The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 26 December 1968 — Page 3
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Thursday, December 26, 1968
The Daily Banner, Greencastle. Indiana^
Page 3
Engaged
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Dickie Jean Chastain
Ruth Ann Seale
Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Chastain, of R.R. 5 Greencastle, announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Dicki Jean, to M. Richard Coffin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin O. Coffin of Fillmore.
Miss Chastain and Mr. Coffin are both graduates of Fillmore High School and both are now attending Purdue University.
The wedding will take place January 25 at 3:30 p.m. in the Bethel Baptist Church in Fillmore. A reception will immediately follow the ceremony. All friends and relatives are invited to attend.
—Pope
Sharon Cromwell
Mr. and Mrs. James Cromwell, Rt. 1 Cloverdale, would like to announce the engagement of their daughter, Sharon, to Larry Williams, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Williams of Cloverdale.
Both are 1967 graduates of Cloverdale High School.
Sharon is a student at Indiana State University, Terre Haute and Larry is employed at the Chevrolet Plant in Indianapolis. No date has been set for the wedding.
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Fillmore news
By Mrs. Charles Smith
i
Your correspondent hopes her readers will have a Merry Christmas and a healthy and prosperous New Year. The Help-One-Another Club will meet Friday, Dec. 27 at the home of Mrs. Dorothy Sears. Recent callers on Mrs. Ida Day were, Oscar Day, and sons, Johnny and Eddie of Hinesdale, 111., Rev. and Mrs. Wilbur Day, Mrs. Shirley Wison, Mrs. Amy Buis and Mrs. Esther Quick. Lloyd Storm, an employee of American Zinc Inc., has been absent from work for several weeks because of illness. Herbert Zeiner has been ill and unable to work for about 3 weeks. Bert Miller, proprietor of Bert and Betty’s Kitchen, has been ill since Dec. 13, and unable to help in the restaurant. The Annual Music Dept. Christmas Program was cancelled Wednesday night because of illness in the school. Bethel Baptist B.W.F. met at the Union Bldg, in Greencastle, Wednesday for luncheon and their regular meeting. They had their Christmas program with gift exchange. Mr. and Mrs. Junior Cowgill called Tuesday on the Alfred Hanks f&mily.
Mrs. Larry D. Nauman spent last week with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Truesdale at Plainfield. She returned to the home of her parents Monday, her husband is in Berlin, Germany. Mrs. Daisy Youngerman left Thursday for Indianapolis where she will visit her grandson, Larry Westenhofer and family and other relatives. Mrs. Ruth Smith visited overnight Monday in Greencastle with Mr. and Mrs. Doc Wilson. Fillmore School was dismissed Friday morning for the Christmas Holiday. Absenteeism Thursday was high with an estimated attendance of about onethird and many teachers absent also. Miss Jake Shaw has been a patient in the Putnam County Hospital since Dec. 2, for observation and treatment. Mrs. Laura Tharp has been ill and was at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Effie Smith. Roy Phillips is back in Fillmore after visiting his son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Phillips in Indianapolis. Johnson Grocery has moved into their new building in North Fillmore and opened Monday morning Dec. 23rd,
FRIDAY CURB SPECIAL Curb & Carry-Out Oaly 2 Places Boneless Perch, Mashed Potatoes, Gravy, Slaw and Baa 69{ Double Decker Drive In
I Personal and Local
VFW Meeting There will be a VFW Meeting Thursday, Dec. 26th, at the Post Home. All members are urged to attend.
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Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Seale of Gary announce the approaching marriage of their daughter, Ruth Ann, to Walter James Bennett. Mr. Bennett is the son of Mrs. Chloe J. Bennett, 10 Park St., and the late Kenneth W. Bennett. s The wedding will take place in the Methodist Church at Merrillville, Saturday afternoon, January 18. Miss Seale, a senior at Indiana State University will graduate in January with a major in elementary education and special endorsements for teaching the physically handicapped and the mentally retarded. At the beginning of the new semester she will teach a special education class in the Greencastle school system. Mr. Bennett, a graduate of Greencastle High School and Indiana State University, is currently teaching physical education in the Greencastle elementary schools and coaching at the high school. • The couple will reside in the Greenbriar addition east of Greencastle.
Bible Thought
Unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given: and the government shall be upon his shoulder: and his name shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor, The mighty God, The everlasting Father, The Prince of Peace. - Isaiah 9:6.
