The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 12 November 1968 — Page 3

Tuesday, November 12, 1968

The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana

Page 3

Lone Star honors 25 year members

The Student Union Building was the scene Saturday night of the annual 25 year service club meeting of the Indiana Division Lone Star Cement Corporation. The welcome was given by Lawrence Thomas. Preston Walters gave the invocation. The report of the membership was delivered by George Irwin. Paul Evans played theorgan for entertainment. The dinner committee included Mr. and Mrs. John Knight and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Boyce. The entertainment committee consisted of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Godfrey and Mr. and Mrs. Junior Cooper. Other committees included: Decorating-Mr. and Mrs. George Irwin, Mr. and Mrs. George Friend; prizes - Mr. and Mrs. Homer Cook,Mr. and Mrs. James Hill, and Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Justus; reception - Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Sutherlin and Mr. and Mrs. Chester Hunter. The active 25-year-members honored included Claudie Albright, Roy Albright, Clarence Bird, Mrs. Mable Bishop, Frank Boyce, Homer J. Cook, Arthur Cooper, Jr., Mrs. Josephine Duke,, Chester Elmore,Miles T. Forte, George Friend, Charles W. Gilman, Harry Godfrey, William Green, James W. Hill and Chester Hunter. Others include George Irwin, Cecil Justus, Albert Kieffaber, John G. Knight, Morris Miller, Paul Miller, E.E. Myers, Burnance Pritchard, Jr., Harry Renner, Emmett Sutherlin, Eugene Sutherlin, Lawrence Thomas, Harold Truesdale, Clarence VonTress Lester F. Von Tress, R. M. Wilson. Retired 25 year members include: W.D. Alexander, Raymond Alexander, Wm. Earl Bemis, James O. Best, Theodore F. Bock, C. A. Cooper, Raymond

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M. Erwin, George E. Fekete, Glenn Flint, Russel H. Fuller, Thomas Gorham, Albert Green, W.R. Greer, Valentine Hanlon. Also included as retirees are Jacob Jackson, Clyde Miller, Raymond Miller, Joyn A. MeCurry, Michael Morgan, Gayle O’Banion, Mrs. Irene Patterson, Burnance Pritchard, Orville Reed, Leo Terry, C.O. VonTress, Murt E. Wade, Preston Walters and B.J. White. Those who have resigned included Raymond Baldwin, Ivan Cook and William L. Huber. Those who had transferred included A.V. Lemasters and H. H. Walber, both retired. Deceased 25 year members included W. Earl Alexander, Maynard M. Alspaugh, George N. Baker, Leo J. Brendle, Leland Brown, Riely A. Burke, Wm. A. Cody, Donald J. Davison, Carl Erdman, Ross L. Estep, Alvy H. Gentry, Edward P. Green, Lysle C. Green, Gilbert Health. Other deceased members included Ralph Ray Hendrix, Robert Hill, Denver Huestis, Ernest Kearschner, Henry Koessler, C.J. Moore, George E. Pierson, Daniel B. Rowland, Fred Shaw, Myron J. Spring, Joe Thomas, J.G. West, Albert J. Williams, and Wm. H. York.

| Bible Thought j And hereby we do know that we know him, if we keep his commandments.. - I John 2:3. Obedience leads to knowledge of God and this suggests the necessity of discipline in personal living. t In memoriam In memory of Eugene W. Huber who left us November 10, 1966. Wife, Daughters and grandchildren. Mr. and Mrs. Wilborn Kendall and family, Mr. and Mrs. Leon Arnold and family, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Stelzner. Transplant patient to be home INDIANAPOLIS (UPI)— Louis Russell, 43, an -Indianapolis school teacher who received a new heart in a transplant operation at Richmond, Va., last August, may get to spend the Thanksgiving holiday at home with his wife and four children. Russell, an industrial arts teacher, is recuperating from the operation in a Richmond, Va., hospital. His wife plans to visit Richmond in 10 days to see if she can bring her husband home.

