The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 20 May 1967 — Page 2
Pag* S
Th* Daily Banner, Greaneastla, Indiana
Saturday May 20, 1967
THE DAILY BANNER and Herald Consolidated "It Wavaa For All" Bueinasa Phoras: OL 3*5151 — OL 3*5152 Elizabath Raridan Estata, Publisher Published uvury uvuninf except Sunday and holidays at 14*20 South Jackson Stroot, Orooncasdo, Indiana. 44135. Entered in the Post Office at Groencasllo. Indiana, as second doss mail manor under Act of March 7. 1371. United Press International lease wire service* Member Inland Daily Press Association; Heesier State Press Association. AM ansolidted article* manuscripts, letters and pictures sent to fhe 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 prices of fhe Daily Banner effective March 14, 1944; In Putnam County—1 year $10.00—4 months $5.50—3 months $3.00; Indiana ofhoi than Putnam County—1 year $12.00-4 months $7.00—3 months $4.00; Outside Indiana—1 year $14.00—4 months $9.00—3 months $4.00. All maB subscriptions payable hi advance.
School Lunch Menu MAT 22-26, 1967 MONDAY Hamburger on bun Potato Salad Green Beans
MAPLECROFT AUTO THEATRE 10 Minute Drive West of Plainfield on U. S. 40
FRI., SAT., SUN. MAY 19*20*21 BURT LANCASTER, LEE MARVIN, ROBERT RYAN, JACK PALANCE RALPH BELLAMY and CLAUDIA CARDINALS in 'THE PROFESSIONALS" PLUS "KISS THE GIRLS AND MAKE THEM DIE"
Sliced Peachea Milk TUESDAY Beef & Noodles Cheese Stick Cornbread & Butter Buttered Spinach Fruit Cup Milk WEDNESDAY Steak & Gravy Mashed Potatoes Slaw Biscuits & Butter Jello Cubes Milk THURSDAY Hot Dog On Bun Baked Beans Potato Chips Peanut Butter Cake Milk FRIDAY Tuna Salad Sandwich Buttered Com Lettuce & Tomato Salad Cookies Milk
Rus-sells
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North Side of Square — Grssncastls, Ind. 17 W. PRANKLIN Ot 3-431S WATCH for announcement
IF
You Want To Win *400 00 To Go In Door Prizes
Humphrey Rites Set For Monday Clarence (Peanut) Humphrey, 72, passed away Friday at his residence 433 Bloom ington Street, after an extended illness. He was bom July 3, 1894 in Putnam County, the son of Milton and Dora Day Humphrey. He was married to Mae Broadstreet of Cloverdale. Mr. Humphrey was a truck driver for the Gardner Brothers Ice Cream plant for many years and had operated a service station for over twenty years. He was a veteran of World War I;; and a member of Legion Post No. 58 and World War I Barracks No. 114. While in World War I, he served with Company I, 333rd Infantry, 84th Division. Survivors are his wife, Mae, two sisters, Mary Surber, Rushville and Edith W o o d r u m, Greencastle; one brother, Earl Humphrey, Green castle and several nieces and nephews. Funeral services will be held Monday at 2:00 p.m. at the Rector Funeral Home. Rev. Stanley Nicol will officiate. Interment will be in Forest Hill Cemetery. Military services at the grave. Friends may call at the funeral home from 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday and 7 to 9 Sunday evening.
Hare Raising SAN JOSE, Calif. UPI — Santa Clara County Sheriff’s Deputy Raoul Niemeyer squelched a bomb report when he carefully opened a “ticking” cardboard box which a small boy had shoved under a bus stop bench. Neimeyer found a white rabbit noisily munching crisp lettuce and a scrawled note requesting that the animal be given “a good home.”
NOTICE To whom It may concern: By a ruling of the Board of Trustees of New Providence Cemetery, flowers may be placed on the graves now and until one week after Memorial Day. At which time they are to be removed, to allow proper care of the Cemetery. Those wishing to leave flowers later must be responsible for the upkeep of their lots.
