The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 May 1968 — Page 2
Page 2
The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana
Thursday, May 2, 1968
THE DAILY BANNER and Herald Consolidated "It Waves For All" 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, 46136. 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. 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 Banner effective July 31. 1967-in Putnam County-1 year. Si 2.00-6 months, $7.00-3 months. S4.50 Indiana other than Putnam County-1 year, $14.00-6 months. $8.00-3 months, $5.00. Outside 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.
Miss Purcell pledged
Glenda L. Purcell of Roachdale, a junior at the University of Evansville, was pledged to Cap and Gown, senior women’s scholastic honorary, in a ceremony on Friday, April 26, in the Union Lounge on the University campus. Glenda, daughter of Mrs. Eller Purcell of R.R. 1, Roachdale, is one of 15 Cap and Gown pledges. To be considered for membership in the honorary, a student must be a third quarter junior with at least a 3.0 grade
point average, and must have displayed leadership and service to the University. Glenda, a music major, is a member of Sigma Alpha Iota, professional music fraternity for women, and Alpha Lambda Delta, freshman women’s honorary.
County Hospital
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Bible Thought
I am the good shepherd: the good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep.—John 10:11. God is always looking after His wandering children. The death of His Son, the Good Shepherd, is a confirmation of His love.
I Personal and Local x *
Dismissed Wednesday: William Etcheson, Sr., Roachdale Dorothy Kinser, Spencer Beverly Partin, Quincy Donald Smith, Fillmore Mrs. William Sinnet and daughter, Russellville Sherman Earley, Greencastle Doris Allee, Greencastle Glen Gass, Greencastle
Funeral notices
D. L. Mayle D. L. Mayle, 88, who resided at 32 Beveridge Street, died Wednesday afternoon in the Robert Long Hospital at Indianapolis after a six weeks illness. He was born April 2, 1880, the son of George and Julia Mayle. A member of the Hanna Street Baptist Church, the deceased taught in the public schools in Indiana, Ohio and West Virginia for 60 years. Surviving are his wife, Nancy Prichard Mayle; two daughters, Mrs. Robert Harlan, Greencastle, Mrs. Ross Cadick, Speedway, and four grandchildren. He was preceded in death by a daughter, Genevra and a son, Kelly. Services will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday at the Rector Funeral Home with burial in the Chambersville Cemetery in Owen County. Friends may call at the funeral home after noon Friday. Ollie McCloud Ollie McCloud, 88, who resided on Coatesville, Route 1, passed away at 5:10 this morning in the Putnam County Hospital. He was admitted as a patient in April. According.to hospital records, his next of kin is his wife, Lennie. The Weaver Funeral Home in Coatesville is in charge of arrangements. Jesse Earlle Graveside services for Jesse Earlle will be held at Forest Hill cemetery at 11:30 a.m. Friday.
Gift book The Roachdale Library has received a gift book which will be of interest to many because it contains a poem by Livia Miller (Mrs. Howard) Ashby, Roachdale resident and author of several books. The book “Spring Anthology 1968” has just been published by Mitre Press of London, and is a compilation of representative verse from the world’s living poets. This is the 25th annual edition of the well-known international anthology of contemporary poetry. Mrs. Ashby’s poem, the only one by an Indiana author, Is titled “Sun’s Gold.” Marriage license Ronald Gene Spencer, truck driver, Greencastle, Route 2, and Lois Jean Hinkle, settlement clerk, Indiana National Bank, Greencastle, Route 1. DeWayne Robert Montgomery, U.S. Army, Cambridge City, and Vicki Lynne Grimes, at home, Greencastle, Route 2.
