The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 22 June 1967 — Page 2
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Th* Daily Bannar, Draancastla, Indiana
Thursday, >una 22, 196/
THE DAILY BANNER
and
Herald Consolidated
"It Waves For All"
Businass Phones: OL 3-5151 — OL 3-5152 Elizabeth Rariden Estate, Publisher Norma L. Hill, Assistant Publisher Published every evening except Sunday and holidays at 34-24 South Jackson Street, Greencastlo, Indiana. 4413S. Entered In the Post Office at Greencastle, Indiana, as second doss mail matter under Act of March 7, 1S7S. United Press International lease wire service; Member Inland Daily Press Association; Hoosier State Press Association. All unsolicited articles, manuscripts, letters and pictures sent 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 Bonner effective March 14, 1944; In Puh nam County-' 1 year $10.00—4 months $5.50—3 months $3.00; Indiana other 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 mail subscriptions payable in advance.
News Of Servicemen
| OBITUARIES Services Friday for Agnes Smith Mr*. Agne* Smith, 45, of Routu 2, Poland, died Tuesday night enroute to the Clay Coun-
ty Hospital in Brazil.
Mr*. Smith wa* bom in Owen County, May 7,1922, th* daughter of Robert J. and Mary Ann Langdon Cook. She wa* a member of the Jordan Village Nazarene Church of near Poland. Survivor* include the husband, Ray F. Smith; her mother, Mr*. Mary Ann Cook; two slaters, Mr*. Josephine Langdon of Indianapolis and Mrs. Margaret
„ . „ . . I Mae Slavena of Greencastle, and
Pfc. Charles Robert Roe is FT. GORDON, GA. —Private ^ brotherS( Robert Earl Cook spending a thirty-day leave with Thomas R. Graver, 24, son of ^ Rex Keith Cook, both of
his mother, Mrs. Mary Roe of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer H. Graver, Sheridan. July 11 he will return i 1103 Ave. C., Greencastle, Ind., to Pleiku, Vietnam. He has | completed a radio teletype
been over there since last Sep-
| Bible Thought
For Today
Jesus said unto him, if thou canst believe, all things are possible to him that believeth.— Mark 9:23. There is a creative quality in faith. It rests on love and understanding.
tember. His address is: Pfc. Charles R. Roe. RA 16842995 Co. B H Sq. TEN 4th Inf. Division San Francisco, Calif. He has a brother over there. Mrs. Mary Roe also has another son over there. His ad-
dress is:
SP 4 John W. Roe,
RA 16791801
ADVTN No. 24, Saigon .Vietnam 96499. He is at Kontum. They are both grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Artie Boswell, who has another grandson over there. His address is: Pfc. Larry R. Gowin,
• US 55852017
2/27th 25th Division 38 th IPSD, APO 96353. His mother’s name is Mrs. Helen Pickel, R. 2, Roachdale.
Poland.
Funeral services will be held
operation course at the Army j Friday at 2 p.m. at the Jordan Southeastern Signal School, Ft. Presbyterian Church, with burGordon, Ga., June 16. ial in the Wilkinson Cemetery.
The body will lie in state at the
During his 11 weeks of train- church one hour preceding the mg, he received instruction in gerviceg Friends may call at the operation of radio transmit- th< Wegt Son Funeral H ome
ting and receiving sets by voice in S p enceri
and Morse code. |
His wife, Donna, lives in
Roachdale, Ind.
20 Years Ago
County Hospital Dismissed Wednesday: Mrs. Richard Hull and son, Reelsville Velda Nees, Cloverdale Grace Cooper, Spencer Judy Neeley, Clayton Mabel Hall, Stilesville Marie Tate, Greencastle Russell Myers, Greencastle
Births:
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Varvel, 507 East Hanna Street, a boy,
Wednesday.
Mr. and Mr*. Dale Martin, Greencastle, Route 2, a girl,
Local people returning from j Wednesday.
the State Encampment of the Veterans of Foreign War* in Evansville included Morris Crawley, Roy Thomas, Gailord Brown, James Black, Clyde Miller, Junior Crawley and Herschel Hammond. Mrs. Lois Arnold was hostess to the Mothers Study Club.
Eighty per cent of the people of the northeastern United States now live in cities.
