The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 13 March 1968 — Page 2

Page 2

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The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana

Wednesday, March 12, 1968

County Hospital dismissed Monday: Brenda Dean, Spencer Harold Auten. Freedom Tim Hornbecker, Auburn William Mathew, Putnamville Harry Walton, Coatesville Robert York, Greencastle Births: Mr. and Mrs. Lee Martin, Rusjellville, Route 1, a girl, Monlay. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Doyle, Fillmore, Route 1, a boy, Thursday.

We wish to express our thanks and appreciation to our relatives, neighbors and friends for their kindness, prayers, and sympathy. Also, those who sent the beautiful floral tributes and the food at the passing of our beloved Nancy. Mr. and Mrs. James F. Buis

and family

Mr. and Mrs. Alva Carter

and family.

Card of thanks ' era ^ i i t i

rersonal and Local

news

LUCIAS FABRICS MOONLIGHT SPECIALS Thursday March 14th. From 6:00 to 10:00 Only 30 i OFF an 36” DENIM - INDIAN HEAD Selected Hopsacking Paints 45” Abbey Flannel

Bruce Brackney, son of Mr.; Mr. and Mrs. Cleon Branneand Mrs. Howard A. Brackney, man, Cloverdale, Route 1, an3 Paradise Drive, has been nounce the marriage of their pledged by the Sigma Nu frater- daughter, Mary Lou, to Marvin nity at Purdue University. Wenning on Friday, Marach 8, John McCutchan, of Lebanon,, at the Plainfield Christian was here Monday. He is the Church. grandson of the late Dean Me- ,,, . „ . .. . Cutchan of the DePauw Univer- f L ^, nvHs . K nhs sity Music School. Mrs - Carl 11011 of Fl0 >' <is Knobs - Simpson Stoner is here from The young couple will be at Fort Lauderdale, Florida. home to their friends at 536 Mr. and Mrs. Forest Aker ^orth Duffy Street, Plainfield,

have returned from a month's

visit in Florida.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Jones, of Worthington. Ohio.

spent Sunday in this city with AUUrill

his mother, Mrs. Thad Jones. ; LANSING, Mich. UPI-State Sen. William Copeland is an

\\ roilmove ardent defender of 4th-of-July CARDIFF, Wales UPI-Law- sparklers ’ “' hich SOme "S 5 '!' rence Steer, an ex-convict who * ors ' vou ^ hke to ban in Michjumped bail in 1965 and went igan because children playing into hiding to avoid being return- with them sometimes get burn-

ed to prison on firearms char- ^ ges, needn’t have bothered. A

blanket pardon for such offenses i “It’s a sad state of affairs was in effect, and he would have when we become so old and been released. senile we think kids can’t enjoy gavnim^r. b «Lrs *^ - Monday, a judge gave him a enjoyed . . . Copeland said two-month suspended jail term Monday. “I hope we won’t take and ordered him topay the $120 this last little thing away from

he forfeited when he failed to them »

appear in court three years ago.

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Guerrillas show increase KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia UPI — Communist guerrillas working from secret hideouts along the Thai-Malaysia border showed an increase in strength and willingness to fight during the past year, authoritative Malaysian sources said today. The sources said 1967 brought twice as many clashes between the guerrillas and Malaysian or Thai forces than the previous

year..

They did not say how many guerrillas were fighting from the hideouts but they described the increase as “slight.” Previous official government figures said the outlawed Communist party was believed to have “beiween five and six hundred well-trained guerrillas, and a reserve of about 1,000 men who are available for full time service if required.” The border divides the narrow Malay Penninsula at a point about 300 miles across the Gulf of Siam from the southern tip of South Vietnam. In the 1950s before Malaysia won its independence from Britain colonial troops fought a bitter but successful war against Communist insurgents and left the small nation relatively free of guerrilla activity. The sources said increased recruitment probably was not the cause for the increased threat along the border. They said it was “due rather to further identification of guerrilla reserves and some Communist sympathiezrs.” Some of the Communist reservists, villagers serving as part time guerrillas, “through fear of being arrested, left their homes and are believed to have joined the guerrillas,” the sources said. They said most of the insurgents were believed to be hiding on the Thai side of the border in camps located deep in the jungle. The hiding places were recently! relocated because of a series of joint Thai-Malaysian operations in 1967 that deeply penetrated their area, the sources said. Despite the increase in armed contact with the Communists, they said, there were no casualties in 1967 among Malaysian

troops.

Hints from Heloise

By Heloise Cruse

Dear Heloise: Since I'm in the restaurant business. I would like to give your housewives a recipe that’s ever so good. We often use this recipe in sandwiches and stuffed tomatoes. Or just place it on a big leaf of lettuce and top it with a spoonful of salad dressing, a dash of paprika, and a green stuffed olive. This is one of the best sellers in our restaurant. Here's how it’s made: Use one can of light grated tuna. We use grated because it costs less. Mash or squeeze all of the oil out if you cannot find tuna packed in brine. Then put it in a mixing bowl. Grate one small apple on the smallest part of your grater into the tuna and add the juice of one-half lemon. Now . . . take any leftover meats that you have in your refrigerator such as lean pieces of ham, pork, beef, or chicken (whether it's fried, boiled or baked, use it) and grind it in your meat grinder and add to the mixture. While your meat grinder is out. also grind a few sweet pickles into the mikture. It doesn't really make any difference how much other meat you add to this so long as you start with that ONE can of tuna fish. Add just enough salad dressing to the mixture to make it the consistency that you prefer. Chill thoroughly before serving. Any one, two, or even three different kinds of meat can be ground up into this mixture at the same time. To vary it, some dayse we use ham. the next day we use pork and maybe the following day we will use turkey, but it’s always good and varied. We call this “today’s House Special.” Restaurateur

