The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 26 March 1968 — Page 2

Page 2

The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana

Tuesday, March 26. 1968

THE DAILY BANNER and Herald Consolidated “It Waves For A/l“ Business Phone: OL 3*5151 -0L 3-5152 Elizabeth Rariden Estate, Publisher Norma L. Hill, Assistant Publisher Published every evening except Sunday and holidays at 608 South College Avenue. 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. An 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 50C per week, single copy IOC. Subscription prices of the Daily Banner effective July 31. 1967-in Putnam County-1 year. $12.00-6 months. $7.00-3 months. $4.50- Indiana other than Putnam County-1 year. $14.00-6 months. $8.00-3 months. $5.00Outside Indiana 1 year, $18.00-6 months, $10.00—3 months, $7.00. All Mail Subscriptions payable in advance. Motor Routes S2.J6 per one month.

Promotion

Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. Glendyn Irwin, 25 years today, March 26. Marriage license William Adrian Muir, farmer, Carbon, and Mary Susan Shuee, secretary, Fillmore, Route 1. Richard Eugene Knapp, State Highway, Greencastle, Route 1 and Lynda Ann Wright, Central National Bank, Cloverdale, Route 1. Robcrds, Bronson, Fonda Star in Western HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Jason Robards, Charles Bronson and Henry Fonda will star in Paramount’s “Once Upon A Time in the West.”

Putnam Court notes E. & T. Pump Co., Inc., vs. Shelby T. Hoover et al, complaint to foreclose mechanic’s lien. English & Son, Inc. vs. Shelby T. Hoover et al, complaint to foreclose mechanic’s lien. In memoriam In memory of our mother, Cleo Hope, who passed away three years ago, March 26,1965. There are tears and fond remembrance Dearest Mother for you still For you held a place within our hearts, That none can ever fill. Sadly missed by children and grandchildren

The promotion of Mr. R. E. Powell to the position of Department Manager has just been announced at the Greencastle IBM facility. Mr. Powell joined IBM in October 1959 and held a variety of assignments in the plant, the most recent of which was Dispatcher in the Special Card Production area. Mr. Powell and his wife, Barbara, and their two children reside at Rural Route 2, Poland,

Indiana.

Grills plan INDIANAPOLIS (UPI)—“Dovish” Democrats would be opposed at the grass-roots precinct level by pro-President Johnson candidates under a plant proposed Monday by former State Sen. Nelson Grills. Grills, an Indianapolis Democrat seeking nomination and election to the Senate, charged in a letter to Marion County chairman James Beatty that “the voice of the faint-hearted, the eccentric and those who belittle our American traditions are loud and clamorous across the land.” Grills proposed that “some person loyal to the President file as a Democratic candidate for precinct committeeman if no one equally loyal has filed.” He also urged that “persons dedicated to the unfettering of President Johnson in his efforts to achieve a victory in Vietnam and to bring our sons and brothers home file as delegates to the state convention.” “The armed forces of the United States belong in South Vietnam to protect the people who love liberty and as a guarantee that the future struggle against dictatorship will not be fought in the communities of our country,” Grills wrote. Cosmonaut's hope ROME (UPI)—Gherman Titov, the Soviet cosmonaut, said Monday he hopes to be the first man to land on the moon but told newsmen he could not say whether the United States or the Soviet Union would win the race to earth’s satellite. Titov arrived here to attend an electronics show.

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XttvX-X-N-XvLvXv^^ V. Personal and Local I

Chapter meeting Chapter I of P.E.O. will meet with Mrs. Louise Collins Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. with Mrs. Louise Sunkel as co-hostess. Mrs. Bonnie Jones will give the program. Moose Women Women of the Moose will meet at the Moose Home at 8 p.m. Wednesday. All members are welcome to attend. Out of hospital John Lyon is now home after recent back surgery at St. Vincent’s Hospital in Indianapolis. Returns home Mrs. Clyde Wildman has returned home after a month's visit with her daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. John Long in Wilmington, Delaware.

