Banner Graphic, Greencastle, Putnam County, 13 September 1974 — Page 3

Friday, September 13,1974

Banner-Graphic, Greencastle, Indiana

Page 3

Mr. and Mrs. John Meier and daughters of St. Petersburg, Fla., have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Harrah,

rural residents.

Mr. and Mrs. Tom Britton and daughters of Indianapolis, spent the weekend with Josephine Alice and family. Mr. and Mrs. Don Allen and Jackie Mitchell have returned home from a vacation which took them through Kentucky, Ohio, Virginia, West Virginia, Washington D.C., and Tennessee. In Madison, N.C., they attended the wedding of James Mitchell to Sharon Webster at the Presbyterian

Cloverdale News

Church. Enroute, they toured Williamsburg, Mt. Vernon, and several points of interest. Wednesday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Paugh included Mr. and Mrs. Wendall Albraugh and Mr. and Mrs. George Casto of Anderson, Ind. “Thot: Good received blesses much-good imparted blesses more.” Our Daily Bread. Sunday afternoon visitors of Mrs. Ruth Brant and Beverly were Mr. and Mrs. Richard King and family from Indianapolis. The Dorsett family reunion was Sunday at the rural home

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rOeoA.-AfeJ*

He blames rolling over on heart condition

By Abigail Van Buren c 1974 by Chicago Tribune-N. Y. News Synd., Inc.

DEAR ABBY: I am 50 and my husband. Walter, is 52. Two years ago he had a heart attack, but he recovered and is now enjoying excellent health. Walter plays tennis at least three times every week, so he's not exactly an invalid, right? However, when it comes to lovemaking, I am told not to “bother him' because he doesn't want to take any chances on damaging his heart. Before his coronary, he wasn’t the world’s greatest lover, but now he has an excuse. (Or has he?) Please ask one of your medical consultants and let me know. Don't advise me to ask Walter's doctor because he is also Walter's tennis buddy. Thanks. MISSING SOMETHING DEAR MISSING: I consulted Dr. Donald B. Effler. the famous Cleveland Clinic heart surgeon, who is cooler than Denton Cooley and hotter than Michael DeBakey. His response. “If \\ alter, age 52, is enjoying regular tennis, but will not take care of his homework, three possibilities come to mind: a) Walter's got something going on the outside, bl Walter’s wife has lost something that must have looked good to him a number of years ago or cl Walter is one of those rare men who loses interest in sex at 52. In any event, judging from his wife’s letter. Walter's past heart attack is most likely a phony excuse. “Very few coronary patients are advised against sexual activity at home. This simple observation, made long ago. gave rise to the aphorism. There’s nothing dangerous about sex, it’s the chasing after it that can kill you.’ " DEAR ABBY: Our 27-year-old son is a college graduate who lives and works a few hundred miles from us. Two years ago he met a very nice girl three years his junior, and they have gone together ever since. My husband and 1 hope to see them get married —since they are devoted to each other and are certainly not too young—but they tell us they have no such plans for now. Recently they rented an apartment and are now openly living together. This bothers me much more than it does my husband. Our son would like some help in furnishing his apartment, and while I would gladly give him things if he were married, 1 feel it is wrong under these circumstances. Yesterday I was asked by a friend to give her my son's address and also his girl friend's, so she could invite them to a wedding. I was embarrassed to tell her the address w r as the same for both. 1 understand that the life-style and morals of these young people are not mine, but I am hurt just the same. Must 1 accept this arrangement publicly, go along with it and keep my thoughts to myself? UNHAPPY MOTHER

DEAR MOTHER: If you want relationship with your son, yes.

to maintain a good

DEAR ABBY: Tell that small-town bartender that he doesn't have to lie. If someone phones the bar and asks if Joe Blow is there, all he has to do is page Joe Blow by calling his name loudly. If Joe Blow doesn't want to answer the page, it's his business. That wav the bartender isn't in the middle. LADY BARTENDER DEAR LADY: Leave it to a lady to figure out how to keep from getting in the middle.

