The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 22 April 1967 — Page 2

Th* Daily Bannar, Graaneaatla, Indiana

Saturday, April 22, 1967

Paga 2

THE DAILY BANNER

and

Herald Consolidated "It Wavas For All" Businoss Phonos: OL 3-5151 — OL 3-5152 Elizaboth Raridan Estata, Publishar Published every evening except Sunday and holidays at 24-26 Sealb Jackson Street, Greencastle, Indiana. 44135. Entered in the Pest Office at Green castle, Indiana, as second dass mail matter under Act of March 7, 1*76. United Press International lease wire service; Member Inland Daily Preet Association; Heesier State Press Association. _ _ All unsolicited articles, manuscripts, letters and pictures sent to The Daily Banner are sent at earner'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 prices ef The Daily Banner effective March 14, 1966; In Put* nam County—1 year $10.00—6 months $5.50—3 months $3.00; 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 mad subscriptions payable in advance.

NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In. the Putnam Circuit Court. Estate No. EST. 67-32 Notice is hereby given that Harry J. Harman was on the 20th day of April, 1867. appointed Administrator ef the estate of Herman C. Waggoner, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate, whether or not now due, must file the same in said court within six months from the date of the first publication of this notice or said claims Will be forever barred. Dated at Greencastle. Indiana, this day of 20 April. 1967. Er.nis E. Masten. Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court. Attorney J. Frank Durham April 22-29-May #-3t

CHATEAU

Thur., Fri., Sat., Sun.

SHEER FEAR! SHEER SHOCK!!

ROCK HUDSON SECONDS

School Lunch Menu APRIL 24-28, 1967 MONDAY Barbecue Beef on Bun Bean Salad Buttered Broccoli Pineapple Rice Pudding Milk TUESDAY Pizza Buttered Mixed Vegetables Orange Juice Peach Cobbler Milk WEDNESDAY Roast Beef & Gravy Mashed Potatoes Cole Slaw Hot Rolls & Butter Cookie Milk THURSDAY Hamburger on Bun Tomato Wedge A Pickles Potatoes Au Gratin Fruit Cup Milk FRIDAY Grilled Cheese Buttered Green Beans Lettuce A Tomato Salad Brownies Milk

Announce Engagement

Mr. and Mrs. Jack Dearinger, Greencastle, R.3, announce the engagement of their daughter, Kathy Sue to Charles E. Coffin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin O. Coffin, Fillmore. Kathy is a graduate of Bainbridge High School and Terre Haute Med. Labs. She is presently a C.L.A. employed at the Putnam County Hospital. Eddie is a graduate of Fillmore High School and Mortuary College. He is presently employed at WXTA Radio Station as news director and announcer. No date has been set for the wedding.

BIRTHDAYS Pfc. Edgar M. Steele, Jr. serving in Vietnam, 20 years old Sunday, April 23. Eddie Lee Broadstreet, son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Broadstreet, Cloverdale, 12 years old April 23. Forest Smith, Cloverdale, April 23.

Delicious Vine Ripened TOMATOES

Bible Thought | Obituaries

For Today Christ came into the world to save sinners.—I Timothy 1:15. Jesus’ parable of the Prodigal Son teaches that we can return home to the Father’s welcome and to the Father’s love. Personal And Local News The Present Day Club will meet with Mrs. Wilbur S. Conner at 2 p.m. Tuesday. * Chapter CB-PEO will meet with Mrs. James Houck, Monday April 24, at 8 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. Harold G. Crawley of Maitland, Fla., are visiting relatives in this city. Robert Black was in Terre Haute Wednesday, and visited his niece, Lucille McDonald, while he was there.

Janie Michael Rites Sunday Mrs. Janis Michael, 81, Cloverdale, R. 2, died Friday evening et the Putnam County Hospital after an extended illness. She was born February 15, 1886 in Putnam County, the daughter of A. R. and Anna Measel Wilson. She was a member of the Church of Christ of Cloverdale. Survivors are: one son, Ruby E. Michael, Muncie; one sister, Lida Pickens, Indianapolis, and two grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband, Charles, in 1950. Funeral services will be held Sunday at 2:00 p.m. at the Whitaker Funeral Home in Cloverdale. Brother S. F. Hester will officiate. Interment will be in Cloverdale Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home in Cloverdale.

