The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 8 June 1967 — Page 2

Pag* 2

Tha Dally Bannar, Graaneastla, Indiana

Thursday, Juna 8, 1967

THE DAILY BANNER and Herald Consolidated "It Wavas For All" Businass Phonos: OL 3-5151 — OL 3-5152 Ellzabath Raridan Estato, Publishar Norma L. Hill, Assistant Publishar Published every evening except Sunday and holidays at 24*26 South Jackson Street, Oreencastle, Indiana. 46125. Entered In the Pest Office at OreencatHo, Indiena, as second doss mail matter under Act of March 7, 1S7S. United Prose Intematienel lease wire service) Member Inland Daily Press Assedatian; Heesier State Press Association. AB unsolicited articles, manuscripts, letters and pictures sent to Hie Daily •anner are sent at owner's risk, and The Daily Banner repudiates any liability or responsibility for their safe custody or return. Sy carrier 40c per week, single copy 10c. Subscription prices of The Daily Banner effective March 14, 1966; In Putnam County—1 year $10.00—6 months $5.50—3 months $3.00; Indiana ether 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.

County Playhouse "Help, something' Is about to happen!” says one of the characters in the mystery thriller "Angel Street” which will be on stage in DePauw’s Speech Hall next weekend. The cast is preparing a pleasant mystery drama experience for all the-

ater goers.

Director Mrs. Marian Gifford has announced the technical crew for the first Putnam County Playhouse production of "Angel Street” which will be griven June 15-16-17 at 8:00 p.m. Charlotte Guilliand and Larry Sutton are the technical directors, Mrs. William Jackson, small properties, assisted by Jo Ann Eitel; large properties, Helen Houck, Mary Lett, Kirk Hammond and Harold Henry. The stage crew will be Anne

i Silander, Larry Hunt, Sally Eppleheimer and Susan Strain. Mrs. J. L. Stamper is pubilcity. Jim Poor, ticket chairman, has announced that Norman : Donelson, Marvin Long, Chet Coan and Robert Matthews have made their business establishments ticket stations. Tickets may be purchased at these stores or at the DePauw Speech

Hall door.

OFFICE CLOSED Jun* 16 - July 15 DR. W. R. TIPTON

Card of Thanks We cannot find words to convey what is in our hearts as we attempt to acknowledge all the sincere acts of kindness and love shown to us during the passing of our loved one. We have found no easy way to face our bereavement but we are finding strength for each day, through faith in God and courage from all our friends and neighbors who are standing by us, so anxious to help bear our burden of grief. A special thank you to the Putnam County Hospital, The Whitaker Funeral Home, Belle Union Fire Department, The ministers, singers, pallbearers, those who sent food and cards, and all our wonderful friends who helped in any way. The Verlin Scott family, wife, children and grandchildren.

Bible Thought For Today If thou eanst believe, all things are possible to him that believeth.—Mark 9:28. Faith is a form of courage. History shows that men of faith have indeed moved mountains.

Putnam Court Notes Barbara J. Patton vs. Hugh A. Patton, suit for divorce.

Extra Special Dining ADAMI’S RESTAURANT NOW OPEN -RIDAY — 4:30 to 9 p.m $1.95 Par Parsonl ■SATURDAY — 4:30 9 p.m. .. .$2.50 Par Personl ■SUNDAY — 11:30 a.m. to 12 p.m. $2.50 Par Parson) |—Chlldran Undar 12 — 10c Par Yaar of Aga Uaotod 5 Milos West of Brazil an U. S. 40

