The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 15 April 1968 — Page 2

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Page 2

The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana

Monday, April 15, 1968

THE DAILY BANNER and Herald Consolidated "It Waves For AH” 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. Induna, 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. All 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 Banker 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 $2.15 per one month. Sniper assassin leaves cold trail

ATLANTA (UPI) — Federal agents, intensifying the largest manhunt in FBI history, today maintained stringent silence as they followed a cold trail in the hunt for the sniper assassin of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The hunt for elusive Eric Starvo Galt continues, although there is no warrant outstanding for the seaman. Police in Jacksonville, Fla. said Sunday two hitchhikers arrested on vagrancy charges had no connection with the case. They were arrested after a Negro motorist reported one of the men looked just like an artists’s sketch of the murderer. Galt, if that is his real name, appears to hold the key to the investigation. His car was impounded last week after it was found abandoned in a housing project here. The car answered the description of one seen fleeing Memphis, Tenn., April 4 with King’s killer. The Nobel Peace Prize winner was shot to death as he stood on the balcony of a motel in Memphis. Galt apparently took a room in Birmingham last fall, but has not been seen by neighbors recently. He said he was an

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nployed merchant seaman when he applied for an Alabama driver’s license. Agents are known to be checking a theory there might have been more than one person involved in King’s death. Several witnesses reported seeing two white Mustangs outside the flophouse from which the fatal shot was fired. They are also investigating the possibility Galt’s name is an alias. League slates unit meeting April unit meetings of the Greencastle League of Women Voters will be devoted to a study of Employment, the material to be presented by members of the Human Resources committee of which Mrs. Gordon Chastain is chairman. The discussion will center around the problems of employment, the local situation, and income maintenance. Members are urged to read“Jobs and Hard Cash” and “The Migrant Workers” to prepare for the study. Units will be held as follows: Tuesday, April 16-9:00 a.m. Hostess: Mrs. Roger Ptak 8141/2 E. Washington Disc. Leader: Mrs. John Morrill Tuesday April 16— 8:00p.m. Hostess: Mrs. Robert Gilliland 510 S. Indiana Disc. Leader: Mrs. Donald Bossart Wednesday, April 17- 8:00p.m. Hostess: Mrs. William Meehan 106 Taylor Place Disc. Leader; Mrs. Clem Williams Anyone who is interested on this topic is cordially invited to attend one of these meetings.

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Dismissed Friday: Dorothy Bowman, Fillmore Mrs. James Casady and daughter, Cloverdale Lee Sheppard, Cloverdale Mrs. Larry Sutton and son, Ladoga Mikell, Blue, Indianapolis Helen Houck, Greencastle Charles Hutcheson, Greencastle Bayard Allen, Greencastle Mrs. John White and twins, Greencastle Births: Mr. and Mrs. Chesley Lady, 800 North Madison, a boy, Friday. Dismissed Saturday: Peggy Plunkett, Roachdale Samuel Russell, Danville Laura Evans, Cloverdale Daisy Miller, Bainbridge Carole Emery, Bainbridge Arthur Tincher, Coatesville David Bohmer, Greencastle Ralph Dowen, Greencastle Edith Cone, Greencastle Ruth New, Greencastle Margaret Emily Stoner, Greencastle. Births: Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Query, Poland, Route 1, a boy, Saturday. Dismissed Sunday: Douglas Sechman, Coatesville Roxanne Cox, Coatesville Lynn Reuss, Springfield, HI. Barton Gebhart, Peoria, HI. Mary Cox, Cloverdale Walter Pae, Greencastle Stephen Norris, Greencastle Births: Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Hayden, Coatesville, Route 2, a boy, Sunday. Manila Hilton MANILA (UPI)—The Manila Hilton Hotel, the largest hotel and tallest building in the Philippines, was formally opened March 14. The 22-story, 351-room hotel is in the center of Manila’s business district but only a few minutes walk from Manila Bay.

Plane hit by gunfire CHICAGO (UPI)—The Federal Aviation Administration revealed Friday that one of its planes was apparently hit by gunfire while flying close to the Chicago riot area late Thursday. The twin-engine DC 3, which had been on a routine navigational check, landed safely at Midway Field with a dent in its fuselage. None of the four-man crew was injured. Neal Callahan, a community relations officer for the FAA, said, “It appears that somebody took a shot at it just back of where the pilot sits.” The pilot was identified as William Arties, 37, of Kalamazoo, Mich. The plane, Callahan said, was based in Battle Creek, Mich. The pilot and his crew of three FAA employes, Callahan said, “were making a routine flight check ... at an altitude of 1,000 feet above the ground when at about 6:15 p.m. the pilot felt and heard a bang on the fuselage.” A later examination revealed the bullet did not puncture the body of the plane, but left a dent. “It is theorized that this was caused by a small arms shot,” Callahan said. He said the plane was flying over a vicinity on the city’s Southwest Side, near where arsonists took their heaviest toll in buildings during the weekend riot.