I Personal and Local I S Si

Student has busy schedule

Diane Evans, a Bainbridge High School student, is busy fulfilling her duties as state J.C.L. vicepresident. She is presently engaged in writing to various people and groups about the program for the coming 1969 I.J.C.L. Convention to be held on the LU. campus at Bloomington. She has contacted Dr. Norman T. Pratt, Chairman of the Department of Classical Languages and Literature at I.U., who will deliver the Invocation; Dr. John Snyder, of I.U., who will give the greeting at the convention; Dr. Edward Ramage, of the Department of Classical Languages and Literature at I.U., who will be the main speaker; and John Bach, the N.J.C.L. vice-presi-dent, who will tell of the coming 1969 National J.C.L. Convention to be held in Louisiana. Diane has also communicated with the Greencastle Latin Club which will lead the Flag Salute in Latin, the Rockville Latin Club which will lead the J.C.L. Creed, and the New Haven Latin Club which will present a skit at the convention. Also, the Car-

mel Latin Club will have a folk singing group. The club is very busy getting ready for the Roman banquet which will be in December. Especially busy are the chairmen of various committees. They are Roy Zenor, chairman of the theme and decoration committee; Carol Evens, chairman of the throne committee; Mike White, chairman of the reception committee; Patty O’Hair, chairman of the entertainment committee; Steve Sanders, chairman of the tree committee; Gary Wallace, in charge of decorating the tree; Cindy South and Sherry Knapp, co-chairmen of the wreath committee; and Jeff Sanders, chairman of the set-up-crew. There are also several committees which have no official chairman. They are the food committee, the crown committee, the gift exchange and grab bag committee, the programs committee, the place cards committee, the favors committee, the committee in charge of gifts for the King and Queen, the invitations committee, and the clean up committees.

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P.O.E. “Chapter I, P.O.E. will meet at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday at Asbury Towers, 102 W. Popular St. Hostesses will be Mrs. Bernice Jones and Mrs. Elizabeth MeGaughey, and Mrs. Mary Ann Meyer will give the program.” Birthday The family of Clint Whitaker of Belle Union held a birthday dinner at the Cloverdale Community Building Sunday November 10th honoring Mr. Whitaker’s 90th birthday.

Homemakers The Community Service Homemakers Club, will meet Tuesday Nov. 12, at BainbridgO Lions will feature a lesson on candy making. The Golden Circle Club met Oct. 24th. The meeting was opened by the president Ruth Nelson. Eva Diel gave devotions. The flower fund was collected and cards were sent to the sick. An election of officers was held with Dessie Fellows president, Eva Diel Secretary. Geneva Taylor was winner of contest and Leva Trussell of the lucky napkin. Dainty refreshments were served to 14 members and 4 guests. The meeting adjourned to meet with Pearl Roberts Nov. 21st for an afternoon meeting. Moose Women of The Moose will meet Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the Moose Home. There will be initiation. Dress formal. All members please be present.

Veronica Club Veronica Club will meet with Mrs. Joe Pickett, Wednesday afternoon Nov. 13th at 2:00 p.m. Grandson Born Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Call received word of the birth of a great grandson James Artderian to Mr. and Mrs. James R. Call of Indianapolis, Nov. 9th. He weighed 9 lbs. He has a sister Tracy, 4 years old. His maternal grand parents are Mr. and Mrs. Rex Sparks of Cloverdale. Good Cheer The Good Cheer Club will meet at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the home of Mrs. Bonnie Williams. C.B. of C.E.O. Chapter C.B. of C.E.O. will meet Wednesday 8:00 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Myrtle Gass.

Friendly Club The Clinton Madison Friendly Club will meet Thursday at 1:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Marrion Crus«. Members please bring Xmas gifts for mental patients.

Rebecca Circle The Rebecca Circle of First Baptist Church will meet wtih Mrs. Mace Aker, Wednesday Nov. 13, 9:15, The theme is Thailand. Band The Fillmore Band Parents will serve Chili, sandwiches, pie and coffee at the Fillmore-Clov-erdale basketball game tonight. Serving at 6 p.m. in the Cafeteria.

