The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 July 1967 — Page 2
1
■i
Pag* ^
Tha Dally Banner, Greaneastle, Indiana
Saturday, July 29, 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, Oreencastle, Indiana. 44135. Entered In the Post Office at Greaneastle, Indiana, as second doss mail matter under Act af 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 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 af The Daily Banner effective March 14, 1944; In Put* 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 $16.00—6 months $9.00—3 months $6.00. All mail subscriptions payable in advance.
NEWS or BOYS U. S. ARMY, Vietnam — Daniel B. Barnett, 19, son of Mrs. Hazel F. Taylor, Route 1, Reelsville, was promoted to Army staff sergeant June 30 in Vietnam, where he is serving with the 44th Infantry Platoon (Scout Dogs). A scout dog handler assigned to the platoon near Dau Tieng, Sgt. Barnett entered the Army in July 1964 and was last stationed at Ft. Benning, Ga., before arriving in Vietnam in January 1967.
Personal and local news
Pearl Pickens is a patient in Rm. 226 at Putnam County Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher and family of Dayton, Ohio visited Mr. and Mrs. W. Alfred Cooper * few days. Due to the Fair this coming week there will be no band rehearsals Monday or Wednesday nights for the Reelsville Band members. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Gooch have returned home from a vacation spent with their daughter, Mrs. Helen Miller and family in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Ronald Smith, 23, Villa Grove, Illinois, was arrested and jailed by Sheriff Bob Albright at 2:45 this morning for malicious trespass. Pfc. and Mrs. James Hurst and new son, Tony, of Ft. Carson, Colo., arrived home July 20 and surprised Jim’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Hurst, and sister. Mrs. Lillie Day of Indianapolis is visiting her sons, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Day and family, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Day, and her brother, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Ikamire, this weekend.
Bill Sandy Says: For the whitest, brighest shirts in town, come to White Cleaners, 309 N. Jackson.
Betty Dickerson, 38, city, was arrested on South Main Street at 8:45 Friday night by Officer Russell Rogers and charged with public intoxication.
MARRIAGE LICENSE Raymond Edward McGaughey, J. C. Penney, and Linda Sue Higgins, secretary North Putnam Schools, both of Russellville.
ANNIVERSARIES Birthdays Kevin Rhea Hubble, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Hubble, Greencastle Route 1, one year old today, July 29.
County Hospital Dismissed Friday: Linda Sidwell, Brownstown, Illinois Leona Greenleaf, Coatesville Russell McLerran, Jr., Olney, Illinois Sandra Burnett, Clayton Tole Burnett, Clayton Bobby McKinney, Clayton Helen Hall, Gosport Margaret Jones, Greencastle George McCammack, Greencaatle Births: Mr. and Mrs. Michael Mangus, 105 East Berry Street, a girl, Friday.
USS CAMP—Shipfitter Second Class Stanley E. Scobee, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Russell E. Scobee, R. 1, Greencastle is taking part in “Market Time Operation” as a crewman aboard the radar picket escort ship USS Camp. “Market Time” is the coastal surveillance operation off the territorial waters of South Vietnam. U. S. ships, in cooperation with those of the Republic of Vietnam, conduct regular patrols to prevent infiltration of men and equipment to the enemy. The Camp, completed in 1943, was originally built as an escort ter part of World War II. In ship and saw action in the lat1956, she was converted for radar picket duties. She carries “Hedgehog” depth bombs, homing torpedoes, and three-inch guns, as well as a highly-complex radar system.
Putnam Court Notes Alpha Foster vs. Ferdinand Franklin Foster, Jr., suit for divorce.
In Memory
Big Summer Dance ELK’S CLUB Saturday, July 29 9:30 p.m. to 1:00 o.m. BERMUDA SHORTS WELCOME Music By The Twi-Lighters
In loving memory of Oreta Ratcliff whose birthday would have been today, July 29th. Dear Lord, please take this message To our loved one up above; Tell her how much we miss her And give her all pur love. Although her soul is now at rest And free from care and pain, The world would seem like Heaven j If we had her back again, j If all the world was ours to give ! We would give it and more j To see the face of the one we I loved Come smiling through our door. Sadly missed by husband, Cline Ratcliff, and children, Lucille, Betty, and Donald and families.