MEADOWBROOK DRIVE-IN THEATRE Jet. 34 & 43 Tonight, Fri._ Sat. Yul Brynner, Angi* Dickinson 'THE POPPY IS ALSO A FLOWER" (COLOR) John Arnold, Kendra Karr "HOT ROD HULLABALOO"
Historical Society Will Meet June 28 The Putnam County Historical Society will meet Wednesday, June 28, 6:30 p. m. at Torr’s Restaurant Miss Eleanor Cammack will give a program on the life and work of her father. J. O. Oammack came to Greencastle In 1895 and after one year rented the quarters above the present Murphy’s store on Washington Street He remained in that location fortyeight years, retiring in 1944. He was active in photographic organizations and received many contest awards and honors on his photographs, not only in Indiana but in many other states as well. Many of the slides to be shown are from pictures taken during the first decade of the 1900’s. For dinner reservations call Mrs. William Boatright by noon Tuesday, June 27.
Williams rites here Saturday
Funeral services for Mrs. Elizabeth Williams, 83, former Greencastle resident, who died in Detroit, Michigan, will be held Saturday at 2:00 p. m. at the Hopkins - Walton Funeral Home. Rev. C. W. Groves will officiate. Interment will be in
Forest Hill Cemetery.
Mrs. Williams is survived by six children, all of Detroit. She was a former member of Mt. Zion Baptist Church. She was preceded in death by her husband, John William* in 1939.
Jones in talk to missionaries A pool of 2,000-8,000 men and women, developed with computer aid, to make possible a task force of mission specialists ready to offer themselves for overseas duty, was proposed at an international missionary meeting at DePauw University last night. The Rev. Dr. Tracey K. Jones, Jr., associate general secretary of the Methodist Board of Missions for its World Division, said: “At the moment we are looking for specialists in a variety of fields to go to Vietnam. But where are they? They should have a competence in French and they should be trained in their specialty." During the next 20 years, Dr. Jones predicted, there will be growing demand for men and women to meet the kind of emergency that exists in Vietnam. Such new missionary forces will not take the place of th# career missionary, but they hold great promise for world mission, he said. “We know that they exist in churches, but we have not been able to build up in advance a pool of these qualified people for such work, ready to go on short notice. “These (specialists) might be professors on sabbatical leaves, technical men, mechanics, management executives, surgeons, nurses, secretaries, airline pilots and pension experts,” Dr. Jones suggested. “If we in the church could figure out how to channel this reservoir of talent into new streams of world wide service, it could not help but make a difference to the church ...”
Personal And Local News
Charles H. Boswell of Noblesville, Mrs. Mary Roe of Sheridan and son Pfc. Charles Robert Roe spent Saturday with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Artie Boswell. Mary stayed over till Sunday afternoon. The Putnam County Council of Clubs will hold a dessert meeting Monday, June 26 at 1:15, at the home of Mrs. Grafton Longden Jr. All members and club presidents are asked to attend. Mrs. V. L. Singleton, Stan and Sue, and their friend Becky Andrews of Davis, Calif., arrived June 17 to spend their vacation with Mrs. Singleton’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Brattain and other relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Harrah and Marsha of Cloverdale were in Bloomington last Monday attending the Commencement of Indiana University. A relative of Mrs. Harrah, Jon Appleby of Spencer received a degree in Business Administration. Mr. and Mrs. William H. Barrett and family moved today from Spring Avenue to their new home at 4201 North Pennsylania, Indianapolis. Mr. Barrett purchased the Parrish Insurance Agency several months ago and recently purchased the K. E. Amick Agency which are now combined in the BarrettParrish Agency at 4915 North College in the capital city. Mrs. James B. Johnson Is at Mackinac Island attending the Biennial convention of the Alpha Omicron Pi sorority. The convention opened Monday and will close at the end of this week. Mrs. Johnson is an alumnus of the chapter at DePauw, and she was chosen as the delegate of the Greencastle alumnae group. James Johnson, Jr., has gone to Europe where he will travel to several countries. Mr. and Mrs. Artie Boswell celebrated Father’s Day and their 52 wedding anniversary with a family pitch-in dinner. Those present were, Mrs. Mary Roe and son, Pfc. Charles R. Roe, Tommie Reeves of Sheridan, (Charles is home on a 30 day leave from Vietnam), Mr. and Mrs. Robert Boswell and Freddie and Robert of Indianapolis, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Sarjent, Carolyn, Richy, Chris and Beth of Indianapolis, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Morrison, Joe and Sue of Ladoga, Mr. and Mrs. Leon Keller, Elaine of Ladoga, Mr. and Mrs. George Sarjent, Phyllis, Sanja of Lafayette, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jones; Johnnie, Debbie and Mss Ruth Majors of Greencastle; Shirley, Sandra, David, Debbie, Johnnie Pickel of Carpentersville.
