The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 August 1968 — Page 2
Page 2
Thursday, August 29, 1968
THE DAILY BANNER and Herald Consolidated '7f Haves For AH” Business Phone: CL 3-5151 -0L 3 5152 Lu Mar Newspapers Inc. Dr. Mary Tarzian, Publisher
Published every evening except Sunday and holidays at 1221 South Bloomington St.. Groencastle. Indiana. 46135. Entered in the Post Office at Greencastle, Indiana, as second class mail matter under: Act of Match 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 Oaily 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-Put-nam County - 1 year. S12.00 - 6 months. 87.00 - 3 months. S4.50 - Indiana other than Putnam County - 1 year. S 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^
In memoriam In fond and loveing remembrance of my husband, Arthur Lyon who passed away two years ago, August 28, 1966. What would I give to clasp his hand, His happy face to see, To hear his voice and see his smiling face, That meant so much to me. I always knew that some day There would be a empty chair. Yet, I could never picture home Without daddy being there. I never fully realized How deeply I could care. Until two years ago Dad left a vacant chair. Sadly missed by Wife, Sylvia and family.
Shoplifting charge LAFAYETTE, Ind. (UPI)—An 80-year-old Logansport woman and her 61-year-old daughter were assessed fines of $50 and $20 in costs Monday on shoplifting charges. Mrs. Minnie Clark and Mrs. Ruby W. Herron appeared in Lafayette City Court to face charges of theft of merchandise from a Lafayette discount store. The two women were charged with taking about $10 worth of goods from the store.
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The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana
Personal and Local >;.t
Bible Thought He that hateth me hateth my Father also.-John 15:23. If we carry hate in our hearts against any other man for any reason then we are also hating God who is father to all men.
FUNERAL NOTICES Ruth Timmons Services for Mrs. Ruth Timmons, 93, formerly of Greencastle, will be at 10 a.m. Friday at the Hopkins-Walton Funeral Home in Greencastle. She died Tuesday at the Kennedy Memorial Christian Home in Martinsville. She had been a milliner for several years and was a member of the Presbyterian Church in Greencastle and a member of the Delta Theta Tau sorority and Washburn Chapter of D.A.R. She also served on the Allison Orphans Home Board and the Greencastle Board of Health. Survivors include, FredSnively a nephew and Josephine Crays of Rockville and Willa Marie Morrison of Nineveh both nieces; cousins, Miss Grace Woody, Mrs. Berly Neal both of Martinsville and Katheryn Graves of Franklin. ■Mrs. Timmons was born September 3, 1875, she would have been 93 years old on September 3 of this year. A Memorial Service will be held at the Kennedy Memorial Home in Martinsville, at 1:30 p.m. and burial will be in Rest Haven Cemetery in Edinburg. Friends may call at the Funeral Home on Thursday from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.
hundreds of persons gathered to mourn. There was no immediate word when the body would be flown to his native Cadiz, Ky. There were no immediate reports of arrests. U.S. sources said Mein’s life had been threatened previously by the Revolutionary Armed Forces, a Cuban-backed Communist terror group. A career foreign service officer, Mein was married and the father of three young boys. His family is here. The Guatemalan Ministry of Interior issue expressing "the sorrow in all sectors of Guatemala over the death of the ambassador.” It praised Mein for his "great merits” and called him a "friend of Guatemala.” President Johnson in 1965 appointed Mein as ambassador to Guatemala, a nation the size of Tennessee that has been beset by terrorists of the political right and left. 2,000 Have Died Since 1967, political violence has killed nearly 2,000 persons. Seven months ago, Col. John Webber, chief of the U.S. military mission, and Capt. Ernest Munro, chief of the U.S. Embassy’s naval section, were assassinated. A Communist, led insurgent group said their deaths were in retaliation for the killing of a Guatemalan beauty queen by rightwing terrorists. In Washington, a spokesman said President Johnson and Secretary of State Dean Rusk were "shocked and grieved” by
Birthdays Sgt. Stephen Boswell, P.O.Box 4744, Blytheville, Air Force Base in Arkansas, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elden Boswell, was 21-years-old, Aug. 28. Returns home Mr. and Mrs. Robert Homas have returned to Greencastle after spending a vacation in California and points of interest in the west. Reunion Mr. and Mrs. J.Y. Dahlstrand of Indianapolis came to Greencastle Sunday and took Mrs. F.C. Reeder with them to the Redding family reunion at Tipton. New son A son was born last weekend to the Rev. and Mrs. David Hockensmith of Indianapolis. The infant is the grandson of Mr. and Mrs. H.G. Hockensmith of Greencastle. Returned home Mrs. Louis H. Dirks have returned from Vancover where she visited with her brother Garland his wife. Wyoming Mrs. Handy has been visiting her daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Rolph Leir of Sharadon, Wyoming. State Fair Paul Grimes and daughter, Willadene Humphrey and her children, Jenneifer, Laura and Linda attended the Indiana State Fair. Attended Celia and Gary Lennick attended the State Fair Tuesday.
