The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 26 November 1955 — Page 2

THE DAILY BANNER, CREENCASTIE, INDIANA. PA«.i: TWO sATIRDAY. XO\ L^IRTR ‘JC. 1»V>.

ri rrm :: uivs CHICAGO. Nov, 26 < UPiPurdue Univer«f1tJ' won two grand champK'®!*hir ,s “ on hcjof" carcass compel.tion with a medium weight Berkshire hog ard a Southdown sheep Friday at th«- International Livestock Exposition. (ONVO^ ATTA<KED RABAT. Moroefo, Nov. 26 ilTPi Moroccan teirorlsts attacked a F'rencii ambulance convoy in tiu .-tiff Mountains ai. 1 kilietl or wour. itul 17 French soldiers. French authorities annotmced heit; today. The ambush in ihe mountains r orth of Fez and ravage acts or violence in major Moroccan citir i n afle it evident S .ltan Sirli Mohammed Ben Yous.-ef had not yet restored order in the protectorate.

I’A RENTS OF DAUGHTER Mr. and Mrs. Harold Dunn. 8 West Seminary street, are the parents of a daughter born Satin day. The baby na* been named Melissa Kay. and weighed ten pounds and two ounces. NOT A M \ EM A VICTIM PITTSBURGH. Nov. 26 (UP) Mrs. William II. St mpel. who definitely is not an amnesia- vict m. asked Allegheny County commissioners today to tell her where she lives. She said her family built a r.ew home in 1951 on a road -.hich since has been abandoned n i stripped of its name, livery trucks got lost trying to 11very trucks got loslt rying to rind where we live."

THE DAILY BANNER ortd ' HERALD CONSOLIDATED Entered in the postoffice at Greencastle, Indiana as sec-r»d j class mall matter under act of March 7. 1878. Subscription price 25 cents per week; $500 l»er year by mail in Putnam County; $6.00 to $10.40 per year outside Putnam County. Telephones 74, 05, 114 S. U. Rariden. Publisher 17-19 South Jackson Street

SOCIETY R

SHOP BANNED ADS

IA M C

SATURDAY NIGHT. NOV. 26

AT THE

X

7

POST 155D HOME MUSIC BY "THE SYMTONES"

A

protect your child against whooping cough

'< M'

•T to

\\ oHLii-wiiiF. ill it? distribution, whooping cough is endemic in large ciiics, becoming epidemic on a large scale c\ery two to four years. The seriousness of pertu'-is, especially i-n young children, is evidenced bv the mortality rate—about 26 percent in infants less than one year old. Children should he vaccinated during the first year of life. Do not wait for an epidemic. It takes several weeks after vaccination for the body to produce antibodies. Ask your physician now about protection from \\ hooping cough for your baby. We carry fresh sto< of vaccine under refrigeration at all times.

£oan Pharmacy

the labrl of OCALITY, ACCURACY AXD SERVICE

ELKS Stag Party AND Fish Fry TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29 Starting at 6:30 P. M a PLENTY OF EATS PLENTY OF FUN BENEFIT CANCER FUND GREENCASTLE ELKS HOME This Elks Cancer Fund is sponsored by Physicians, Dentists, Optometrists and Druggists.

TODAY’S BIBLE THOUGHT I will entreat ‘be Lord - Ex-' dus 8:29.—He does not need to be entreated. He is ready now to shower blessings on His love.l childien. He stands at the door and knocks. We reed to open the door and ray Come in! And by utter faith keen Him there.

Personal And Local News 13 Fiefs

Literary Club Met With Mr*. Cassity 'Ihe Mildred Ahlgren Literary Club of Bainbridg met Tuesdat evening at the h.*nie of Mrs.

I Ed Cassity.

Mrs. D. O. Tate, president, presided and M-s. E. L. Gray i gave the devotions with Miss Mary Bayfield leading the club ! creed and flag salute. Gifts were brought to be distributed to the ..rental patients in our hospitals. ‘ Eed Carpet for Mamie’’ by Alder Hatch was delightfully and pably reviewed by Mrs. Albert

Harshbarger.