ANNIVERSARIES Mr. and Mrs. Glen Custis of Coatesville, R. 2, 45 years, July 29.
Bible Thought For Today When thou fasteth, anoint thine head, and wash thy face. —Matthew 6:17. Don’t make a show of your religion. Forget yourself in honest devotion.
20 Years Ago Mr. and Mrs. Chester C. Coan were vacationing at Lake Tippecanoe. Miss Mary Riley was here from Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. William Murray returned home from a vacation spent at Lake Manistique, Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Eastham and son were in Chicago.
news
The fifth meeting of the Greencastle 4-H Club was held July 25, 7:30 p. m. at the Greencastle High School. The meeting was called to order by the president, Teddy Brewer. The 4-H pledge was led by David Bruner. The minutes of the last meeting was read by the secretary, Betty Jo Brewer. Some announcements were made about the fair by Mr. Akers. Following a demonstration given by Ronnie Maddox on Rabbits, a film was shown on insects. The pledge to the American flag was led by Trent Boesen and the meeting was adjourned.
The Roachdale Hustling Hawks 4-H Club met on July 26 at 8:00 p. m. in the school building. President Terry Hopkins called the meeting to order. Kim Wilson gave the pledges to the American and 4-H flags. There were thirty-eight members present. Under new business, Byron Gough discussed the fair. All miscellaneous projects must be at the fairgrounds on Friday July 28. Hogs must be at the fair on Sunday, July 30. All other livestock must be at the fair by Monday, July 31. He also discussed plans for a competition party. The party will be August 12. The meeting was then adjourned. Don Gilstrap, Reporter
When will your new-car dollar go farthest? Right now.
dottor*sli«fef»i> yifayPTniiJoto SpoftCoop* ffoiwgrcwxfl, Chwrelle Mefibo Station Wagon fopper tefU and Comoro Sport Coupe.
> : : ; :Ux>>£vS£x:::y' >: w-Yf: •’
&
. * *. **•'’V* V V '' A ' ?*•'*'**+ ms*
Mrs. G. W. Hanna wishes to announce the engagement and the approaching marriage of her daughter, Miss Sara Lou Hanna to Richard Nile York, son of Mrs. Mildred Phillips.
Women' , s Fashions Reviewed
PARIS UPI —Christian Dior has reviewed the suit and cinched the 1967 ladies’ waistline with wide belts.
Bohan’s daytime colors were brown, copper, tortoise shell, eggplant, dark purple, red and black.
Dear Folks: If you have outdoor picnic or patio tables . . . I had a bang-up idea while washing off our table last weekend. I covered both table and benches with a big piece of heavy plastic when we were through using them. This can either be tied with strong cord or weighted down with rocks or some of those house plants which need sunshine. Covering the table with plastic saves lots of cleaning time which is most important. Time is the most valuable thing we have and energy comes next. So if you’ve got an old tarpaulin, drop cloth or raincoat, dig ’em out and use ’em. Worn raincoats cam be cut down. An old, twin-size, contour sheet exactly fits most tables. Heloise • • a * Dear Heloise: Instead of freezing a whole cut-up, dressed chicken and having to waut for it all to thaw to pull apart, I spread the unfrozen pieces out on a cookie sheet. Then place the cookie sheet in the freezing compartment until the chicken is frozen solid. Remove the pieces and drop them into a plastic bag and place it back in the freezer until ready to use. I can just reach in the bag and take out any number of pieces I like and leave the rest frozen. Sure is handy for me. Mrs. Breeden
For evening Bohan used red, copper, orange, apricot, green, dark red with pink and navy
A salon executive said Dior designer Marc Bohan had decreed women should go back to
wearing suits instead of the | blue with white,
dress-coat or jacket outfit that has dominated Paris high fash-
ion for several seasons.
Bohan created suits with short, close-fitting jackets and flared skirts, sometimes boxpleated. The suits have patch pockets and round collars.