Beta Sigma Phi will meet Tuesday, April 25. at 6:30 p.m. at the DePauw Union Building for the Founders Day Banquet. Cletus Cooksey, 24, Reelsville, and Arlie Cooksey, 26, Carbon, were arrested and jailed Friday night by Sheriff Bob Albright on charges of theft.

Bill Sandy Says, Some folks would rather win an argument than a friend. Old Reliable White Cleaners.

County Hospital Dismissed Friday: Freda Haltom, Cloverdale Mary Clark, Cloverdale Martha Pettit, Greencastle Deborah Burk, Greencastle Births: Mr. and Mrs. Michael Lewis, 1023 South College Avenue, a boy, Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Runnells, Greencastle, Route 4, a boy, Friday.

Infant Dies William A. Burk, one day old son of Stephen and Debbra Kay Vermillion Burk, died Friday at the Riley hospital in Indianapolis. The baby was born Thursday at the Putnam County hospital. Survivors are: the parents; the maternal grandparents, Nettie and Kenneth Pettit; Wendell and Violet Vermillion; the paternal grandparents, William and Opal Burk. Funeral services will be held Monday at 11:00 a.m. at the Whitaker Funeral Home in Greencastle. Interment will be in Forest Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home after 4:00 p.m. Sun-

day.

3 Men Held In Bank Holdup

Calender nfCveats

Monday Boston Club, Mrs. John Poor, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday A.A.U.W., Mrs. J. P. Allen, 8:00 p.m. Wednesday Chapter I, P.E.O., Mrs. Jerome Hixson, 7:30 p.m. Thursday Delta Theta Tau Alumnae, Mrs. Arthur Shumaker, 7:30 ; p.m. Friday Colonial Dames of 17th Century, Mrs. Ira Moore, 1:15 p.m.

Fire On Police At Louisville

LOUISVILLE, Ky. UPI—Police were fired upon Friday night while investigating an abandoned car containing materials for making Molotov cocktails near an open housing demonstration. In the fifth straight night of racial disturbances, some 85 open-housing advocates demons t r a t e d near the famous Churchill Downs race track, home of the Kentucky Derby. Before Friday, the demonstrations had been confined to the all-white Beechmont section of

the city.

The home-made bomb materials were discovered in a wrecked car near the track. The police were fired upon as they moved into the area. Later, a bulletin was issued calling for the arrest of two men who fled from the automobile. They were

described as “armed and dang-

erous.”

Five other persons, including two young women, were arrested in two other cars. They were believed linked to the men carrying the Molotov cocktail apparatus. The five were charged with carrying a concealed deadly weapon.

iSle/fata

ROSEDALE UPI — Vermillion County, state and federal authorities are holding three men in connection with the robbery of a Rosedale branch bank Friday which netted the gunmen an estimated $22,000 in

loot.

The three suspects were identified as Gilbert Sylvanus Sweazy, 44, Gilbert Owen Sweazy, 25, and Landis Earl Smith, 32, all of indianapolis. The three were being held at the Vermillion County jail at Newport for questioning after being apprehended at a roadblock set up by state police on Indiana 234 just west of the Vermillion County line. Three armed men walked into the Rosedale State Bank of Rockville, forced branch manager Guy Hartman to open the safe and ordered tellers Eva Freeman and Rosemary Shaw to put the money in a sack. The money was in bills ranging from $1 to $100‘. The trio, armed with pistols then ordered the employes and a customer to lie on the floor while they backed out the door. Hartman said the men were systematic in their work and did not threaten the employes or the lone customer, Mrs. Letha McHargue, Rosedale. Kenneth Hall, Rockville, cashier at the parent bank, said the loot could amount to $22,000, but that the exact figure would be unknown until an audit was completed. The holdup was the first for the bank, which has a branch in Montezuma, as well as Rose-

dale.

Blessed Event v ROTTERDAM UPI — Princess Beatrix, according to a royal timetable announced Friday, will have her first baby next Wednesday. A Dutch newspaper said the princess, father. Prince Bernhard, announced that Dr. William Plate will move this weekend into Drakensteyn Castle, home of Beatrix and her husband Prince Claus Von Amsberg, to head a team of physicians who will attend the birth.