Mis. Albert Baleh will be hos•.S3 for our December meeting.

C lub Met With

Mrs. Halford Mercer The November meeting of the Pleasant Gardens Home Demonstration Club was held at the home of Mrs. Halford Mercer. A c isseroie dish was prepared by the lesson leaders and the rest

er standards for college entrance. higher requirements for 1 he d’gre" De'^an.- .-' these schools are .‘70311. heavily endowed, beautifully equipped, it is assumed that in no other places is a ’•superlative education” possible. Nothing could be sillier. Merely because such institutions as Wisronsin. UCLA Texas A & M admit thousands instead of hundeds is no reason to assume their op 10 per cent studjnts are less Tilliant than the Ivy Lea-guers. [ suggest a mule train carload f Eastern alumni venture beyond that old Monongahela. They would find Education is bigger than the eight of ’em. They would find they left the “provincials" at home—none cut there, old boy. They would be appalled i to find that these citadels of j semicolon, seismograph, sylligism and Scipio actually provide professors for their own

sacred colleges.

This trip would be sufficient for the first dose. Don't let's mention Oxford University. Tumors of an older noggin num-

MARRIED WEDNESDAY EVENING

of the “Meal That Measured Up’ ! oer mlght bc fata1 ’ ,Take the

southern route, boys via Ded

Miss Karen Reed is spending the Thanksgiving holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Huber t Reed. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kenesson and son are here from Detroit Mich., visiting Mrs. Florence Snider. Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Reed and daughter. Karen .also Mrs. Kale Reed spent Thanksgiving day in Indianapolis visiting- relatives. Last rites were held in Terre Haute this afternoon for Mrs. Leona Purcell, 77, who passed away in that city on Thursday. She was the mother of Charles Purcell of Roachdale. Members of the Women's Deer Creek Coon Hunters Association please make reservations for the dinner on Sunday. Dec. 4, at Old Trail Inn, by calling 742-R not later than Wednesday, Nov. 30. Edward Wood and Mrs. Pearl Wood and Mrs. Pear! Logue left today for Mississippi. Mrs. Logue will visit her sister, Mrs. C. C. Keyes, in Hattiesburg. Mr. Wood will visit relatives in Ocean Springs. They will return on Dec. 5th. Word has been received of the death of Maurice Burgess, formerly of Coate vilie. on Nov. 18th in Arizona. Mr. Burgess and his fasnily went to Phoenix a few years ago for his health. He was tlie son of the late Glen Burgess and a- nephew of Oran and Almon Buis, of Marion Townshp. Mr. Burgess leaves the wife and two daughters, his mother, one brother and two sisters. Mrs. George Leshima and daughter. Carole, and son. Richaid, of Gallup. New Mexico, are visiting her mother and brother, Mrs. Fay Kessinger and John, R. 1, Coatesville. Mrs. Leshima is the former Margaret Kessinger, a graduate of Roachdale high school and the Methodist Hospital School of Nursing. Mrs. Kenneth Oilar and son, John Ray, and daughter, Eva Fay, were weekend guests of the Kessingers. Mrs. Leshima and children accompanied Mrs. Oilar and children home and will return to Gallup next week.

RESTOR FUNERAL HOME AMBULANCE SERVICE PHONE 841

was furnished by other members

uf the group.

Roll call was answered by each member naming a Thanksgiving dish. Secretary and Treasurer’s leports were read and appxoved. Committee reports were given and plans were made by the program committee for a meeting to plan the program for 1956. Mrs. Albert Kieffaber gave a very interesting report of the club tour held recently. During the social hour contests were given by Mrs. Hubert Burger ami Mrs. Roy Taylor and Mrs. MUo Lane Jr., who with hex two sons were guests of the meeting. The December meeting j will be held at the home of Mrs. j Forest Aker. A 50c gift exchange J will be held and a special Christ- ]

ham.)

mas program is planned.