Joanne Marie Fraley Weds James Tenney
The Beverly Post, a California newspaper on July 20 had an interesting ittm telling of ! the recent wedding of Joanne Marie Fraley and James Ten-
A sampling of New York ney. In part the follovying artbuyers. meanwhile, said Paris j lcle tells of the nu P tials *
See what your Chevrolet dealer is offering.
can show mid calf creations until the cows come home but few will wind up on American
women.
Bohan’s winter collection in-
cluded suits with long, tubeshaped jackets, buttoned high,
with lightly flaring skirts. He teamed all his suits with
satin or crepe blouses instead of the vests or leather shirts that
have been popular for years.
His collection was also full of O hio -
capes for occasions from morn-' Matron of honor was Mrs. ing to evening. Some were de- Larr y Lucas of Davis - Califor - signed for double-duty. nia * and John Harrington of
Anaheim was best man.
Bohan went strongly for wide, I During the ceremony Robert military-style belts. Since Dior Fraley, brother of the bride, is widely reproduced and copied sa ng “The Lord’s Prayer.” by the ready-to-wear market, a wedding reception was held his belt craze indicated the loose i n Fellowship Hall of Geneva,
waist may be out of favor for
some time.
Joanne Marie Fraley and James Clifford Tenney were married Saturday, July 15, at Geneva Presbyterian Church in Long Beach. The Reverend J. Irving Rhoades, uncle of the bride, officiated at the double
ring ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of John V. Fraley and the late Mrs. Fraley, and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Teeney, 3813 Sulphur Springs Road, Toledo,
Bohan’s belts had round, transparent buckles in tortoise shells or black lacquer to match
buttons.
His tweed coat dresses had cravat collars and cuffed
sleeves.
Yowr Chevrolet dealer con save you money right now. He has the cars more people wont because they have more of whof peopleword. A long list of quality
features gives you fbat sure feeling, keeps Chevrolet most popular year after year. Get them oil and save now on a handsome Impaia, Quick-Size Chevelle or sporty
Comoro. Get a car all America goes for at a price you’ll go for, too. Just look for the crowd at your Chevrolet dealer's new-car dollar-stretching headquarters.
6«t a deal only the loader can offer
13-3403
JIM HARRIS CHEVROLET-BUICK INDIANAPOLIS ROAD GREENCASTLE PHONE OL3-5I78
following the ceremony. The new Mrs. Tenney, a 1964
graduate of Long Beach State College is a teacher of physical education at Western High School in Anaheim. Mr. Tenney, a graduate of the University of Michigan School of Mechanical Engineering, holds a master’s degree from the University of Southern California, and he is
Coats were often fitted and with Doug]as Aircraft ^ ^
double-breasted with big col- B Cach
lars, someUmes in fur. Bohan After a honeymoon tH ^ also showed clinging Redingote Hawaii the young c ]e ^ coats that ended in a flare. ; reside in Garden GrovC) Califor .
The collection for evening in- nia -
eluded close-fitting dresses with John Fraley, the bride's fathwide belts and flared sleeves er ’ livod in Greencastle during with lace, organdy or chiffon l a t er grade school and high cuffs. i school, as well as during his col-
lege days at DePauw, where he
Shirtwaist dresses in velvet, was a member of the Sigma Chi satin or lame had cravat collars social fraternity, and he was a or fluffy jabots. Bohan also 1929 graduate. He and his fammade belted two-length dresses ; iiy i have visited here from time in chiffon and black wools with to time while his parents, the peasant styles embroidered in i a t e Reverend and Mrs. F. O. colors - Fraley were living. His sister. His long evening gowns were Frale y of East Semsatin sheaths with embroidered “ lary ® treet ' has ;,ust returned inserts worn under long narrow ro ™ alifornia where she atwoolen coats. Other velvet, tended the wedding of her niece