Campus Calendar Monday, April 24 DePauw Women’s Club trip to Brown County. Public Concert by Willowbrook High School Orchestra, 4:00 p. m. Meharry Hall. Investment League meeting, 7:30 p. m., Room 203 ASbury. Tuesday, April 25 Band concert in the Women’s Dormitories Quad, Student Conductors, 6:45 p. m. A.A.U.W., 8:00 p. m., Mrs. J. P. Allen, 615 Ridge Ave. Wednesday, April 26 DePauw Chamber Ensemble, Leon Brooks, Cassel Grubb and Dorothy Brooks, Conductors, 8:15 p. m., Meharry HalL Thursday, April 27 Naiad Show, “Naiad Goes to Town,” 7 and 8:15 p. m., Bowman Pool. Little Theatre: "The Importance of Being Earnest," 8:15 p. m., Speech Hall. Friday, April 28 Naiad Show, “Naiad Goes to Town,” 7 and 8:15 p. m., Bowman Pool. Concert: The Madrigal Singers, 7:00 p. m., Bowman Gym. Little Theatre: “The Importance of Being Earnest,” 8:15 p. m. Speech Hall. Combined Concert, The Men of Note and The Collegians, 8:30 p. m. Meharry Hall. Saturday, April 29 Mortar Board Chapel, 11 a. m., Meharry Hall. Coronation of the May Queen, 1:30-2:30 p. m., East College Lawn. Angel Flight Ice Cream Social, 2:30-4:00 p. m., East College Lawn. Kappa Pi Art Auction, 2:304:00 p. m., DePauw Art Cen-

ter.

The Madrigal Singers Dinner and Concert, 5:45-7:45 p. m. Union Ballroom. Combined Concert featuring The Men of Note and The Collegians, 7:45 p. m.-and 10.15 p. m., Meharry Hall. Little Theatre: “The Importance of Being Earnest,” 8:15 p. m., Speech Hall. Concert by The Back Porch Majority, 8:00 p. m. Bowman Gym. Sunday, April 80 School of Nursing Capping Ceremony, 10:10 a. m., Gobin Memorial Church.

Federated Reading Club Met Wednesday Afternoon The Federated Reading Club met Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Grafton Londgen, Jr. The president, Miss Carrie Pierce, opened the meeting by reading the explanation of the names of the calendar months. During the business meeting, a report was given of the Putnam County Federation meeting held last week in Roachdale. The sale of “This and That” articles netted the treasury more than $15.00. The young people who took part in the program were appreciated. Mrs. Roy Wilson, Fifth District President, gave a good summary of what the clubs have accomplished the past year. Several guests were present. For the program, Mrs. Elmer Seller reviewed the book, R.F.D., by Wayne Fuller. This book is “The Changing Face of Rural America.” In the beginning of this century rural America lived in an unhurried world of the small town, the country store, the one-room schoolhouse, muddy, impassable roads, and the horse and buggy. There were those then living who believed that this world would go on forever — but suddenly along the country roads appeared mailboxes, telephone wires, King road drags, and gasoline buggies, and shortly in less than a lifetime, old agrarian America was gone. It is the story of the old Rural America and the postal service; a history of the transition of day-to-day life in the country in the early I900’s, of farmers, small town postmasters, country storekeepers and the ultimately successful passage from the old established way of life into one new and dynamic. - A social hour and refreshments were enjoyed.

Putnam Court Notes Helen Rafferty vs. George F. Zimmerman, c o m p 1 a i nt for damages to farm fence.

