The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 9 August 1968 — Page 2

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Page 2

The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana

Friday, August 9, 1968

THK DAILY BANNER and Herald Consolidated "/r Waves For AH'’ Business Phone: CL 3-5151 -0L 3 5152 Lu War Newspapers Inc. Dr. Mary Tarzian, Publisher ablished every evening except Sunday and holidays at 1221 South Bloomington St.. Greencastle. Indiana. 46135. Entered in the Post Office at Greencastle. Indiana, as second class mail matter under: Act of March ?, 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 -Putnam County - 1 year. $12.00 - 6 months. $7.00 - 3 months. $4.50- Indiana other than Putnam County - 1 year. $14.00 - 6 nionths. S8.UO - 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 Ftoutes $2.15 per one month.

Bible Thought

The Lord is far from the wicked, but he heareth the prayer of the righteous.—Proverbs 15:29. God is as near as we invite Him to be. Some would be embarrassed to have Him too near. •Iv.v.v.v.ww.v.v.w.v.v.v.w.v.v.v.v. Fincastle

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Personal and Local

news

In memoriam In loving memory of Everett Kendall, who passed away five years ago, August 10. Deeply missed by Wife and Family. In memoriam In memory of John Hood, who passed away August 11, 1967. The blow was hard, the shock severe We never realized death was so near. Only those who lost can tell The pain of parting without farewell. The Family.

Band camp Sept. 4 LAFAYETTE - Approximately two-thirds of this year’s freshman additions to the Purdue University bands will attend the annual Band Leadership Camp Sept. 4-7 on the Lafayette campus. The camp will enable freshman musicians to bs: »mo familiar with university band procedures and to meet band officers and staff. Bandsmen will prepare for their first marching performance Sept. 21 at the Purdue-Virginia football game. Prospective majorettes have also been invited to take part in camp activities to prepare for Sept. 11 tryouts.

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Friends and relatives from here called at the Whitaker Funeral Home in Greencastle and attend, ed the funeral of Frank Bridges last week. Mr. Bridges was rear, ed in the community and has two brothers, Earl Bridges and Perle Bridges, living near here. Mr. and Mrs. James Mandleco and daughter, Carolyn, attended their family reunion in Frankfort, Sunday. People from this community turned our well last week for the county fair and many 4-H mem. bers brought home top ribbons. Mrs. James Carroll and daughters, Vickie and Janice, were Sunday dinner guests of Mrs. Mary Virginia Clodfelter, Mr. and Mrs. Damon Lawrence and sons, Stwart and Stanley, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bill Brothers and children, John, Bill, Jim, Ronnie and Rebecca Jo, and Mrs. Maude Brothers called on Mrs. Clodfelter in the evening. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Lang are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bor. don and Mrs. Nancy Rieke. Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Frsybyl. skie visited Mr. and Mrs. Paul Grider over the weekend. Mrs. Laura Fosker visited Mrs. Maude Brothers, Sunday afternoon.

Go To Church The Tri-County Community Church has been open since June 9. The Rev. Horace Wainwright is minister. The public is invited to attend Sunday school at 10 a.m., morning worship service at 11 a.m. and evening worship at 7:30 p.m. Museum has first closing in years NEW YORK (UPI)— A strike of guards and maintenance employes closed the Museum of Modern Art Thursday for the first time in its 40-year history. Vincent D. McDonnell, state mediation board chairman, reported a “complete impasse” in negotiations between the museum and the Service Employes International Union which has been working without a contract since June 30. He said no meetings are scheduled. “They are simply too far apart,” McDonnell said. The union is seeking a $25 a week pay raise for 54 museum employes who currently earn $92 for a 37V2 hour work week. Joseph Chapman, museum administrator, said the men had been offered “a very fair wage, one that was within the standards and guidelines sug. gested by President Johnson.”