Cord of Thanks Albln—We deeply appreciate the comforting expression of sympathy and beautiful flowers extended to us by our friends and neighbors at the loss of our dear Husband, Father, and Grandfather Wilmer F. Albin. To Drs. Johnson and Dettloff, the nurses on the second floor of the Putnam County Hospital. To Rev. Elgin Smith and Rev, Maxwell Webb for their kind words and many visits during the ten months of Wilmer’s illness. Also our friends for the many, many cards which helped to cheer him. To the ladies of Sherwood Christian Church and the veterans of Foreign Wars. Our neighbors and everyone who sent food. We are so very grateful to you. Rector Funeral Home for their thoughtful aarvices rendered. The pall bearera, Harold Smith, John Andrews, Paul Garl, Lola Cowgill, John Sutton and Carl Myers. To Julian Steele who sang Wilmer’s favorite song, "In the Garden” and to Mrs. Meredith who played the piano. To all we are very grateful. May God bless and keep each one of you is my prayer. Mrs. Wilmer F. Albin, Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Orioko, Wilmer Jamea Albin, Julian Thomas Albin
Letter of Thought Dear Heloise: Here’s a thought for all those depressed housewives who can’t seem to catch up with their housework. “This house is clean enough to be healthy and dirty enough to be happy.” Margie • • • • Dear Heloise: We make many short week end car trips. For these trips, I usually pack a weekend case, a train case and a carton containing all our swimming gear. I spread the luggage out in the car trunk but I leave my dresses o n hangers. Then I cover them with a plastic raincoat, button it down the front and lay them across the gageThe dresses don’t get wrinkled and it leaves the inside of the car uncluttered with nothing blocking our vision out the back. Jane Miller
Dear Heloise: For anyone who has to replace bra straps, this is the way I do mine: I use one-half yard of good quality broadcloth and tear it into one and a half inch strips. Then center a strip of onehalf inch twill tape on each strip and baste. Fold each side of the broadcolth into a flat hem and stitch it close to the center of the tape. This makes several pairs of straps and I find they will outlast most bras. Lula Falsinelli • a a a For those who have "fleshy” shoulders where bra straps DIG into the skin, this is a fabulous way to make them wider so they won’t bite. This can also be done to the original strap already on your bra. Heloise
satin, crepe or chiffon dresses
had long flaring sleeves. Bohan put his girls in small
caps with flat peaks worn forward or in widerbrimmed black velvet hats. Some looked like
clerical hats with shallow a trip to the Yosemite and Se- j crowns and curled up brims. j quoia National Parks. j
and visited her sister, Mrs. Helen Fraley Rhoades of Long Beach, in whose home the rehearsal dinner was served, as well as her brother in Los Angeles. During the following week she and her brother made
REMEDY FOR INTERNS LONDON UPI — Member of Parliament Laurence Pitt urged the government to build accommodations for married hospital interns. He said he knew of one doctor’s wife who had to sneak into a hospital’s residential quarters for secret meetings with her husband and of a hospital that had an 11:30 p. m. curfew on wives being in their husband’s rooms. He cited such examples as reasons why doctors in Britain’s nationalized health system are dissatisfied and want to emigrate.
Dear Heloise: When packing for a picnic I wrap the knife, fork, etc., for each individual In paper napkins just like most cafeterias do. 1 do the same with the cooking knives and forks. 1 put these rolls In a flat cardboard box and the blades are protected. Also, I don’t “peel” my fingernails when fumbling in the picnic box. Evelyn Campbell Dear Heloise: If you are one of those people that love raw, green bell peppers but they disagree with you, do what I do and eat all you want. I peel the pepper with a floating blade vegetable peeler and then use it In my salads, etc. This is the only way I can eat them uncooked. Mrs. Lucy York * • • • Dear Heloise: If you buy your daily paper paper from a street vendor, follow the practice of carrying a clear plastic bag to slip it In. This prevents getting newsprint on your hands or clothing and keeps your paper dry if it should rain on your way home. Mrs. A. McGregor
TERMITES? rad SHETRONE REAL ESTATE Mi. Ot 3-931S Yolclwg ordtrv lor Ivttpocfio* "Wvlfig you tlitct W Work Ogofoittood
EAT Food WHAT Pancakes & Sausage WHEN Saturday, July 29 WHERE 1st Assembly of God Church LOCATION—106 Spring Ave. TIME 6:00 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. PRICE Adults $1.00 Children 50c ALL YOU CAW EAT MEN’S FELLOWSHIP CLUB
