The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 18 June 1968 — Page 2

Page 2

The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana

Tuesday, June 18, 1968

THE DAILY BANNER and Herald Consolidated “It Waves For Air Bussiness Phone: CL 3-5151 - OL 3-5152 Lu Mar Newspapers Inc. Dr. Mary Tarzian, 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. 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 10C. Subscription prices of the Daily Banner Effective July 31, 1967-Put-nam 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, $5.00. Outside Indiana 1 year, $18.00 - 6 months, $10.00 - 3 months, $7.00. All Mail Subscriptions payable in advance. Motor Fbutes $2.15 per one month.

New view SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)— Even though they are slowly killing themselves some people are better off smoking, a psychiatrist told the American Medical Association Monday. “Once you’ve got it (the smoking habit), it may well be that you shouldn’t stop,” said Dr. Sheldon Cohen of Atlanta, in a paper delivered to the AMA’s section on nervous and mental diseases. Cohen said patients who have been ordered to give up cigarettes because of serious disease frequently develop bad emotional disorders. “All too often, it brings about the unmasking of depression, aggression and what have you,” the doctor said. Cohen qualifies as an expert in the problems people face kicking cigarette smoking. Although a non-smoker, he has

researched withdrawal problems for 11 years and has treated numerous patients who were trying to stop. “Smoking can have very deep emotional significance,” said Cohen, who has used hypnotic trances in an attempt to break the habit in his patients. “The patients I hypnotized all had very good reasons to stop,” Cohen said. “They suffered from coronary disease, cancer of the throat and bronchitis. Probably three or four of them stopped smoking for a period of time during treatment. But all went back, usually in a matter of weeks or months. The doctor cited the case of a patient who had cancer-prone lesionsin the throat. “Shortly after he quit smoking, this fellow went to a party, beat up his wife and his best friend and made quite a damn fool out of himself.” Cohen said.

LOW-COST PROTECTION

s for your BOAT

Check our broad coverage Boat insurance policies ... at low rates. Protect yourself and your boat. Our policy lets you safeguard all boating equipment against direct physical loss or damage from hazards. See us today!

(central Insurance Agency Inc.

Central Bant Building Plione OL 3-6011

Bible Thought

I cried unto the Lord with my voice, and he heard me out of his holy hill.—Psalm 3:4. God has not wandered off to the farther recesses of heaven. He hears our prayers. Funeral Notices Mrs. Denny Perry Funeral services are Wednesday at 2 p.m. in the Hopkins Walton Funeral Home for Mrs. Denny Perry, 49, Greencastle Route 1, who died Sunday. Born August 31, 1918, in Elkin, West Va., she was the daughter of Henry and Dosha May White Carpenter. She was married to Denny Perry in Russellville in 1946. She was a member of the Russellville Federated Church. Survivors include the husband, Denny; a daughter, Mary Jane, at home; four sisters, Mrs. James Williams, Mrs. John Morgan and Mrs. Charles Brobst, all of Ohio, and Mrs. Von Belkamp, Tennessee; threebrothers, James, Clarence and Robert, all of Ohio, and an uncle, James White, Ohio. Friends may call at the Hopkins Walton Funeral Home. Sight wreck DUBLIN, Ireland (UPI)— Irish officials said Sunday night they had spotted wreckage on the ocean bottom seven miles off the County Wexford coast of the Aer Lingus Viscount airliner that crashed March 24 with the loss of 61 lives. Petition LONDON (UPI)—About 150 student demonstrators Sunday marched to the Ministry of Defense and presented a petition calling for an end to germ warfare research and to an agreement to share “deadly secrets” with the United States.

Personal and Local

I

Col. Hurst here Lt. Col. and Mrs. R.R. Hurst arrived recently from Honolulu, where Col. Hurst has been stationed at Ft. Shatter for the past three years. He will be stationed at Ft. Sill, Okla. until he retires in 1970 after 29 years of service. They have been the guests of Mrs. Grace P. Hurst and family for the past week and left Sunday for Savannah, Ga. where they will visit with their son Lt. R.R. Hurst, Jr. and wife. Groveland O.E.S. Groveland Chapter O.E.S. will meet Friday, June 21, at 7:30 p.m. for initiatory work. The official visit of the deputy of district 9, Ellen Murdock, is scheduled for the same evening. The next stated meeting of the Groveland O.E.S. is scheduled for July 2 at 7:30 p.m. Refreshments of sandwiches and salads will be served. Visitors from other chapters are invited to attend.