the slaying and urged “a full investigation of all the circumstances of the tragedy.” A graduate of Georgetown College in Kentucky and Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., Main joined the diplomatic service in 1947. He was second secretary in the U.S. Embassy in Rome and first secretary in the U.S Embassy in Oslo. His foreign service assign•ments also included Manila, Jakarta and Rio de de Janeiro. Mein is survived by his wife, the former Elizabeth Ann Clay, and three children. Return snakes MILAN (UPI)—Thieves returned a pair of deadly vipers to owner Felice Fiorini Wednesday but kept the stolen car in which they found them. Fiorini said the car thieves left the box holding the snakes on his doorstep after police broadcast a radio warning. Two teenagers killed By United Press International Two teen-agers were killed Wednesday northeast of Evansville when cars they were driving collided, raising Indiana’s 1968 traffic fatality toll to at least 917 compared with 886 a year ago. * * * Yiddish is usually considered a variant of German, though it has its own standard grammar, dictionaries, a highly developed literature and is written in Hebrew characters.
Afternoon Circle The afternoon circle of the Presbyterian Church will meet with Mrs. L.H. Dirks at 2 p.m. on Thursday, Sept. 5. Commercial Place to be appraised Appraisers will be inspecting Real Estate in Commercial Place, starting Aug. 28th. on Wednesday. On Sept. 3rd. Appraisers will start gathering and recording information on downtown commercial structures. All workers will have letters of identification signed by the County Assessor, Albert Solomon. The field men report that Bainbridge, Roachdale and Russellville residential Real Estate are about 95 per cent complete, and that public cooperation has been almost One Hundred per cent. Carpets Refleet Home Location DALLAS I UPI >—The traveling ways of Americans mean also that their taste in something like carpeting is breaking across geographical lines, according to Frank Hula, director of products for EvansBlack Carpets. "Geographical differences in home furnishings are disappearing.” he said. However, the Far West and Southwest, with their stress on outdoor living, show a preference for shag carpets. In the Northeast, plushes, saxonies and twist carpeting are predominant. he said, “reflecting the staid type of indoor living.”
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CRAWFORDSVILLE SCHOOL OF REAL ESTATE Approved For Veterans Broker end SeUtmon’e Cowrae Neet Clot* Bogin* SEPT. 23. 1968 To oaroR ceR JAMES R. ELLEDGE 342-3721 4P m — - -M ^ li A RmxJ oel VWI WlIRVIIIwf Clo*>o« wM Bo hold el 1114 Ardatero Ava. CrowfordtvHU
EXECUTOR SALE The personal preperty of Mildred Stringer, deceased, will be Offered for sale at Public Auction by the Central National Bank, Executor of the Estate of Mildred Stringer, l-'/j Mile South of U.S, Highway 40 and % Mile East of State Road 75, on Wednesday, September 11, 1968 AT 11 O'CLOCK SHARP HOUSEHOLD .21 ’ Emerson TV, occasional chairs, wicker chairs, ash dining table, kneehole desk, studio couch, rocking chairs, mirrors, utility cabinets, gas range, ref.igerator, Maytag washer, dishes, utensils, small appliances, feather beds, bedding, linens, sweeper, lamps, Siegler automatic oil heater, electric heater, fans, AM/FM radio, tools and Misc, items. ANTIQUES What-not-shelf, small love seat, cherry cupboard, hall tree, two (sets of six each) cane bottom chairs, walnut dresser with tear-drop pulls and marble center in top, stand tables, accordian, wall telephone, ash bed, pictures, glassware, china, combination bookcase desk, folding bed, organ and stool, several 1858 Mason fruit jars (1 amber), stone churn, and other old articles, 1955 Chev, 4-dr. Sedan in good condition. Central National Bank, Executor of the Estate of Mildred Stringer Terms. CASH Not Responsible in Case of Accident. Lyon & Boyd, Attorneys Hurst & Clapp, Auctioneers Hurst & Frazier, Clerks Lunch will be served by Walnut Chapel Friends Church
—Police
Terre Haute student dies TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (UPI)A student pilot was killed Wednesday afternoon when a single-engine plane crashed and burned in the front yard of a rural residence about 10 miles south of here. The victim was identified as Thomas Gordon, 31, Terre Haute, a mechanical employe of the Terre Haute Star. The Cessna aircraft was owned by Hulman Field Aviation, Inc. Authorities said Gordon, who had about 25 hours flying time, was making low passes over the Paint Mill Lake area, several miles south of Hulman Field, Field, when the engine appar. ently stalled and sent the plane earthward. Max Fiscus, R.R. 24, Terre Haute, watched from his doorway as the plane flew over a grove and nosed into his yard, about 40 feet from his house. The plane caught fire and burned the victim, although authorities said he probably was killed on impact.