Bake sale The Jaycee Wives will stage a bake sale Saturday in front of Murphy’s in downtown Green, castle. The sale will begin at 8 a.m. Visits brother Mrs. Louis Dirks flew to Van. couver, Thursday, to visit her brother and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Haspel. Closed The Kountry Kitchen, Marshall, Ind., will be closed for vacation until Aug. 18. New appointment WASHINGTON (UPI ) — William F. Hausman, a native of Indianapolis, has been appointed deputy assitant to the secretary of national security affairs, acting Treasury Secretary Joseph Barr announced Wednesday. Hausman, 54, will assist Ray. mond J. Albright, principal adviser to Secretary Henry H. Fowler, on national security matters. Before his appointment, Hausman was an assistant director for the Commerce Department.

Sunday proclaimed just for family

Dreams Do Come True! How clever! For the tiny price of a cornice and enough inexpensive chintz for draperies and duster you can work sheer decorator magic! Repeat the floral color in full strength within the curtained area, hang her photo mounted in a decorative white frame to match furniture for contrast, add matching area rugs and presto, .an ordinary room is transformed into a teen-age princess dream! Creating a home which expresses you is not easy. Although we’re quick with suggestions to work decorating wonders everything calls for a plan. The total effect depends upon perfect coordination and we invite you to ask our assistance without obligation. We’ll gladly provide a hazardless background to show you step-by-step the functional beautiful home of your dreams. It’s good to know, too, that our complete selection of the finest in quality and fashion costs you no more. do more with your home and your money at Horace Link & Co. "THE HOUSE OF FURNITURE"

Special To The Banner President Lyndon B. Johnson recently proclaimed that Sunday, Aug. 11, should be designated as “Family Reunion Day.” The project was spearheaded by Kiwanis International. The contens of the proclamation signed by the President of the United States follows: Since the founding of the Republic, the American family has been a source of individual strength and national stability. These are times, however, that test the unity of family life. Progress—social, e c onomic, and technological—has broght with it new mobility that tends to separate the members of affluent families. For millions of other Americans, poverty, discrimination and the spiritual deprivation of slum life have strained the cohesion of family units past the breaking point. Many young

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people are growing up without the shaping example of a firm, responsible, and caring male in the household. There are strength within almost all families, whether or not headed by a father; but history and instinct tell us that a society that does not encourage responsible fatherhood will pay for its failure in later generations. For that reason, action to extend job opportunities, to improve education and housing, and to end discrimination in all its forms is vital to stronger family lifeand ultimately to a more just and peaceful nation. NOW, THEREFORE, I, LYNDON B. JOHNSON, President oi the United Sates of America, pursuant to Seante Joint Resolution 165, do hereby designate Sunday, Agust 11, 1968, as Family Reunion Day, and I urge all the people of the United States to support those actions that will strengthen the American family, and to celebrate this day with such ceremonies as will re-em-phasize our continuing belief that family life is the highest and most enduring product of our civilization. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this eighteenth day of July, in the year of our Lord, nineteen hundred and sixty-eight, and of the Independence of the United States of America the one hundred and ninetythird. LYNDON B. JOHNSON

Miss Karen Jean Hutcheson Engagement announced Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hutcheson, Reelsville Route 1, announce the engagement and approaching marriage of t h e i r daughter, Karen Jean Hutcheson, to John Lloyd Hood. The prospective bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Harriett Hood, Greencastle Route 2. The couple will be united in marriage September 7 at 7 p.m. in t h e Reelsville Methodist Church. All friends and relatives of the couple are invited to attend. Card of thanks The family of Frank Woods wishes to acknowledge with deep appreciation the kindness, sympathy, food and beautiful floral tributes extended by our relatives, friends and neighbors in our time of bereavement. We especially wish to thank Dr. Elliott, the ministers and the Weaver Funeral Home for their kind services rendered and to all who assisted in any way. The Family of Frank Woods. Card of thanks We wish to express our thanks and appreciation for kindness, sympathy and many beautiful floral tributes extended by our relatives, friends and neighbors at the passing of our beloved sister, Mary Gilmore. We also wish to thank Dr. Ernst and the Donna Nursing Home, the Rev. Clarence Barr for his comforting message, the pallbearers, the organist, and the Whitaker Funeral Home for thoughtful and understanding service. The Family of Mary Gilmore. Card of thanks We wish to thank friends, relatives and neighbors for expres. sions of sympathy, floral offerings and other courtesies received at the passing of our beloved husband and father, Roscoe Wells. Wife and Family.

