The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 24 July 1967 — Page 2
Pag* 2
Th* Daily Bannar, Oraancastla, Indiana
Monday, July 24, 1967
THE DAILY BANNER and Herald Consolidated
"It Wavas For All" Businass Phonas: OL 3-5151 — OL 3-5152 Elizabath Rariden Estata, Publishar 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 GreencasHe, Indiana, as second doss mail matter under Act of March 7, 1S7t. 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.
DR. F. M. BURNS 201 South Indiana.St. X-RAY & PHYSICAL THERAPIST Out of Office July 21 - July 30 inclusiva Call for Appointments July 31
Bible Thought For Today Now thou art worth ten thousand of us.—II Samuel 18:3. An inspired leader gives lion’s strength to his people. But every person of character is an inspiration to his community. A good example has tangible value.
John Whitaker
Charles Whitaker
TRIBUTES TO OUR UNSUNG HEROES
THE PHARMACIST This man is certainly more
than a merchant even though he does have hundreds of items for sale. He is, somr times, the link between our doctor and ourselves. He has to know his business in fillling the thousands of prescriptions that are filled every day by these skilled men. He can be a real friend, too, ad-
vising us on new methods—new medicines and who to see for an
emergency of any kind.
Next to our family doctor these men and women should be very close to us, as they ere carrying out some doctor's special orders regarding our health and they have to know what they are doing at all times. They ere good people to get acquainted with. PUT YOUR TRUST IN THESE "UNSUNG HEROES.**
WHITAKER FUNERAL HOME CLOVER DALE - GREENCASTLE - GOSPORT
County Hospital Dismissed Saturday: Sam Miller, Spencer Harry Morgan, Danville Anita Ridgon, Clayton Elsie Key, Roachdale Virgil Phillips, Amo Esther Taylor, Poland Roy Watson, Cloverdale Calvin McKamey, Cloverdale James Throop, Greencastle Walter Baynard, Greencastle Irving Thomas, Greencastle Kathryn Butcher, Greencastle Kathleen Perry, Greencastle Damon Modlin, Greencastle Mrs. Max Williams and daughter, Greencastle Births: Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lyons, 307 Wood Street, a girl, Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stroud, Stilesville, Route 1, a girl, Sunday. Dismissed Sunday: Mrs. David Crispin and daughter, Crawfordsville Sandra Hanks, Bainbridge Frank Kessler, Fillmore Olive Harcourt, Cloverdale Cena Morgan, Greencastle Anna Jarvis, Greencastle Mrs. Jimmy Combs and son, Greencastle Births: Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stinson, Greencastle, Route 5, a girl, today.
Personal and local news
ANNIVERSARIES Mr. and Mrs. Ott Hand, Bainbridge, R. R. 1, 55 years today, July 24.
NOTICE FARM BUREAU INSURANCE OFFICE CLOSED ALL DAY WEDNESDAY JULY 26TH
The East Marion Homemakers will meet with Mrs. Ruth Sutherlin, Friday, July 28 at
1.30 p.m.
Mrs. Clara Kennedy of San Francisco, California, is visiting her brother, Walter Feld and family. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Ness of Terre Haute spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Feld. Mrs. Ness is the former Joan Feld. Mrs. Clifford Cook of Indianapolis was an overnight guest Monday of her brother and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dobson, R. 2, Cloverdale. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dickson and daughters of Phoenix, Arizona, are visiting their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Feld, and Mrs. Edna Dickson. Major and Mrs. Henry Krost and daughters, Karen and Paula, have returned home to Colorado Springs after visiting Mr. and Mrs. Paul Whitman and other relatives in Indiana. Mrs. Elizabeth Clodfelter has returned from visiting in Chicago. She also visited Mr. and Mrs. James Smithers of Peoria, Illinois and Mr. and Mrs. John Clodfelter of Iowa City, Iowa. This is a reminder to call for your reservations for the Wednesday meeting of the Putnam County Historical Society by noon Tuesday, July 25. You can give your reservation to Mrs. William Boatright. Darla Grimes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Grimes, 1016 South Indiana Street, and Mytron Lisby, son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Lisby, Coatesville, Route 2, are attending the Indiana University Music Clinic at the IU School of Music in Bloomington.
Keller rites to be held Tuesday Mrs. Anna Keller, 85, well known Cloverdale resident, passed away Saturday at the Sunset Manor Nursing Home in Greencastle. She was born April 18, 1882 in Putnam County the daughter of Samuel and Amanda Hurst
Adams.
