The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 26 November 1968 — Page 3

Tuesday, November 26, 1968

The Daily Saimer, Greencastle, Indiana

Page 3

| Personal and Local

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j Bible Thought And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are called according to his purpose. - Romans 8:28. Thousands of good men have wrestled a blessing from disaster -God helping them. FHA visits Indianapolis The Future Homemakers of Bainbridge High School, took a trip Tuesday, Nov. 19, to Indianapolis. At 9:30 they arrived at Speedway. Their first visit was the Speedway Beauty Academy School. The students were all shown through the school, and study room. They saw step by step how beauticians are taught. The manager told the group the qualifications included that a trainee be 18 and have an 8th grade education. The group went to the Speedway shopping center for lunch. A t 1:30 they arrived at the Deaf School. -DMZ down over the Communist nation. The stricken aircraft limped home to their bases safely, their pilots unhurt. The Communists sent surface-to-air missiles (SAMs) and MIG jet fighters against an armada of helicopters and planes sent to find the lost pilots. Hanoi radio said they already had been captured but the rescuers continued their search. South Vietnamese spokesmen said today’s reconnaissance patrol was sent into the DMZ to find the guerrillas who fired on an allied base from there Monday. Answering the Communist fire with their machineguns, the Vietnamese troops sent the Reds fleeing within minutes. Their captive said he was a member of the 138th North Vietnamese Army Regiment. It was another in a series of more than 200 reported Communist violations of an understand, ing that Hanoi’s troops would not “abuse” the DMZ if President Johnson would order a halt in the bombardment of North Vietnam. Four other U.S. spotter pilots Monday drew fire from the zone and called in artillery and naval barrages that knocked out two machinegun nests, two bunkers and 75 yards of trenchline, headquarters said.

Great Sport Shift Printed Pattern

It's litfiit’s new "Sport Dress" for every day and weekends. Looks marvelous plain or dressed up with scarves, hold pins or bright belts. Easy! Printed Pattern !M12: NEW .Misses' Sizes S. 10. 12. 14. Hi. IS. Size 12 (bust 34) takes 2 3 4 vards 3"»-inch fabric. SIXTY-FIVE CENTS in coins for each pattern—add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Marian Martin, c/o The Daily Banner Pattern Dept.. 232 West ISth St.. New York. X. Y. 10011. Print NAME, ADDRESS with ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. What's new for now? 107 answers in our Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog. Free pattern coupon in Catalog. Send 50< New INSTANT SEWING Book — shows you how to sew it today, wear it tomorrow. Over 500 pictures. Only $1.

A ruby is sometimes called an "oriental ruby" to distinguish it from the spinel ruby, which is a stone of inferior hardness and value.

from DONELSON’S

Musical Powder Boxes Dresser Sets Manicure Sets Sunbeam, Schick and Universal Hair Dryers Norelco, Remington, Schick & Sunbeam Ladies' Razors Perfume And Perfume Sets by Max Factor —Hypnotique, Golden Woods, Primitif, Promess Faberge - Flambeau, Tigress Woodhue, Aphrodisia Dana — Tabu, Ambush D'Orsay - Intoxication Heaven Scent Ba-De-Bain Tweed Yardley

Kaywoodie, Medico and Vello-Bole Pipes Tobacco Pouches, Pipe Racks

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3 £ o o o > O o 0 > r 1 1 o o r

Zippo, Ronson and Scripto Lighters Norelco, Schick, Remington, Sunbeam and Ronson Lighters Hair Brushes, Shaving Kits Cologne 8i After-Shaving Sets Hai Karate, Passport 360 Max Factor, Yu, 007, Yardley Old Spice, KingsMen Italian Lime, Mark II

Papermate, Scripto, Shaffer and Parker Pen and Pencil Sets Timex and Saxony Watches Raycine Hair cutting Sets