LETTER To The Editor To the editor: BICYLE SAFETY As Greencastle’s , Chief of Police, I urge all parents to be mindful of their children riding bicycles. Please make sure they are equipped with the proper safety equipment, such as a light on the front and reflector on the back. Insist that your children receive the proper training and experience before being allowed to ride on our streets. Control times when they do ride bicycles such as very darker rainy nights, and see that they wear light colored clothing during the time they do ride bicycles at night. I urge all the citizens to be especially mindful of our young people on the streets and to obey the laws and keep our city safe from accidents and injuries that seem so needless. Won’t you please help us? Remember the life you save, may be one of your own. JOHN R. STEVENS CHIEF

LADIES NIGHT . American Legion Post #58 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19 GUESTS INVITED LARGE JACKPOTS

Graduates Joyce W. Weller, 710 Dogwood Lane, was one of 3,703 students graduated from Pennsylvania State University Saturday. She received a B.S. degree in business administration. Bankers meet Mr. and Mrs. Glenn H. Lyon, chairman of the state banking commission, Mr. and Mrs. Howard L. Williams, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Frye, Sr., and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Morris accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Simpson Stoner to the Indiana Banker’s Association convention at French Lick last week. Sign tready BONN (UPI)—A West German threat to delay signing the nuclear weapons non-prolifera-tion treaty fueled a new crisis today over East German pressures against access to West Berlin. The West German cabinet Monday held an extraordinary session on a public holiday and approved measures for new economic aid to West Berlin. The assistance will counter new Communist harassment of persons and goods moving to and from West Berlin 110 miles inside East Germany. Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger said after the meeting West Germany must be protected from nuclear and other political blackmail before it signs the non - proliferation treaty approved by the United Nations General Assembly last week. West Germany gave up the right to manufacture nuclear weapons when it became sovereign in 1955. Kiesinger said the new West Berlin crisis showed the Communists were unwilling to give up the possibility of blackmail. Diplomatic sources said a number of other nations would refuse to sign the treaty until after West Germany does so. The East German measures placed special levies on West Berlin industrial products. Kiesinger said the West German aid program would shift its emphasis from service industries to developing modern productive industries.

Soil Water PENNIES A DAY CULLIGAN OF GREENCASTLE OL 3-5910 We II Be Here Tomorrow To Service What We Sell Today

hfote from

Heme

By MKLOISK C K1SE

Engaged

The engagement of Miss Jerry Lynn Bryant to Phillip Maurice Wingler is announced by the parents of the bride-elect, Mr. and mrs. Maurice C. Bryant, Coatesville. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice E. Wingler, Coatesville, are the parents of the prospective bridegroom. The couple is planning an October wedding. Russians arrest British youths MOSCOW (UPI) - Three young British tourists were arrested by Soviet Secret Police today when they tried to hand out leaflets in a downtown Moscow square demanding freedom for Soviet political and religious prisoners. The three—whose names were not immediately known—had just begun handing out the fourpage leaflets when more than a dozen plainclothes agents of the KGB (Secret Police) arrested them and whisked them away. The three, two boys and one girl tried to hand out the leaflets at Mayakovsky Square to citizens going home from work. The Britons scattered the rest of the leaflets on the sidewalk, where the curious Muscovites quickly picked them up. Small debates sprung up on what they had just seen. There were about 500 leaflets. The three Britons had tried to keep their mission secret. But it was believed that they had used the telephone to contact an organization in London with which they were in contact. The demonstration had been set for Mayakovsky Square, about one mile from the Kremlin, at 6 p.m. At 5:30 p.m., the square was teeming with the secret police. Receives honors LON EXON (UPI)—Ceremonies were scheduled at Windsor Castle today to invest Prince Charles as a knight companion of the Order of the Garter, the oldest of the Christian orders of chivalry.

DEAR HELOISE: I gave my Mom a gift on her birthday that she liked so well she said it was the nicest gift she had ever received. It was a "coupon book” of things I could do for her. Whenever she wants me to do one of them, she just tears out that page and gives it to me. Some of the things I wrote were: Hand down landmark decision WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Supreme Court, in a landmark decision, has ruled that Negroes entitled to fair housing treatment under a law that has been on the book for 102 years. Justice Potter Stewart said the 13th Amendment which abolished slavery gave Negroes “the right to buy whatever a white man can buy, the right to live wherever a white man can live.” In a 7-2 decision, Stewart said for the majority, “ . . . when racial discrimination herds men into ghettos and makes their ability to buy property turn on the color of their skin, then it too, is a relic of slavery.” Justices John Marshall Harlan and Byron White dissented from the majority opinion, contending the decision would limit the open housing law passed by Congress learlier this year. They said Monday’s decision would make that law “academic.” Stewart, however, said it would be a “serious mistake” to assume that the ruling on the Reconstruction era statute “diminishes” the need for the new open housing law. And an attorney on the staff of the House Judiciary Committee said the court actually had in effect reinforced the 1968 housing law—that there was a good chance the ruling would speed its implementation. While the ruling theoretically outlaws at once racial discrimination in the sale of rental of property, the machinery for government intervention and conciliation provided by the law still will not cover most housing until 1970. Meantime, to get relief under the ruling, citizens would have to resort to private law suits. The law also will cover areas not covered by the ruling, such as discrimination based on religion or nationality, home financing, and advertising.