Mrs. Keller was a memer of
liams flew to Orlando, Florida,; the Union Valley Baptist
Cozetta Lear were in Westphalis Sunday for a family dinner of the Meek and Heidenrich families in honor of Mr. and Mrs. James Meek and family who are visiting here from Sacramento, California. James is the son of Clarence Meek of
Westphalia.
Dr. and Mrs. Robert E. Wil-
about two weeks ago and spent a night in Winter Park. They were met by Dr. and Mrs. Herold Ross and spent a week in St. Petersburg, and from here they drove back with Mr. and Mrs. Ross and arrived here Friday night, July 21. For years Mrs. Lola Woods of Fillmore had dreamed of a trip to California. After recuperating from several operations she at last has made her trip. She arrived in Sacramento last Thursday to visit her brother Ivan Lisby. She was accompanied by her husband, Waldo Woods, and her daughter, Jane
Ann.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Dobson returned to their home in San Gabriel, California, after a recent two weeks vacation with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dobson, R. 2, Cloverdale, and his brother, Charles Dobson of Ocean City, Maryland. They also spent some time in Washington, D. C. and Arlington, Va., visiting Mr. and Mrs. Albert Jones, a cousin. Mr. and Mrs. Seth Roll of Fontana, Calif., visited Greencastle friends recently, and she will be remembered as Maybird Beaman of Cloverdale, where she once lived and went to
Church and lived most of her life in the Clover dale-Belle Union community. Survivors are four daughters, Mrs. Zelma Bennett and Mrs. Lillian Mason, Fillmore, Mrs. Goldie Vaught, Lizton and Mrs. Mabel Brown, Greencastle; four sons, Howard, Cloverdale, R. 2, Clarence, Indianapolis, Donald, Danville and Ancil, Belle Union; twenty grandchildren, thirtysix great grandchildren and three great-great grandchildren; one brother, Ora Adams, Cloverdale, R. 2. She was preceded in death by her husband, Lemma Keller in 1963. Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 2:00 p.m. at the Whitaker Funeral Home in Greencastle. Rev. Gilbert McCammack will officiate. Interment will be in New Providence Cemetery. Friends may call at the Whitaker Funeral Home in Greencastle.
Chenoweth rites this Wednesday
Mrs. Gertrude May Chenoweth, 87, Cloverdale, passed away Sunday afternoon in the
school. Later she taught in Hob- Putnam County Hospital.
son, Montana, and became the I She was born Se P tember
Susan Strain of 513 Ander- superintendent of schools while * n P ia ^ County, Illinois, son, Greencastle, & student at; tfapt*p. She was the guest of the daughter of George and
Greencastle High School, will cloverdale friends and of Mrs. attend the two-week Yearbook Calita Hammond and Mrs. Flor-
Workshop segment of the 21st Annual Indiana University High School Journalism Institute, to be held in Bloomington July 23Aug. 5. Mrs. Ruth Uphaus and daughter, June of Columbus and Mrs.
ence Patterson in Greencastle. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Gavel left yesterday for London, Ontario, to visit Mrs. Gordon Swan, sister of Mrs. Gavel, for a week. Mrs. Gavel will take a hair styling course while there. They will then drive to Expo 67 in Montreal for a couple of days and then proceed to Bar Harbor, Maine, where they will get a boat and sail to Yarmouth, Nova Scotia. They will camp here a few days before starting home by way of New Hampshire.
Silence Ann Hamilton Harlan, Mrs. Chenoweth was a member of the Monticello, Illinois,
Presbyterian Church.
Survivors are two daughters, Mrs. -etty Kaufmann, Mill Valley, Calif., and Mrs. Ruth Morrison, Cloverdale; one son, George, Danville, HI.; four grandchildren and four great grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband, W. C. Chenoweth in 1939. Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 11:00 a.m. at the Whitaker Funeral Home in Cloverdale. Rev. Janies Bastain will officiate. Interment will be
HOW TO PLAY BILLFOLD BINGO
1; Y°» r*c«iT« ■ fro* BILLFOLD BINGO Gam* ■lip., printed in oranpe, each time yon visit a participating A6P Store. No purchase vs necessary to play th* came. Adults (and married
•■ly participate and our employees and their families ora ineligible.
I. Gently moisten the wash-off patch on each ilip to reveal a cams number. Locate the number on the name indieated and mark it on the ■uu card with an *X*. Sava tha alipa for later
rtaemptfon.
