The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 11 April 1968 — Page 5

Thursday, April 11, 1968

The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana

Page 5

Feminine horizon

| Fillmore news

By HORTENSE MYERS INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — The two women who constitute Indiana’s only team entered in the 1968 Angel Derby from Nicaragua to Florida are believers in the adage that if at first you don’t succeed—try again. Mrs. Larry Mahoney and Miss Rae Cawdell, both of Indianapolis, will leave Weir Cook Airport here Monday for Managua, Nicaragua. They competed for the first time last year as a team in the All Women’s International Air Race, which is the formal name of the Angel Derby, but did not win. This year, Mrs. Minerva Mahoney and Miss Cawdell will try again, using a different plane and changing places as to pilot and co-pilot. In the 1967 Angel Derby from Montreal to Miami, Rae was pilot and Minerva copilot and they were flying a Cherokee 140. This time Minerva will pilot and they will fly a Piper Cherokee Six. Preliminaries April 18 The race will begin April 22 but ground - level preliminary activities start April 18. The flight will be from Managua to Panama City, Fla., with designated stops at Tapachula and Tampico, Mexico, and McAllen, Tex., and flyover points for position report at San Salvador and Vera Cruz. Stops may be made, but are not required at Lake Charles, La., and Mobile, Ala. The Hoosiers will compete against about 40 other teams in a race in which handicaps are

based on tests speeds, the particular plane and race performances over the past four years. Awards totaling $2,500 will be made to the first six winners. Minerva, a registered nurse, has held a private pilot’s license since 1966. Rae began taking flying lessons after her first plane flight “about 12 or 15 years ago.” She was chairman of the first Indiana Air Race sponsored by the Ninety-Nines, an international organization of licensed women pilots, in 1960 and was second-place winner in the 1962 Indiana race and copilot of the winning plane in a similar Michigan race for women pilots in 1964. Works for Airline Currently Rae works for Lake Central Airlines as administrative assistant in the advertising and public relations department, but she faces a tough decision for a Hoosier. Lake Central and Allegheny Airlines have merged and the headquarters are to be moved to Pittsburgh and Washington. So Rae must decide whether to move or try for another job in her native state. She formerly worked for eight years for the Indianapolis Star and News as an assistant to Willard Worcester, now of Muncie, but then general manager of the central division for Indianapolis Newspapers, Inc. Rae moved to Florida after her mother’s death and worked for a time for Radio Station WSUN in St. Petersburg, before returning to Indianapolis.

Mrs. Jim Christie and sons and Mrs. Don Smith and daughter visited Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Charles Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Zeiner left Thursday morning for Fort McClennan, Ala., to attend the graduation from basic training of their daughter, Marie. The Fillmore High School Alumni are preparing for their annual banquet. The supper will be furnished by Bethel Baptist Church women, planned by the A.B.C. Circle. The Friendly Sewing Circle met all day Wednesday with Mrs. a delicious noon meal, with every member present except two. Next meeting will be with Mrs. Ethel Byrd. Mrs. Sue Starr called Fridayevening on Mr. and Mrs. Charles Smith. Group 2 of C.W.F. Christian Church will meet April 16 with Mrs. Elizabeth Pyke. General C.W.F. will meet at the Christian Church April 25. John Glaze and Manry Jane Goss were united in marriage Fridayevening April 4. Following the reception in the Christian Church basement, the young couple left for a short trip. They will soon be home in Greencastle, on St. Rd. 240. The Fillmore Garden Club will meet Friday April 12 with Mrs. Isabelle Smith. Rev. David Mann of Terre Haute has been called to fill the pulpit at Bethel Baptist Church. He and his wife are moving into the parsonage soon.

The Bethel Brotherhood entertained their wives at supper Saturday evening. Mrs. Dorothy Bowman underwent surgery Friday at the Putnam County Hospital. The Methodist Church Canvassing teams were out Sunday afternoon trying to determine the feeling of the community concerning a new church. Do we? or do we not? Want a new Church? Miss Denise Thomas spent three days last week undergoing tests at the Putnam County Hospital. The April Mothers Club meeting was cancelled. The next meeting will be May 7 with Mrs. Lorene Deweese. The Help One Another Club met all day Friday March 29 with Mrs. Edna Smith in Coatesville, with one member absent. A delicious pitch-in dinner was enjoyed at noon. A quilt was bound and blocks were pieced. The next meeting will be with Mrs. Ruth Carpenter. Michael (Mike) Kiger and Sara Terry were united in marriage Sunday, March 31st in the Chapel at the Naval Air Station at Pensacola, Fla. Fillmore residents who attended were his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Kiger and his brother Richard. The Beechwood Pleasant Circle met Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Ethel Jackson. Roll call was foolish superstitions. Delicious refreshments were served by the hostess. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Nichols arrived home Thursday night. They have spent the winter in Florida. Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Dick Sheese were Mr. and Mrs. Steen and son of Columbus and Mrs. Ed Shultz of Gosport. Miss Pattie and Susie Newkirk of Indianapolis are spending their Easter vacation visiting Mrs. Avaril Huller and Mrs. Daisy Youngerman. On Tuesday morning Chester Walton of Oregon and his sister, Mrs. Alton Hurst of Greencastle called on their cousin and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Wells. Marion Cline of the Bethel Neighborhood has been ill several days. Sunday callers on Mr. and Mrs. Lee Wells were Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Cunningham and daughter Susan. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Evans of Roachdale visited Sunday with her mother Mrs. Mae Pursell and called in the afternoon on Mrs. Mary Evans. Mrs. Ethel Ruark visited Friday and Saturday with her son Roland Ruark and family. Several members of Fillmore Rebekah Lodge No. 652 attended the meeting of District No. 19 Friday at Bee Hive Rebekah Lodge in Greencastle. Minnie Wells will observe her 82nd birthday on April 13. Acreage control enrollment WASHINGTON (UPI) — Record farmer enrollment in the government’s acreage control programs for grains will push 1968 direct federal payments to feed grain, wheat and cotton producers up to an estimated $2.85 billion. The growers, who collect gov. ernment checks in return for idling part of their acreage, would get about $326 million more this year than in 1967 on the basis of current estimates. Final program enrollment reports prepared by the Agriculture Department showed 1.5 million farms growing corn and grain sorghum had signed agreements to idle nearly 34.3 million acres this year. The growers stand to collect $1.32 billion in direct federal payments.

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New Maysville news

Mrs. Violet Leak visited Friday with Pearl Elliott. Clarence Ward called on LeRoy Disney Sunday. Grace, Kathy and Mary Leak spent Saturday with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Leak, along with Darrell and

Vicky Hart and Nick Nichelson. Lucy Woodall spent the weekend with Lily Parks of Roachdale. Mr. and Mrs. Roland Henderson and family spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John H. McGuire. Those who called at the Clarence

Ward resident during the week were Darrell and Vicky Hart and the Woodall children. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Dickerson, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Dickerson, and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Woodall of Roachdale were visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Woodall Sunday.

Tokyo Births Up TOKYO (UPI)—A total of 20,145 babies were bom in Tokyo in January, £he second largest number of births in any month since the postwar baby boom ended, according to the Metropolitan Statistics Department. The highest mark of 20,729 births was registered in March, 1967.

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