The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 15 July 1967 — Page 2
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Pag# 2
Tha Daily Bannar, Greancastla, Indiana
Saturday, July 15, 1967
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 Published every evening except Sunday and holidays at 24*26 South Jackson Street, Greencastle, Indiana. 46135. Entered in the Post Office at Greencastle, Indiana, as second class mail matter under Act of March 7, 1878. 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 sect 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 Putnam County—1 year $10.00—6 months $5.50-3 months $3.00; Indiana other 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 mail subscriptions payable in advance.
Bible Thought For Today How oft is the candle of the wicked put out! They are as stubble before the wind, and as chaff that the storm carrieth away.—Job 21:17. The righteous sometimes suffer misfortune, but the wicked are overwhelmed by the fruit of their own deeds.
TERMITES? call SHETRONE REAL ESTATE Ph; Ol 3-9315 Now taking orders for Free Inspection Termite Control Company "serving you since '32" Work Guaranteed
20 Years Ago Mr. and Mrs. William Murray and son were vacationing at Lake Manistique, Michigan. Dr. and Mrs. Russell Vermil- ! lion were in Crawfordsville. Mrs. L.W. Crump was awarded the Arc of Epsilon Pi by the i national organization of Alpha Gamma Delta for her outstandj ing service to the local under- : graduate chapter.
DANCE AMERICAN LEGION POST NO. 58 SATURDAY, JULY 15th Clarence Daugherty Combo 9:30 P.M. to 1:30 A.M.
Bill Sandy Says, I stopped the high cost of delivery, you come and bring and save. Old | Reliable White Cleaners.
Items and prices in this ad are effective thru Sun., Mon., Tues., Wed., July 16, 17, 18, 19. Cooyright 1967—The Kroger Company. Quantity Rights Reserved.
Kroger All-Meat
Wieners. .™.59 c
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Graves former residents of Greencastle were here visiting friends recently. James Tobin, an assistant Indianapolis Fire Chief and a former local boy, visited friends and relatives here Friday. Miss Virginia Sayers and Miss Sally Sayers have returned home after visiting their aunt, Lucille Gillespie in New York City. Miss Virginia Sayers recently returned from a six months tour of Europe.
Personal And Local News
The Current Book Club will meet with Mrs. Lynn Brown on Monday, July 17, at 8 p.m. Present Day will meet at 1 o’clock on Tuesday with Mrs. Frank Durham. Mrs. Menard D. Ryan, formerly Jean Hall of Roachdale, daughter of H. Earl and the late Gladys Hall, attended the Triennial National Meeting of U.P.W. Jan 26-30th at Purdue University as a delegate of the Fletcher Hill’s Presbyterian Church, El Cajon Calif. Mr. Ryan and son, Greg joined her in Indianapolis and visited with Mrs. Ryan’s relatives also in Roachdale and Bainbridge. They will leave July 16th for their home in LaMesa Calif.
County Hospital Dismissed Friday: Walter Ross, Fillmore Robert Templeman, Roachdale Vicky Proctor, Greencastle Mrs. Larry Sheldon and daughter, Greencastle Births: Mr. and Mrs. Larry Bastin, Greencastle, Route 1, a girl, Friday.
fn Memory
In memory of our daddy, Gilbert Pettit, who left us one year ago, July 16. 1966. Although God took our daddy away His love will always be in our| hearts to stay, Sadly missed by daughters. Betty Jean, Margie, Barbara, Carol Ann, and Judy and fam ilys.
OBITUARIES Services Monday for Wilmer Albin Wilmer F. Albin, 65, well known South Jackson Street resident, died this morning at 4:30 in the Putnam County Hospital where he had been a patient since June 30. Mr. Albin was a graduate of the Greencastle High School in 1921 and was a retired rural mail carrier out of the local post office. He was a charter member of Fathers Auxiliary No. 1 of Gen. Jesse M. Lee Post 1550 Veterans of Foreign Wars and had held various offices in the organization. Survivors are: his wife, Ruth; one daughter, Mrs. Mary Oricko, Dayton, Ohio; two sons, Wilmer J. Jr., Greencastle, R. 1 and Tommy J. Greencastle; two sisters, Mrs. Edna Mae Priest, Crawfordsville and Mrs. Katherine Alter, Richmond; one brother, Clair, Greencastle R. 1 and nine grandchildren. Funeral services will be held on Monday July 17th. at 2:00 p.m. at the Rector Funeral Home in Greencastle. Friends may call at the funeral home after 2:00 p.m. Sunday.