«. Yoa win the BILLFOLD BINGO Gome indicated on the top of each of tha four comae on your card ($10 to $1600) when you have filled » Woe of five aumbsen horisontaUy, vertically or diagonally. Taka yaw winning il^a to your participating AAP Store Manager. 4fMr they have been verified, yon will receive
your prise. Keep your game card and continue playing. The game block “printed free” and "rwpaper slips from our weekly ada help yen 4. You win an INSTANT PRIZE when you receive a slip that says “Instant Coals $1 ete.“ _ w * it; ***• yoor slip to any participating AAP Store and. after verification you Will receive your prise from tho Store Manager. 5. You win a FREE PRODUCT PRIZE U your yarae slfo is marked with tha word “free”. Just cut the slip in half, where indicated, and trade in the free portion of the slip for the actual product at AAP. The aise and weight of your product to tte Cashier ec yoa chock out, and •eve the bottom half of your alfe so yo^ eaa continue playing. ffMmtxtmmtmimu
i. Cash in your clips as soon as you ore a winner. Win your share of thousands of dollars of prises. KEEP YOUR GAME CARD AND CONTINUE PLAYING. 7. Hold all slips 1 No prise will be awarded un- >«?» tOQuired alipa are submitted. Only slips clearly legible to the naked eye, and not altered or mutilated, will be accepted. All slips submitted become* the property of AAP and cannot be returned. 8. Only orange slips distributed through partieipatmg AAP stores and those published in local newspapers originating within the Division are olgible. We reserve tho right to correct any typographical or mechanical errors which ?' rht in .“y printed matter, including Slip«j etc*, in conjunction with thin same, and to reject any slip not obtained through legitimate channels.
in the Monticelli, Illinois, CemeBill Sandy Says, a fellow who tery, with graveside rites at won’t listen to an opinion that 3:00 p.m.
disagrees with his, lacks confidence in his own. Old Reliable White Cleaners.
Mrs. Harris dies Mrs. Edith Harris, 77, died Sunday morning in the Putnam County Hospital where she had been admitted last Friday. The Baker Funeral Home in Danville is in charge of services.
Calling hours at the Whitaker Funeral Home in Cloverdale after noon Tuesday.
Birthdays Pfc. Jerry D. Sutherlin, Vietnam, today, July 24. Troy Douglas Clark. 3 years old today, July 24, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roland Clark, 1126 Indianapolis Road. Jerry Lee Nodley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Nodley, 6 years old today.
Dr. Shonkwiler’s Office Closed FOR VACATION Monday July31 through Monday August 21 Madicints may ba picked up Friday, August 11th, between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m.
Bessie Hooser rites Tuesday Mrs. Bessie Pearl Hooser, 66, Roachdale, died Sunday evening at the Ben Hur Nursing Home in Crawfordsville. She had been in failing health the past seven months. She was born October 12, 1899, in Indiana, the daughter of Fred and Grace Sanders Crosby. She was married to James Hooser. Mrs. Hooser had spent all her life in the Roachdale community. Survivors are: one daughter, Mrs. Clifford Crosby, Roachdale; four sisters, a twin sister, Ressie Hawkins, North Salem; Ina Page, Roachdale; Genera Forrest, Indianapolis; Netina Farrow, Roachdale; one brother, Donald Crosby, Roachdale; two grandchildren. She was preceded in death by an infant son and one sister. Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 2:00 p. m. at the Perkins Funeral Home in Roachdale. Interment will be in New Maysville Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home in Roachdale.
Dear Heloise: The dishes we take from the table are always well rinsed and put into the dishwasher for storage until a full load is collected. Sometimes we have difficulty in distinguishing between clean and dirty dishes when we hurriedly need to use a certain dish or plate from the machine. My husband came up with this very good idea that has saved tempers in our household: He took a small, square magnet and painted the side (with the least pull) white to match the front of the dishwasher. Then with red nail polish painted & “C” on one end of the magnet and a “D” on the other (for clean and dirty) and stuck it on the washer near the dial. I simply turn the “C” up whenever I turn the dial to wash. Then when I unload the clean dishes later, I turn the magnet around to “D” and start putting in the dirty dishes which I won’t be taking out by mistake! Now, without so much as opening the door, everyone can tell at a glance if the dishes are ready to use. a • a • An Avid Fan Thank your sweet husband for this clever hint. What would we do without them? To avoid the trouble of painting the magnets, I bought a red one and a green one. When the dishes are dirty, I stick the red one on the front of the dishwasher . . . Stop! When they are clean, I switch to the Go ... GREEN!