Blackwood On B rid|je Take Full Advantage Of All Enemy Errors Here is an appropriate hand to end this series on “when not to finesse." It is not a flashy hand. There is no grand slam, no nine card suit, no 1400 point set. Yet there is a point of play which is important—and which is often missed. South dealer. Neither side vulnerable. NORTH Mrs. Keen

Bainbridge Saddle Club Held Meeting

The Be inbridge Saddle Club j members met at the Morton Sale i Barn on the night of Nov. 21st. ] A chili and oyster soup supper |

was enjoyed by all.

Twenty-four members and ten guesfs from Clovcrdale were pre-

sent.

Our next meeting will be a pound party and gift exchange

6 5 2 Q J 7 6 4 K J 2

9 8

EAST

Miss Brash

A A 8

V A K 9 # 10 9 8

3 A J 6 5

6 5

TV TONIGHT WISH-TV—Channel 8

WTH1-TV—Channel 1ft Wrestling ‘ People’s Choice Jackie.. Gleason Two For the Money — Lone Wolf 9:00 — Gunsmoke WRIGHT'S ELECTRIC SERVICE YNestinr'house O 505 N. Jackson St Phone 64 APPLIANCES AND television MI-ES AND SEBVICfl

FAIRLY SPOKEN

Ivy Leaguers Snobbish Toward Western Schools By Margaret Latrobe “Don’t send my boy to Harvard. . .” You want his later life to seem an anti-climax ? The Ivy League, hitherto impervious to Dame Rumor i though not to other dames, of course), must be getting worried. Why else the present deluge of articles in defense of ?ducation at these eight schools? Why else the unveiled assertions hat without a degree from Harvard. Yale, Princeton. Dart mouth, Pennsylvania. Cornell. Columbia or Brown, one might s well stop with Central High ? Like I said. Harvard and its select step-cousin institutes were mtil recently unaware of geography west of the Monongahela River. And for the Ivy League, that is pretty far West, pal. Runners have appeared in Cambridge vith wild reports. Chaps named Lewis and Clark plus an adven-

East 2 *

6:00

Soldier of Fortune

turer, called Fremont have ris-

6:30

Beat the Clock

covered a handful of Johnny-

7:00

Stage Show

come-lately “state supported"

7:30

Honeymooners

universities out in the hinter-

S:00

Two For the Money

lands.

8:30

Always Jan

Michigan. Stanford. Rice, Wis-

9:00

Gunsmok 0

ronsin, Oklahoma—situated in< he corn belt, gold rush and wig-

9:30

.... Damon Runyon

10:00

News; Weather

vam country. Impossible! Places

10:15

which don’t know where their

'

rext 10.000 students are coming

t\TTV—Channel 4

Tom. Unlikely: Not only do they

6:00

Shorty Shehan

rrofess to have straight-A schol-

6:30

_ First Show

ars. Rhodes scholars, yet—they

8:00

Larry Welk

play football, resembling the

9:00

. Champs On Wav

Eastern game of the same name

9:30

Traffic Safetv

except its scores are found in the

10:00

Feature Theater

sports section of the paper in-

stead of the society columns.

One such article states: “When a young man wants a superlative education, he usually comes East to get it." State university “inmates gradually learn the use of commas and can be trained to perform simple feats of logic connected with chain-store masiigement, ethical embalming and other disciplines much revered ny the American demos.” Gee. I always thought Harvard claimed the outstanding graduate school of business administration, a lat-ter-day effort to catch up with the times. Must be wrong again! In the rash of build-ups for the chosen eight members of the Ivy j League is one ^cuous —

A V ♦ *

WEST

Mr. Abel A Q 10 9 V 10 3 2

♦ Q 7

+ A 10 7 4

SOUTH

Mr. Muzzy A K J 7 4

V 8 5

♦ A 4 3 + K Q 2

The bidding:

South West North 1 A Pass 1 NT

2 4 All Pass

In response to his partner’s overcall Mr. Abel got off to the queen of diamonds opening. Mr. • Muzzy won on the board with the • king. He led a club and put up the queen which lost to the ace. The return of the seven of diamond was won in the closed

hand with the ace. WRONG MOVE

Mr. Muzzy now cashed his king of clubs and ruffed his last club on the board. So far, so good. It was on the next play that he went wrong. He led a small spade from the board and finessed the jack when Miss Brash

played low.

