The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 13 June 1967 — Page 2

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THE DAILY BANNER and Herald Consolidated "It Waves For All" * Business Phones: OL 3-5151 — OL 3-5152 Elizabeth Rariden Estate, Publisher Norma L. Hill, Assistant Publisher Publishad avary availing axcapt Sunday and holidays at 24*26 South Jackson Stroot, Graoncastlo, Indiana. 46135. Entarad in tha Pott Offico at Graoncastlo, Indiana, as socond class mail matter undo? Act of March 7, 187S. Unitod Pross International loasa wire tervica; Member Inland Daily Press Association; Hoosier State Press Association. All unsolicited articles, manuscripts, letters and pictures tent to The 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 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—I year $12.0C—6 months $7.00—3 months $4-00; Outside Indiana—1 year $16.00—6 months $9.00—3 months $6.00. All mail subscriptions payable in advance.

Bible Thought For Today LORD thou hast heard the desire of the humble.—Psalm 10:17. God always has loved to exalt humble people. He hates pride.

ANNIVERSARIES Weddings Mr. and Mrs. Wm. B. Jones, 42 years. Birthdays Gregory McCracken, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald McCracken, Greencastle, Route 5, 9 years today, June 13.

Marriage License Glen D. Holmes, teacher, and Ellen Conley, waitress, both of West Plains, Missouri.

Card of Thanks We would like to thank our many friends and neighbors who showed their kindness and sympathy in the loss of our loved one. Thanks to Mr. and Mrs. John Whitaker and P.ev. Maxwell Webb. The Person Family

Deaf Man Perfects Midget Transistor Hearing Aid If you can hear people talk and can’t make out the words clearly then this may be the answer. An extremely small hearing aid using a tiny energized unit has been perfected by a man who himself is hard of hearing and has been for over 10 years. If interested it is suggested you write A. W. Newell, 2616 W. 8th St., Erie, Pa. You will receive full information at no cost or obligation whatsoever.—Adv.

Card of Thanks We wish to express our sincere appreciation to all who helped in anyway to make our 50th wedding anniversary a happy occasion. Thanks, to all who sent flowers, gifts, beautiful cards and letters. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Arnold

OFFICE CLOSED JUNE 19 thru JULY 5 Dr. Gerald Elliott

Take home a portable feast**. TONIGHT!

A barrel full of tender and tasty Colonel Sanders’ Recipe Kentucky Fried Chicken. 21 pieces of the most flavorful chicken you ever ate. Just costs $4.60. And all you do is pick it up and take it home. The service is sudden!

fr’ake fciwa the Colonel*** finger Kckin* good!”^ (Othersizeordeaavailable. Wither without side dishes.) We fix Sunday dinner seven days a week

COLONEL SANDERS* RECIPE

Kjmtiifky Tried Ukidce*,

9

JACKSON'S

DOUBLE DECKER

INDIANAPOLIS RD.

OL3-9977

Personal And Local News

Mrs. Lola Tilley has returned to her home from the Putnam County hospital. The Friendship Club will meet with Mrs. Raymond Baldwin, Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. Maple Heights Craft Club will meet Wednesday, June 14th at the home of Ethel Schachtel, Martinsville St. Club Sixteen will meet with Betty Rector at 7 p. m. Wednesday. Remember the baked goods auction. Mrs. Marian Radcliffe from North Little Rock, Arkansas spent a long weekend in Greencastle with her mother, Mrs. L. P. Arms of Green View Apartments. The Women of the Moose will meet Wednesday evening at 8:00 p. m. at the Moose Home. There will be initation and all members are requested to attend. Mrs. Robert Comick and doughters, Nancy, Susan and Sally, of Lakewood, Colo, arrived today for a visit with Mrs. Comick’s mother, Mrs. L. C. Buchheit. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Whitlock and daughter, Diana and Mrs. Harold Brown returned Friday after spending several days in Lakeland, Georgia, visiting Mr. and Mrs. Warren Brown. A Schwerman truck, driven by Dick Plummer, was pictured in an earlier issue as It veered off Road 43 just south of Brick Chapel. The truck veered off the road to avoid collision with another vehicle. Miss Opal Brothers returned Sunday to her residence in Green View Apartments, after spending a week with her niece and family in Indianapolis, where her great niece, Sue Ann Stoner, was graduated from Ben Davis High School last Tuesday evening. Dr. Preston Adams and Dr. Winona Welch, of the DePauw Department of Botany and Bacteriology, are attending, this week, the International Conference on Systematic Botany and Zoology, at the University of Michigan. All sessions of the Conference are held in the Rackham Building. Speakers at the Conference are from Utrecht, Holland, Melbourne, Australia, Ghent, Belgium, Buenos Aires, Argentina, and Stockholm, Sweden, as well as from biological departments of numerous large universities in the United States.

