The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 June 1968 — Page 2

Page 2

The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana

Monday, June 10. 1968

THE DAILY BANNER and Herald Consolidated “It Waves For All"

Business Phone: OL 3-5151 -0L 3-5152 Lu Mar Newspapers Inc. Dr. Mary Tarzian, Publisher Published every evening except Sunday arid holidays at. SOS' 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 In land Dai ly 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. $1 2.00-6 months, $7.00-3 months. $4.50 Indiana other than Putnam County-1 year, $14.00-6 months, $8.00-3 months, $5.00. 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.

Six state drownings

By United Press International Six persons died in water accidents in Indiana during the weekend, raising the number of drowning victims in the state since Thursday to 14. The body of Joseph Peter Zucher, 17, Clay City, was recovered from a gravel pit owned by the Peabody Coal Co. Sunday from about 20 feet of water in which he drowned north of Clav City. Authorities recovered the body Dr. L. J. Goldberg Registered Podiatrist Wednesday, June 12 Will b» in hi* off It* for Traotmant of Foot Ailmanta Aftar 8:30 A M at tha COMMERCIAL HOTEL Pfcon* OL 3-5617 for Appointmanta

of Thomas Clarence White, 40, Gary, Sunday morning from a lake just west of Gary. He had been reported missing Saturday afternoon. Richard C. Baumer, 38, Valparaiso, drowned Saturday night when he fell out of a boat into Flint Lake just north of his hometown. Dwight Strunk, 11, Fountain, town, drowned Saturday while swimming with five companions in Brandywine Creek a mile east of his Shelby County home. The body of 14-year.old Timothy Seagle of East Gary was recovered Saturday from a sand pit in East Gary where he drowned 14 hours earlier while swimming in about 10 feet of water. Authorities also recovered the body of 14-year-old Oscar Messer, Auburn, Sunday from a 12foot deep pond at the Ball Brass Foundry in his hometown. He was reported missing Friday night.

Bible Thought I will not leave you comfortless: I will come to you.—John 14:18. The presence of Christ in your heart as the Christian’s strength. Funeral I Notices J Lawrence Jones Funeral services for Lawrence C. Jones 4 West Margaret Avenue, Terre Haute, were conducted Monday afternoon at 1 p.m. at the DeBaun Funeral Home. Jones, who was 73, died Friday evening at St. Anthony’s Hospital, following an extended illness. Survivors include the wife, Lois Liston Jones; a son, Dr. Lawrence R. Jones, of Greencastle; and three grandchildren, Lawrence Richard, Laurel Robin and Jeffrey Jacob Jones. In lieu of flowers, a contribution to the American Cancer Society was requested by the family. Victor H. Duncan Victor H. Duncan, of Cloverdale, died at 11:35 a.m. Saturday in the Putnam County Hospital. He was 84. The son of Lloyd Duncan and Mary Gillispie Duncan, he was born April 17, 1884 in Putnam County. In 1904 he married Edith Whitaker. She died March 3,1961. He was member of the Baptist Church in Gosport. Survivors are a son, Robert of Lookout Mountain, Tenn., a daughter, Mrs. Helen Shireman, of South Bend, and two grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 11a. m. at the Whitaker Funeral Home in Clover, dale, with the Rev. Wendell P. Webster officiating. Burial will be in Mannan Cemetery near Lewisville. Friends may call at the funeral home after 3 p.m. , today.

Philip honored LONDON (UPI)-Prince Philip marked his 47th birthday today and received as a present from Queen Elizabeth appoint, ment to the Order of Merit, an order founded by King Edward VII in 1902 as a special distinction for eminent men and women.