MORE TELEPHONE LINES FOR BETTER SERVICE BUT A NEW TELEPHONE NUMBER OL 3-3131
SAVINGS & LOAN
The Time & Temperature Number Is OL 8-1212
Bible Thought For Today Give, and it shall be given unto you. —Luke 6:38. Even business men have learned that the old idea “let the buyer beware” is wrong. There is also inner satisfaction from being generous even when we do not profit materially.
Personal And Local News
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority Steak Fry, Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at Shelter House No. 1, Robe-
Ann Park.
Bro. Clyde Simpson will preach at the Long Branch Church of Christ, Sunday at 11 a. m. Visitors are invited. There will be a joint meeting of Chapters I and CB of PEO on Monday, May 22 at 6:30, with Mrs. Tom Slaughter. Please bring covered dish of salad, vegetable or dessert Mrs. Stella Schrog, 74, Poland, passed away Friday evening at the Clay County Hospital in Brazil. Funeral services will be announced later by the Whitaker Home in Cloverdale. Clyde W. Vinzant, 31, Brazil, was arrested on North Jackson Street at 2:05 this morning by Officer Alva Hubble and booked at the Putnam County jail for driving while under the influence of intoxicants.
Plan To Hold Open House
The children of Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Scholl are honoring their parents Sunday afternoon with an open house from two until five p. m. in celebration of their parents’ 25th wedding
anniversary.
Mr. and Mrs. Scholl were married May 17, 1942 in the First Methodist Church at Seymour, Indiana. The ceremony was performed by the brother-in-law of Mrs. Scholl, Dr. W. Merlin Schwein, who is presently serving as District Superintendent of the Methodist
Church at New Albany and a trustee of DePauw University. Their five children are Judy, second grade teacher in Slate Run Elementary School in New Albany; Tom, a student In Purdue University; Jane, a Greencastle High School Junior; Margaret and Timothy, sixth and fourth grade students at Miller School. All friends of the Scholl family are welcome to the open house at their home, 803 Gardenside Drive.
Bill Sandy Says, A fellow doesn’t need the best wife to be happy, just the best who would have married him. Old Reliable White Cleaners.
Cannot Vote
DETROIT UPI — James P. Hoffa, son of imprisoned teamsters union leader James R. Hoffa, will not be able to vote Tuesday when he runs for a seat in the Michigan legislature. Young Hoffa, a 25-year-old law school graduate, won the Democratic primary in the special election. A check of voting records showed, however, that Hoffa was still registered at his old address, outside the district, and it is too late to re-register.
County Hospital Dismissed Friday: Mamie Cummings, Cloverdale Mickey Terry, Cloverdale Roger Gibson, Roachdale Kenneth Davis, Reelsville Lola Rissler, Reelsville Shirley King, Greencastle Lois Evans, Greencastle Births: Mr. and Mrs. Larry Williams, Clermont, a boy, Friday.
Reelsville Lions Auxiliary Meets Our meeting was called to order by our President Lucille Hutcheson. All members stood and gave their pledge to the flag. Roll call was given with twelve members present. The secretary’s and treasurer’s report were given and approved. A donation of $10 was given to the Cancer Fund. The pot of gold was drawn and Tressie Fischer won the $1. Both old and new business was discussed. Mesia Hutcheson read a poem “The Shriners Thought of Me,” taken from the “Desert Wind.” The meeting was closed and refreshments were served. A very pleasant social hour followed.
DANCE AMERICAN LEGION SATURDAY, MAY 20 10:00 P.M. to 1:00 A.M.
MUSIC BY DAUGHERTY
ANNIVERSARIES Wedding Mr. and Mrs. Robert Switzer, Russellville, 3 years, May 22. Birthdays Mark Duane Nichols, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Nichols, 2 years old Sunday, May 21st. Paul Anthony Rising, son of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Rising, Van Bibbers Lake, 4 years old today.
CLUB CALENDAR Monday Chapter I and CB-PEO—Mrs. Tom Slaughter. Putnam County Hospital Guild Spring General Meeting— 9:15 a. m.—Charterhouse.
MARRIAGE LICENSE James Howard Shrout, service station, Roachdale, and Nina Allen, at home, Rockville.
