions payahlo in advcmco.
Change Diagnosis BOLOGNA, Italy UPI— Umberto Bagnoli’s arthritis wasn’t that at all, doctors discovered Wednesday. The 70-year old World War I veteran had a machinegun bullet lodged in his arm. Bagnoli had been wounded in the stomach, and over the years the bullet apparently worked its way to his arm.
Employer — Employe Banquet In Held The D.C.E. Club of Greencastle High School held the seventeenth annual EmployerEmploye Banquet at Torr’s Restaurant on Wednesday evening. More than seventy-five students and guests were in attendance. Janet Terrell, president, served as master of ceremonies. Pat Huffman offered the invocation,
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and Karen Hamm, vice-presi-dent, introduced the special guests. Honored guests were introduced by the students. “The Night Flyers’’ of DePauw, introduced by Connie Duncan, provided the night’s entertainment. Vicki Rains explained the program by giving “The D.C.E. Story" and Greg Frost expressed appreciation to the employers. Chester Coan responded for the employers expressing their approval of the D.C.E. program.
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Bible Thought J For Today
Obituaries | ■John Boyd
Be of good cheer; I have overcome the world.— John
16:88.
Yes, be of good cheer, our God is abundantly able. Personal And Local News Coterie will meet with Mrs. Margaret Glidewell at 7:30 p.m. Friday. Putnam County Historical Society will meet May 3 instead of April 26. The time of the showing of two Cancer films at the Voncastle Theatre in Greencastle is 7:30 tonight. Delta Theta Tau Spring breakfast will be held Sunday, April 23 at 8:45 a. m., at the DePauw Union Building. Reservations must be in by today. Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Sheridan returned Tuesday from Venice, Fla., where they spent several months. Their son, Charles, whose home is in Flint, Mich., accompanied them. City firemen were called to the 1400 block on South Bloomington Street Wednesday morning as a precautionary move. They reported an old bam was being tom down and burning debris set fire to a utility pole. Home and Child Study Club will meet at 8 p.m. Monday at the home of Julia Shumaker. Mrs. Jean Guiliani, director of Gobin Methodist Nursery School has prepared an interesting evening’s discussion on The Headstart program in our area please don’t miss this night. The members of A.A.U.W. will hear Dr. and Mrs. John Foxen Tuesday night, April 25th, at the home of Mrs. J. P. Allen, 615 Ridge Ave. The time is eight o’clock. The Foxens spent last year in Japan and will discuss the topic “Living and Working in Japan Today.” While on leave of absence from DePauw, the Foxens headed a group of students who studied in Japan, living in the homes of the natives. Dr. Foxen taught at Waseda University and the Foxen children who accompanied their parents, attend school there. Theirs was a unique experience and will make a most interesting pro-
gram.
Bill Sandy Says, Maybe we were better off when charge meant move ahead instead of I’ll pay for it later. Old Reliable White Cleaners. ! County Hospital Dismissed Wednesday: Mrs. Daniel Cox and daughter, Coatesville Patsy Ann Cannon, Coatesville Frank Puckett, Sr., Fillmore Janice Hubbard, Stilesville Dave Chancy, Greencastle Roberta Arnold, Greencastle Pauline Pursell, Greencastle Florence Werner, Greencastle Births: Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Hutcheson, Fillmore, Route 1, a boy, today.
(Continued from Page 1) ica for which he had served as president at the state level, and sometimes as a committee chairman at the national level. In 1909 Mr. Boyd was married to Mable Allen who was deceased in 1936. In 1938 he married Edna McGuire, who survives. Other survivors include three sons, Rexell A. Boyd, Green castle; Drexell A. Boyd, Indianapolis; John A. Boyd, Terre Haute; six grandchildren; and a brother, William J. Boyd, St. Joseph, Missouri. Calling hours will be at the residence, 210 Hillsdale Avenue, Friday from 2-5 and 7-9 p.m. The memorial service will be Saturday at 2 p.m. in the sanctuary of The First Christian Church conducted by Reverend Maxwell James Webb and Dr. Frank G. Helme. A memorial fund for Mr. Boyd has been established at the First Christian Church. Rector Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. Henry H. Carr Rites Saturday Henry Harrison Carr, 91, Roachdale, died Wednesday afternoon at the Bowles Nursing Home in Crawfordsville. He was bom September 30, 1875 in Milford, Delaware, the son of Williard and Mary Campbell Carr. He was married in 1909 to Alyce A. Ritchie. He was a farmer, and a member of the Presbyterian Church at McArthur, Ohio and the
I.O.O.F. Lodge.