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Parents of son Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth McCullough, 110 S. West St. Crawfordsvllle, are the parents of a 8 lb. 6 oz. baby boy, Mark alan, born Wednesday morning May 1st. Mrs. McCullough is the former Jane Ann Thompson of Greencastle. The grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Earl McCullough and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Reeves of Greencastle. Tour new plant. Joe Ellis, owner of Joe Ellis Heating & Air Conditioning, Inc. and employees Roy Higgins, Robert Hurst and David Cox, were in Indianapolis Tuesday touring Bryant’s new factory where they manufacture electric and gas air conditioners in addition to furnaces. Then they motored to Bryant-Hedback Company for an open house of newly remodeled facilities with displays by the manufacturers with whom they do business. Also they viewed the car and met and talked with Arnie Knepper and Rolla Vollstedt, driver and owner of the “500” race car sponsored by Bryant-Hedback Company. Dance Saturday The Moderne’ Swingers are square dancing at the 4-H Fairgrounds Saturday May 4th from 8:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. Chuck Bean will be calling. Morning Musicale The Morning Musicale meeting May 8th. will be a pitch-in dinner at the home of Lois Loring, 426 Anderson StreeL Time 6:00 p.m. Bring your own table service. Honor Students Two Greencastle students have been named to the Honor Roll at Transylvania College in Lexington, Kentucky for the past academic quarter. Kimber Ivan McCarson received a 3.70 grade average out of a possible 4.00 for his work as a freshman business student. He is the son of Mrs. Eldena McCarson of 11 Bloomington. Also on the Honor Roll was Ernest Edward Smith, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Elgin T. Smith of R.R. 3. Smith earned a 3.68 grade average as a junior pre-medical student at the historic Lexington college. Attend Layne rites Mr. and Mrs. Claude Webb attended the funeral of his cousin, Ollie Layne at Defiance, Ohio Tuesday. Mrs. Orville Webb accompanied them. Mr. Layne was reared south of Belle Union and had many relatives and friends in Putnam County.
Election reminders
The date? Next Tuesday, May 7th. The time? 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. EST. The League of Women Voters reminds you that if you don’t select the candidates for your party, others will do it for you. Vote in the Primary on Tuesday. 1968 is a "jackpot” year for elections. Indiana voters elect everybody from precinct committeeman to President of the United States. The League of Women Voters urges you to make your voice count in all these important elections. Vote in the May 7th Primary Election to “select” the candidates you hope to “elect” in November. Does your precinct committeeman represent you? He or she will speak for you in political party councils for the next two years. You will elect or reelect your precinct committeeman in the Primary Election, May 7th. The person you elect will in turn elect the powerful county chairman for your party. Know your candidates for precinct committeeman, says the League of Women Voters, then vote in the May 7th election. Looking for candidates for governor? senator? Superintendent of Public Instruction? They are “not” on your primary ballot. These important candidates will be chosen by each party in special nominating conventions In June. Delegates to - these conventions are elected by you at the Primary Election, May 7th. If you wish your party to nominate good candidates, you must elect good delegates. Know your candidates for State Convention delegates, then vote in the May 7th election. Remember this date--Tues-day, May 7th. This is Primary day when Indiana voters select the men and women they hope to see elected next November. Voters also have a chance to vote for the many they think would make the best presidential candidate for their party. The polls will be open from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. EST. Be sure your voice is heard by votiijjt on May 7th.
Visit son Mayor Vissing of Jeffersonville and Mrs. Vissing were here the past week-end visiting their son, John, who is a sophomore at DePauw University. Resumes work Charles C. Crawley, who has been off duty the last 6 months because of illness, was pronounced O.K. by his doctor and told to resume his work. He left yesterday for Dayton, Ohio where he will drive a motor truck to distant places such as St. Louis and Cities in Texas. —Tour state and as far east as New York City. Many of the major cities of the Midwest also will be represented. The Hospitality Tour will take the visiting industrialists around the state in two airplanes, May 16 and 17 , to view industrial and educational facilities. Luncheon stops along both northern and southern tour routes will be made each day, and local chambers of commerce will entertain the guests and conduct ground tours. The host cities will be Muncie, Bloomington, Lafayette, and Evansville. Thursday evening, May 16, the executives and their wives will be honored guests at the Lieutenant Governor’s 500 Festival Dinner at the Columbia Club. A social hour will precede the dinner. Saturday, May 18, following breakfast at the Columbia Club the guests will accompany Lieutenant Governor and Mrs. Rock to the famous 500 Speedway and the time trials for the 1968 race. Sidelights of the day at the track will include a trip to the famous Speedway Museum and for the men only a guided VIP tour of Gasoline —Hospital 3. Stay off the beds. 4. Observe quietness at all times. 5. Not loitering in hallways. 6. Patients are sick; do not over-tire them. Putnam Court Notes Wanda I. Miller vs. Louis R. See, complaint for damages. Darla K. Smiley vs.- Keith Smiley, suit for divorce.