IN MEMORY In loving memory of Charles E. Black, who passed away October 8, 1942 and Effie Black, who passed away May 21, 1957. Sweet memories still linger forever, Time cannot change them, ’tis true. Years that come cannot sever. Our loving remembrance of you. What would we give to clasp their hands, Or their faces to see. To hear their voices and see their smiles, That meant so much to me. Your memory is as dear today, As in the hour you passed away. The years go by but memories stay, As near and dear as yesterady. Sadly missed by the Children
INTRODUCING
11
SPUDNUTS
PIPING HOT AND DELICIOUS YEAST DONUTS EVERY TWO MINUTES! MAKE YOUR MORNING COFFEE A HIT BY SERVING HOT SPUDNUTS... THEY’RE FRESHLY MADE EVERY DAY.
GREENCASTLE FOODS, INCORPORATED CORNER FRANKLIN AT LOCUST
—Farmers and one half months. What makes May seem unusual is that In May of 1966, only 1.91 inches of rain fell compared to the 4.68 inches measured in the first 18 days this month.
MILTON’S POSEY PATCH Open Sundays 12 to 6 in May For Plant Sal«s Only
Dear Folka: I have been sewing for years, yet I have just learned how to make the now fashionable impressed pleats with my own steam iron. First, I place a big heavy bath towel on my ironing board, then fold and pin the unpressed pleats. Next, I turn my steam iron on STEAM and hold it about a quarter of an inch ABOVE the pleat for a second or two, moving it along the pleat edge. After pulling the material off the ironing board and shaking it, I hold it up in the air to see if those pleats were steamed enough. If needed, I put it back on the board and squirt some more over them. This may sound as if it’s a letter of laughter, but I’ve understood what an impressed pleat is. I know it is a soft fold, but my goodness, no one ever told me why! Isn't life funny? Heloise o o o o P. S. And don’t put that iron down on those pleats. Remember you can always go back and make it sharper, but you can never “dim it!” oo*o Dear Heloise: Whenever I prepare several oranges for a dessert or salad, I find that dropping them into boiling water for about minutes until the rind is heated through is the quickest way to peel them. The rind then comes off clean and easy, and I’m not bothered by squirting juice. This also works on grapefruit. M. D. 4 4 4 4 Dear Heloise: Our mattress had gotten out of condition and sagged something awful. We put a sheet of %” plywood between the mattress and box spring and stopped the sags. It is now firmer than it was in the first place and is just the way we like it. Mrs. J. Thomas 0*00 After going through a mattress factory in Washington, D. C., I learned it’s the springs half the time when you THINK the mattress is bad. Your idea is great! Heloise o o o o Dear Heloise: I’m a stamp collector and would like to pass on my process of removing stamps from envelopes. The method of placing them in water to soak off is unsatisfactory if the stamps are not colorfast ... and color plays a part when you want to sell ’em. My method is to use a dish towel, thoroughly wetted and squeezed out. I place the stamps which have been cut from en velopes in rows on the towel and fold it over each row. After it stands for a half hour or more, the stamps can be very easily removed and the colors are not diluted. Then I put them face down on a dry surface for another half hour or more and they come out in excellent condition. Minnie Bebbington o o o o Letters of Laughter Dear Heloise: We have all heard the old remark, “Confucius say , . . “BUT in our household it’s, Heloise say ...” Frances May
Dear Heloise: Last Christmas I gave my husband a portable tape recorder. Whenever we get long distance calls from members of the family he tapes the conversation over an extension phone. This way our whole family gets to rehear the voice of the caller. Mrs. R. Schuller o • • o Dear Heloise: I have a suggestion for using plastic baby bottles that are no longer needed. Instead of buying glass measuring cups that chip and break easily, I use plastic baby bottles. Besides saving money and possible cuts, I also save time because I’m able to premeasure all my liquid and most dry infredients without waiting to reuse the same measuring cup. Susie Cahill
!n Memory
In loving memory of our father who passed away May 21 1961. Six years have passed since that sad day When one we loved was called away. God took him home—it was his will Within our hearts he liveth still. ' Ardithe Lucas Kenneth Nelson
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