of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Dorsett and son Todd. Relatives present traveled from Greencastle, Belle Union, Indianapolis, and rural Cloverdale. Saturday evening, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ryland of Fillmore, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Nees. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jent and family visited in Cloverdale with relatives on Saturday evening. Robert is a grandson of Jesse Arnold, and has just returned from Thailand after having served a year’s duty with the Air Force. Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Glee Truesdel visited with Mr. and Mrs. Tom Truesdel. Mrs. Tom Truesdel was released from Methodist Hospital on Friday and returned to her home. Friday, Mrs. Mary Logan visited at the home of Mrs. Carrie Foreman and attended the Willing Workers Class meeting. Miss Nan Cook of Tillicoultry, Clackmananshire County, Scotland, and her cousin, Mrs. Marie Archibald of Detroit, Mich., were Tuesday overnight houseguests of Mr. and Mrs. Chester Haltom. Mrs. Haltom and Miss Cook are pen pals. Sunday afternoon, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Haltom visited with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Huber and Mrs. Jenny Huber of Bowling Green. Birthdays include: Sept. 8, Ronald Dorsett; Sept. 9, Robbie Logan; Sept. l5,Edythe Johnson and Nell Lawrence; Sept. 17, Aubrey Moore; Sept. 20, Dorothy and Scott Hudson. Anniversaries include: Sept. 15, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Davis. Roy L. Sandy of Indianapolis was a Saturday visitor of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Sandy Jr. Corp. and Mrs. Allan McClane and children \my Jo and Joseph David are home from Fort Leonard Wood, Mo. on a months leave visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Tom Brown and Mr. and Mrs. Floyd McClane and family. Sunday visitors of Mrs. Olga Snyder were Kathleen Swift and son Robbie of Indianapolis, and Mr. and Mrs. Don South of near Bainbridge. Mrs. Averil Allen was a weekend houseguest of Mr. and Mrs. James Sims and family of near Camby. Sunday dinner guests of the Sims family included Mrs. Allen, Mr. and Mrs. Gary Wilbur and family, rural Greencastle, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Sims and daughter Barbara, who was celebrating her first birthday, and Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Barwell and daughter, formerly of New Mexico. Following the dinner, the family members attended the graduation of Stephen Sims from an electronics school in Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Williams were weekend house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Rodger Williams and family of Advance. Sunday, they accompanied Leslie Williams to Ball State University, and Wanda Williams accompanied her grandparents home to spend part of this week visiting. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McCammack and family of Brownsburg, were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles McCammack and son. Supper guests included Mr. and Mrs. Mike McCammack of Brazil.

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World Of TOPS

Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Bills of Route 1, Greencastle, wish to announce the approaching marriage with God’s blessing of their daughter, Cheryl Anne to David Ray Crawley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Crawley of Bainbridge. The ceremony will be in the Portland Mills Christian Church on September 22 at 2 p.m. All friends and relatives are invited. A reception will be hosted immediately following the ceremony.

TOPS # 573 TOPS No. 573 met for a weigh-in September 2. The queen was Mary Buis and the duchess was Pat May. Thirty-two members attended the September 9 meeting with a loss of 29 pounds. Cathy Taylor and Pat May tied for queen. Jean Ronk and Cheryl Plessinger were the duchesses. Virginia Kendall and June Tilley were the KOPS queens. The monthly queen was Thyra Frost and Virginia Kendall was the monthly KOPS queen. Ann Lyon won the money bowl and the perfect attendance award. The next meeting will be

game night. A cosmetic demonstration will follow the meeting on September 23. New members are welcome to attend meetings which are at 7 p.m. each Monday at the Presbyterian Church in Greencastle. TOPS #604 Thirty-six members of TOPS No. 604 gathered Tuesday, September 10 at 9:30 a.m. at the American Legion Building. They answered roll call with a loss of 37*2 pounds. Mary Frances Strain was TOPS queen with a loss of three and a quarter pounds, while Mary Catherine Caldwell and Ann Shoemaker tied for run-

ner-up Dy iossing two and a fourth pounds each. Linda Brown was KOPS best loser. The officer of the week was Alma Davis and she was also the backslider who lost the most weight. Mary Frances Strain received a pin for loss of 25 pounds. A KOPS graduation party will be given for Linda Brown September 17. She has lost 31 1 4 pounds. A transfer member was welcomed into the club. DECORATING PRICE GLIDE OTTAWA i AP) - When decorating a new home, keep the costs of furnishing between onethird and one-half the cost of the house, says the Consumers’ Association of Canada.

(falwctan

■ ;

Today

The Women’s Study Club will meet Friday, September 13 ai the home of Mrs. R.W. Vermillion. Miss Carrie Pierce will have the program. Saturday The youth of St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church will hold a rummage sale on Saturday, September 14 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. The sale will be in the parish hall of the church on the corner of Seminary and Bloomington Streets. The fall meeting of the District No. 9, Order of the Eastern Star meeting will be with the Groveland chapter as host on Saturday, September 14. The carry-in dinner will be at 6:30 p.m. with the business meeting at 8 p.m. All members are inyited to attend. Castle Squares Dance Club will host a dance at the National Guard Armory Saturday, September 14from fill p.m. Ron McPherson will be the caller. Everyone is welcome.

Sunday

There will be an anmu ° p ^ w qi be meeting of Putnam Countchapter No. • ' ’ t ? 3 q Playhouse Sunday. Septemb Monday September^6 at^ ^ 15 at 2 p.m. at GreencastP- m - b \ a ... rha iv drawing Federal Savings and Loan. ^pS^nnchum. Members interested persons aroy Visiting

welcome to attend.