Mr. Abel won with the queen of spades. He led a spade to his partner’s ace and ruffed the diamond return. Mr. Muzzy still had to lose two heart tricks for down

c>r-

Let’s go back to the sixth trick where Mr. Muzzy led a small spade from dummy. After Miss Brash played low. the king was Ihe play from the closed hand. OVERC’ALLED Surely Miss Brash could be figured for the ace at this point. She had overcalled at the two level and her partner had already shown up with the ace of clubs and the queen of diamonds. Going up with the king of spades on the first lead of the suit meant the opportunity of firing another spade and thus pulling four enemy trumps at once. As you see Mr. Muzzy had one club loser and two heart losers. Therefore he could afford to lose two spades but not three. Of course Miss Brash coul have made sure of the defeat of the contract by going up with the ace of spades on the firs’ lead of the suit and returning ' diamond for Mr. Abel to ruff. He frnild have put her in again with a high heart for Aothei diamond lead which would hav made his queen of spades a sure winner. But the defenders didn't pla\ like that. And what's the good cf having the enemy .make er ror if you don't take advantage of it?

ANNIVERSARIES Birthdays Mrs Margaret Plummer anc George Patterson, twins. 7f years old Saturday, t Nov. 26th. Wedding Mr. and Mrs. Carl Torr, 1 £e«us ago today, Nov. 26.

Home X: Child ^tndy Clnb r Naomi—? p. m —Mrs Clinton ! Tlam McDonald Meet* Monday f C. Green. j Wesleyan Service Guild- 7 ".O Hone & Chili Study Club wii, j Rebecca—S p. m.—Mrs. \Vil-j-~Mr3. Albert Avery. h ‘ M lay ■ k at . _ . . .- "

home of Mrs. William McClellan 325 North Arlington street. Mrs. Clifford Frazier and Mrs. Cassell Grubb hnve arranged the program. Mrs. Hubert Smaltz wi !

be the gfreSt speaker

IN MEMORY

In loving memory of my son, Corp. Charles W. Buis, who war killed rn action. November 2’’. 194.T e . » More and more each day I nr -

him;

Friends may think the wound is healed.; But they little know the sorrow ■ Lies within my heart cc^reealed | Your mother. Mae Dobb- J

P

CLUB CALENDAR .Monday Modern Priscilla Club—2:30 p. rn.- Mrs. Clay Brother s. Wednesday i 20th Century Club—2:30 p. m. —Mrs. W. L. VanCieave. Home and Child Study Club— r' p. m. — Mis. William McClellan. Thursday W. S. S. Circles Esther—2 p. nr - Mrs. Ray Mosteller. Martha—2 p. m.—Mrs. C. D. W. Hildebrand. Mary— 2 p. m.—Mrs. Clara Shulz

The marriage of Miss Jane Jones and Bill Sibiitt wa-; ■ i . : - ed Wednesday evening at 7:50 in the Fdlmore Methodiat church. The Rev. William Tressler read the vows of the ceremony.

BETA SIGMA PHI INITIATES TEN IN SOLEMN SERVICE

Iv-ft to right are Myra Hutcheson, Charlotte Wkhman. Ruth Ann «- a Mary E. Eitcljorgf . standing are Joan Hutcheson, Marylyn Wells, Marlene Masten, Phyllis Shooniak r ul Mabel JlBcIfelter. Jeanne Carpenter did not arrive until after the picture was taken. The pledges were initiated into the sorority at the Old Trail Inn, following the serving of a tinner to about forty members. WINDS OF 7,600 MILES PER HOUR ARE MADE HERE

THIS MAZE of dials and pushbuttons is the master control room of the newly unveiled $300,0 > qoo wind tunnel installation at Tullahoma, Tenn. Lighted diagrams on the inclined panel < top m ■ le) reflect conditions. Tunnel creates 7.600 mph wind, 10 times sound speed. (Inter nafiouat a'.u ■ di>hotoaJ