Personal And Local News

The Boston Club will have their annual picnic with Mrs. Granville Thompson, Monday at 6:00 p. m. The New Providence Baptist Church will hold their Sunday evening Service June 11th, at 7:30 in the Belle Union Gym. Ray Henry Foust, 23, Angola, escaped Wednesday from the Indiana State Farm where he was serving a term for issuing fraudulent checks. Dr. John Ross and three children, Katherine, David and Barbara of Winter Park, Florida, are here for a week’s visit with Dr. and Mrs. Harold Ross. Gerald Smith, 25, Crown Point, pleaded guilty to escaping from the State Farm in the Putnam Circuit Court Wednesday and was sentenced to serve 1-5 years in the State Reformatory at Pendleton. Mrs. A. L. Fiorillo Jr., is here from New York City visiting her mother, Mrs. Edward C. Hamilton. Mrs. Fiorillo will be remembered as Marcia Hamilton, noted for her adeptness in the art of piano workmanship. Friday, June 9, at 7:30 p. m. the Union Chapel Methodist Church, of Morton, will share with the parents and friends of the church, the fruits of the achievements of the children who have been attending Vacation Bible School this week. The school has been directed by Mrs. Lee Martin, assisted by many able end willing teachers and helpers. Hie children will have a program to present for all who care to attend. Everyone is welcome. Delta Theta Tau sorority held its June meeting Tuesday, June 8 at the Greencastle Saddle Club house at 6:30 at a pitch-in picnic. Sixteen members were present and Mrs. Ann Stewart was elected their president for the craning year. The members spent the evening playing Bingo after the picnic. The committee in charge of the affair were Mrs. Donald McLean, Mrs. Ann Stewart, Mrs. Jessie Wells, Mrs. H. G. Treible, Mrs. Hazel Hanna and Helen Wemeke.

The closing program of The New Providence Baptist Church Vacation Bible School will be Sunday evening, June 11th at 7:30 in the Belle Union Gym. The crafts will be on display in the cafeteria before the program. All parents and friends are invited. Invitations for 25 are issued by Mrs. Norman Knights for a 1:00 p.m. luncheon Friday at her home for a linen shower honoring Miss Ellen Hunberger of Washington D.C. Miss Hunsberger is the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. William E. Kerstetter, as she is the fiancee of their son William, Jr.

County Hospital Dismissed Wednesday: Charles Renfro, Putnamville Roy Watson, Cloverdale Jess Herbert, Cloverdale Hugh Collins, Cloverdale Agnes Walker, Coatesville Doris Sheese, Gosport Claude Dellen, Stilesville Mrs. John Head and daughter, Fillmore Mark Meagher, Greencastle Jackie Jackson, Greencastle Roy Kee, Greencastle John Lowdermilk, Greencastle Births: Mr. and Mrs. Jim Spiker, 408 West Walnut Street, a girl, Wednesday.

The engagement of Miss Judith Mair^-r Martin and Eugene C. Buis has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs Densford Martin, R.R. 4, Terre Haute. Mr. and Mrs. Henry D. Buis are the parents of the bridegroom Miss Martin is a graduate of Indiana State University and has been teaching in the Belle Union grade school the last two years. A July 18 wedding is set and will be in the Union Valley church.

Bill Sandy Says, A changing world is not harmful to people but unchanging people are bad for it. Old Reliable White Cleaners.

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Mr. and Mrs. Gary Burton 12 Sunset Dr. City, wish to announce the engagement of their daughter Linda Marie to Bill R. Newgent Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Newgent Sr. of La Mesa, California. No wedding date has been set.

Birthdays Taffy Shay Cox, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Cox, 1 year old June 8. Diana Lynn Shaw, daughter of Mrs. Mary Shaw, 308 North Madison Street, 11 years old June 8.

Card of Thanks For the many cheery cards, nice notes and flowers and visits from my family, friends and ministers I say thanks, also to the Doctors, Nurses, Nurses Aides and every one connected with the hospital and Sunset Manor Nursing Home I again say thanks. They were such a ray of sunshine behind those dark clouds. Mrs. Myrtle Boatman

Attacked By Mistake WASHINGTON UPI — A U.S. Navy research ship today was attacked by mistake by Israeli torpedo boats and airplanes in the Meditarranean near the Sinai Peninsula, the Pentagon reported.

