The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 26 May 1967 — Page 2

Pag* 2

Tha Dally Bannar, Graaneaatla, Indiana

Friday, May 26, 1967

THE DAILY BANNER and Herald Consolidated "It Wavas For AM" Businas* Phonos: OL 3-5151 — OL 3*5152 Elizabath Raridan Estata, Publishar PubIMtcd •vary availing axeapt Sunday cmd holidays at 14-20 Sooth Jacksao Straot Oroancastlo, Indiana. 4*135. On farad to tha fast Offico at Gr—naasfto. Indiana, at sacaad dan maii at attar undar Ad March 1. 1871. Unitad Pratt International laase who tarvica; Mombw Inland Daily Prats Atsactotiaa; Hootiar State Pratt Attodatiaa. Al ansalicifad artidat, oianutcripH, lattara and pletorot toot to fha OoBy Banner ora tent at owner's risk, and lha Daily tanner repudiates any liability •r responsibility for their safe custody or return. By carrier 40c per week, tingle copy 10c SubscHpttoa prices of fha Daily Banner effective March 14, 1966; In Pah naat Caanty— 1 year 510.00—4 months $5 JO—3 months $3.00; Indiano othet than PaM— Caunty-1 yom $12.00-4 months 57.00-3 month* $4.00; Outside Indiana—1 year 514.00-4 months 59.00-1 months $4.00. All atal subscriptions payabla to advance.

Bainbridge Lions To Hold Fish Fry June 7 thru 10 The Lions Club plans to hold its annual Amateur Contest in connection with the Fish Fry on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday nights (June 7, 8 & 9). Plans are being made for the contest to be run similar to last year’s event with elimination contests being held on Wednesday and Thursday nights and finals will be held on Friday evening. This contest is open to anyone who desires to enter providing they can be classified as amateurs in the entertainment field regardless of age. Either single or group entries in the following categories — vocal, instrumental or novelty ar* most welcome. If you are

interested in competing in the Lions Amateur Contest, please contact Norman Evens, R. R. 1, Bainbridge, Phone PE 9-2241 or Jim Clifford, R. R. 1, Bainbridge, Phone 522-6757. Entries must be received by Monday, June 5th. The following entry blank may be filled out and mailed to either of the above persons.

OBITUARY Homer H. Boyd Homer H. Boyd, Brazil, father of Mrs. John Andrew, of this city, passed away Wednesday at Meadows Manor in Terre Haute. Funeral services will be held Saturday at 2:00 p.m. at the Lawson & Sons Funeral Home in Brazil.

* BAINBRIDGE LIONS FISH FRY I Amateur Contest — June 7 r 8 f 9 & 10 | NAM! AGE | ADDBf$$ PHONE I WPf OF ACT SINGLE GROUP

I I I I

Total Priza Manay — $200.00 — 8 plaeas Entry daadlin* — Monday, Jun* 5, 1967

Mail to — Nerman Evans R. R. 1 Balnbridga, Ind. Fhana FI 9-2241

I I I i ■ I \ I I

Your Diamond Rasat Whila You Wait and Watch. If You Lika, All Jawalry and Watch Work Dona Right Haro In Graancastl* — In Our Own Store.

MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY

A

m

MASON'S @

REGISTERED JEWELER 18 WEST WASHINGTON STREET

Swim Schedule Begins June 12 The Putnam County Chapter of the American Red Cross will conduct its annual swimming program at the Greencastle City Pool beginning June 12. The schedule and registration dates are listed below: June 12-June 28 8:30-10:30 Senior Life Saving Course—^Participants must be sixteen years old or have completed the 10th grade. 8:30-10:30 Junior Life Saving Course—Participants must Ire twelve years old or have completed the 6th grade. 10:30-11:30 Water Safety Aid Course—Participants must be fourteen years old or have completed the 8th grade. Aides must have life saving to complete the course. All students interested in the life saving or aid courses should report to the pool at 9:00, Monday, June 12, with bathing suit, cap and towel. June 26-July 7 8:30-11:30 “Learn To Swim”— Participants must be eight years old or have completed the 2nd grade. July 10-July 21 8:30-11:30 “Learn To Swim”— Participants must be eight years old or have completed the 2nd grade. Adult classes will be arranged if time and facilities permit. Registraton for the “Learn To Swim” program will be at the shelter house near the pool on Friday, June 2nd, 9:30-12:00; 1:00-3:00, and June 3rd 1:004:00. No swimming classes will meet on Saturdays, Sundays, or the 4th of July. A volunteer staff of five qualified Red Cross Instructors, interested adults, and Water Safety Aides will conduct the program. The facilities will be provided by the Greencastle City Pool. No charge will be made for the instruction.