Survivors are his wife; two sons, Dr. Woodrow W. Carr, Roachdale and Hubert Carr, Detroit, Mich.; one sister, Lillian Blackstone, Columbus, Ohio; several nieces and nephews and three great-grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Saturday at 2:00 p. m. at the Perkins Funeral Home in Roachdale. Interment will be in the Roachdale Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home in Roachdale after
noon Friday.
Mrs. Jackson Dies Mrs. Carl Price Jackson, mother of Paul Jackson, County Extension Agent, passed away Wednesday afternoon at Carlisle, Indiana. Funeral services will be Saturday afternoon at 2:00 o’clock at the Pleasantville Methodist Church at Pleasantville. The Schultz Funeral Home at Carlisle will have charge of the services.
Services Friday GREENSBURG UPI —Services will be held Friday for Mrs. Labbie Donnell Bonner, who observed her 104th birthday anniversary last October. Mrs. Bonner died in a nursing home Wednesday. She was bom in this area and spent most of her life here. She was a member of the Greensburg Presbyterian Church the last 91 years and sang in the choir for half a century.
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Mrs. Sendmeyer Is Club Speaker “Are You Listening” was the them of the lesson Home Agent Mrs. Betty Sendmeyer gave to the Jefferson Township Home Demonstration Club at the home of Mrs. Frederick Sheppard. We seem to remember only half of what we hear and two months later we only remember one quarter of it. Six bad listening habits are: 1. Faking attention 2. Must get facts 3. Avoiding difficult listening 4. I won’t like it 5. Sidetracted by physical appearance. 6. Yield to distraction Thirteen members answered the roll call with an embarrassing moment. Mrs. Betty Sendmeyer and two children were present also. Home Demonstration Day will have a Pot Luck luncheon and feature a fashion show on May 4th. The Jefferson Twp. club will set up tables and make coffee.
Discordant Note BRATTLEBORO, Vt UPI— The liquor control board voted unanimously Wednesday night to close the Harmony Room, a nightclub, until April 30 because of an unharmonious brawl that hospitalized two of 13 policemen sent to break it up.
Engagement Announced
Mr. and Mrs. Verlin E. Cash, R. R. 1, Fillmore, wish to announce the engagement of their daughter, Sandra Sue, to John Marvin Nees, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Nees, R. R. 3, Cloverdale. Sandra will graduate from Fillmore with the class of ’67. John is attending Purdue Universtiy. A June wedding is being planned.
PROCLAMATION WHEREAS: At the present rate cancer will strike one person in every four and will strike in two out of every three homes, making it a threat to every life in our city; and WHEREAS: This disasterlike disease killed some 7,500 Indiana men, women, and children, which is five times as many as died in traffic accidents in our state; and WHEREAS: One-half of all those cancer strikes can be cured NOW if the disease is detected and properly treated in the early stages; and WHEREAS: The only hope for the other half cancer strikes is further advancements and knowledge from research; and WHEREAS: The Amercian Cancer Society through its local units strives to inform people of the best ways to guard their lives against needless cancer death throughout the year, with particular impact during its annual Educational and FundRaising Crusade during April; and WHEREAS: The American Cancer Society is the only national voluntary health organization waging a comprehensive fight against cancer through programs of Research, Public and Professional Education and Services to Needy Cancer Patients; and WHEREAS: What we all do in the fight against cancer now will speed the day when we may read the headline for which the world waits, “CANCER CONQUERED’’ . . . NOW THEREFORE, I Raymond Fisher, Mayor of Greencastle, Indiana proclaim April as AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY MONTH, and urge every citizen to heed the life-saving messages of the American Cancer Society as their best personal protection against cancer death, and I urge every one to support the work of the American Cancer Society, both in voluntary time and financial contributions, in proportion to the seriousness of the problem and enormity of the need. Done under my hand this 14 day of April, 1967, Raymond S. Fisher, Mayor of Greencastle, Indiana.