Bill Sandy Says, The kind of words a fellow speaks are the kind that comes back to him. Old Reliable White Cleaners. -

Mr. and Mrs. Dorwin Duncan and their children spent the past weekend in St. Louis, Mo. Mr. and Mrs. Orville Davis, of Indianapolis, arc visiting friends and relatives her# this week. Joseph R. Parker and his family of Chicago will visit his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bo Irwin, and friends this week. The Jaycee wives will have a picnic at noon Wednesday at No. 1 shelter in Robe-Ann Park. Bring sack lunches for your family. Mr. and Mrs. Jack W. Hamm have returned home from a vacation spent at the Great Ba> hama, where they flew from Florida. James A. Lyon, son of Richard and Jeneene Lyon, was released from the Riley Hospital in Indianapolis on Monday. His condition is improved. Mr. and Mrs. Gifford Black attended their daughter Barbara’s commencement in Chicago, Friday. The exercises were held at the Medinah Temple and Barbara was graduated from the University of Illinois and she has the degree of Registered Nurse. Mr. and Mrs. Walter O. Buis recently entertained at their home with a family supper in honor of his sister and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Arnold, on their 50th wedding anniversary. Others present were Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Buis, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Kivett and Mr. and Mrs. Devon Dudley. The Clinton Homemakers will meet Thursday evening at 7:30 at the home of Mrs. Lawrence Thomas. Elizabeth McCullough from Prevo’s will bring the lesson on lingerie. Martha Virginia Smith of Greencastle received the Bachelor of Arts degree with distinction from Transylvania College during Commencement exercises June 11. Miss Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elgin T. Smith, majored in drama at the Lexington, Kentucky college. She ia a graduate of Greencastle High SchooL

MASONIC NOTICE Stated meeting Cloverdale Lodge 132 F. A A. M. Thursday, June 15, at 7:30 p.m. Visitors welcome. Truman Mann an, W.M.

MASONIC NOTICE Stated Assembly Greencastle Council No. 107, Royal A Select Masters, Wednesday evening June 14th. Some important matters will be discussed. A good attendance is urged. Robert A. Ziegelman, Sr., HI Master

O.E.S. Notice Stated meeting of Morton Chapter No. 356, order of Eastern Star, Wednesday, June 14, at 7:30 p.m. Carry-in refreshments. Visiting members welcome. Dqrsie Allgood, W.M.

Alfred Tucker of London, testified in court that despite the fact he had drunk ‘'40 and probably 50” bottles of stout in one sitting, he still was sober enough to catch a man allegedly stealing his wallet. “My mum and dad also drink a lot.

WURL1TZER FULL-SCALE PIANOS IN 4 HAND-RUBBED FINISHES Once-a-Year Factory Authorized

jpilKa*,. ■

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Brown Mahogany Gleaming Ebony

Warm Fruitwood w _ ?r Mediterranean Walnut 0 HURRY! slightly higher * QUANTITIES LIMITED Here’s a once-a-year opportunity to save money on a in your home. And the price is perfect for pampering full 88-note piano. It’s a Wurlitzer, so you know that the every pocketbook. Every piano in this sale carries the tone is superb, the craftsmanship impeccable and the Wurlitzer 10-year factory warranty. Hurry—<mly lim■tyling traditionally lovely... sure to be the focal point ited quantities available at this unusual sale price.