Mrs. Jean Decker Is Hostess To Club The Marionettes Homemaker Extension Club met May 23 at the home of Mrs. Jean Decker, with nine members answering roll call. Die meeting was opened with the Club Creed and the song of the month, “Shenandoah.” Mrs. Jean Spencer gave an interesting report on “snakes and first aid for snake bites.” She reported there are 7,000 snake bites reported each year. Snakes venture out at night mostly for their food so a person should be extra careful where they step. “How to read a recipe right” was the topic for Mrs. Betty Phillips. She said if a receipe calls for minced onion or chopped onion, the minced onion would give you more flavor. Delicious refreshments were served by the hostess, and the door prize was won by Mrs. Jean Spencer.

Eitel's for ROSE FOOD ROSE SPRAY ROSE DUST INSECT SPRAY EITEL'S FLOWERS

THANK YOU! We Take This Opportunity To Thank All The People Who Helped To Make Our Grand Opening Such A Tremendous Success. FROM THE ENTIRE STAFF OF THE Highlander Laundromat 508 MAPLE AVE. Phon* OL 3-9837 GREENCASTLE

Bible Thought For Today The sleep of a laboring man is sweet, whether he eat little of much.—Ecclesiastes 5:12. In some nations people are always hungry. A laborer is worthy of his hire. He has earned meat as well as sleep. Personal And Local News Bro. Jim Morgan will preach at the Long Branch Church of Christ, Sunday 11 a. m. Bible classes for all ages 10:15 a. m. Visitors welcome. Ralph Morgan, 66, Owen County, was arrested and jailed Thursday evening by Sheriff Bob Albright. Morgan was taken into custody south of Belle Union. The League of Women Voters gave a coffee on Thursday morning, May 25, for the following members who will be away next year: Mesdames Ralph Gray, Sam Kirk, Paul Kissinger, David MacLean and Bruce Nicholas. Mr. and Mrs. R. N. Rafferty of Clearwater, Florida have arrived in Greencastle to celebrate their 50th year from the time of their graduation from DePauw. They have spent several summers here and their many friends will be glad to see them. Mrs. Rafferty was Helen Broadstreet before her mar riage. Captain Barbara McClure, of the U.S. Army Nurse Corp., daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Foster McClure, is here from Honolulu visiting her parents. She has been here one week, and has two more weeks vacation before returning. Her fiance, Emile Charlier, who also lives in Honolulu is here and will return with her. Barbara was promoted to the rank of Captain in March, and was sent immediately to Hawaii. She was graduated from St. Anthony’s Hospital in Terre Haute. Mrs. Robert E. Hurst and sons, Charles and Byron, 202 W. Walnut Street, Greencastle, will leave Tuesday, May 30th, for New York where they will leave on May 31st on the liner United States for Vienenburg, Germany, to visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Heinz Rust. They plan to be gone for three months and will return by plane on Sept. 1st. Other passengers on the ship will be the Duke and Duchess of Windsor. Mr. and Mrs. Marion P. Seller of St Paul, Minnesota, are expected today to spend the Commencement weekend with Mr. Seller’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer R. Seller, also their son, James and wife. James is a member of this year’s graduating class. On Saturday they will be joined by Mr. and Mrs. Philip Ball, and their son, Kevin of Indianapolis. The parents of Mrs. James W. Seller, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Hellenschmidt of Waterloo, Iowa and their son, Mark, will arrive Saturday to attend Commencement. Mr. and Mrs. Marion Seller will return home, Monday, accompanied by their daughter, Mary, who has completed her freshman year at DePauw.

Bill Sandy Says, for the whitest, brightest shirts in town come to White Cleaners, 309 N. Jackson. i

Birthdays Cathy Mae Burton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gary Burton, 12 years old. May 26. Margaret Burton, May 26.

ANNIVERSARY: Mr. and Mrs. Cleo Shuck, today. May 26.

County Hospital Dismissed Thursday: Howard Myers, Roachdale James Bandy, Spencer David Keil, Bainbridge Golda Lewis, Eminence Orville Hutcheson, Reelsville Mildred Sims, Greencastle Deborah Burnham, Greencastle Alberta Alexander, Greencastle.

Herbert Hoover was the first president of the United States to be born west of the Mississippi River.