Sunbeam, GE, Py-Co-Pay and Broxodent Electric Toothbrushes, Northern and Dumore Heat Massagers, Kodak and Polaroid Cameras, Amity Biil Ifolds/Kiwi Shoeshine Kits, Playtape Music Machines/Kings Candy Donelson’s Pharmacy, Inc. West Side of the Square * Instead of Our Usual 9-72 A. M. Opening Sundays. He will Be Open 1-6 P.M. On Dec. 8, 15. 22

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Homemakers plan Christmas party The West Floyd Homemakers Club met Nov. 13th with Mrs. Fred Beck with Helen Noll, assisting. Lena Bryant received the door prize. Mrs. Eggers, the president, opened the meeting. Flag Salute, Christian Pledge and Creed were repeated in unison. Dorothy Sears gave the history of the song. Opal Osborn gave the safety report. The president appointed the committees for the coming year. Blanche Miller gave the lesson on framing, masking and hanging of pictures. Ethel conducted a contest which was won by Lena Bryant. Refreshments of pumpkin pie, coffee and nuts were served. Club adjourned to meet with Dorothy Sears for the all Day Christ, mas meeting. There will be a gift exchange. Zsa Zsa hates Spanish hospitality By M ARIS ROSS LONDON (UPI)—Zsa Zsa Gabor rested in a hospital today, the pain in Spain behind her. “I hate Spain and Spaniards. There are no gentlemen left in Spain. They just beat you there.” Such were the actress’ lines when she arrived by plane Wednesday night from Palma de Mallorca, Spain, the latest stop on her troubled travels since she left the United States in August for business and pleasure in Europe. “I was beaten up by five Spanish policemen. They started beating me up. They broke my bones. They wouldn’t tell me why,” she said. Miss Gabor, 45, wore bandages on her wrists and legs. She put her blonde head on the chest of a London policeman who helped her off the plane. The bobby’s face reddened. In Spain, authorities said Miss Gabor had been taken off a Paris-bound plane before dawn Tuesday and taken to court to answer a suit filed by a hotel which charged nonpayment of a bill. They said she also struck one of the policemen who escorted her from the plane. Spanish officials said she was free to leave after posting a $2,000 bail bond. In London, Miss Gabor said she had to pay $7,000 to leave the island of Mallorca. The five times married and five times divorced Hungarian actress said she was entering the hospital to recover from the Spanish trip. She had already had trouble in Iberia. In Portugal a hotel had wanted to hold her jewelry until she settled a $500 check. As in Palma, she was reported to have slapped a cheek or two. “I am Hungarian. I always defend myself,” she said.

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Lodgf Called meeting of Temple Lodge # 47 F & AM Tuesday Nov. 26 at 7 "p.m. Work in FC Degned. • ? E«1 Poynter, Worshipful Master. Guest - > '•* * Miss Barbara Yunker of Ndw York was the weekend guest of

Attends centennial Mrs. MintaSnider was in Philo, 111., Sunday to attend the celebration of the Centennial Anniversary of the founding of the Methodist Church there. She was a member of that church until she came to Indiana to make her home.

her mother.

1 ' *'"■ S '% Proclamation

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WASHINGTON (UPI) - F^llowing 1 the text of President Johnaoh’s Thanksgiving Day proclamation: Americans, looking back on the tumultoas events of 1968, may be more- inclined to ask God’s mercy and guidance than to offer him thanks for his blessings. There are many events in this year that deserve our remembrance, and give us cause for thanksgivftigi The endurance and stability of our democracy, as we prepare once more for an orderly transition of authority; The renewed determination, on the part of millions of Americans, to bridge our divisions; The beginning of talks with our adversaries, that will, we pray, lead to peace in Vietnam; The increasing prosperity of our people, including those who were denied any share in America's blessings in the past; The achievement of new breakthroughs In medical science, and ; new victories over disease. These events inspire not only the deepest gratitude, but —Putnam

the CD planning have interests at

cooperate in because all

stake.