Summer Classes Beginning NOW! KERSEY MUSIC

Buy As Low As $16.00 Per Month North On Rt. 43 -- Phone OL 3^*6824 Open 8:30-5 Daily —Frl. 8:30-8 EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT

Obituaries Albert H. Mason Rites Thursday Albert H. Mason, 72, Speedway, passed away Monday afternoon in General Hospital at Indianapolis. Hs was bom May 1, 1895 in Buffalo, New York. Mr. Mason and Miss Della Williamson were united in marriage cm March 17, 1927, and ■he is the only survivor. Services will be held Thursday at 2 p.m. at the Whitaker Funeral Home in Cloverdale with Bro. Clarence Barr in charge. Burial will be in the Cloverdale Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home after 7 this evening.

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by HEIOISE CRUSE

Why all This Talk About Water? Why all this talk about wa-

ter?

Don’t we have plenty in the Wabash Valley and (Putnam County) ? Sometimes too much. Sometimes not enough. Nationally, water has become a critical problem. We could be running out of water. The amount of rain remains about the same each year but the population is growing. There were 150 million Americans in 1950, there are 190 million today and by 1980 there will be 260 million. That isn’t all the problem. We are using more water per person than ever before. We’re taking more baths and showers, there are more garbage disposal units, more home laundries and commercial do-it-yourself washing establishments. Today we use four times as much water per person as we did in 1900. Industrial use is up 11 times industry uses 160 billion gallons of water each day. Agriculture uses more water—it consumes 145 billion gallons per day in American. Today's water consumption by everyone is 355 billion gallons per day. By 1980 that requirement will be 600 billion gallons per day. That’s why we have to make better use of our existing water resources—like the Wabash River and Its tributaries which links Putnam County closely to the problem through our Big Walnut water shed.

Lavish Clothes Wow Women ROME UPI — Women love lavish clothes, no matter on which side of the Iron Curtain they live, reports the Italian fashion designer, Zoe Fontana. Zoe, one of the dynamic Fontana Sisters of the Rome fashion house commented after showing her collection in Warsaw. “Polish women went wild for our lavish evening gowns. The more sumptuous the dress, the better they liked it,” she said. “I had expected them to be more interested in practical styles but glamour was what appealed to them. “They are avid for Western styles. A polish actress telephoned a friend at the Italian embassy at dawn after seeing the show. She eald she could not sleep for thinking about the gowns and asked if there weren’t soma way she could buy one. “I was flattered but unfortunately the answer was ‘no.’ The collection was brought in under a temporary import permit and everything had to leave the country after the three days of showings.” The designer said she was negotiating with Polish authorities about a sort of fashion “co-production” — Fontana designs and Italian fabrics made in Poland.

Hints from Heloise Dear Heloise: For ladies who cannot remove lint from dark corduory: Wash and allow to dry slowly and while the article is still slightly damp, just brush it with a clothes brush. All of the lint will come off. TTiis works like magic every time. It is very important that the clothing be damp when trying to remove the lint because lint really sticks after corduroy is

dry.

Helen Ciarca • a • • Believe me, gals, it works. But better yet—is nylon net. There’s that word again! Heloise m • * * Dear Heloise: In sewing buttons on coats or suits, use the clear nylon thread with a colored thread. The nylon gives strength and the colored one matches the garment so the thread isn’t conspicuous. Julia N. • • • • Dear Heloise: My children don’t like their summer shorts and shirts starched. So when I’m ironing, I spray-starch just the front of the shirts and the seat of the pants (where the dirt usually get ground in). Dirt floats right out at next laundry time and they don’t have the scratchy seams they would have if the garmets were starched all over. Mary Lasher * * • * Dear Heloise: I know how to dry parsley and celery tops . . . now, I’d like to know how to dry onions! I’ve tried chopping and spreading them out on a cookie sheet, then leaving them in the oven (with just the pilot light on), but they bum every time. I use so many onions in soups find stews that I would love to know how to dry them. Onion flakes are so much more convenient than peeling and chopping an onion every time it’s needed. If you don’t know, perhaps some of your readers do, so how about asking them for me? Lazy Lola • * • a I might as well be truthful and admit that I haven’t had any luck drying onions either! If any of you know the solution, how about sharing it with us? Write us a few lines in care of this paper. There must be a way to do this in our homes. And think of the money we could save! Heloise * • a • Dear Heloise: I put my name, address and phone number on my shopping

bag.