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xj 1 Personal and Local | *• I; '*-* -x Friendly Club 65th birthdays The Clinton Madison Friendly James B. Zeis, 107 1/2 E. Club will meet Thursday at 1:30 Washington St., and Harold G. p.m. at the home of Mrs. Geor- Reckley, 205 S. Vine St., celegia Martin. - brated 65th birthdays Monday. Garden club Square dance The Fillmore Garden Club will The Castle Squares will dance meet Friday, June Hat 1:00p.m. Saturday, June 8, 1968 from 8:00 with Mrs. Ethel Byrd. Members p.m. to 11:00 p.m. Bruno Zeni please note change of meeting will be calling. Members bring place. finger food.

Weekend guests Miss Sue Smaltz has as her house guests this week, Miss Charlene Troy of Pittsburg, Pa. and Miss Christene Johnson of Stevens Point, Wise., formerly of Greencastle.

School board The Greencastle School Board will meet in regular session Wednesday, June 12, at 7:30 p.m. in the office of the superintendent. -YES

Hostess to tea Mrs. Nellye Riggs was hostess Wednesday to a benefit Silver Tea in her home in the Cole Aoartments. Members of the church and friends were served from a beautifully appointed table. Money was received to be applied on the new addition of the church.

| Horticultural 1 Tips OYSTER SHELL SCALE This insect pest is a small, inconspicuous gray or brown scale about 1/3 ” long and curved like miniature oyster shells. By sucking plant sap they cause severe damage to many kinds of trees and shrubs, including lilacs, elms, soft maple, ash, poplar, dogwood, linden, willow, redbud, privet and hemlock. Oyster shell scale overwinters as elliptical, white eggs underneath female shells. There are 80 to 100 eggs under each female. The eggs hatch in late May and - early June. The young scales are called crawlers. They look like mites and wander about over the becoming permanently attached to the bark. CONTROL: Insecticides should lers are actively moving about over the plant. Uns either DDT or Malathion. These sprays may injure privet hedges. On privet use 40% nicotine sulfate. A second spray 7 to 10 days after the first spray may be necessary to control heavy infestations of oyster shell scale. Thorough spray coverage is essential. SYCAMORE ANTHRACNOSE Sycamore trees throughout Indiana are losing their leaves because of this disease. It causes young expanding leaves gradually or suddenly to turn brown and die. It often resembles frost injury. Anthracnose is most prevalent during cool, wet, spring weather and it can be especially damaging to newly established trees or large overmature ones when their growth is limited. The disease strikes swiftly and turns the leaves brown as they emerge from the bud. The twigs and small branches are also attacked. This accounts for the masses of dead branches that usually accumulate under the tree following a windstorm. In addition to spoiling the beauty of the tree, the disease may also weaken it so that the tree becomes easy prey to other troubles, especially drought damage. CONTROL: Using fungicides at this time will not stop the disease. To improve the health of a diseased tree it should be watered during periods of extended drought. Fertilizing at a moderate rate should also improve tree vigor.

office at OL3-4814 and leave some information, or may stop at the office and describe the type of job to be done. The office will also want to know when the job is to be done, about how long it will take, whether the job is for a boy or a girl, and how much the employer is willing to pay. Extension Agents Betty Send, meyer, Jerry Williams and Paul Jackson hope that people will use this service for all kinds of jobs such as lawn mowing, window washing, spading flower beds and others, as well as for full time jobs. The Extension office is open from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. Chicken Scallopini Boned chicken thighs can be cooked like veal scallopini. To bone the chicken thighs, cut along thin inner side of each all the way to the bone, slashing meat the length of the bone. Hold one end of bone while you scrape meat from it completely. Cut off round piece of cartilege: the cutlet remaining can be pounded to even thickness with a meat mallet. Salt and pepper lightly, dust with flour, shake off excess, and saute over medium heat just long enough to brown both sides and cook meat through. Remove to warm place and rinse pan with a few spoonfuls of dry table wine, dry sherry, lemon juice or water, stirring with spoon to scrape up flavorful brown bits stuck to the pan. Garnish with lemon wedges or slices. Chancellor threatened LUDWIGSHAFEN, Germany (UPI)—Police guarded Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger with care at the West German soccer cup final in Ludwigshafen Sunday following threats he would be killed, but Kiesinger’s appearance passed without incident. —Ray held in morning tea, kept to himself and said very little. Ian Colvin, writer and journalist, said in today’s Daily Telegraph that Ray apparently was the man who kep telephoning him for data about joining a mercenary army in Africa. There was a cover story about a lost mercenary brother. Brussels was the place to go, said Colvin. Ray was arrested en route from Lisbon to Brussels. In the Midwest, the former jailers of ex-convict Ray may have been right. Ray might have served himself more intelligently by going to Brussels via Paris where a strike made spaghetti of airport bureaucracy. Slipping through France might have been easier. Instead, Ray ended up in an 8-by-12 foot cell in Cannon Street police station. Police said he ha 055 quite g’,vrofane and’ uncooperative.”