HERBICIDES

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NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Or the Putnam Circuit Court. Estate No. EST. *7-33. Notice le hereby given that Kenne’h Nelson waa on the 30th Oar of April. IM7, Appointed Executor of the will ef Della M. Nelson, deceased. A0 persona having claims against said estate, whether or not now due. mutt file the same la said court within six moatha from the date of the first publication of this notice or said claims win be forever barred. Ennis E. Masten. Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Couh. Attorney Prank G. StoeseeL Greeneastle. Indiana AMU EMMIarStt

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Dear Heloise: I just finished wiping up my kitchen floor. While I was doing it I wondered if anyone else used the kind of “mop rag” that I do. I think I’ve tried them allstring mops, sponge mops, old socks, and even old underwear. But I have yet to find one that does the job like one of our old nylon sweaters! Like so many good things, I discovered this quite by accident when a tom nlyon sweater was the only “rag” I could find. Believe it or not, I used that sweater as a mop for two years before I changed it for another one . . . nylon again, of course. I have even used it on the cement floor of the utility room. It soaks up water or any liquid quickly, and dries quickly, too. It has no time to get a musty smell, even if I forget to rinse it out, which has happened on several occasions. I surely hope someone else will try out my durable and, to me, highly satisfactory and inexpensive mop. Gen Fawcett o o * • Well! Well! Everyday we learn something new. We have a 20-foot screenedin porch and it’s the dickens to mop. I used your sweater idea by

Mrs. Maurice Bryan Is Hostess To Club The West Floyd Extension Homemakers Club met with Mrs. Maurice Bryan who was substituting for Mrs. Ethel Ruark who is ill. The meeting was opened by the president Mrs. Arthur Eggers reading the thought of the month. The history of the song of the month was read by the song leader, Mrs. Stanley F. Sears who led in the group singing of “All Through "the night,” followed by the pledges to the flags and the club creed. A safety thought warning us to take care of scratches was given by Mrs. Albert Wood. Nine members answered roll call with my most embarrassing moment. The lesson on “Diet Supplements,” lesson 2, was given by Mrs. Maurice Bryan. Cards were signed to send to Mrs. Ethel Ruark who is in the Putnam Co. Hospital. Mrs. Dale Miller at the Culver Hospital. Mrs. Ethel McKamey at Eventide and Miss Grace Arnold who was home with the flu. Announcements of the plans for the Style show on May 4th at the Community building was made by Mrs. Eggers. Contests given by Mrs. Harold Sibbitt were won by Mrs. Stanley F. Sears and Mrs. Maurice Bryan and contests by Mrs. Helen Noll were won by Mrs. Arthur Eggers. The next meeting will be the annual guest day on May 10 at the home of Mrs. Roscoe Hillis unless notified of a different meeting place.

MEADOWBROOK DRIVE-IN THEATRE Jet. 36 & 43

Tonight and Sunday Elvis Preslay SPINOUT (COLOR)

Rod Taylor, Jill St. John THE LIQUIDATORS (COLOR)

just laying it on the floor, taking off my shoes and doing the frug—barefooted; I never mopped so fast or so well in my entire life. You’re a real honey to send that idea in. Thanks, Gen. So save those sweaters, gals. They’re great for mopping. And dancing! Heloise o o o o Dear Heloise: Here’s my timesaver when baking cookies. I remove the racks from my oven and cover them both with foil. Then I drop the oooki* dough on the foil and replac* the racks in the oven. I can bake a whole recipe at a time this way because the racks are so much larger than an ordinary cookie sheet. Saves washing cookie sheets, too. Helen Reed Dear Heloise: A traveling man I know keeps a bottle of carbonated drink in the trunk of his car at all times for emergency use against small car fires while on the road. He has used it only once but it worked. He just shook the bottle and sprayed the first with the effervescent liquid. lily • 000 Of course, a good fire extinguisher is recommended and is far better . . .but this sure would be better-than-nothing for cigarette bums and smolders on car upholstery. Heloise • • * o Letter of Laughter Dear Heloise: Have you ever had a day when everything went wrong? This has been one of those days. I know for a fact that if it rained gold my bucket would be upside DOWN ... Weary O 0 o o Dear Heloise: I gave my son a birthday party and used little margarine tubs as a surprise gift for all his guests. I filled them with several different candies, gums and a small toy. On the lids of the tubs, I glued a design cut from the pretty birthday paper used to wrap my son’s gifts. It v/as truly a "surprise” for them and they loved it! Another Mother o o o o Dear Heloise: When putting plates away I stack napkins between them. These napkins prevent the plates from being scratched, and when table setting time comes around my napkins are in my plates and ready to be put on the table. Miss Jan Hunter

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