Northeast PTA Elects New Officers “Today a well read person knows more about medicine than Doctors did 100 years ago," said Lester Nagley, Jr. of Indianapolis, representing the Charles Pfiser Pharmaceutical Company, speaking before a Northeast Elementary School’s PTA audience. “Our children are pounds heavier, inches taller and live longer, thanks t o pharmaceutical research. The near future will probably see a life span of 100 years,” continued Nagley. Mrs. Charles Poe presented the slate for the nominating committee and new officers were elected for 1967. President, Mrs. Dale Shoup; vice president, Mrs. Patrick Aikman; secretary, Mrs. Charles Walgamuth; treasurer, Mrs. John Robertson; historian, Mrs. Joe Litchford. Northeast will have three voting delegates at the Fort Wayne State Convention of the Indiana Congress of Parents and Teachers Association, Mrs. J. L. Stamper, Mrs. Tom Gorham, and Mrs. Charles Walgamuth. Mike TzouanaKis, principal of Northeast, will receive state recognition on Thursday of the State P. T. A. convention. Attending the all day session will be Mrs. Dale Shoup, Mrs. Michael Tzouanakis and Mrs. Patrick Aikman. Royce Kurtz, former Greencastle Superintendent Schools is a State PTA officer, and is a part of this delegate convention.
Close Call BRISBANE, Australia UPI— A U. S. Air Force C97 carrying a crew of 12 fell 8,000 feet Wednesday while the pilot, Brig. Gen. John Gifford, desperately fought for control. Two of the plane’s four engines had failed almost simultaneously while the craft was flying from Pago Pago, American Samoa, to a base near Sydney. At 2,000 feet over the sea, Gifford managed to level the plane and land here for repairs.
Film Jury CANNES, France UPI — American film star Shirley MacLaine and American director, Vincente Minnelli were chosen Tuesday night to serve on the international jury which will preside over the Cannes Film Festival.
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by HEL0ISE CRUSE
Dear Heloise:
I am a retired florist and would like to give some tips to you housewives who grow
Every time I bum a pot or pan (I am bad about that) I tell my family that I am tesb-
ing for you . . .
their own flowers. Cut flowers last longer if all the leaves are removed from any stem that is under the water. The leaves sap up the power of life in a cut flower. The main point is to get water to the bud itself. If you have no proper frog or foam, the extra leaves and sprigs may be tucked into the flower container. Often, sprigs of foliage with leaves still attached (such as stems from hedges) may be tucked down into a deep vase and used as a perfect flower arrangement For some types of flowers, such as marigolds, a few drops of household bleach, added to the water before placing the flowers in, helps to keep the stench down. And more power to you, Heloise. My wife absolutely loves you. Larry Solsberg a * * a And thanks to you, sir. You sure made my day flowery! Heloise • * * a Dear Heloise: Know those tiny jars with twist caps that are sometimes so hard to open? Try releasing the vacuum by punching a hole in the top with a V-type bottle opener . . . makes all the difference in the world. This is especially good if it’s a tiny jar of something you will use immediately. Again a a a a Dear Heloise: I’ve found another use for Heloise nylon net... as a kitchen sink mat to keep the porcelain finish from getting those horrible marks from aluminum,
etc.
I made a net pad for the bottom of my sink by using four thickness of nylon net and cutting a pattern to fit the bottom of the sink. Then I stitched these together around the edges and sewed a big “X” through the center with my sewing machine. I then cut a circle out of the center over the drain and stitched around that. The little circle I cut out of the center I used in my soap tray to put my bar of soap on. If you have a double sink, make a net pad for at least one side. This will be interchangeable. * a a a Letter of Laughter Dear Heloise:
At least it brings a laugh. Elnora a e a ' Dear Heloise: I find if you use elastic thread to hem skirts or dresses made of this new stretchable material, it won't break when you walk or kick. Don’t stretch the thread as you sew ... just sew it loosely. Mrs. Wilkins seas Dear Heloise: My daughter was recently confined to her bed with a nasty cold. After the first hour, used facial tissues were all over the bed and floor. I knew this would not do. I took one of the plastic bags that my husband’s laundered shirts came in and pinned it to the box of tissue. This way she had the tissue dispenser and a convenient place to deposit each tissue after using. Also, she could carry both containers with her when she left her bed, and when I discarded the used tissue it was much more sanitary. J. R. W. a a a e Dear Heloise: -» When I addressed my wedding Invitations I also addressed all the envelopes to my thank-you notes. I put them in alphabetical order and set them aside until after our honeymoon. - • This sure saved me a lot of time and extra address hunting when I thanked all our friends for our wonderful wedding gifts. ' Linda a a a a This might save scone other bride-to-be many precious hours as she gets her home in order and cooks her first meals. Linda, best wishes to you and thanks for the thoughtful idea. Love, Heloise
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