Aliens to report addresses in January
The Mass was illuminated by the yellow glare from two blast furnaces. More than 15,000 workers dressed in overalls and industrial helmets stood with wives and children to hear the Mass, their faces lit by the flickering light from molten steel. Great clouds of smoke rose from the hissing metal as it poured into conduits while a few hundred feet away the ancient rite of Roman Catholicism unfoldea. The Pope chose the steel nill in one of Italy’s poorest ar.as to demonstratethat the church is concerned with the plight of the worker. The pontiff flew back to Rome in the pre-dawn of Christmas Day and slept less than four hours before rising to celebrate an early Mass in his small private chapel next to his Vatican apartment.
Mr. Harold W. Lauver, Officer in Charge of the United States Immigration and Naturalization Service, stated that the period within which aliens must report their addresses is almost at hand. The month of January has been set for the address reporting period. All aliens in the United States with few exceptions must report their addresses to the Government during this period. Mr. Lauver said that forms with which to make the report will be available at all Post Offices and Offices of the Immigration and Naturalization Service during the month of January. Mr. Lauver urges all aliens to comply with the reporting requirements, as willful failure to do so may lead to serious con. sequences.
Ball State
University receives $100,000
MUNCIE, Ind.-Estel V. Marsh, cha rman of the board of directors of Marsh Supermarkets, Inc., Yorktown, has given the Ball State University Foundation an unrestricted gift of $100,000. Marsh, an alumnus of Ball State, is the national chairman for the 1969 annual fund drive. Qne of four brothers and a sister to attend BallState, Marsh helped his brother, the late E r mal Marsh, open his first store in Muncie in 1931 when both were students at BallState. “We took in $4 the first day we were in business,” he recalled. “Our father had a grocery store at New Pittsburgh in Randolph County. He iwanted me to leave Ball State and come home to help him with his grocery store. I drove a huckster wagon for him. Later I had a grocery store of my own in Portland,” said the chairman of the large Indianaowned food chain. Twenty-five years of Marsh's 37 years in the food retailing business have been with the Marsh firm which opened its first supermarket in Muncie in 1947. The firm now has 86 stores, about 2,700 employees, and a distributton plant at Yorktown with 10 acres under one roof. The firm is the 40th largest chain in the supermarket business in the U.S. Marsh became president of Marsh Supermarkets, Inc. in 1959 when Ermal Marsh died in a plane crash. He is now chairman of the board of directors. Marsh serves mi the board of directors of the Ball State Uni. versity Foundation, the National Association of Food Chains, Merchants National Bank of Muncie, and Acme Warehouses, Muncie.
Home Radarman, Seaman, William Cromer is spending the Xmas holidays with his family on South Jackson St. He is assigned to the destroyer U.S.S. Owens and will report back to duty on January 3rd.
Board of Zoning Appeals NOTICE: The Board of Zoning Appeals will meet in special session on Thursday Dec. 26th at 7:30 p.m. in city hall. The purpose of the meeting will be to consider the request for variance for construction of the new DePauw Science Building on Hanna St. between Indiana and College. The public is invited to attend this meeting.
Wirtz asks for order
Fire Run City firemen made a run to the IGA supermarket, located on the corner of Locust and Franklin Street, Tuesday morning. Christmas trees were being burned. At the time of the run it was not known that the fire was being supervised. No damage was reported.
Visits Parents
Language is inadequate to ex-' press in full measure the significance of God’s perfect Gift, even the Lord Jesus Christ.
Dr. and Mrs. Don Marketto and family of Las Cruses New Mexico will arrive today for a weeks visit with Mr. and Mrs. Don Marketto. The past week he and his family have been visiting his sister, Mrs. R.W. Fulmer and family in Minneapelis, Minnesota.
More snow on the way
Christmas morning tempera, tures flirted with the zero mark in the Far North but overnight lows this morning were somewhat warmer, ranging from 15 at South Bend to 25 at Evansville.
A gradual temperature warmup was in prospect for today and Friday, with highs today ranging from about 30 upstate to near 40 south and highs Friday expected to be in the 50s.
The mixture of precipitation was expected to start later today, changing to rain Friday as temperatures rise.
But the five-day outlook for the period ending next Monday called for readings 4 to 6 degrees below normal.
Royalty Cloaks It In Fashion
LONDON <UPI) — Cloaks have the royal approval in their comeback to fashion. Queen Elizabeth II has followed the style of young Londoners swinging around town in a shorter version of what great - grandmother used to wear. But when the queen wears a cloak, it is with dignity, more than swing. She could not have looked more dignified when photographer Cecil Beaton took an official photograph of her recently in a cloak of deep blue cloth lined with scarlet silk, sdfcured at the throat with two gold roses and a gold clasp, all part of her uniform as “Lord High Admiral of the United Kingdom.” Princess Anne, her 18-year-old daughter, has a sapphire blue velvet cloak to wear with an evening dress, plus a warm check tweed cloak in grays and yellow for chilly winter days. Princess Margaret has a long cloak in pale cold satin with a matching evening gown. Princess Alexandra, the queen’s cousin, wears a short cloak of vivid green facecloth over her tartan skirt when she is visiting the Scottish highland ancestral home of her husband, Angus Ogilvy.