Government is charged to protecting citizens, and business and industry, to operate effectively, must protect employees, he said. Vencel said that CD in Indiana had moved slowly because local officials and business leaders have not picked up the responsibilities of programs started by the state. He said many local governments had simply not taken an interest in Civil Defense. In the closing address of the conference Robert Piercy, a member ®f the IU group, reviewed the Remarks Of others and summed up ttie purposes of CD and its application to Putnam County. Piercy was master of ceremonies fer the evening. A panel discussion with the various speakers took place following the conference program. The diseufcsien was open to the conferees and elicited a great response from the audience. Local dignitaries on hand at the confereate included police chief Jkck Stevens, Fire Chief Charles Watkins, and Mayor Norman Peabody. The local Civil Defense unit was formed about eight mentis

ago. .

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HOMEOWNERS: tell us how much you need □ $i,800 □ $2,500 p$$,oao □ $3,500 □$4,000 □ $4,600 □ $5,000 □ and mere Just check the amount of exto cash you tea put to good use right now. You may berrtWBfly amount up to $5,000 — or even more — whether your heme is paid for or not. Seaboard Finance wiH arrange payments to fit your budget. You’ll be surprised at how small they are. Take up to 60 month* to poy. Just fill in the coupon and bring ft in or mail it to: SERB0RRD LORN C0NMM 12 N. Jackson St., West Side Square

Greencastle

Phone 653-5154

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Open Sats. till noon thru Doc. 21 ■: ! . ‘ ; I

Address. CNy

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confidence that beneficiary of beyond that of history, will present trials

our nation, the good fortune any nation in surmount its and achieve a

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more just society for its people. In this season, let us offer more than words of thanksgiving to God. Let us resolve to offer him the best that is within us—tolerance, respect for life, faith in the destiny of all men to live in peace. Now, therefore, I, Lyndon B. Johnson, President of the United States of America, in consonance with Section 6303 of Title 5 of the United States code designating the fourth Thursday of November in each year as Thanksgiving Day, do -hereby proclaim Thursday, November 28, 1968 as a day of national thanksgiving. In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand this fifteenth day November, 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 ninety-third. New books added to library The Greencastle - Putnam County Public Library has recently added the following new books: Bjorn, The Home Has a Heart; Camus, Lyrical and Critical Essays; Jencks, The Academic Revolution; Morris, The Naked Ape; Cain, Young People and Crime; Bayh, One Heartbeat Away; Lundberg, The Rich and the Super Rich; Liston, Downtown, Our Challenging Urban Problems; Mayo, The Story of My Family and My Career; Sandberg., Letters; Davis, Lawrence and Oppenheimer. Greencastle Rotary meets The Greencastle Rotary Club met at the DePauw Union Building on Nov. 20th. Guests present were Jim McCammon, head foot - ball coach and assistants Joe Fiedler and Wally Bennett. Members were Jim Ray, John Gough, Rich Lear, Gerald Cook, Jay Boyd, Gary Goodman, Jim Tuttle, Richard Baumunk, Doug Smith, Darryl Pierce, Richard Collins, Sam Hecko, Steve Hamm, MSrc Monnett, Dan Murphy, Dennis Losin, Anthony Baynard, Phillip Clark, Don Dowty, Pat Blose, and cheer leaders Beth Briggs and Diana Buis. These were senior members of the football and cross country team. Also present was special guest Art Hansen. Program Chairman Marion Wilson introduced Chuck Birchum of Indianapolis Culligan Firm who spoke concerning his work as industrial institution salesman with Culligan. Mr. Birchum spoke o n hemodialysis which is blood filtration concerning its use in an artificial kidney. He spoke of the testing that is being done with different kinds of water which could be used with the artificial kidney. Rotary Meeting will be Jointly with the KiwanisWednesday, November 25th. The prograrh will be given by Dave McCracken concerning the history of Thanksgiving.

