The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 17 October 1968 — Page 5

Thursday, October 17, 1968

The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana

Page 5

—Putnam United Fund Members of the local Mental Association participate in the Adopt-A-Patient program. They offer Christmas gifts for patients and work as hopsital volunteers. The American Red Cross conduct swimming programs and relate information to servicemen. Junior sport funds are used by the Junior League of Bainbridge, Cloverdale, Fillmore, Roachdale, Russellville. The Greencastle Pee Wee Football League. The scout program includes nearly 650 boys. The council supports Camp Krietenstein and Camp Wildwood and pays the salary of a scout executive who is shared with Clay County. Funds for the Putnam Friends of Youth, Inc., are for the maintenance of Camp Friend, located in Madison Township. For the first time, funds will go to support the Putnam County Recreation program. The program provides roller skating, volleyball and basketball. Plans for boxing and yearround swimming. U.S.O. helps an estimated 500 county servicemen a year. The Hospital Guild is responsible for a $900 grant-in-aid each year for senior nursing students who come to Greencastle to work in the hospital. The Guild also assists in purchasing hospital equipment and operates a book and gift shop. Hammond Times backs Nixon

DISH OUT THE CHICHEN--Albert Solomon, Putnam County Assessor, concentrates his assessing on fried chicken being served here to Republican party patrons attending the Tuesday night GOP rally at the county Fairgrounds. Bill Ruckelshaus Republican U. S. Senatorial candidate was the speaker. -The BANNER Photo, Dennis Abell.

HAMMOND, Ind. (UPI)—The Hammond Times has endorsed Republican Richard M. Nixon for president. An editorial in the Times, which classifies itself as a politically independent newspaper, eliminated Vice President Hubert Humphrey as being “indecisive” and on the “soft side” and said this nation cannot take a ‘marshmallow’ at this time.”

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The newspaper also ruled out George C. Wallace, saying of his “law and order” appeal, “This boy was born too late—he should have been the marshal of Dodge City or else one of the late Adolph’s runners.” “Mr. Nixon does not promise Pie in the Sky,” the editorial said. “He concedes many problems will be difficult to overcome . . . “His experience in world affairs far surpasses that of his current opponents. He knows the people and their wants, their needs and their mood.”

INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) Sen. Vance Hartke, Indiana’s senior senator who has shown a reluctance in the past to support the policies of the Democratic national administration on Vietnam, is campaigning for Vice President Hubert Humphrey. A Hartke spokesman said not all of the 14 speeches the senator told Democratic county chairmen were his contribution to the party’s campaign were for Humphrey, however.

—Tax rates He said the State Tax Board at its recent hearing did not cut the advertised budget appropriations but the total 1969 school tax rate would be sixty-six cents less. Approved 1969 Rate Advertised Rate General Fund 6.06 5.45 Debt Service .92 .87 Cumulative Bldg. .15 .15 Total School Tax Rate 7.13 6.47 The new approved school tax rate is only 17 cents above last year’s school tax rate. This new rate puts the Greencastle Community Schools within its legal maximum limit. Superintendent Rammel cited the following reasons for the lower rate: 1. The Greencastle Classroom Teachers Association recognizing the Board’s financial problems, and in spite of rising costs of living, accepted the same salary schedule as a year ago. 2. The Board of School Trustees and the school administration have put forth every effort possible to cut costs --almostto the critical point. 3. Since last year the assessed valuation is up. Dr. Rammell expressed concern over rising costs and local property tax rates that are already high. He said, “School costs will continue to climb and the State Legislature simply must provide for at least fifty percent state support to schools.”

His talk tonight to students at Indiana State University in Terre Haute was termed “not purely political” and the same label was fastened to talks before the Indiana AFL-CIO con. vention in Indianapolis today. But Hartke will speak on Humphrey’s behalf Saturday in Wolfhurst, Ohio, and at a rally Oct. 20 at Bloomington for the Democratic 7th District congressional nominee, Elden Tipton.

—Lawson gion that possesses his daily living,” he said. To gain an authentic religion Lawson posed three questions as the basis of a personal inventory: Is there an inner logic pushing one into a deepening conscious, ness that one belongs to life not death? Do our lives possess an “over-arching critic” who keeps our life in judgment—a continuing sense that our lives are not yet what they ought to be? Does an inner sense of aliveness per. meate our energy so much that we find ourselves standing more and more in solidarity with the human race?

Lawson said he welcomed the opportunity to speak at DePauw where his former teacher, Dr. William E. Kerstetter, is now president. Lawson was a student at Baldwin-Wallace College when Dr. Kerstetter headed the school’s department of philosophy. “Dr. Kerstetter was the man on campus who opened up for me the world of philosophy, and more important, when I was a nonregistered person for the draft, he was the one man who by listen, ing to me and asking questions, and understanding, helped me to think through the issues of my life.”