AMERICAN LEGION
New Year’s Eve Dance
9:30 —1:30 Bill GRIMES COMBO
$5.00 per couple-includes Smorgasbord Make reservations now Phone 3-4418
The complaint alleges that the defendant failed to pay several employees legal overtime pay at the rate of one and one-half times their regular hourly rates for hours worked in excess of 44 and 42 hours in the applicable work-weeks since February 1, 1967; and failed to maintain adequate and accurate records of hours worked. The court action was based on an investigation by the United States Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour and Public Contracts Divisions under the supervision of Gerald J. Mitchell, Regional Director.
By United Press International Portions of Indiana enjoyed a White Christmas, after all, especially the South Bend area, and more precipitation was on tap in the form of light snow, sleet and freezing rain.
South Bend had 10 inches of snow on the ground on Christmas Day, but by this morning it had shrunk to 8 inches.
Funeral Notice Former resident dies Tuesday
Word has been received hereof the death of Mrs. J.W. Statz. Mrs. Statz passed away Tuesday in Indianapolis after a brief illness. She was the former Emilouise Gearheart, who lived in Greencastle before moving to Indianapolis several years ago.
Marriage license Raymond Eugene Ford, heavy equipment operator, Poland, Charlene Langdon, Mallory, Greencastle. Steven Leon Marshall, teacher Greencastle, Betty Kay Moore, teacher, Center Point.
In memoriam
In memory of Steven Lee Cassidy who passed away Dec. 26 1963. Dear God forgive a selfish tear, A selfish wish that he were here,
There were others that we know, But he was ours, we loved him so. Missed by MaMau Patterson
Holiday Fatalities
By United Press International The 30-hour Christmas holiday period claimed at least five traffic deaths in Indiana, three of them Wednesday night, to push the 1968 highway fatality toll to at least 1,482 compared with 1,537 a year ago. An elderly Portland couple was killed in a four-car accident near Fort Wayne and a short time later, a State Highway Department truck collided with a car as it rushed to the accident scene, killing the motorist. Authorities said Mark Pearson, 20, Fort Wayne, was killed in the U.S. 27 collision near the scene of the multiple-car wreck. Also Wednesday, Larry Cownham, Muncie, died in a hospital of injuries suffered last Saturday night when his car crashed into a utility pole in Hartford City.
Carrie Pierce entertains needlecraft club
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. —Secretary of Labor Willard Wirtz has asked the U.S. District Court • in Indianapolis, for an order permanently enjoining Smart & Perry Inc., Greenwood, Johnson County, Indiana, from future violations of the overtime pay and recordkeeping provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act—the federal wage and hour law. The corporation employs many persons who are engaged in the sale and distribution of autos, truck parts, accessories, and other vehicles, a portion of which has been shipped into Indiana from other States.
The Needlecraft Club met with Miss Pierce on Friday p.m. with a goodly number present, Mrs. Donald Pitts, president, opened the meeting by leading in the Collect, the pledge to the flag, and the song. She read a “Christmas Prayer.” Correspondence from members away or ill was read. Food was brought for a family, and ten dollars also will be given. Mrs. J.F. Hirt, chairman of the program committee, presented the new programs to all present. Cards were signed to be sent to out of town members. For the program Mrs. Clifford Holley read a sweet story “Why the Chime Rang” by Raymond Alden. The chimes did not ring unless someone made a real sacrifice and not just gifts for display. Pedro and his brother walked miles to reach the city but at the gate an elderly lady was lying in the snow, so Pedro stayed with her and persuaded his little brother to go on and see if he could hear the chimes. But, before he left, he slipped a coin for his brother to place on the altar. All laid their gifts on the altar but when the brother put his coin down the chimes rang for the first time in many years. Gifts were exchanged and refreshments were served. Club adjourned to meet with Mrs. Garce Roberts in January when officers will be installed.
Girls graduate from Central
Business College
Central Business College, Indianapolis campus, announced today that Miss Patricia Ann Wilson, Rt. 1 Reelsville, and Miss Barbara Nichols, Rt. 1 Fillmore, have completed Junior Secretarial Courses at the school. Miss Wilson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lester I. Wilson will be employed by the Milwaukee Railroad starting January 2, 1969. Miss Nichols, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Nichols has assumed employment with Kightlinger, Young, Gray & Hudson Attorneys.