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1 Personal and Local I

DAR will meet Washburn Chapter DAR will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the DePauw Student Union. The hostesses are Mrs. Rexell Boyd, Mrs. James Johnson, Mrs. Marion Wilson and Miss Mary Frances Cooper. Guest speaker will be Miss Edith Browning. Her subject is “Periodicals Of The Past.” Please note change of meeting place. Mothers Service Club Mothers Service Club will meet with Mrs. Ethel Conklin, 211 West Walnut Street, Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Roll call will be napkin or place mat exchange. Meeting tonight Current Book Club will meet Monday at 8:00 p.m. with Mrs. Lynn Brown. Rescue truck run City firemen made a resuscitator run to the home of Donald Miller, 322 Melrose Avenue, at 12:20 Sunday noon when he had trouble breathing. Oxygen was administered and he was then taken to St. Vincent’s Hospital in Indianapolis. In Washington Mrs. Perry Michael from Washburn Chapter Daughters of the American Revolution and Mrs. Robert Wallace of Danville, members of the Wa-Pe-Ke-Way Chapter are attending Continental Congress in Washington this week. Called Meeting Called Meeting of Temple Lodge No. 47 F &A M Tues. April 16 at 7 : 00 P.M. Earl Poynter, W.M. Parents of twins Mr. and Mrs. John White, 408 North Indiana Street, are the parents of twins born Tuesday, April 9. The new arrivals have been named John Reed and Melissa Kay. Here from Michigan Miss Gertrude Cook of Royal Oak, Michigan is here visiting here sisters Mrs. Marie Porter and Miss Nina Cook and her brother, Forest. Easter guests Mr. and Mrs. Felix Cook and two daughters of Noblesville were here Sunday to enjoy Easter with his mother, Mrs. Paul Cook. Completes basic Seaman Apprentice Duane Leach, Ladoga, Route 2, has graduated from nine weeks of Navy basic training at the Naval Training Center, Great Lakes, 111. After a 14-day leave at home he was sent to Memphis, Tenn. He is the son on William C. Leach. Golden Link Club The Golden Link Club will meet Wednesday evening at 7:30 p.m. with Mrs. Edna Crump. Mrs. Eunice Graves will have the program.

MEN’S WEAR

Meeting Tuesday Anyone opposing the fluoridation of our city water is asked to attend a meeting Tuesday, April 16th, at 7:00 p.m., at the home of Mrs. Norman L. Birt, on North Arlington Street Road, phone OL 3-6886. City officials, doctors and dentists are invited. Here from El wood Mr. & Mrs. R. L. Hoffman and family of Elwood are spending Easter vacation with Dr. & Mrs. L.A. Trippett. Convalescing Karl Boyd Clearwaters, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald dearwaters, is recovering from surgery at Winona General Hospital in Indianapolis. His room number is 459. vfw dads to meet Fathers Auxiliary No. 1 of the Veterans of Foreign Wars will meet Wednesday evening at the Gen. Jesse M. Lee Post 1550 Home. Members are urged to attend. Meeting Thursday The Ladies Missionary Society of The New Providence Baptist Church will meet Thursday, April 18 at 11:30 at the Church for a pitch-in-dinner. Meat and drinks will be furnished. Hostesses are Beulah Hutchison and Mary Beams. Mrs. Clare Gorham of Stllesville will have the program and install the officers for the coming year. All ladies of the Church are urged to attend. Weekend guests Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Heavin, of Detroit, Mich., spent the Easter weekend with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Heavin.

Will attend sessions Mrs. Value Williams, registrar at DePauw University, will attend the 54th Annual Meeting of the Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers in Philadelphia, April 16-19. More than 1500 representatives of over 1200 colleges and universities of the nation are expected to attend. Mrs. Williams is on the committee on hospitality as well as the Resolutions Committee and is participating as a consultant in a session concerned with registration for small colleges. Girl Scout leaders The Putnam County Girl Scout Neighborhood Association will have its monthly meeting April 15, at 9:30 a.m. at the home of Mrs. Calvin R. Dyer. One adult should come from each troop. Choir to sing The Ozark Bible School and Academy Choir will be at the Hanna St. Baptist Church Wednesday evening at 7:00 p.m. Good Cheer Club The Good Cheer Club will meet with Mrs. Marvin Jackson Thursday evening, April 18 at 7:30 p.m.