§|| > i ill j m

Oliver Rice will deliver the Memorial Address Sunday evening June 11, at 7:00 p.m. at Bethel AME Church. The Green castle Chapter of the NAACP will hold a memorial service as a tribute to Medgar W. Evers, Mississippi Field Secretary, killed in action June 12, 1963 and other martyrs who died in the cause of Full Freedom. Mr. Rice was bom at Natchez Mississippi and graduated from Tougaloo College Mississippi with a BS in Mathematics. He minored in religion and philosophy. He was a personal friend of Wharlest Jackson of Natchez who also has lost his life. Mr. Rice came to DePauw last Fall on a MAT fellowship in Math. During the school year he substituted in the Greencastle Community Schools. His wife, Edith, is Headstart Teacher at the St. Andrews Center. They are the parents of 1% months old Angela Marie. The public is invited to attend this Memorial Service.

I Obituaries Grace Arnold's Rites Saturday Miss Grace Arnold, 77, Fillmore, died Thursday morning at the Putnam County Hospital. She was bom in Putnam County, December 7, 1887, the daughter of James and Mary Smith Arnold. Mrs. Stanley Sears made her home with Mrs. Arnold after the death of her parents. Miss Arnold was a retired school teacher, having taught school for twenty-eight years. She retired in 1947. She was a graduate of Danville Normal College. There are no immediate survivors. Funeral services will be held Saturday at 2:00 p.m. at the Rector Funeral Home. Interment will be in Bainbridge Cemetery. Calling hours at the funeral home after 2:00 p.m. Friday.

Hefatel

by HEIOISE CRUSE

A local Teenager's View By Janet Staub Two more weeks and the official start of the summer season will be here. To most people summer starts when school ends. Summer is the season of the year which in the northern hemisphere generally may be said to comprise the months of June, July and August. The astronomical summer lasts in the northern hemisphere from the June solstice to the September equinox, during which time the sun, being north of the equator, shines more directly upon this part of the earth, and rises much sooner and sets later, which renders this the hottest period of the year. The period of greatest heat generally takes place in August, since the influence of the sun’s rays has then been felt for a long time on the earth, and the wind blowing from the north becomes milder owing to a moderation of the temperature in the polar circle caused by the thawing of the ice. But people who are cooped up in offices say that the heat is worse before and after their vacations! In the southern hemisphere the summer lasts from the December soltice to the March equinox. By The Way: From the looks of the 4-H news the fair is going to be great this year.

•Missiles

Spokesmen said 214 Americans were killed in action during the seven day period ending last Saturday. The spokesmen said 1,161 Americans were wounded and one was reported missing, bringing the total number of U. S. casualties for the war to 76,111, including 10,780 killed. South Vietnamese combat deaths last week totalled 235 and 15 other allied troops were killed. But 5.2 Communists were reported killed for every free world soldier slain, giving the allies their highest “kill ratio” in two months. Officials also announced U. S. troops strength in Vietnam increased by 7,000 last week to a record total of 462,000. Reconnaissance planes which flew over the blasted SAM storage area brought back pictures confirming at least nine loaded missile transporters, one radar van and two chemical trucks were destroyed. The jubilant attack pilots reported they put their bombs squarely into the camouflaged base. Aft^r the raid, they said, a giant cloud of multi-colored chemical smoke billowed a mile high.

Elizabeth Phelps Mrs. Elizabeth Phelps died Wednesday evening after an extended illness. Funeral services are pending at Hopkins-Walton Funeral Home.

State Police Hunt Outlaws TTERRA AMARILLA, N. M. UPI—Two dozen state policemen took up the search today for the remnants of an outlaw band of 16 Spanish-Americans who vanished in the forested canyons of northern New Mexico with an army on their heels. Some 500 National Guardsmen, armed with tanks and cannons, were called off the hunt and ordered home Wednesday after an unsuccessful search for the renegades, one reported to have dynamite laced to his chest. State police Capt Joe Black, who headed the manhunt, decided Wednesday to abandon the military type of search. "I feel we can gather information better by roving around freely in the villages, working through informants, rather than under a military type of operation,” Black said. The hunt for the desperados, led by fiery Reies Lopez Tijerina, begun Monday after they shot their way into the courthouse at Tierra Amarilla, wounded two policemen and held 20 persons hostage, including the sheriff, for an hour and a half. The incident apparently was a retaliation by Tijerina’s group, the Political Confederation of Free City States, for weekend arrests by state police of 11 confederation leaders. Tijerina and his followers claim title to millions of acres of New Mexico land under ancient land grants made by Spanish viceroys in Mexico in the 17th and 18th centuries.