County Hospital

Dismissed Monday: Letha Stinson, Stilesville Iva Fidler, Martinsville Frances Powell, Martinsville Tina Betts, Spencer Frances Hendrickson, Greencastle George Sims, Greencastle Jeffery Patterson, Greencastle Ronnie Bumgardner, Greencastle Births: Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Scolley, Greencastle, Route 3, a boy, Monday Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Frazier, 1001 South Indiana, a girl, Monday Mr. and Mrs. David Sutherlin, 1009 Avenue C, a girl, today.

Shirley in Florida Vernon Shirley is visiting in Sarasota, Florida, and is enjoying watching big league baseball teams during the spring training games in that vicinity. Annual coffee The Ladies' Golf Association of Windy Hill Country Club will have their annual coffee on Tuesday, April 2, at 10 a.m. downstairs in the clubhouse. Any club members interested in joining the Association are welcome. Completes course Miss Brenda Phillips, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Phillips of near Belle Union, has completed her beauty course at Harold’s Beauty Academy at Terre Haute. Reunion planned Any member of Greencastle High School class of 1953 interested in planning a 15th reunion for this summer are invited to come to the Presbyterian Church Thursday, March 28 at 8 p.m. Meeting Thursday The Daughters of 1812 will meet Thursday with Mrs. Ira Moore. Masonic Notice Called meeting of Temple Lodge 47, F. &. A.M., this evening at 7. Work in F.C. degree. Earl Poynter, W.M. Sorority meeting Epsilon Sigma Alpha will hold its business meeting at Indiana Gas Company room this evening.

Engaged

Dr. and Mrs. John Reiling announce the engagement and approaching wedding of their daughter, Pam, to Kenneth E. Fletcher. Pam will be a May graduate of the DePauw University Philosophy Department and plans to work with VISTA before returning to graduate school to work toward a doctoral degree in Philosophy. Ken, a January graduate of the DePauw University Art Department is currently teaching in an experimental education project in Philadelphia. He plans to do alternative service in social work before completing work for his master’s degree in Visual Arts. Ken’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fletcher of DesPlaines, Illinois. The couple will be married in St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church on April 13 with Father John Eigenbrodt officiating.

Funeral Notices Alma Farrow Lola Belle Powell

Hairdresser in Viet SAIGON (UPI) — Monsieur Daniel, Lynda Bird Johnson Robb’s New York hairdresser, today ended a week’s tour of snipping and coiffing in Vietnam. He won the hearts of 350 nurses, Wacs and Waves. Daniel, 26, whose full name is Daniel Wadiaeff, wore jungle fatigues instead of his usual formal suit and carried a 45. caliber pistol among his brushes and combs. He crammed six major Vietnam bases into his frantic week that saw 30 and 40 women at a time waiting “with towels around their heads.” Escorting him on the tour was John Miller, of Bonita, Calif., a Korea and Vietnam combat veteran and ex-Special Forces

major.

“Wherever we went,” Miller said, “there the girls would be . . . in huts, under parachute awnings, trailers or service clubs. Thirty or 40 of them at a time all ready and waiting with towels around their heads.” Daniel, who paid his own way, said everyone in New York thought he was “nuts” to undertake his quick-clip project in Vietnam. “But it’s been well worth it,” he said. “I’ve never had such a reception. No one’s come out exclusively for the women before.” Conviction stands WASHINGTON (UPI)—By a tie vote, the Supreme Court let stand today the rape conviction of a Tennessee Negro, who claimed systematic exclusion of Negroes from grand and trial juries in the county where he was tried. Brooks Lee Anderson, 56, was sentenced to 49 years and a day in prison. Today’s decision was unusual in that the court has seldom granted review of jury discrimination claims, as it did in the Anderson case, and then let the conviction stand. In the case, decided by a brief order, four members of the court wanted to reverse the conviction. Four others wanted to dismiss the appeal on grounds that it should not have been granted in the first place. Since Justice Thurgood Marshall did not take part, the vote was 4-4 and a ruling by the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals against Anderson is final. Anderson sought a writ of habeas corpus in 1964 on his 1949 rape conviction of a minor. Anderson claimed male Negroes over 21 comprised 20.79 per cent of the population in Maury County, according to 1950 census figures, but that “no Negro had ever served on a grand or petit jury” there. The district attorney claimed Negroes were not willing to serve. I