uifircataDieS

You don’t have to be rich to drive a Chrysler. To find out just how little it does cost, see ...

YOUR CHRYSLER DEALERS

Chrysler Newport priced about $3.78 a month more than a Ford LTD*

(which is still a Ford). Newport is just one of the reasons why Chrysler sales are soaring. Why bother^ with a smaller car when for just a few dollars a month more you can move up to Chrysler? Competition calls us unbeatable —see why?

Mvet rut:

Newport 2-Door Hardtop

AUTHORIZED DEALERS

CHRYSLER WAg MOTORS CORPORATION

•Based on a comparison of manufacturers' suggested retail prices for Chrysler Newport and Ford LTD 2-dr. hardtops, comparably equipped with 3-speed automatic transmission, power brakes, power steering, radio, white sidewall tires and wheel covers. Comparisons based on one-third down, 36 monthly payments, excluding other optional equipment, destination charges, state and local taxes, interest, insurance and licensing fees.

PUTNAM MOTOR SALES • 118 North Indiana St.

I’ll help with supper; I'll empty the trash; I'll sweep the front porch and steps; I'll read a book instead of watching TV; I’ll spray wax the furniture; I’ll clean my room; I’ll do anything you tell me to . . . There were 10 things in all. I got the idea from my school teacher and have liked doing all of these things because it makes my Mom happy. Of course, I also do other things when she asks me. And since she liked this idea so much, I've decided to make another coupon book for next Mother's Day as well as on every birthday. Randy Age 7 * * * Kandy, I think this is the sweetest idea I ever heard of. Yours is a lucky Mom and I’m sure she appreciates your gift much more because you thought of it yourself. Wouldn’t 'all of you Moms love to get a birthday present just like this? I sure would!! Doesn’t cost a penny out of either your pocket or your child’s piggy bank. And what a joy to have this help offered without coaxing. A big hug and squeeze to you, Randy, from the rest of us mothers. Heloisc * * * DEAR HELOISE: Please help me so I won't break a leg. There are two steps in our stairs that make a loud squeak every time w r e go up or downstairs. I’ve even been taking two steps at a time to avoid the squeaky ones. I'm careful, but it probably will be my luck to fall someday. Is there an easy w r ay to stop those squeaks without going to the trouble and expense of replacing the boards? Mrs. B. * * * Mrs. B., I know there must be ways to stop those squeaks. Maybe some of our friends will tell us how they managed to do it. Come on, folks, how al>out it ? Write to me in care of this paper and let us know. We’d love to hear from you. Love, Helolse * * * DEAR HELOISE: I'm sure many others will be canning strawberries this summer, so wmuld like to pass on a little tip I learned. To prevent the berries from rising to the top of the jar, lay the jar on its side until it cools, after the jar has been sealed. Then shake until the berries are distributed all through the syrup. The berries will neither rise nor settle, but stay evenly distributed. Home Canner * * * LETTER OF LAUGHTER DEAR HELOISE: I tried detergent, turpentine, kerosene, window cleaner, dishwasher detergent, alcohol and household cleaner with ammonia to i-emove freezer tape we put on our windows prior to a storm. So ... I just decided to leave ’em plastered for next year! The draperies hide it from my side anyway. Vernice * * * DEAR HELOISE: My husband likes pajamas with a pull-over top, but the stores don’t have many of them. Now as soon as I buy a new’ pair, I sit down to my machine and with a zigzag stitch (because it lasts longer), I sew up the front along the epen edge (through both thicknesses) and back down the other side of the buttons. Then my husband just slips the top over his head and we never have to worry about ripped-off buttons or a torn front. Sure saves my temper because I hate to sew’ buttons. How about you? C. D.

RELIABLE TERMITE EXTERMINATING COMPANY Swarmers indicate possible damage to your home. For inspection and Estimates, call C0AN PHARMACY

i i

r

:>

t