We thank you. Sir, for taking time out from your busy day to write. I can bet thousands upon thousands of housewives will bless you. I sure do. Heloise

Dear Heloise: I save catsup bottle tops (and other tops) to have spares. When a top gets sticky and gummy I throw it in the dishwater, then wipe off the bottle rim and screw on a clean one from my extras. When the dirty one is washed I toss it in with the spares. Saves a little time and sticky fingers. Daily Reader

Dear Folks:

If you like to read a good book in bed (and this is especially good for those who are sick), try putting a pillow or facial tissue box on your stomach and your book on top of that! Takes all the strain off your arms and shoulders. When I m sitting up, I put a pillow in my lap and rest the book on it while reading.

Dear Heloise: After reading a hint on how to remove lipstick from face and hands with toothpaste, a friend said that a little toothpaste will also remove lipstick from cloth. So I tried it and it works. A great help for linen napkins. Jean Powell

Sure ‘nuf it works, gals. I used a toothbrush and let it set a bit. I’ve often wondered why, when we brush our teeth, that stuff comes off . . . Heloise

Bombing has pressure point WASHINGTON UPI - Secretary of State Dean Rusk said that although U.S. bombing of North Vietnam has not brought the Communists to the conference table, it still is an inneentive to Hanoi to talk peace. In an exchange with Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield Monday, Rusk conceded that even after months of the air attacks “we have seen no evidence that they are prepared to undertake serious discussions’’ toward ending the war. But. Rusk added, he failed to see how allowing the North Vietnamese to operate without hindrance would give them any incentive to talk peace. Rusk had said earlier in the opening round of testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that the United States was "prepared to negotiate today, without any conditions whatsoever.” Discussinng various specific peace proposals made in this country and elsewhere, Rusk said "there is a question if bombing pauses can be, in fact, a step toward

peace.”

“So far as we can see. Hanoi is in no such mood,” he said. He added his conclusion that the Communists “want to be protected from bombing while they go on with the war.” He said when U N. Secretaray General Thant offered a threepoint plan to end the war, the Uninted States accepted the idea of a “military standdown” and the other terms, but Hanoi “apparently rejected” them. Discussing a proposal of Sen. John Sherman Cooper. R-Ky., to restrict bombing to infiltrict bombing to infiltration routes and South Vietnam, Rusk said this plan, as others, w'as studied

cloeely.

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6 more Yanks lose their lives WASHINGTON UPI-The Defense Department announced Monday the deaths of six more Indiana servicemen in Vietnam. Four were killed in action, one of non-hostile causes, and another was previously! listed as missing. Killed in action were: Army Sgt. Guy Jones, son of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Jones, Route 3, Sheridan. Army Spec. 4 Stephen F. Booth, son of Mrs. Marian J. Penix, Orland. Army Pfc. Michael D. Geise, son of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Geise, Carthage. Marine Lance Cpl. Frank W. Marks, son of Mr. and Mrs. George F. Marks, Fortville. Previously listed as missing but declared dead was Air Force Sgt. Dallas H. Moore, husband of Mrs. Ruth E. Moore, Evansville. Killed not as a result of hostile action was Marine Staff Sgt. Thomas A. Grimes, brother of Mrs. Barbara E. Yentes, Peru.

LETTER OF LAUGHTER Dear Heloise: To all the “Gertie Schertees” on ironing day . . . While you're standing at that old ironing board, try daydreaming about pleasant things. Such as a favorite relative or friend coming to visit you. Or plan a trip for when your ship eventually comes in. Helps a little! Betty R. THE DAILY BANNER

and

Herald Consolidated "If 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; Hoosicr State Press Association.

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Passenger train is derailed

ERIE, Pa. UPI — A Penn Central passenger train, bound from New York to Chicago and carrying 9 passengers, derailed Monday at a grade crossing in Springfield Township, Pa., 20 miles west of here near the Ohio border. Three women passengers, and a railroad employe from Indiana were injured, none seriously. The units of the 11-unit train, consisting of three engines and eight cars, left the track but remained upright.' The train, No. 63, carried 38 coach passengers and 21 sleeping car passengers. It left New York at 10:30 p.m. EST, and was due in Chicago at 6:10 p.m. Monday. The derailment occurred at the Holiday Road crossing at 10:50 a.m. EST. and blocked one track of the two-track line, operated by the New York Central Railroad prior to its recent merger with the Pennsylvania Railroad. The injured were identified as Anna Kiss, 26, of Mentoro, O.; Carolyn Frost, 51, of Kent, Ohio; Clara McDonald. 26, of Columbus. Ohio, and Carl Hayes, 53, of Gary, Ind. Passengers were taken by bus and taxicab to Cleveland and put on another train to Chicago.

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