U. S. Embassy Is Sealed Off MOSCOW UPI — The U.S. Embassy was sealed off today in preparation for an antiAmerican demonstration apparently against the U.S. role in the Mideast crisis. U.S. Embassy officials rang down the building’s steel shutters and about 20 water trucks were parked nearby. Anti-demonstration preparations also went into effect at the British Embassy, which was preparing for a reception to honor the birthday of Queen Elizabeth n.

Dear Folks: Do you hate a soap-filled pad because it rusts once you have used it? Let me tell you what to do. Get an empty peanut butter jar (I happen to use an extra sugar bowl because it looks nice on my drainboard) and put a soap-filled pad in it Turn on your hot water faucet. Let the water get real hot . . . Fill the jar at least halfway with hot water. Take a spoon and push the pad UNDER the water. Cap the jar (if you are using a sugar howl put the Ud back on) and let it sit on your drainboard overnight. Here’s where your surprise will come: The next morning as you lift up the pad you will find a thick gloppy substance. Hiis is wonderful. I call it jewelers’ rouge. As you pick up the pad, squeeze most of this soapy residue out . . . then scour your pots and pans! You haven’t wasted all of the jewelers’ rouge. After you are through using the pad as a scourer, rinse it under the faucet to get all of the particles of mashed potatoes, scrambled eggs, etc., out of it, leaving the pad perfectly clean. Place it back in the jar of goop, being sure that it is UNDER the water. You can use the pad for weeks and it will not rust if you use this method. If the water line goes down, add some more water, or some type of liquid detergent. But don’t let the air get to the steel wool. This is what causes rust. Gee, I love to save a penny. Don’t you? Heloise a a a • Letter of Laughter Dear Heloise: A good place to leave notes for your children, your husband or yourself (I’m always trying to remember something myself . . . ) is on the front door of your refrigerator. Anchor them with a small magnet. It works like magic. You can’t possibly miss it as everyone in the entire family goes to the refrigerator for something at some time during the day. Mother a a a a Dear Heloise: Did you ever forget to iron your husband’s shirt till the last minute . .. and he’s getting dressed ? When I do, I dip a bath towel in hot water and wring it out fairly well. Put the shirt in it and roll it up and in a few moments it is perfect for ironing. Dorothy D. a a a • Dear Heloise: I sell perfume and would like to help your readers. I quite agree that all of those beautiful bottles of perfume and cologne should be displayed proudly. But please, ladies, do not

dispaly them where they will be in the sun. It will evaporate your perfume and over a period of time will actually change tha fragrance! Carol Johnson a a • • Dear Heloise: For those women who do not have dishwashers or spray hoses on their sink for scalding and sterilizing their dishes: I find a child’s pliable plastic sprinkler pail just perfect for this. These pails can be bought at most five and dime stores. Sarah Sandri a a • a Dear Heloise: When removing a ham, cranberry sauce, etc., from a can, instead of making a hole in the bottom of the can itself, just insert a knife blade down the side between the food and the can and watch the contents come right out. Martha Davey a a • e You’re right, it works! Heloise a e e e Dear Heloise: I’ve found a quick and easy way to dry nylons, combs, brushes and any other small item I forget to wash ahead of time and need right away. Just put them in the hood of a portable dryer and they’ll dry in no time. J.M.S. e e Dear Heloise: I use a canvas cloth for rolling out cookies, and pie crusts. Each time I’m finished using It I put the canvas in a plastio bag and store in my refrigerator. This way I find that I do not have to wash it each time. It keeps cold and thus eliminates the "breakdown” of tha shortening. Edna K. Haines • a a a . 4 *•' Dear Heloise: I do not have a vaporizer. Instead (when I need one), I use an old coffee pot. The pouring spout is idea] for letting out steam into tha (Continued oa Page 4)

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