By WALTER LOGAN NEW YORK (UPI) — New York is jammed this time every year with several hundred worried and sometimes puzzled men—the sportswear buyers. They have to decide now what the male public will buy next Fall and if they guess wrong they’re in deep trouble. Guiding them in their endeavors is an organization known as the National Association of Men’s Sportswear Buyers (NAMSB) which not only sends them a series of pamphlets during the year but puts on a series of musical type fashion shows while they’re in town. The shows are a little short on plot but the fashion message is there, delivered by a line of Broadway chorus boys in Nehru <or Mao) jackets or any of the other hot fashion items. This time the show represented the combined efforts of NAMSB and du Pont. There were recurring themes — shape (including men’s sweaters, of all things), the look of the 1930s. the emphasis on necklines including turtlenecks and Mao collars, a trend to brown shadings, increased interest in textures, including Donegal tweeds and Cuir Sauvage. Cuir Sauvage as any French student knows is wild leather and some of it is pretty wild. It is also called naked leather or antique leather and is used for everything from golf jackets to cowboy jackets. The Nehru collar is a major success in the major cities and there are some Nehru jackets which are knee length. Worn with it are pendants and love beads. ^

Men’s Fur Coats Fur coats for men are in— seal, raccoon, beaver, pony, Persian lamb, mouton—real fur and imitations. So far fashion raincoats which are wool and wool blends move past topcoats into a sporty look of their own. The collars include rounded notched collars. Also new is the long shaped coat, made to be worn with shaped suits. It is below the knees and flared and usually has a wide coachman’s collar. In fur it looks like something Dr. Zhivago would wear. But also new are waist and hip length jackets in the style of the 30s. What’s happening to knitted wear is almost unbelievable. Some of it is double knit and tailored into sports coats. Horizontal stripes are in. So are Scandinavian patterns • snowflakes etc.) in bulky knits. And there is shape— achieved in some cases with wide ribbed waistbands or with belts. The look of the 30s turns up in argyles. And turtles are everywhere—including some so bulky you can’t wear anything over them. For the turtle necks that aren’t that bulky there are Buffalo plain sports shirts to be worn over them. The shirts also are made as tunics and Nehru shirts—with upholstery fabrics: velvets, brocades, metallics. The 1930s theme turns up strongest in clothing — double breasted chalk stripes, shaped of course. There are Donegal tweeds, Norfolk jacket styling. And if you are in this type of suit you’ll naturally want the darker shirts — dark brown, bottle green and dark gray.

What's Being Shown In Fall Sportswear

Funeral Notices Ida Mae Zielke Mrs. Ida Mae Zielke, 61, passed away Sunday at her home on Quincy, Route 1. She was born October 15,1906, the daughter of William and Mary Whitlock Myers. She was married to George Zielke. Survivors include the husband; a daughter, Mrs. Maxine Pleake, Quincy, Route 1; five sisters; one brother and four grandchildren. Services will be held Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the Whitaker Funeral Home in Cloverdale with Rev. William J. Evans in charge. Burial will be in the Mannan Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home.

Jessie Logan Services for Mrs. Jessie Logan, 78, 1129 Avenue C, were held this morning at the Hop-kins-Walton Funeral Home. Mrs. Logan passed away Friday evening in the Putnam County Hospital. She was born June 24, 1890 in Davenport, Nebraska. The deceased was a member of the First Church of Christ, Scientist, in this city, and was a first reader. She is survived by three sons, Robert, Homewood, 111., Paul, Rolling Meadow, HI., Ralph, Greencastle; a daughter, Mary Jane Brunell, Chicago; nine grandchildren, and eight great grandchildren. Her husband, Richard, preceded her in death in 1960. Fat Children: A Glowing U.S. Problem COLLEGE STATION. Tex. • UPI*—That diet the adult struggles with week after week should have started when he was a youngster. Prof. Charles B. Corbin of Texas A & M University believes. Dr. Corbin said studies of overweight among 1.200 grade school children showed percentages of obesity among boys in grades one through seven ranged from six to 17 per cent. Girls showed generally higher percentages of obesity in those age groups. Similar studies in Canada and Great Britain showed those children had less fat. Corbin said. “Our kids are less fit and more fat.’’ he said. By and large, athletic programs are geared to boys, he said, a fact that would explain the generally larger amount of fat among girls. The most damaging revelation of the study is that fat problems tend to stay with people. “Our kids are getting fatter as they grow older,” Carbin said. “Research shows fat people tend to get fatter. The majority of these kids are not going to trim down in their teen-age years. It is more proof against the baby-fat theory that says, ‘Don’t worry, he will grow out of it.’ ” "It may mean parents should shut off the television and see that their kids get more physical education earlier." Corbin said Club enjoys luncheon The Clinton-Madison Friendly Club enjoyed a luncheon meeting at the Fairway Restaurant on April 11. After the luncheon, the meeting was opened in the usual manner, song “Sweet and Low,” Flag Salute and the Club Collect. Roll call, “An Embarassing Moment,” was answered by 17 members and one guest, Era Martin, who later became a member. Reports of the secretary and treasurer were read and approved. Lillie Stultz cannot serve as secretary next year and Dorothy Miller was appointed to take her place. The programs for the year were read by Ethel Frazier, the incoming president, and with a few minor changes were accepted. Maude O’Haver gave an account of the County Federation of Clubs annual meeting held at Groveland and the meeting then adjourned with prayer. The next meeting on May 9 will be with Hazel Williams.