Love,
Heloise * a * • Dear Heloise: Don’t throw away those old decorative pillows. They make comfortable seats for children. Just cover them with plastic or vinyl and see how they enjoy them at camp, in the yard or at the pool. Mrs. T. Holt • a a a Dear Heloise: My little daughter has thick, waist-length hair that is very difficult to wash. Like many mothers, I partly solved this problem by using the kitchen sink with the spray attachment. She always lies across the drainboard with the back of her head suspended over the sink which is very uncomforatable and her back gets wet. I found a large sponge I had saved for washing the car that gave me an idea.
I slipped this under her neck at the edge of the sink and it worked great. It also absorbed the water and her back and neck kept perfectly dry. Now she just loves her kitchen sink shampoo. • * * * Juanita Brown Dear Heloise: Here is a space saving idea for those empty, bulky detergent and cereal boxes that take up so much room in your waste-
basket.
Just run hot water in them (Continued on Fage 5)
What's Cookin'
3.
CHICKEN - NIGHT EVERY TUESDAY ALL YOU CAN EAT
"Gantlaman, paopla ora known by tha company thay keep. Please make it a point to Dina often at TORR'S Restaurant!"
Terr'A
RE-STycURAtST
South Greene jstle
20 Years Ago Miss Peggy Dean was visiting in Logansport. Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Hollowell returned from a two weeks vacation in Wisconsin. The Golf Bridge Club met with Mrs. V. Earle Wiseman with Mrs. Edward Wood as assistant hostess.
In Memory
In memory of Charles Hathaway, who passed away July 24, 1964. God saw you getting weary He did what He thought best He put His arms around you And whispered “Come and rest,’* On that late Friday evening Three years ago today With goodbys left unspoken You gently slipped away. Nieces and Nephew*
| CONVENIENCE |
at Ham mond's Watch and Trophy Shop but Con vanitnea b ju*t ana appro* c i a t a d faatura a vital ana. You can park fraa in front nf my shop.
Hara you will find tha meet com* plcta watch rapair shop in tha Midwatt . . . with ovary modarn facility and a complato selection of parts to eliminate annoying delay*. Coma in today! • WATCHES • SPIIDfl WATCH BANDS # TROPHIES WATCH and TROPHY SHOT HAMMOND’S Open Man. Thru Fri. 8:30-4 Sat. 8:30-5 607 SOUTH LOCUST ST.
WE ACCEPT YOUR FREE VACATION OFFER
Nimt_ Address-
No. In FamilyFlees* Reserve (3 D»ys)_
(Detes)
□ Motor Rout* Information Desired Mail Tot HORSESHOE DEVELOPMENT C0RP., Franklin, Arkansas Reservations ere somewhat easier to fill on week days
FILL OUT THIS FREE VACATION COUPON! . You or* invited to accept • FREE VACATION at Horseshoe Bend, a superb new recreation area unexcelled for scenic baauty in tha entire. Midsouth—a most pleasant, restful, relaxful area for permanent or vacation living. As our guests you will enjoy free lodging and free entertainment for three days and two nights. Just fill out the coupon above telling us when you can come. This invitation is part of tho Arkansas Tourist and Recreation Committee Program for Fulton and Izard Counties. Right now is tho most colorful time of year to visit HORSESHOE BEND. Driving through tho scenic Ozark countryside is a delight in itself. Every bend in the road brings oxciting new vistas of green valleys, forested hills, sparkling rivers and streams. On every side you'll see trees—pine, cedar, hickory, oak, dogwood, magnolia, holly and sumac. Wild flowsrs abound. Drive leisurely and enjoy the magnificent scenery of the Ozarks. Transportation to and from HORSESHOE BEND will bo provided by you. HORSESHOE BEND is nostlsd In th* heart of th* Ozarks Highway 56 at Franklin, Arkansas. You'll b* lodged in comfortable quarters. You'll have free access to many forms of entsrtainment including golf, swimming (in our big outdoor pool or in famous Strawberry River), canoeing, bicycle boating, fishing, tennis, archery, miniature golf, nature study, horseshoes, washers, ’ badminton, bridge, squaro dancing, shuffleboord and other pleasures. For a small charge a gentle saddle horse is yours to explore woodland trails. Excellent maals at modost prices in our clubhouse restaurant, one of k/^LT the finest anywhere. HORSESHOE BEND offers something for th* entire family regardlese of age or Interest. There's fun for everyon*. Wa look forward , to your visit. Reservations confirmed promptly ' •n first-come, first-served basis. CTX/*' HomhoBm ESTATES Franklin, Arkansat
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