No results as yet By KIM WILLENSON VIENTIANE (UPI)-Sipping tea and orangeade in a yellow house behind a chain-locked gate America’s man in Laos sits with North Vietnam’s diplomats to do the guarded talking that the world hopes will lead to a Vietnam peace conference. Ambassador William H. Sullivan and his political counsellor, Robert Hurwich, are the men who handle most of the sensitive contacts between the United States and North Vietnam. A source in a position to know said the diplomats talk as much about the day’s weather and local news as they do of world problems. A typical session was the most recent one, held Sunday. Hurwich drove to the North Vietnamese Embassy, a twostory yellow and gray complex of three buildings behind a high fence on a red dirt road on the city outskirts. He hoped to find Nguyen Chanh, the North Vietnamese charge d’affaires. When he reached the gate the porter had forgotten his key and when he finally opened the gate he had to unwind a length of clanking chain from the latch. But when Hurwich got inside he was told that Chanh was out sightseeing, it being Sunday, and the American asked the charge’s secretary, Nguyen Con, to call on the U.S. ambassador at 4 p.m. At precisely 4 p.m., Con and a junior attache arrived at the U.S. Embassy and were rushed across the thick yellow carpet into Sullivan’s dark walnutpanelled office. They were offered tea and orangeade and sat with Sullivan and Hurwich in Danish modern chairs covered with black vinyl. Card of thanks We wish to express our sincere thanks and appreciation to our relatives, friends and neighbors for their thoughtfulness and many acts of kindness shown us during the illness and death of our Mother and Grandmother, Georgia A. Hanna. Especially we thank Mrs. Pearl Johnson for her devoted care of our Mother, Dr. Richards, the nurses of the Ben Hur Home, the Perkins Funeral Home for their many services rendered, Mr. Eugene Hutchins for the beautiful music and the pall bearers. Every act of kindess has been appreciated. The Family of Georgia A. Hanna
Republicans may scuttle tax hike WASHINGTON (UPI)-Pres-ident Johnson’s long-sought tax hike, inched along by a spending cut agreement, may be scuttled by Republicans who say they were left in the dark on his plans to get the tax bill through Congress. Johnson Wednesday proposed a spending reduction formula which was quickly passed by the House Appropriations Committee, voting without its Republican members. Republican leaders instantly charged that the Johnson plan to get his 10 per cent income tax surcharge passed was “partisan” and said the proposal did not help chances for approval of the tax bill. Rep. John W. Byrnes, R-Wis., said the “partisan” nature of the proposal muddled the outlook for quick approval of the tax biU. Byrnes is the senior Republican on a House-Senate conference committe which scheduled another meeting today on Johnson’s tax and spending cut proposals. Johnson’s plan calls for $4 billion in spending cuts from a fiscal 1969 budget of $186.1 billion. The formula, approved by the appropriations panel on a 20-0 vote with no Republicans voting, also calls for $10 billion in cuts in appropriations now being considered by Congress and a freeze on $8 billion in previously approved, but unspent, appropriations. Johnson outlined the proposed strategy at an off-the-record White House session with Democratic leaders Tuesday night. Treasury Secretary Henry H. Fowler carried the spending reduction plan to the Appropriations Committee and said it could save $18 billion over the years. He defended Johnson’s budget as “lean, prudent and designed to do America’s urgent work prudently,” but acknow. ledged “perhaps a majority” of Congress wanted big spending cuts. “I don’t see how we’re any closer to a tax increase particularly in light of the partisan nature of the Appropriations Committee’s action,” said Byrnes. I 4-H news !