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Dear Snookie-Pies . . . If you have acquired a bit of “cool” and love to wear bright-colored stockings, like green or red or purple, I just learned something by a tried-and-true method which I did myself, . Buy a package of all-pur-pose dye. Take your OLDEST unmated stockings and tint them to wear with those cute dresses. 1 did not even boil mine. I put my teakettle on the stove and brought the water to a boil. Poured the package of dye into a stainless steel pan, held my teakettle high and slowly poured the boiling water over the dye. Then stirred it real good with a spoon. You’ll be amazed what pretty colors of pink, red and blue you can get. Why buy ’em when you have unmated stockings anyway? Or “more better yet,” tint those light-colored ones which look like they’re faded. By the way, I’ve just been told by my teenage daughter, “Mother, you better get with It!” Heloise * * * DEAR HELOISE: I have found the most marvelous way to keep my clothes closet in order. I keep a large paper bag standing in the corner. Now when I pull out that dress I have intended to shorten for three years, a skirt that is just a little too tight, or a blouse that doesn't go with anything, I just drop them in the bag right then and there. When it's full I call a charity organization to pick it up or I take it to the nearest collection box. Then I put a new bag in my closet for further use. R. R. * * * That's a new way to clean a closet and get some new clothes at the same time! Heloise * * * DEAR HELOISE: We had “chicken in a bucket” from one of the drive-ins the other night. After the family finished the chicken, I took the big cardboard bucket, washed and dried it, then spray-painted it inside a bright red. I covered the outside with heavy red and gold gift wrapping paper. The result was the prettiest little bathroom wastepaper basket you ever saw. It could be used also for an arrangement of flowers and many other things. It cost nil. too. Mrs. Linda West * * * DEAR HELOISE: Instead of discarding my sea grass runners that were spotted and ugly, I just got out an old bucket of paint. The first coat I put on them was a flat paint, applied very thick. Then to finish them off, I used an enamel spray-coat. After a year, I sprayed the runners again and they are like new and so useful. I painted only one side be-

cause they dried quickly that way. The older squares I now use on the patio, but the others are still doing duty in the house. Some are white but the grass green rugs outside look terrific—and all for a dollar or less. Iris Clark * * * Iris, I hope our friends know to do that painting outside on the lawn just BEFORE they mow the grass. When the lawn mower does its next chopping Job, the painted grass is cut off. Results? No messy, sticky papers to pick up. Heloise * * * LETTER OF LAUGHTER DEAR HELOISE: Do you ever feel like you are working on borrowed time ? Executive * * * Was that fellow trying to make us all laugh? He sure did, didn't he? Heloise * * * Heloise welcomes all mail, especially household hints which she can pass on to readers as space permits. However, because of the tremendous volume of mail she receives daily. Heloise is unable to answer all individual letters. She will answer readers' questions in her column whenever possible. Senior hayride Seniors of Greencastle High School Class of 1968 enjoyed a hayride Thursday evening. About 60 seniors and guests met at Jones School a 7 p.m. From there a caravan of cars drove to the John Eiteljorge farm where a large fire was set up for a wiener roast. Sheriff Bob Albright came out and had a coke with the group. At 10:00, everyone loaded onto trucks driven by Clyde Spencer and Danny Eiteljorge and went for an old-fashioned hayride. After two hours.of riding through the country everyone was ready tor the return ride back to town. Plant Gifts For New Homes NEW YORK 'UPI' — Pot plants make ideal sifts to families moving into new homes. Choice selections available in spring include compact potted mums, azaleas and calcadiums, which can be replanted in outdoor gardens when the weather gets warmer, and African violets. fuchsias and geraniums, all professionally grown in red clay pots to keep them thriving longer.

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