—Scholl Jackson, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W. Harris, Mr. and Mrs. Williafn Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Granville Thompson, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Vermillion, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sanders, Mr. and Mrs. William Spence, Mr. and Mrs. James R. Allen, Mr. and Mrs. Max L. Evans, Mr. and Mrs. George Murphey, Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Wall, Mr. and Mrs. Don Wheeler, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ruesch, Mr. and Mrs. William Adrian Muir, Mrs. Virginis Mullis, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Miller, and Mr. and Mrs. Earl E. Voss. Scholl, a professional soil conservationist, received his B.S. in agriculture from Purdue in 1941. He has been a career employee of the Soil Conservation Service since August, 1948. Previous SCS assignments were at Albion and Anderson, Indiana. Prior to joining SCS, he taught and supervised vocational agriculture at Columbia City, Indiana, and managed and operated a farm near Connersville, Indiana. Having completed pilot training at Purdue, Scholl was later a naval aviator and flight instructor for the U. S. Navy during W. W. II. He now holds a Commercial Pilot’s license and was a charter member of the Greencastle Flying Club. Scholl is also an active member and former ofiicer oftheHoosier Chapter of the Soil Conservation Society of America. He is also a member of the Greencastle Kiwanis Club and the Organization of Professional Employees of the Department of Agriculture (OPE DA). The Scholls have been active in the Gobin Memorial Methodist Church a n d in other community activities, including Goodwill industries projects and Scouting. Mrs. Scholl, also a Purdue graduate, presently teaches home economics at Greencastle High School. She is the former Katherine (Kay) Fosbrink, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Henry V. Fosbrink. Scholl graduated from high school in Connersville, Indiana. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Scholl, R. R. No. 4, Conners, ville, operated their farm there for many years but are now retired.

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DEAR HELOISE: Fringe is so fashionable now and used on many things. But it’s so hard to restore it to have that nice pretty look after laundering. I learned to shake these garments real hard before hanging them on the line and it eliminates most of the tangles. Janice Hedge On some ty|*e* of fringe you can also comb out those tangles with the large end of a comb! And after you press a garment, you can brush most fringe with a clean nylon hairbrush and it will fluff up again. Heloisc DEAR HELOISE. I’m a busy mother of four. Our house is crowded with little closet space. It seemed my 12-year-old daughter "never had a thing to wear,” and wore the same tiled-look-ing things over and over. In taking a serious look at her wardrobe, we found that her clothing was adequate, but much was unwearable because of the need of simple alterations or repairs. So, first of all, we got busy and made as many garments wearable as possible, giving them the necessary attention. Then we made a chart for 10 school days utilizing all her clothes. In the space for each day we listed a complete costume. We taped the chart on her closet door and invested in an over-the-door hanger. Now each Sunday evening, we check the chart and hang the week's choice of clothes on the hanger. We make doubly sure that all of the clothes are clean, in good repair and freshly pressed. As they are worn, they are either laundered or re-pressed and put in the closet until "their turn" comes again. Now what a pleasure it is to both of ns to see her leave for school with that band-box look! Proud Mama DEAR HELOISE: Here's an idea for a change from the every-day school sandwich. Use a hot dog bun and your favorite spread. Put two or three different kinds of lunch meat along with a slice of cheese on this. Presto, a miniature "poorboy sandwich"! I also use hamburger buns the same way. Busy Mom

LETTER OF LAUGHTER DEAR HELOISE: I’d like to go “one bettei on the title of Homemaker or Housewife. Instead of "Domestic Engineer." I believe that “Household Executive" fits even better . . . Florence Andersen DEAR HELOISE: This is a terrific hint for those who have mountain cabins or cabins in the woods with a fireplace or wood burning stove. When it comes time to cut and stack the wood, don't put it in a woodshed, woodpile or under the cabin. Most of us have screened-in porches that are not in use during the winter. We have learned over the years that if we pile the wood on the porch, the snakes will not get in it and the wood stays dry. Also, we don’t bring in bugs. And who uses a screened-in Continued on Page 8 —Buckley her. That was a month ago. Meanwhile, Miss Gonzalez who had her visa way back there, is told by the Embassy that unless she uses it, it will lapse, because visas are good for only three months. Frightened, but in any case certain that it will only be a matter of days before her mother can join her, she flies off to the States leaving her mother in the care of a friend. Yesterday, the Spanish government informs Mrs. Gonzalez that next Friday, her permit to stay in Spain expires and she must leave the country,. So that, in this illuminated age, we see an old woman, senile, about to be ejected from a country a half world away from where she was born, but forbidden, because some clerk somewhere hasn’t stamped the right form, to go to the only place in the world where she is wanted, and would be looked after, during the few months or years she has left to live. One wonders, really, whether senility may not in fact prove to be so contagious as to have atrophied the moral reflexes of the officials in Washington, Paris, and New York who by their Kafkaesque impersonality have conspired to torture this pathetic, bewildered old woman. Two bits they all vote industriouly for whatever candidate promises to do most for the benefit of Mankind.

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