If a accidently leave the bag in a store or on a bus the person who finds it will know who

GOING PLACES? Go protected. With the extra protection of State Farm’s new “GO” Insurance. Arranged instantly! 0**^^**^

WM. R. PADGETT 7 I. Walnut STATE FARM FIRE AND CASUALTY COMPANY HOME OFFICE: BLOOMINGTON, ILLINOIS

Extra Special Dining ADAMES RESTAURANT NOW OPEN [FRIDAY — 4:30 to 9 p.m $1.95 For Porsonl KTURDAY — 4:30 to 9 p.m. ... $2.50 For Porsonl [SUNDAY **—11:30 o.m. to 12 p.m. $2.50 For Porsonl |—Childron Undor 12 — 10c For Year of Ago—| Located S Milas West of Sraiil on U. S. 40

it belongs to, and will be able to contact me. Saves many a lost shopping bag. Mrs. G. Li. Parsons • • e e Dear Heloise: Here’s an idea for parents with children under five years

old:

Children of this age love to learn, especially letters and numbers. I put magnetic numbers and letters on the refrigerator door. The children are usually around mother (and mother is usually In the kitchen!), so this is a good opportunity for them to handle and learn the letters and numbers. Even visiting children (no matter what age) are fascinated with the unusal decorations on my refrigerator door. Mother of sx • * • * Dear Heloise: When going boating, camping, or picnicking, I pack all but the ice chest-needs into those wonderful plastic trash containers. I bought a new one with the secure, or snap-on lid to use just for outings. Everything is dry and safe with no mad rush if a sudden shower or hungry little eaters appear. Mrs. Pat Hunt • • * * Dear Heloise: To remove mascara from the outside of the tube, from a plastic cosmetic bag, or even an eyelish curler, use plain rubbing alcohol on a cotton ball or a folded up facial tissue. Works just great! Joyce

Tuasday, Juna 13, 1967 20 Yeors Ago Maynard Shonkwiler was dis< missed from the Putnam Coun-

ty Hospital.

Mary Ellen West, Catherine Manhart and Rose Mary Sourwine went to Cedar Point, Ohio, to spend the summer. Captain and Mrs. Harold Crawley were here from Olympia, Washington.

County Hospital Dismissed Monday: Mrs. Hubert Wallace and son, Waveland Holland Vickroy, Fillmore Russell Myers, Greencastle Lena Shonkwiler, Greencastle

Franklin FB meets Thursday Franklin Township Farm Bureau will meet Thursday eveing, June 15 at the Roachdale Library at 8:00 p. m. for an ice cream social. Members and ftunily are asked to bring a cake and table service. The cakes will be entered in a judging contest for the 4-H Club girls prior to serving time. Prizes will be awarded. Audrey Harney will tell of her plans for going to South America and Meredith Kincaid of the State Farm Bureau Department will be guest speaker. Committee in charge will be, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Ludlow, Mr. and Mrs. James Risk, Mr. and Mrs. Shelley Abbott and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Brothers.

Open Now In ROACHDALE

STAY IN YOUR CAR

Newest ■ Most exciting car wash in town ■ open 24 hours ■ stay in your car—it’s automatic ■ it takes only two minutesl (use 2 quarters or % dollar) MARTZ AND PERKINS CAR WASH Roachdale, Ind. -

Plenty of Home Decorating Ideas and Supplies in our 1967 SPRING CATALOG Take a look and call today!

/ V IONIC, O fiY WARD

18 S. Indiana

Phone OL 3-5169

Greencastle, Ind.