Catholic Bishops open conference

WASHINGTON (UPI)The powerful National Conference of Catholic Bishops opened a fiveday secret conference here today in the newest phase of the growing battle between the church hiearchy and rebellious Catholic priests and laymen. The closed-door discussions, the semi-annual meeting of more than 200 cardinals, archbishops and bishops, opened just a day after an enthusiastic rally of Catholics dissenting from Pope Paul’s views on birth control. The Sunday rally, which featured Sen. Eugene J Meearthy as one of several speakers, drew an overflow crowd of 3,000. The rally was called to support a number of Washington priests who have been disciplined by Cardinal Patrick O’Boyle for challenging the Pope’s encyclical on the use of contraceptives. A petition was sent to the bishops asking

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them to intervene in the Washington dispute. The need for reform and involving priests and the laity in decisions of the church was emphasized by the Rev. John Corrigan, chairman • oi the Association o f Washington priets and spokesman for the 40 priests in the Washington diocese who have been disciplined by O’Boyle. Calling the Catholic Church one of “turmoil and confusion... (and of) quiet dismissal and removals,” Corrigan said “centuries of imprisonment” have left their mark on the church.“It is the church that saved souls but often did not serve persons,” he said, adding that a new, reformed church should exercise “communication, not ex-communication.” McCarthy said he was “not here to announce the formation of a third party or a second church.” — James Ray face and voice of everyone allowed into the courtroom, including the pess, the public, the sheriff in his uniform and the judge in his black robe. There were four white sentry boxes at each corner of the criminal courts building in downtown Memphis, each with a guard to screen persons heading for the building. Neither pedestrians nor vehicles were allowed on the block fronting the building.

14 Persons killed in explosion MANILA (UPI) - High-oc-tance gasoline from a leaky pipeline ignited and exploded Sunday night, burning to death 14 persons, most of them children, in the southern Philippines port city of Iloilo. Forty-six others were hospitalized in critical condition with severe burns, raising fears the death toll might rise.

Police in Iloilo, about 300 .miles southeast of Manila, corrected their earlier reports that a gasoline storage tank being fed by a tanker on the waterfront had exploded, killing 19.

“Investigation at the scene shows there was a flash fire from the pool of gasoline that spilled out of the leaking pipeline and spread instantaneously like a big explosion,” police said. “Most of the victims were apparently gathered around the leaking pipeline with cans and other containers trying to salvage gasoline from the source of the leak,” a police spokesman said. Police said the fire raged for about four hours before it was brought under control. Two houses were burned. To be wed November 22 Mr. and Mrs. Julius T. Edmonds wish to announce the approaching marriage of their daughter, Jacquelin, to Mr. Timothy L. Baynard on Friday, November 22 at 7:30 p.m. The wedding is private, but all friends and relatives are cordially invited to attend the reception in Charterhouse Lounge at 8:00 p.m. immediately following the wedding ceremony.

get through the day but what about “when day is done"? Since you never say much about AFTER five o’clock, the housewives in our neighboihood decided to tell you how we spend our "leisurely" evenings. Like, five o'clock: Work still not done. Washing machine has two loads to go. H a m b u r g e r not thawed. Haven't reached the middle of the ironing basket, much less the bottom. Teenagers’ transistors are blaring three different programs. Books thrown on the coffee table, sweaters across the chairs, lunch box on the sofa. H u s b a n d comes home. Doesn't add anything to our day because he's grouchy, wants to know wheie supper is and why the paper is torn up. And why didn't we change the baby 'cause he’s wet iwe just did 30 minutes before t. He plops in a chair, takes off his shoes, throws them under the footstool and demands that we keep the k i d s quiet . . . And while we're trying to get supper, the little ones come to mother (not daddy) with. “Mother, how do you do this . . . ?" And what mother can give a sensible or logical answer while she's worried about the hamburger burning. whether she will have time to fix daughter's dress for that school program. Aftei supper. there are dishes to do. kids to be bathed while you settle all of the fights. There's the garbage to

Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF

A CHAOTIC POLITICAL convention of yesteryear—even more disorderly than some of the goings-on in 1968— prompted the late journalistic ace. A. J. Liebling, to propound what he culled "Liebling's Law.” It went as follows: "If you just try long enough and hard enough, you always can manage finally to boot yourself in the posterior.” * * * F'ront the giant redwoods sector of California comes the yarn of a truck farmer who decided to buy a power saw. A logging foreman sold him one that he guaranteed would cut down 15 trees in a single day. A week later a very unhappy farmer came back to report that the power saw must bo a faulty one: it averaged only three trees a day. The foreman grabbed the power saw and plugged it into the nearest outlet. The saw promptly went "BZZZZZ." "Hey," demanded the startled farmer. "What's that noise?" * * * WEBSTER I NCONSULTED: BACHELOR: A chap who—when he opens the window of his pad —more dust flies out than in. INSPECTOR IN WIG FACTORY: A tress passer. JUNE: The month when students hope their profs will take a passing fancy to them. ROCK N' ROLL SELECTIONS: Disaster arias. STRAIGHT MAN: A vaudevillian who lives on the wrong side of the cracks. C 1968, by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by King Features Syndicate.

Olds Delta 88: That look could make a man lose his little-car mind. Come look.

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How we long to settle down in the living room with tinnew m.-igazine that eame in the mail. No wonder we wives get disgusted. It's too bad husbands ean't take one look at a wife and see what she's been through. We ft el that no one notires anything at all that we've :»< - complished during the day. mueh less appreciates it. And that's why we hope fervently that if there is a reincarnation. that next time we'll be a man! Anywho. now that we've aired our complaints, we'ie feeling better mueh better and thanks from the bottom of our hearts foi listening. Weary Wives Dear Mothers: It all sounds so familiar I can't help chuckling. I know th«- feeling: hoping yon would he aide to get everything done, yet knowing that most of it will never be finished. That’s just life . . . hut somehow when wo share our problems they seem easier. You want to run home and hug all those little ones and apologize for pinehing their heads off that morning. We all go through the same thing. When these problems pile up, they seem larger-than-life and we h-el so put upon . . . Just keep on reminding yourself that you are not alone in these problems and that getting everything done is not nearly as important as keeping a sense of humor . . . and making your home a happy place even if it isn’t absolutely spit- and span. Remember, gals, that housework is a part of your job of being a lov ely and loving homemaker — but only ONE part. Just learn the short outs _ and do the host you can. Bless you all. Heloiso j LETTER OF LAUGHTER DEAR HELOISE Here's an easy way t<> tell when the floor needs mopping. Just try going barefoot while you do your work. Those sticky places ean't hide from bait* feet! Reader DEAR HELOISE: Our teenage son got the "poster" craze about the time we had his room redecorated. So we let him put up his posters in the children's bathroom. Now it's papered with celebrities and darling-looking. S.H t\ DEAR HELOISE: My small plastic wastebasket kept falling over because of its light weight. So I put some sand in a plastic bag. closed it with bread wire and put it in the bottom of the wastebasket. Presto, no more spilled contents. Mrs. S. O. (I. Girl Scouts will have share day On Monday, Nov. 4, 1968, the Putnam County Neighborhood Association of the Covered Bridge Girl Scout Council met at 9:30 a.m. at the Presbyterian church. Mrs. Don Whitehead presided. Miss Sarah Huffman from Terre Haute was present. It was announced that Marilyn Jackson will be the cookie chairman for the 1969 cookie sales. June 2-6, 1969, is the tentative date set for day camp. Delegates Martha Boruff, Lois Wison and Martha Priest will be attending the council meeting in Terre Haute on November 14. Other meetings coming up: Nov. 20, 1968, will be sharing day, concluding the leadership training course. December 7, 1968 is the patrol leader’s workshop. On January 8, 1969, there will be a Brownie-Junior workshop for leaders at the Presbyterian church from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. At the next regular meeting Miss Huffman will explain troop registration in detail. This will be especially helpful to new leaders. The meeting was dismissed with a dutch friendship circle. The next meeting will be December 2, at 9:30 a.m. at the Presbyterian church.