Mrs. Alma Farrow, of Morton, passed away Monday morning at the Putnam County Hospital. She was born January 21, 1895, the daughter of John and Elizabeth Carroll Kemper. She taught school in the Indianapolis School system and she was also with the public health nursing association for three years. She was united in marriage to William H. Farrow in Dayton, Ohio, October 1921. She was a member of the Union Chapel Methodist Church. Survivors are two daughters, Mrs. Helen Risley of New Castle and Joyce, at home. One sister, Mrs. John Ray, Indianapolis; two grandchildren, nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her husband, five brothers and three sisters. Services will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday attheHopkins-Walton Funeral Home. Cremation will follow. Friends may call at the funeral home after 7 this evening. Find body HONG KONG (UPI)— The body of a 2-month-old boy was found under the deck boards of a Chinese junk arriving in Hong Kong Monday with 15 refugees from Communist China. Police said the child drowned when his mother dropped him into the water as the group waded ashore. Court upheld INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — The Indiana Appellate Court dedined Monday to uphold the Town of Ogden Dunes in a public nuisance suit brought by the town against residents who constructed a fence that encroached on right-of-way. The state court upheld Lake Superior Court 5 and Judge James J. Richards who found that the 6-foot.high fence built by Mr. and Mrs. Fred 0. Wildermuth Jr. was not a permanent barrier and did not interfere with traffic along Skyline Drive. The high court noted that while the question was raised in the lower court suit as to whether Ogden Dunes is a legally incorporated town, the issue was not decided by the trial court and was not an issue in this case. -

Funeral services for Mrs. Lola Belle Powell, 84, were held Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the Weaver Funeral Home in Coatesville. The Rev. John Deal was in charge. Burial was at Greenwood. Mrs. Powell and her husband have been patients of the Eventide Nursing Home for 2-1/2 years. She died at the nursing home Sunday. Mrs. Powell lived at Coatesville before going tc the nursing home. She was born at Greenwood Oct. 25, 1886, the daughter of Thomas D. Brenton and Sarah E. Lyons. She married Chauncey J. Powell on Feb. 14, 1906. She attended school at Greenwood and was a telephone operator there for a time. She was a member of the Methodist Church at Aberdeen, Washington and Order of Easter Star there. She lived in the state of Washington before coming to Coatesville. Surviving are the husband; one sister, Mrs. Grace Spencer of Danville, 111., and four nieces. Mrs. Lillie Smith Mrs. Lilly Smith, 72, of Fillmore, passed away Sunday evening at Sunset Manor Nursing Home. She had been ill for the past five weeks. Mrs. Smith was born September 30, 1895 at Ripley, Ohio. Survivors are the husband, Robert Smith, and the following children: Curtis Smith of Indianapolis, Mrs. Melba Cassman, Indianapolis, Mrs. Freda Mangus, Greencastle, Roy Smith, Fillmore, Herschel Smith, Fillmore, Mrs. Margaret Runnells, Coatesville, Mrs. Lucille Turner, Lapel, Mrs. Doris Worley Anderson, and Wilbur Campbell, of Toledo, Ohio. Also surviving are one sister, Mrs. Kate Smith and one brother George High, both of Alva, Oklahoma. Funeral services will be held Thursday at 2 p.m. at the Whitaker Funeral Home in Greencastle. The Rev. Maxwell Webb will officiate. Burial will be in the Fillmore Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home at anytime. Fatal bus accident ISTANBUL, Turkey (UPI)-A bus toppled from a coastal highway into the Black Sea Sunday night, killing 14 passengers and seriously injuring 40. Police said the accident happened when an axle snapped.