Miss Sue Smoltz on mission team Miss Sue Smaltz from Gobin Memorial Methodist Church will serve more than a year as a member of the national Methodist Youth Fund/World Mission Team and for six weeks this } summer will work with the : Neighborhood House in Calexi-
co, Calif.
The Methodist Youth Fund./ World Mission Team will con- : sist of 41 members (32 youth ■ and nine adults) who will form a nucleus of interpreters of the Christian world mission to youth and adults of The Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren Church. Twen-
Mr. and Mrs. Ora Eggers of i ty states lncluding r Alaska, will Greencastle wish to announce be re p r e se nted by the team,
the approaching marriage of |
their daughter, Mary Ann Lu-1 The members, divided into 11 cas to Arthur Buis, Jr., Green- j smaller teams, will observe and castle. Route 5. The ceremony participate for six weeks dur-
July Bride
will take place July 1 at 7:30 p. m. at the First Christian Church. Friends and relatives
are invited.
Vacation school
ing this, they wiU serve voluntarily in their own regions at least one weekend a month with conference, district, or local
youth groups.
Bill Sandy Says, a fellow who won’t listen to an opinion that disagrees with his, lacks confidence in his own. Old Reliable White Cleaners.
ing the summer in the programs of community centers and day camps, town and country projects, inner city churches, and other mission projects in several states. Then from September, 1967, through August, 1968, they will spend weekends inter-
Gobin Methodist Vacation P retin S the “ ^ orld miS - Church School began Monday sion in the llght ° f thCir T SU ™' with 111 children and 19 teach- ™r service experience. In do-
ers. We have 30 children whose parents are Methodist missionaries and are attending a conference at DePauw this week. Coming from all comers of the world, they add a special dimension of knowledge and commitment to any subject studied at
Bible school.
Special thanks Is due the teachers. In the kindergarten we have PhyUis Schlegel, Mischa Harbison, Valerie Herriott and Jane Harris. First grade is taught by Jane Hanlon and Betty Jo Mays. Second grade is taught by Frances Harvey and Betty Dean. Third graders are led by Beverly Wagoner and Judy Aikman. Mary Lett and Barbara Voss are teaching fourth grade. Fifth grade Is taught by Joan Kissinger and Whitney Morrill and sixth grade by Kay Scholl and Beverly Weston. Mary Ellery and Ann Newton are in charge of the nursery for teachers’ children. Joyce Jones, Josie Kircher and Margo i Harvey are responsible for the refreshments. Audrey Naylor, assisted by Kathryn Eccles, has handled registration, and Mary Jo Tuttle did the advance publicity. The school has been directed by Martha Schneider, assisted by Ann Newton. All are to be commended for their efforts in behalf of Christian education.
Card of Thanks I would like to express my appreciation and thanks to all those who sent cards and flowers and came to visit me while I was in the hospital. Thanks to Dr. Schauwecker, Dr. Lett and Dr. Elliot, also all the nurses and nurse aides who helped take care of me. Mrs. Raymond Reed
Vaughan attends security sessions Grover A. Vaughan, security officer at DePauw University, attended a security directors’ meeting along with one hundred college and university traffic and security personnel at the University of Colorado June 19 through 22 where he was told the breakdown in respect for authority in America is a result of a struggle to “liberate ourselves from ‘old country’
habits and traditions.”
Robert F. Ochs, director of the Campus Patrol at Rutgers University, New Brunswick, N. J., touched on the respect for authority in his keynote address opening the ninth annual meeting of the National Association of College and University Traffic and Security Directors. Ochs observed, “We have idealized freedom and done everything imaginable to strengthen the rights of the individual. “While in this process, we have weakened all authority. The rights of the state, the church, the law, even the rights of the university are shaky and often stumble. Maybe we have gained too much freedom,” Ochs
asserted.
During the meeting the security officers discussed their relations with students, handling of emotional problems, and reviewed court decisions affecting campus police activities.
Hints from Heloise Dear Heloise: I have just discovered a new and better way to label homemade jellies, jams and canned foods. Use masking tape. You can place a strip of tape mi some waxed paper, roll it into & typewriter and just type away. The name of the food and the date can be put on this kind of tape. When typed, the words are easier to read and the labeling job is finished much faster. When through typing, the tape can be removed easily from the waxed paper and put on the
jars.