RECTOR FUNERAL HOME AMBULANCE SERVICE PHONE OL 3-481U

Meeting Held By Historical Society The Putnam County Historical Society met at Torr’s Restaurant on Wednesday evening for a dinner meeting. Mrs. William Boatright welcomed two guests: Mrs. Effie Stigleman and Mrs. Mayme Gruenholz. The members voted to join the State Historical Society as a Society. The Louis Publishing Company of Knightstown has a book for sale containing the biographical and historical records of 1887 of Putnam County for sale for anyone interested. Mrs. Boatright named a nominating committee. Dr. George Manhart introduced Dr. James F. Findlay of the DePauw History Department who gave a most intere sting talk on the life of Dwight L. Moody, the great evangelist. The Green castle Times and The Banner said that Moody came here on March 5, 1885 and spoke in Meharry Hall as he was changing from the Pennsylvania train to the Monon to go to New Albany to visit Washington C. DePauw. Classes were dismissed, and the meeting started at 9:00 a.m. with state secretary of Y.M.C.A., L. W. Munhall, opening the service who spoke on "How To Promote Religious Life In the College.” There was singing and another man spoke. Moody spoke for fifteen minutes on “How to Use the Bible.” Then there was more singing and Moody preached for fortyfive minutes on “Our Need of Christ.” This meeting lasted for three hours. Moody was born in 1832 in East Northfield, Mass. He went to Boston as a boot and shoe salesman, but in 1854 re organized the first Y.M.C.A. He got the idea from London where he was in 1852. Moody went to Chicago and joined the Chicago Y.M.C.A. in 1856 and was elected as a paid secretary. This organization became very strong and Moody was responsible for erecting the first building. He left Chicago in 1873 and returned to England. Through the Y there, he started to be an evangelist. He took with him Ira D. Sankey, whom he had met in 1870 at the National Y.M.C.A. convention in Indianapolis. Both became well known as the Moody and Sankey team who traveled all over the U. S. and carried on many great evangelistic meetings as well as organizing Sunday Schools and raising much money for religious work.

CHICAGO UPI —Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., warns that conditions in the slums of American cities are so bad that rioting may occur this summer although non-violence is the “most potent weapon” the Negro can employ to gain equality. Decrying outbreaks of ghetto violence as “black suicide,” King said Thursday that Chicago, Cleveland, Los Angeles and New York may nevertheless be in for a “long hot summer” after a “long cold winter during which . . . the plight of the Negro has worsened.” King said he planned "to stir up trouble this summer” here and in other cities. But he said this agitation would be in the form of attempts to bring about “non-violent solutions” to the problems of segregated cities. The civil rights leader addressed the Headline Club, the Chicago professional chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, National Journalism society. King was brief but firm on the subject of his controversial participation in anti-war activities. He vowed to continue his

Card of Thanks My sincere thanks to each and every one who helped me in any way in my recent bereavement. Also, thanks to Dr. W. R. Tipton, the Rector Funeral Home, Rev. Stanley Nicol, Mrs. Evan Crawley. Mrs. Maurice Kersey, the World War I Veterans, the American Legion, and Jack Rogers for the beautiful floral tributes and the thoughtful sympathy cards. Mrs. Clarence Humphrey

U.S. Con Supply Mideast Forces By Donald H. May WASHINGTON UPI — The United States could supply considerable forces for any shortrun action in the Middle East and still press the war in Vietnam without calling up the reserves. But prolonged ground involvement in the area, coupled with a continued buildup in Vietnam, would require mobilization of at least some reserves. At present, elements of the U. S. Navy’s 50-warship, 25,000man 6th fleet are reported in a state of readiness in the eastern Mediterranean, although staying well clear of the immediate crisis area. In addition, a landing force of 1,600 combat-ready Marines assigned to the 6th Fleet ended shore liberty at Naples, Italy, early Thursday and headed out to sea aboard six ships of an amphibious force. Their destination was not disclosed. At the same time, the guided missile cruiser. Little Rock, flagship of the fleet left the 6th’s home port of Gaeta, Italy, and put to sea in the company of a destroyer. The fleet has two regularly assigned carriers—America, last reported in the western Mediterranean, and Saratoga, reported in the eastern portion. These two have been reinforced temporarily by a third carrier, Intrepid, also in the eastern Mediterranean. The only other U. S. naval forces anywhere near the crisis area are two destroyers and a converted seaplane tender. They make up the Navy’s tiny Middle East force which cruises the Red Sea, Persian Gulf and Indian Ocean. As for U.S. ground forces that might be brought in case of a major Middle East blowup, the United States has some 200,000 men in Europe committed to NATO. But experts believe a brigade or more upwards of 3.000 men and possibly some armored units could be detached the Middle East with NATO approval. At home, the United States has at least 25,000 airborne troops that could be used in an emergency. There also is the 1st and 2nd Armored Divisions in this country and the 5th Mechanized Infantry Division, a total of some 45.000 additional men. The 2nd Marine Division also is available, although it is already providing men for duty in Vietnam on a rotation basis.

opposition to the United States presence in Vietnam. King said the amount of money being spent on the war as compared to the amount being spent fighting poverty pointed out the need for a “basic reordering of national priorities.” He denied that he had any Communist taint and speculated that there may be a “conspiracy against dissent” in the United States similar to that of the McCarthy era. While conceding the possibility of racial violence during the warm months, King turned his back on the black nationalist theories of the militant factions of the civil rights movement. “There can be no separate black path,” he said. “One thing that must undergird the civil rights movement is the mutuality of the destinies of white and black Americans.”