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Miss Parent Engaged June wedding plans are being made for Miss Karen June Parent and Paul Richard Hill. The couple will be married in the Roachdale Christian Church. Miss Parent is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Parent of Bainbridge. She attended Atlantic Airline School i.i Kansas City Missouri and is presently employed at P.R. Mallory Co. Mr. Hill is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William R. Hill of Roachdale. He is a Junior at Indiana Central College where he is a member of the Lambda Chi Fraternity. Reelsville social club retains officers The Reelsville Gayette Social Club held its November meeting in the home of Mrs. Wayne McCullough. The President, Mrs. John Diel, called the meeting to order by the Flag Salute. Roll call was answered by 12 members with a Bible verse with the word “Thanks.” New business was the nominating committee giving a r eport and the members voting to retain the old officers for the coming year. A discussion was given on fixing baskets for the needy at Thanksgiving time and sending cards to the sick. Mrs. Kenneth Eggers gave three readings on being thankful at this time of the year. Social hour was by Mrs. Wayne Allen in giving two contests and were won by Mrs. George Mercer and Mrs. Halford Burger. Mrs. Virgie Lane, the sister of the Hostess was a visitor. Refreshments of pumpkin pie and drinks were served. Next meeting will be at the home of Mrs. Louis Gray on December 17. A $1 gift exchange. Named coed correspondent

Miss Conrad Miss Karen Conrad, 13, 315 Redbud Lane, Greencastle, has been named Coed correspondent for the 1968-69 school year, according to an announcement by Miss Margaret Hauser, editor of Co-ed magazine, a national publication by Scholastic Magazines Inc. for home economics students. The publication contains items on fashion, food, beauty and home furnishings and fiction. Miss Conrad is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Conrad. She is an eighth grade student at Greencastle Junior High School. She was appointed correspondent by Mrs. Kay School, her home economics teacher. Ford Grant LIMA, Peru (UPI) — The Ford Foundation has donated $168,000 to the law faculty of the Pontifical Catholic University here. The money is to be used for school equipment, new course programs, and research grants for students and professors.

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CLOSED Thanksgiving Day SateHita Drive-In Remember-Delivery Service After 5 P.M.-OL 3-3341

DKAR HKLOISE: Last Thanksgiving when I needed about a dozen turkeyshaped gelatin salads, I had only one turkey form, and that was a metal cookie cut-

ter.

So I made my gelatin in a long, flat cake pan. When nice and firm. I cut 12 "turkeys” from this. The small sections left between the molds, I gave to the children. Mrs. Maurice Hearn * » * Aren’t you th«- tricky one? And with your idea we could use our tree cutter or the star-shaped one for Christmas, the heart for Valentine's, and so on. Your belfry niiist hate had flood-lights in it to think that one up! Heloise DEAR HELOISE: I don't consider myself the smartest woman in town, but on the other hand, not the dumbest one either. The other day I whipped the old iron out, flipped her up on "cotton" and proceeded to press a synthetic blouse . . . ahum . . . need I s a y more? Yep. the bottom half of my iron is now coated with what looks like plastic stripes! I was so angry with myself, I sat down and cried. How do you clean a mess like that off an iron? I have tried steel wool, nail polish remover and alcohol. A Dum-Dum ♦ * * I’ll bet "I)iiiii-1)iiiii” isn't tbe only gal who has done this, what with all tbe new synthetics floating around. Does anybody know? Just write me in care of this paper. Sure would be appreciated. Love, Heloise * * # DEAR HELOISE: I cut streamers for my children's bicycle handles from old multi-colored beach halls. Then I tied four or five ends together and pushed the knot through the hole in the rubber grip on the handle bar. Mrs. Sandra Dahl * * * DEAR HELOISE: Have you ever washed a load of curtains made of the same material, but different in length and spent useless time in trying to line up the matching pairs? Well, I found a simple way. I mark each matching pair with a different colorfast thread before taking them down and, bingo, no more guessing and aggravation. Lisa Asbury * * ★ Tiny safety pins are great, too. One pin on each of the shortest ones, two the next longest, three the next length, etc. Saves sewing and time. Heloise * * * DEAR HELOISE: I stand our furled umbrellas in the hall no matter how wet they are. As long as they're set in County Hospital Saturday Dismissals Emma Albin, Greencastle Donald Cantone, Greencastle Steven Clark, Greencastle Elsie Dixon, Greencastle Minnie Scaggs, Greencastle Edna Smith, Coatesville Mildred Smothers, Clayton Johnny Watkins, Greencastle Ronald Weist, Fillmore Lela White, Greencastle Sunday Dismissals Wanda Gooch, Greencastle Jennie McClure, Cloverdale Edna Sinclair, Gosport Ronald Spencer, Roachdale Marie Oswald, Bainbridge Gamma Phi has guest speaker The regular monthly business meeting of Gamma Phi Chapter of Kappa Delta Phi Sorority was held Tuesday evening at the Public Gas Company with 28 members and one guest. The main guest was Lorena Russell of Noblesville, Central Regional Director of Kappa Delta Phi who inspected the chapter. Following the business session President Mary Ann Saathoff welcomed Mrs. Russell who gave a talk.