Marilyn Hanley a * • * Ladies, this is terrific and it works beautifully. The reason for putting the tape on the waxed paper is so that the gooey side of the masking tape does not ruin the roller on your typewriter. Heloise • • • • Letter of Laughter Dear Heloise: I cut the feet off old nylon stockings before using the leg part to tie rose branches and plants. One day I accidently cut a pair of brand new nylons. Whacked both feet off! Then it was I, not the plants, that was FIT TO BE TIED!
Irene
a • • • Dear Heloise: A clean plastic squeeze bottle with a flip-seal cap to keep it air tight, is a wonderful container for rubbing alcohol or some types of liniment It is much easier to handle and pervents spilling from a large-necked bottle. A Reader a a • a You are soooo right! I keep one of these plastic flip-seal bottles filled with rubbing alcohol. It is especially wonderful
In Memory
Ashes buried
LONDON UPI — The ashes of John Masefield, Britain’s poet laureate, were buried in the comer of Westminister Ab-
bey dedicated to the
In loving memory of my wife, Thelma Gardner, who passed away June 22, 1965. What would I give to clasp her hand Her happy face to see, To hear her voice and see her smile. That meant so much to me. Edwin Gardner
great poets. Masefield was 88
when he died May 12.
REBEKAH NOTICE:
Bee Hive Rebekah Lodge No.
nation’s 106 will meet in regular session
OUR WALKING GLOVE. This serene and flattering shoe was just made for busy days like youn. Sloped of softest leather, the elegant dressmaker detail hides a secret elasticizing that hugs its famous Red Cross Sioe fit to your foot for total bliss. HUCLET $15 MOORE'S SHOES
anniversaries Weddings Mi*, and Mrs. Walter Feld, 46 years, June 22.
WEST SIDE OF SQUARE
This product hM bo eoBBodion whatmr with Tho American National Red Cross
Combine Auto Finance and Insurance Into One Easy Payment GLEN FURR AGENCY CLOVERDALE, INDIANA PHONE 795-4413
Monday 8 p.m. This will be a Birthday evening—members are expected to bring either a salad or sandwiches. Serving at 6:30. Three “Fifty-Year” members will be honored and receive pins. All Rebekas are most welcome. Willa Green, N.G.
Now You Know By United Press International Hawaii has the youngest population of the 50 states; the last census showed half its population was under 25 and only 60 per cent over 17.
Birthdays Jeffrey Coffman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rex Coffman, 8 years old, June 22.
We fix Sunday dinner seven davs a week
Colonel Harland danders lixes rs.cn tucky Fried Chicken for about a million folks every day. His chickea goes home with more people more often than any other chicken in the world. Most be pretty good? Tti*. Take some frrHTie tonight. Take it from the Colonel ..• "it'sfinger lickin > good® COLONEL SANDERS’ RECIPE _ _ —Kentucky Tried
JACKSON'S DOUBLE DECKER
INDIANAPOLIS RD.
OL 3-9977
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lawn fertilizer makes grass multiply itself
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That’s how sure we are of what TURF BUILDER will do for any lawn. And there’s good reason. TURF BUILDER is the only fertilizer that’s Trionized. Makes roots grow sturdier and deeper below ground, so that grass grows thicker and greener on top. Stays that way longer too, thanks to the sustained feeding of TURF BUILDER. Try a bag this weekend. If your lawn isn’t greener in 10 days, it won’t cost you a dime.
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when traveling as there is no danger of spillage, and it is so lightweight. Also, if you happen to drop it ... no breakiebreakie! Heloise • • • • Dear Heloise: In our home we have a wonderful gadget which we call “the board”—and it is just that It’s a 30”xl8” piece of plywood covered with plastic that was left over from the counter in our kitchen when a new sink was installed. We use this board for Just about everything. It fits across the end of our high old-fashion-ed bathtub. I have dried and dressed four children on it It saves me from stooping or carrying a wet child out of the warm bathroom and into a bedroom to dress. “The board” is great to put things on when cleaning out the linen closet or medicine chest, or for just folding towels, drying sweaters, or what have
you.
I also use it for flower arranging or repotting plants right in the bathroom. In the kitchen I use it on top of the stove when I clean oul the cupboards. In the living room it is ideal for putting a puzzle together. (If you are interrupted, it can be slipped under the davenport). At Christmas time, I place (Continued on Page S)
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