Sunday The Pleasure Time Bowling League will start their season on Sunday. September 15 at 6

p.m.

Route 40 Saddle Club will have a horse show Sunday, September 15 at Putnam County fairgrounds. The show starts at 10 a.m. There will be classes for all age groups. For $2.50 a horse, all day rides are available. There will be a show rain or shine. Beech Grove Church youth will have services Sunday evening, September 15 at 6 p.m. at the church. There will be a wiener roast at 7 p.m. Monday Monday Book Club will meet at 8 p.m. September 16 with Mrs. Harold Garriott, 708 Highwood . Indies of the Elks called meeting Monday, September 16 at 7:30 p .m. All Elk’s wives and widows are welcome.

Stated meeting of Bainbridge

are urged to attend. Visiting^^

meI ^ r ?virs e Lofs CougOl, 707 C S.

Athey Society C.A.R. will Indiana St., Tuesday, Sep-

Tuesday

Th£ Washburn chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, will meet Tuesday, September 17 at 7:30 p.m. at Asbury Towers. Miss Ruth Latshaw will have the program on “the making of the constitution.” Domestic Science Club will meet with Mrs. Maxine Bell at Cataract Lake Tuesday, September 17. Call 653-6551 for transportation. Applegate Ix>dge No. 155 of Fillmore will hold work in Master Mason Degree Tuesday, September 17 at the lodge hall at 7:30 p.m. Members are asked to please remember to bring pie. Visitors are welcome. Wednesday The Greencastle Federation of Business and Professional Women will meet Wednesday September 18 at 6:30 pjn. at the DePauw Student Union Building. Hazel Grosbach, district director, will speak and operation life will have the

program.

West Madison Extension Homemakers Club will meet at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday, September 18 at the Madison Township Fire Department. Thelma Johns will be hostess.

Today’s member of the Diaper Set is Candace Regina Walton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald K. Walton, Route 2, Cloverdale. She will be two-years-old on September 20. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Sinclair, Route 2, Cloverdale and Mr. George Walton, 209 N. Indiana, Greencastle.

Bring ideas for the holiday boutique project.

tember 18 at 1:30 p.m. at the home of Miss Carrie Pierce, 202 S. Locust St. Greencastle. Mrs. The Federated Reading Club B.F. Handy will have (jjg will meet Wednesday, Sep- program.

meet Sunday, September 15 at 2 p.m. with Gena, Lisa, Dick and Ronnie McMains. All members are to bring a storybook for a hospital child patient, clothing for the schools, and a report on some

historical event of 1775.

tember 17 at 2 o.m.

The Putnam County Senior Citizens will meet for their monthly meeting on Tuesday, September 17 at 7:30 p.m. at the V.F. W. There will be games

and door prizes.

Contract

Bridge

! B. Jay Becker

7

-A

Bidding Quiz

You have the following hand: *A9 VK983 4 K75 * A972 1. Partner bids One Spade and you respond Two Notrump. Partner bids Three Spades. What would you bid now? 2. Partner bids One Spade and you respond Two Notrump. Partner bids Three Hearts. What would you bid now 9 3. Partner bids One Diamond and you respond One Heart. Partner bids Three Notrump. What would you bid now? * * * 1. Four spades. Partner seems unhappy with notrump and there is no good reason to override him by insisting on notrump. He almost surely has six spades, which makes the A-9 adequate support, and he probably has a singleton (or void) in one of the side suits, which strongly militates against notrump play. It is true that your 4-4-3-2 distribution strongly suggests notrump, but you shouldn’t turn a deaf ear to partner’s marked preference for spades. With satisfactory support for suit play also, you should willingly yield to that preference. 2. Four clubs. The possibility

of a slam looms on the horizon, and the best way of announcing this to partner is by bidding four clubs. This doesn’t mean you’ve suddenly found a long club suit previously overlooked; on the contrary, it announces a heart fit and a possible slam if partner has more than a minimum opening bid. Thus partner might have any one of the following hands and go on to a slam over the encouraging bid of four clubs: 1.AKJ872 V AQ764 ♦ AJ + . . 2.4 KQ743 U QJ754 ♦ - * KQ8 3. A QJ854 V AQJ2 ♦ A8 + K5 3. Six notrump. In theory, your partner must have 20 points to bid three notrump, since your heart response might have been based on a bare 6 points. Partner cannot count on more than that except at his own peril. As you have 14 points, rather than 6, you are entitled to lift him to six notrump on the assumption that the combined holdings will come to at least 34 points — one more than the number ordinarily needed for a slam. If he comes home lame, you might give serious thought to looking for a new partner.

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(© 1974 King Features Syndicate, Inc.) Tomorrow : Seesaw.

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