Major Harper attending A.F. school MONTGOMERY, Ala. - Major William R. Harper, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur B. Harper of 328 S. Addison St. , Indianapolis, is attending the U.S. Air Force Professional Military Comp, troller Course at the Air University’s Institute for Professional Development, Maxwell AFB, Ala. The nine-week course provides selected officers and Department of Defense civilian employes with the opportunity to improve their understanding of the most current problems, enabling them to anti, cipate and cope with changes. Major Harper is an accounting and finance officer at WrightPatterson AFB, Ohio. A graduate of George Washington High School, he received B. A. and M.B.A, degrees from Butler University, where he was commissioned in 1952 upon completion of the Air Force Reserve Officers Training Corps program. He is a member of Tau Kppa Epsilon.
The major’s wife, Zula, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Braden of 307 S. Jackson, Greencastle, Indiana.
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DEAR HELOLSK: Here’s an idea for a little neighborhood fun get-together: Call your neighbors and ask them over for a "Stew Party." Have each one bring their leftover vegetables, meats, etc., or inything on hand that goes in o make a good stew’. When it’s all pooled, it makes a batch large enough for the whole crowd. And boy is that stew ever good! Don’t know why, but it tastes so much better than if you had stayed home and prepared it just for your own family out of your own leftovers. Besides, its a good way for everyone to get rid of those leftovers and have an enjoyable time doing it. I did this in my neighborhood recently and it was such a “hit" that I thought others might like to hear of my idea. It was so much fun and practically no cost to any one of us either. A Reader * * * Let’s call your fantastic idea a hring-what-yoii-have party. Thank goodness we’re not going to a conie-as-you-are one! And do remember, gals, these leftovers can he frozen in milk eortons . . . Ileloise * * * DEAR HELOISE: My two daughters are always commenting about my soft elbows. But really, the answer is so simple. Whenever I use cream on my face, lotion on my hands,
anything of the soil, I just automatically rub the excess on my elbows. And that’s my secret to "nice looking" elbows. Mrs. Langley DEAR HELOISE: I always hail a hard time trying to make slits with a knife in the crust of frozen chicken pot pies and fruit pies. Then I found that by putting them in the oven for just a few minutes that the c r u s t would soften and it would be easier to make the slits. This is far better than bending your knife on the frozen crust. Louise Meagher LETTER OF LAUGHTER DEAR HELOISE: I wondered why our son couldn't hear when we spoke to him. Especially when we asked him to mow the lawn, pick up his clothes, etc . . . Now / know! Last weekend we let him have his first part y in our "wreckroom". The hi-fi along with the kids made so much noise, we couldn't even hear ourselves upstairs. Tom’s Daddy * * * DEAR HELOISE: Can you please tell me how I can prevent and get rid of the plastic odor that I get in a plastic tablecloth even after it has been cleaned, dried overnight and put away in a drawer for awhile? Mrs. C. S. Zwetow •« * * .Many write of this problem, maybe someone lias come up with the solution. How about Continued on page 4
Keeping current
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summer cooler Nothing more refreshing than fresh pineapple sherbet . . . the quick 'n easy way! Just take a can of frozen pineapple and gradually whip it in an electric blender. Presto! Fresh sherbet to eat immediately or store in the freezer.
non-stick sweets To frost cupcakes to be packed for a picnic, split the cakes and spread the frosting inside and put together sandwich style. why swelter? you could pack the family up for a week at the beach to cool off, but you could enjoy cool comfort all summer long with central air conditioning in your home. You'll save even more by combining it with economical electric heat The folks at Public Service Indiana would gladly estimate for you the cost of year-round comfort in your home.
seal in freshness
Picnic sandwiches will stay fresh twice as long if, after wrapping them, you seal the edges of the wax paper with a hot iron.
glass slipper? \ I / Shine patent leather shoes
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and handbags with a liquid glass cleaner. Apply the cleaner lightly, then polish dry with a soft, clean cloth.
Protect stored woolens from direct contact with mothballs by packaging the balls in a sectioned egg carton. Tape the carton shut, but punch holes in the top to permit fumes to escape.
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