Co&tesville. Rev. Dallas Rissler will officiate. Interment will be in the Amo Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home in Coatesville after 1:00 p. m. Saturday.
Penny and Paula Evens, twin daughters of Dale and Janet Evens, will celebrate their 5th birthday, July 17. Their daddy is employed in Indianapolis. Their grandparents are Mrs. Earl E. Evens and Mr. and Mrs. Noel Bettis.
Mourning doves are not longlived. The population must renew itself almost every three or four years.
YOU ARE INVITED TO COME, SUNDAY - JULY 16, From 1 P.M. Till 7 P.M. TO THE OPEN HOUSE OF OUR NEW - - - RANDOM HOME
Follow the Signs to Edglea Dr. just east of The Country Club one mile north of Greencastle on Highway 43. RANDOM
C. E. SHUEE REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE 108 N. Vina, Greencastle Phone OL 3*9702
Graveside rites for Maude Hurst Graveside services will be held for Mrs. Maude Bryan Hurst, 95, Monday, July 17, in Forest Hill Cemetery. She was the widow of Walter Hurst, who died in 1913. Mrs. Hurst was bom in St. Catherine, Mo., the daughter of Dr. Thomas Alexander and Cynthia Fanner Bryan. Maude Bryan came to Putnam County in her early teens after having been left an orphan. She and her two brothers, William and Thomas, made their home with an aunt, Mrs. James Raines. She was married to William Walter Hurst in 1892. Mrs. Hurst is survived by two daughters, Mae Hurst Canning, with whom she had lived in Cleveland Heights for the past 24 years; Hazel Hurst Carr, Toledo; two sons, Robert Bryan Hurst and Thomas Albert Hurst of Columbus, O. There are eleven grandchildren and sixteen great-grand-children. One niece, Jean Bryan Johnson lives in Kansas City, Mo. Two cousins in this community are Mrs. W. R. Hutcheson and Mrs. Louis F. Hays. Mrs. Hurst was a charter member of the Roachdale Eastern Star and a member of the Christian Church of Christ of Columbus, O.
Roachdale rites for Lioael Suiter Lionel L. Suiter, 75, of Roachdale, died at 4:30 p. m. Friday in Putnam County Hospital after an illness of three years. Mr. Suiter had been a farmer most of his life and had lived in Roachdale the past 11 years. He was a member of the Christian Church. He was bom May 17, 1892, in Meneffee County, Kentucky, a son of Smith and Lucritia Armitag Suiter. He was married to Loda Benson in Meneffee, Ky. Surviving are the widow; three daughters, Mrs. Gladys Cargent of Crawfordsville and Mrs. Ruby Martz and Mrs. Mary Case, both of Roachdale; two brothers, Carl and Harold of Crawfordsville; a sister, Mrs. Ethel Keck of Greencastle; four grandchildren and two greatgrandsons. Funeral services will be held at 2 p. m. Sunday at Perkins Funeral Home' with burial in Roachdale Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home after 2 p. m. today.
Maud Daraell fuaeral Suaday Mrs. Maud Da mall, 84, Coatesville, died Friday at the Putnam County Hospital. She was bom July 1, 1883, in New Winchester, the daughter of Obed and Lou Bawsman Underwood. She was a member of the Amo Baptist Church and the Eastern Star of Coatesville. For i several years she served as precinct committeewoman in the Coatesville community. Survivors are: one daughter, Mrs. Hugh Isenberg, Coatesville; three step-children, Woodson Damall, Coatesville; Earl, Mohn, Washington and Katherine Heath, Texas; four grandchildren; one sister, Jessie Hurt, Danville. Funeral services will be held Sunday at 2:00 p. m. at the Weaver Funeral Home x n
Birthdays
Susan Kay Barrett, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Barrett, nine years old today, July 15. Myron Andrew Miller, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Miller, 2 years old today, July 15.