The fourth meeting of the Jolly Juniors 4-H Club was held April 23 in the Reelsville Home Ec. Room. The Pledge to the Flag was given by Nadine Eubank and the 4-H Club Pledge was given by Carol Wallace. Roll call was answered by naming your favorite color. New business was planning Mothers’ Night to be held at the next meeting. For this meeting members are asked to wear dresses. The installation of new officiers was conducted by last year's officer. Each of the new officers lighted a candle and said . “I do” after the old officers gave the meaning of the office. Doris Hartman and Nancy Farmer received awards for Junior Leadership. The meeting was then adjourned to meet at 7 p.m. on May 7. Refreshments for the next meeting will be served by Robin Blue, Carol Summit, Janella Edwards, Diana and Carol Watts.
The Warren Twp. Haymakers 4-H Club met April 22nd. at the Putnamville School House for their third meeting. Ricky Kelly led the group in the pledge to the flag and Joe Heeke led in the 4-H pledge. Loren Salsman led in a song “So You’re in the Army Now. The treasurers report was given and dues accepted. Jim Samsel read the minutes to the last meeting. A demonstration on Forestry I was given by Mark Jones, this was especially for this years Forestry members. A money making project was discussed and decided that club would pick-up corn left in the field this Saturday p.m. A weiner roast was discussed and a committee will be appointed at the next meeting. Jr. leader, Pat Samsel, suggested a civic project for the Club, could be to paint trash barrels for the community and to sell boaster cards to people interested in 4-H to help pay for fair books. Initiation of new members was conducted by Max Walts, Mark Jones and Randy Holtom. Safety was given by Kevin Jordan. The next meeting will be May 6th. at the schoolhouse. Refreshments were served by Joe Burnham and Eddie Samsel. The meeting was thas adjourned. /
Dear Friends: Your response in helping us solve the problem of laundrying polished cotton curtains successfully was tremendous. You’re all great. Here are several of the most popular ways that were sent in which have been used with good results (I added a few comments): “Add a little borax to the water in which sateen (polished cotton) is washed, then iron the fabric on the wrong side and the material will keep its gloss.’’ “Dip washed curtains into a thin (very light) solution of clear, HOT cooked starch to which a small amount of wax (about the size of a walnut) has been added. I se paraffin or white candle wax and stir starch thoroughly until all wax is dissolved. Iron curtains while damp on right side.” (This worked great for me.) “I'se the wash and wear cycle of washing machine. After the rinse water has run Into washer, add one cup of liquid starch (the kind that comes already to use and is blued). Iron with a hot Iron BEFORE completely dry.” “Dissolve one package of plain gelatin In the final rinse water.” (This was excellent, too.) “To wash polished cotton, save the water that rice has been boiled in. Add a small amount of glycerine to the mixture and use for the last
rinse. For white polished cotton, substitute a tiny amount of blueing for the glycerine.” (The Chinese use this method.) Everyone seems to agree that polished cotton should be washed in COOL water and ironed while damp. So, gals, those of you who have beautiful polished cotton curtains and bedspreads, the next time you launder them, try one of the above methods which our good friends have used successfully when doing theirs. Bless you all. And last, but surely the MOST important is: DON’T I SE BLEACH or anything with bleach in it when washing polished' cotton or sateen. Perhaps that’s the way lots of them were ruined. A chemist told me this years ago. True, too. Heloise • * * DEAR HELOISE: Here’s a hint I hope will be of help to mothers. When I first put our little daughter into a youth bed which didn't have sides on it, she had a few falls in the night. So I blew up an air mattress and placed it on the floor beside her bed. Now if she falls out, it doesn't hurt her. In the mornings when I make up her bed, instead of deflating the mattress. I just shove it under the bed. It’s out of sight until I am ready
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