YOU DON’T HAVE TO DEPEND ON SPECIALS! WE STILL HAVE OUR 12-POUND WASHERS AT ONLY 20 CENTS. WHITE CLEANERS and LAUNDRY 309 North Jackson St. Ph. OL 3-5188

FREE STORAGE For Your WINTER WEAR HOME LAUNDRY & CLEANERS Phone OL 3-3191

King Warns Of More Violence

Fe/ohe

by HELOISE CRUSE

*

Dear Heloise: Why is it when I deep fry potatoes or shrimp, that the second batch is not nearly as good as the first? And how can I keep the first batch warm while the second batch is cook-

ing?

Quandary a • a •

Dear Quandary: Don’t be in one any more! I talked with some manufacturers of cooking oil and here are the answers they gave:

Perhaps you are trying to fry too much at one time. Or maybe you’re using too small a pan and too little fat. Either reduce the amount of food you are frying in your dipping basket, or use a bigger pot and add more stuff to fry it in. One company suggested that you shake your wire basket while the food is in the hot fat, right after the bubble;, die down. In all the kitchens I have seen (including famous restaurants and hotels) they always do this. Tliis not only shakes the pieces of food apart, but allows more uniform cooking.

Another company suggested that the frying fat should always be brought back up to the correct temperature before putting in another batch of food. I thought that was an excellent idea. Remember, we are putting in a bunch of cold food to fry, and as it cooks, heat is being transferred from the oil to the food.

Here’s some more hints (from another manufacturer) that will help prevent smoke in your kitchen: Any floating food particles that are . left in your hot oil should be fished out before you put in the next batch. After all, why keep cooking these till they burn? Here’s something else I learned which I think is great. If you are frying three or four batches of potatoes or shrimp, after each batch is drained you can keep them hot by setting them on a baking pan in a preheated oven which is kept at 300 degrees. It works! Most of us make the mistake of turning our oven on 375. That’s too high. It keeps food cooking. Heloise a a a a Dear Heloise: Just wrapped a package for mailing and had the idea of packing the extra space around the gifts with the plastic bags from the cleaners. These bags don’t add weight to a package like paper does yet they hold gifts nicely in place, and provide good cushioning because of the air pockets in the crumpled up plastic. Mary Monaco a * a • Dear Heloise: Many of us have to carry little nitro tablets with us at all times, so I thought others might appreciate my solution. I purchased a gold locket about the size of a quarter. The tiny nitro pills fit perfectly into my locket and it eliminates the necessity of carrying a pill bottle around. Thus I have my medicine with me at all times, and a beautiful piece of jewelry in the bargain.

(My husband had the locket engraved saying they were nitro tablets and why I needed them.) M. B.&r • • • • Dear Heloise: I was looking for something to carry a cake to a dinnei party when I discovered something unusual. I turned a large cereal box on its side and slipped my fresh oblong cake into it. Then I put a plastic bag over the whole thing. When I arrived at the dinner, my cake looked as nice as when freshly frosted. K.K.

Dear Heloise: After breaking my ignition key off in my locked car door I learned a lesson. I wrote that original key number on my driver’s license so if I break or lose it again I can easily have one made. Mrs. W. R. Hill a a a a Dear Heloise: A little hint to expectant mothers: *. During the last month bf waiting, prepare a double portion of those favorite family recipes such as meat loaves, sauces, etc. Use one portion that night and freeze the other. In the hectic weeks following the arrival of the little angel, dinner can be readied in no time. New Mother ’

The Caspian Sea Is called “sea” because the Romans, finding it salty, named it Mare Caspian. Many geographers, however, consider it a lake because it is land-locked.

tsVour Water Heater • LAZY? Maybe it’s time to buy a new flameless qulck-recavery electric water heaterl If you're a Public Service Indiana customer, we'll provida Free Installation.

PUBLIC SERVICE. INDIANA

RIV. PAUL T. BYRNS, Pastor

FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY AND HOMECOMING SERVICES SUNDAY MAY 28 FORMER PASTORS TO SPEAK

Rev. Samuel Schimpf -- 10:30 a.m.

Rev. Mark Hamilton»2:30 p.m.

Rev. C. A. Newby — 7:30 p.m.

FIRST CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE GREENCASTLE, INDIANA