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Saturday Dismissals: Ola Duncan, Greencastle Pearl Skinner, Greencastle Helen Wall, Greencastle Helen Zeis, Greencastle Mrs. James Dunn and son, Greencastle Kenneth Stites, Greencastle Anna Sanford, Greencastle Ada Ford, Cloverdale Rose Trump, Cloverdale Cecil Denny, Cloverdale Earl Gray, Cloverdale Rita Liechty, Fillmore Mrs. James Wheeler and daughter, Fillmore Deleta Stewart, Ladoga Saturday Births: A son to Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Douglas, 1040 Avenue ”E”. Greencastle. A daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Joe Nanny, Gosport Rt. 2. Sunday Dismissals: Michael Williams, Greencastle Mathew Williams, Greencastle Daryl Taylor, Greencastle Fredrick Gersten, Greencastle Marilyn Evens, Greencastle Robert Wehrman, Greencastle Andrew Shillings, Roachdale Raymond Shillings, Roachdale Steven Shillings, Roachdale Virginia Clark, Roachdale Keith Puckett, Fillmore Virginia Hamblen, Cloverdale Leo Cradick, Cloverdale Mrs. R.K. Query and daughter, Cloverdale William Cane, Spencer Sunday Births: A daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Donald Morris, Cloverdale Rt. 3. Barnard comments HEIDELBERG, Germany (UPI)—Dr. Christiaan Barnard, the pioneer South African heart surgeon, said Sunday medicine has “learned a great deal” from heart transplants during the past six months despite the deaths of several patients. Freighter hit SUVA, Fiji (UPI)—/The 7,000ton American freighter African Glade sailed for New York Sunday after temporary repairs to damage caused when the ship hit a Viet Cong mine off South Vietnam. 14-H news | .V. >v The Smiling Clovers 4-H Club met for their fifth meeting of the year in May. The meeting was called to order by Darla Stanage. The pledge to the American flag was led by Annette Hammond. The 4-H pledge was led by Brenda Strain. Cherly Fowler gave a demonstration on on making cinnamon rolls. A demonstration on photography was given by Cathy Delp. During the business session the 4-H camp was discussed. Health and safety points were discussed by various members of the club.

DEAR HELOISE: We just returned from our vacation and before I even unpack my suitcase, I want to tell you about an experience we had. Our four children each had an inexpensive camera with which to record their trip. At one point in our tour—and on an especially hot, sunny daywe spent over an hour in a restaurant. When we returned to the car, I wish you could have seen those plastic cameras! They had been left in the back window of the car and were no longer even recognizable. Ti-u-ly, all four had melted and become pieces of twisted, warped-looking plastic. The children were heartbroken. So please tell those who own plastic cameras (or anything else plastic for that matter), to be sure and keep them out of the sunny parts of the car. Vacationer * * * You are right about the fact that some plastic items will melt sure as shoutin’. So, folks, do try to remember to

keep them out of that back window which can become so very hot . . . tleloise * * * DEAR HELOISE. I have three young children and w’hen I had to put shoes on them, it was very difficult because they curled their toes. A shoe salesman told me to cup my hand around their knee and rub the sides very gently and their foot would relax immediately. I did and it Continued on Page 3

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