paper or plastic drinking cups, they won't drip on the floor All the water drips into the cUp. Mrs. Lillian Herman DEAR HELOISE: I break flour tortillas in fourths and toast them in my front loading oven toaster Then butter them. Delicious! Alice Amunds Anything to do with tortillas is right down my alle\. I tried it and those tortilla bits were just yummy! Then I decided to drop a whole one in my regular automatic toaster to see what happened . . . Popped np just as warm and nice as you please! And with a little butter smeared on top, it was serwmtilyumptioiis. So if you’re in a hurry for a quickie snack and like ’em crisp ’n’ warm, toast ’em! And a big htiu and squeeze to you for that hint, Alice. Heloise Professional women take trip in slides Those women in attendance at last Wednesday’s dinner meeting of the Greencastle Business and Professional Club took a trip at the Presbyterian Church. Judith Reynolds, Wot Id Affairs Chairman, presented Mr. and Mrs. Joh n C. Wright, who in turn presented an exhibition of modeling clothing and displaying jewelry, pottery, and many other items. They showed some of their collection of slides representing a two year stay in Afghanistan, President Wilma Handy read a letter received from member, Irene Huestis, who is now at Warren. The Main Topic was the Vote of the Club to make the initial donation to the Putnam County Hospital for the purchase of New equipment, the Coulter Blood Cell Counter. Taking over in the absence for the next few months activities of the BPW is Vice President Jean Brown, while the president enjoys the winter months at her home in Florida. Battle rages on two fronts By JACK WALSH SAIGON (UPI)—U.S, Marines and South Vietnamese soldiers today battled Communists on two fronts inside Vietnam’s border demilitarized Zone (DMZ) for the first time since the Nov. 1 halt of U.S. bombing of North Vietnam. Heavy fighting raged into tonight with the Marines calling for reinforcements, warplanes, artillery and naval gunfire to blast the dug-in guerrillas. In arranging for expanding Paris talks, President Johnson halted the bombing of North Vietnam and warned Hanoi against using the DMZ as a military camp. A 15-man South Vietnamese reconnaissance patrol triggered the DMZ fighting before dawn on a mission to find Communist guns that hit an allied base from the zone Monday. The Leathernecks went in on patrol four hours later theh radioed for reinforcements. Explaining the DMZ probes, since Nov. 1, a military spokesman said, “the field commander has the responsibility for taking proper securitymeasures to protect his troops.” The South Vietnamese soldiers reported killing three Communists, capturing one and driving off several others while suffering no losses themselves. U.S. headquarters issued no report on Marine casualties with the battle still in progress just 500 yards inside the DMZ above the Leatherneck outpost at Con Thien, which lies just below the six-mile wide buffer zone. Military spokesmea said the allies had detected 267 “indications” of Communist activity inside the DMZ since the U.S. bombing halt. Twenty-seven of these were classified as “significant incidents” involving Communist aggression from the strip. Terrorists today bombed a school and a government building in the capital wounding five Vietnamese.

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