A women's view By GAY PAULEY NEW YORK UPI — The latest feminine hat trick borrows from the boys. Hats copied from what men wore yesteryear and wear today emerge as the strong trend for fall and winter. Women will be wearing versions of everything from helmets taken from the days when knighthood was in flower, on through to the jaunty Robin Hood shapes, the Stetson of the cowboy, and a number of versions of the Aussie’s upswept brim hat with strap under the chin. Add in fedoras, dozens of styles of capes, and the dressy Homburgs. One designer does the Homburg in white felt with metallic gold trim for evening. By sharp contrast .another trend is to the ultra-feminine hat with big, face-flattering brims back on the scene. One of these “picture” hats is all feathers and a yard wide, and can’t you just see that one on a windy winter day! New hats were spotlighted In the Millinery Institute of America’s semi-annual brunch “bash” for visiting fashion editors. They’re in New York for a series of fashion shows of all types of ready-to-wear. The shows conclude Friday. New too was the millinery industry's announcement of a change in head measurements. Henceforth, hats will be in all sizes, instead of a limited two or three, as the industry tries to lure women away from the bareheaded look. Milliners make a pitch for the teen market too and the institute show featured a whole group of “teen swingers”—caps, berets, helmets done by such “name” milliners as Adolfo, Mr. John, and Oleg Cassini.
Dear Heloise: Swimming time is here so this is an idea for a child’s individual beach bag with matching towel . . . Use a bright colored hand towel, fold it in half and sew the sides together. Make punch holes around the open top with metal eyelets, four on each side. Stitch bias tape closed and insert it through the eyelets, forming a drawstring. Knot the ends of the tape together so the drawstring won’t come out. Sew the child’s inital on the front of the bag using bias tape of a contrasting color. Put a matching bath towel inside the beach bag and she is ready for a trip to the pool. Mrs. D. E. S. * * * * Dear Heloise: In response to the complaint about guests rubbing their hands over lovely velvet upholstery: We visited Windsor Castle in England. In the Queens apartment, there were lovely velvet and silk brocades lining the walls. Samples of the material were tacked beside the doorways for visitors to stroke . . . which WE ALL DID! Following this idea, I suggest hemming small pieces of upholstery material and pinning them over the arms and backs. These can be stroked . . . and removed for dry cleaning. They are unobtrusive and preserve the life of the original furniture covering. Rachel Long • • * • Dear Heloise; Often we reconstitute orange juice in our electric blender and store it in the refrigerator in the blender glass, giving it a quick blend before pouring another glass of juice. Sometimes the blender glass will have rings of orange pulp that are difficult to remove. Running the blender with de
tergent and water in it won’t remove the rings. So I add an abrasive . . . cracked ice. Half a dozen cracked ice cubes adds to the detergent solution is THE solution. BiU • * * * Dear Heloise: With the camping and vacation traveling season about here, I would like to pass on an idea I have found very helpful in packing the car. There are always certain items we know we may need en route and don’t want to pack (Continued on Page 3)
BOLENS MUSTANG TILLERS fingertip control cuts path over 46" wide digs 6" deep 5 hp Super Mustang. Was $180.00
NOW WHILE THEY LAST
sioun
Craver Welding 208 N. Jackson Phona OL 3-6714
REVIVAL TIME
REV. GENE CLARK Evangelist
Through July 16 7:30 Each Evening SUNDAY 9:30 a.m. >7:30 p.m. Hear The “Clark Family"
Singers - Musicians - Evangelist Church Air Conditioned FIRST CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 315 N. Jackson St. GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
Only at EITEL'S do you get A GUARANTEE OF SATISFACTION We use only the freshest flowers end the healthiest plants We Guarantee Your Satisfaction or Your Money Back order from EITEL'S FLOWERS OL 3-3171
Putnam County Playhouse Presents Snow White & The Seven Dwarfs July 20,21,22 8 p.m. Speech Hall
Limited Number of Tickets Available