DEAR HELOISE: How do you clean the vent in the ceiling of a travel trailer? That’s the little window •m top with the screen and glass cover that opens to let the air out.

Henry •If * *

Henry, believe it or not— and my name is not Kipley— I do have the answer. DON’T touch it with any liquid or solvent. Take a dry, old tcrrycloth washrag and gently vvl|M* in one direction ONLY. Be sure and hold a newspaper beneath it. All of the lint and dust that has adhered to the screen will roll off like bullets. After you get nearly all of it off, then rub the screen in the other direction. And you know what else I found out? When it catches leaves on top of the screen, open the vent real wide and blow hard, those leaves wilt fly out. This saves you from ••limbing on top of the trailer to clean out that trap.

lieloise * * *

DEAR HELOISE: Plastic sandwich bags are wonderful to keep kids and husbands clean while eating Freshmen

enrollment

BLOOMINGTON-Indiana University enrolled 4,608 new freshmen during summer registration for the fall semester at the Bloomington campus, and expects some 650 more to register in September. This would boost the total new freshmen enrollment to about 5,250, up five per cent over last year, according to I.U. Registrar Don Scherer. He announced final summer registration figures following the close of the three-week summer registration program. The program included counseling for both the students and their parents on such topics as military training and financial aid. Freshmen who are yet to register will arrive in Bloomington for counseling Sunday, Sept. 8. Tuesday, Sept. 10, is the arrival date for freshman who participated in summer registration. Classes begin Monday, Sept. 16.

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drippy sandwiches like hamburgers. I just serve the sandwiches tucked halfway into a bag and all the "drippings” fall back into the bag. Na^cy J* * * LETTER OF LAUGHTER DEAR HELOISE: Isn’t it enjoyable to have company? But, oh. how wonderful it is when they leave! Am I getting old and set in my routine?

S.

* * £ DEAR HELOISE: Eureka! I just discovered my electric deep-fat fryer can serve another purpose blanching my fresh garden vegetables and fruit! The basket more than holds a pound of vegetables and the fryer- holds a gallon of water. The water reboils so rapidly after plunging the vegetables into the already boiling water and makes this procedure so much faster- and easier. Just remember when doing your blanching to start counting time niter the water reboils. Try it and you'll agree it's great. Mrs. Robert Maxfield £ £ * DEAR HELOISE: Can you tell me if it is wise to dump coffee grains in the sink? For years I’ve hear-d conflicting stories on this and would really like to know the right answer. E. A. Shaffer * * * So would I! Come on. Some plumber's wife can surely get the answer from her husband and let us know. PLEASE! Just write to me in cure of this paper. lieloise ♦ £ £ DEAR HELOISE: After - I remove my sleeveless dresses that have cloth belts, I take the belt buckle and fasten it through the armhole. Then I am not searching through the closet or belt rack for the belt to match that dress when I need it. G. D. Age 11 £ £ £ DEAR HELOISE: I liked the hint on making a toilet brush holder out of a coffee can, but I improved on it a little by using two, onepcund coffee cans. I removed the top and bottom from one can and taped it on top of another can with only the top cut off. Then I covered this two-deep can with a pretty yellow pattern of adhesive-backed plastic and cut a hole in a plastic lid for the brush handle to come through A piece of foil in the bottom of the can retards rusting. Eleanor Tyler Wabash Valley map available A map of the Wabash Valley at a scale of 1 inch to 7.5 miles is now available through the Wabash Valley Interstate Commission. The map focuses on the Wabash Basin and includes contiguous portions of Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, and Ohio. Physical features, drainage, topography, and forest cover; and cultural features, federal, state, and local highways, railroads, cities and towns, etc., are depicted on the 3 by 4 foot multi-colored map. The map was produced by adaptation of a composite of individual maps covering the Basin published by the U.S. Army Map Service. The nine-color map is available for sale from the Commission’s office, 302 Rea Building, Terre Haute, Indiana, 47301.

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