LADIES NIGHT American Legion Post #58 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27 GUESTS INVITED LARGE JACKPOTS

jwxwx^xWxWx^ IS Hints from

| HELOISE I

Heloise Dear Heloise: We do not have a frost-free refrigerator and most of the people in our circle of acquaintances also have refrigerators which have to be defrosted. I used to try to get all the stuff in the freezer compartment “used down” to a minimum, but it never worked out. So I’d end up having to run to a neighbor’s real fast, with items to park in their refrig while I was defrosting. No more! I now take all the things out of the freezer compartment and pack them into one of those foam chiller-chests. This will hold everything in a solid freeze, even ice cubes, for longer than it takes to defrost, even when I do a leisurely job of it. Mrs. E. C. Lenz YourTe so right, Dolly. Another trick I learned was to carry that foam chiller-chest in the car when I went to the grocery store to do our bimonthly shopping. I put all the frozen stuff in it. Then if I’m delayed on the way home, it doesn’t get soft. Moreover, when you do bring in all your bags of groceries, the frozen stuff is all together so you can just take the chest to your freezer. Heloise Dear Heloise: For our church sale, I sew odd buttons that I can’t use on 3x5 file cards. They sure sell fast. Nana Colonial Dames The Sir John Ogle Chapter of the Colonial Dames of the 17th Century met with Mrs. Ira Moore Friday afternoon. After refreshments were served from a very pretty candlelighted table, Mrs. Elmer Seller, president, opened the meeting by all members pledging to the flat and joining in the ritual. She welcomed a new member, Mr. Truman G. Yuncker. Mrs. Seller announced the National Conference in Washington will be held April 10-13 in the Mayflower Hotel. The state meeting is set for May 4 at the Holiday Inn on West Washington Street in Indianapolis. The next chapter meeting will be held in Bloomington with a luncheon given by Mrs. H. E. H. Greenleaf and her daughter, Dr. Elizabeth Greenleaf, in April. For the program, Mrs. Russell Pierce gave a very interesting account of “The Noble Company of Women” by Marguerite Appleton. These women played a magnificient part in the successful colonization of our coun-

try.

The meeting was adjourned until April. Papal visitor VATICAN CITY (UPI)-Pope Paul VI Monday received MSgr. Joseph Gremillion of Alexandria, La., the Secretary of the Pontifical Commission on Justice and Peace.

Dear Heloise: If you have a large kitchen, put a bookcase in it. You'll fine the extra space great for cookbooks, serving and souffle dishes, etc., with canisters on the top. Reader Dear Heloise: Tell your readers not to throw away their husband’s old suits and trousers that have gone out of style. That wool is worth it’s weight in gold. First I tear them up in fine strips. (Do not cut them unless it is absolutely necessary because they will ravel). Then I crochet these strips with a big wooden crochet needle. They make the most fabulous bathroom and front door rugs you can imagine! The secret is not to wash them until after you have the rug braided. Usually wool has been dry cleaned. After you make the rug and then wash it in lukewarm (not hot or cold) water, it will shrink just enough to make it very, very tight. These are the best dirt and water catchers we have in our whole house! Wool dresses, old skirts and any kind of a garment can be used for this. Dollar Saver Dear Heloise: I just “did over” a jewelry box that had become faded and soiled. I removed the velvet lining, then washed the box with soap and water. When it was dry, I used pink shoe coloring to paint the outside and re-covered the inside with a matching adhesivebacked plastic. It looks like a new jewelry box and I am real proud of it sitting on my dresser. Agnes Dear Heloise: I discovered that those little clear plastic clips found on men’s new shirts and packaged clothing are handy to use. My favorite trick is to slip them over the top of each pleat on drip-dry drapes and allow them to remain for several days. When the clips are removed, the pleats are much tighter and look so much better. Sure saves sags. Mrs. J.C.K.

Detf Man Perfects Midget Transistor Hearing Aid If you can hear people talk and can’t make out the words dearly then this may be the answer. An extremely small hearing aid using a tiny energized unit, has been perfected by a man who himself is hard of hearing and has been for over 10 years. If interested it is suggested you write A. W. Newell, 2616 W. 8th St., Erie Pa. You will receive full information at no cost or obligation whatsoever—Adv

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