New studded
tires are now legal
“Many Hoosier motorists may not be aware that studded tires are not only legal in Indiana, but highly recommended by the state’s safety authorities,” reports Albert E. Huber, executive director of the INDIANA TRAFFIC SAFETY COUNCIL, INC.
Studded tires, formerly outlawed, were approved by the 1967 General Assembly, Huber added. Some highway authorities opposed studded tires for fear the studs would damage pavements but experience in recent years has shown the safety aspects of the studded tire greatly outweighed any small amount of damage they may do to the road surface.
Huber pointed out that studded tires, while giving much better traction than regular tires or snow tires were still inferior to reinforced tire chains as far as affording the best traction. He also warned that many drivers are lulled to a false sense of security with snow tires. Such tires, he said, are superior to regular ones in show, but provide little or no advantage on glare ice or packed snow.
New innovations in automotive equipment are of invaluable help to the safety movement, Huber concluded, but nothing will replace a cautious, careful driver.
IS YOUR CAR DIRTY? COME OUT TO R0B0
AUTOMATIC CAR WASH
Stay In Your Car And Let Robo Do The Work -
WASH—750— WASH & WAX—$1.00 (FYice Increase Due To Increased Cost Of Operation)
ROBO AUTOMATIC
CAR WASH
1004 Indianapolis Rd.
hints from
mke
By HKLOISK < Kl SE
DEAR HKLOISK: I needed a punch bowl for a party recently and not having one. I made myself the darlingest bowl you ever saw. I’d like to tell you how because it's real easy. I just used my large-size mixing bowl! Measure the height. Then measure around the top edge of the bowl. Cut a piece of aluminum foil twice as long as your bowl measures around, with the width more than twice the height. Cut another piece the same length, but have it only SIX inches wide. Fold both pieces in half lengthwise, then into pleats about one-half inch deep. Put a strip of double-coated tape (that’s sticky on both sides) around the top outer edge of the bowl and stick the larger pleated piece of foil to the tape. Then with your hand, gently mold the foil to the shape of the bowl. Now shape the narrow pleated piece into a circle as a base to set the bowl on. (Looks like your punch bowl is sitting on a pretty tray, i Wrap a piece of gift wrap ribbon in a contrasting color (I used red) around the bowl and attach a bow or a pretty ornament. There . . . you have a most attractive punch bowl all it lacks is the punch! Mis. M. W.
use your imagination and any colors you like. Thanks a million, sweetiepie for your idea. Just think of the do-re-me (that’s money) you’re going to save the gals . . . , Love, Heloise
DEAR HELOISE: When my knit suits look a little wrinkled and crumpled. I put them in the dryer with a slightly damp towel for 10 minutes. Of course. I don't put but three or four pieces in at a time. And I use a cold dryet at first, then set the dial on warm. Mrs. B. M. Lazy
DEAR HELOISE: One of the nicest innovations in our family life is oui “together time." Every night about 7:30 my five youngsters and I devote a half hour to doing fun things together. We dance, tell stories, go creative with crafts, sing, read, cook, or take a walk together. Usually about this time of day mothers have "had it." but anticipating this instead of turmoil, the day isn’t half bad. And you'd be surprised how nicely the next day goes, thinking about the night before with your children. Ann Battafarano
(inis, 1 made one of these and it was precious. And so quick and easy. 1 used green gift-wrap foil and attached red ribbon and bow. But just
That is wha* I call real communion. Heloise Continued on Page 9
KEEPINCTCURRENT
bulb snatcher's bonus:
To remove a broken light bull) without taking the chance ot cutting yourselt on jagged edges, press a large cork against the shattered base ot the bulb and unscrew it easily.
dispose of disposal aroma:
To keep the waste disposal really clean, once a week give it a good squirt of liquid detergent and a little hot water. Let it run for a few minutes with the water turned off. As soon as the foam dies down, repeat and later flush yvith cold water.
look ma, no lumps! Lumpy paint can be easily strained without pouring it from can to can by cutting a piece of screen wire slightly smaller than the diameter of the paint can. Then, by simply dropping it onto the surface of the paint, and pushing it gently to the bottom all of the paint will be above the screen and the lumps underneath.
dip tip: Serve ice cream at a party without the last minute rush. Prepare individual servings ahead of time in muffin tins lined with a double-thickness of cupcake papers. Store the entire tin in the freezer until serving time. comfort resolution:
ing electric heat in your home.
Resolve that early in 1969 you'll call Public Service Indiana and arrange for a quick, no-obligation estimate of the cost of enjoy-
prevent stick-ups: Glasses may be stacked without fear of sticking together if a tooth-pick is placed between each tumbler.
PUBLIC SERVICE INDIANA
