The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 26 October 1963 — Page 2
THF DAILY BANNER
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
SAT., OCT. 26, 1963. Page 2
—\\ SI’EAKKK can-type, self-started, self-pro-pellett private enterprise ecomonic development.” She cannot possibly c;u-ry forward her plans for industrialization and development without a considerable degree of governmental involvement.” Therefore, he continued, “if we create the impression that strong government involvement in the economy puts a system beyond the pale, so far as we are concerned, our hopes of identification will be shattered." He left the impression that Americans should not be fearful o! going before the uncommitted nations with the admission that Government has played a key role in our progress. One of Abraham Lincoln's best known sayings applies: the function of government is to do for people what needs to be done, but what they cannot do for themselves at all. or do so well. ATTENDING CONVENTION Mrs. Paul Sutherlin, Librarian of the Roachdale Public Library, will attend the Ken-tucky-Indiana Bi-State Library Convention in Louisville on Thursday, Friday and Saturday of this week. Robert McDowell. Louisville author, will address the luncheon meeting of the Small Library Division Friday on "History and the Historical Novel.” Mr. McDowell is the author of many works of historical fiction including "Tidewater Sprig" and the drama of pioneer Kentucky, “Home is the Hunter." Participants in the convention will include public, school, college, university, and special librarians and library trustees from both Indiana and Kentucky. The Roachdale Library will be closed during the three day meeting.
THE DAILY BANNER and HERALD CONSOLIDATED 17 S. Jackson St. Greencastle, Ind. Entered In the Post Office at Greencastle, Indiana, as Second Class Mail matter under Act of March 7. 1878. Subscription Prices Home I»eli\ery 35c per week Mailed in Putnam County $7.00 per year Outside of Putnam County $8.00 per yeai Outside ef Indiana $12.00 per year TODAY’S BIBLE TIIOl GUT Boast not thyself of tomorrow; for thou knowest not what a day may bring forth. Proverbs 27T. Humanity faces problems today which make the problems of yesterday pale into significance. God forgive ns if we boast ourselves as adequate to solve them without His help.
Married Here This Afternoon
CL! B CALENDAR MONDAY Present Day Clul> 2 p. m.—Mrs. James P. Hughes. Boston Club- 7:45 p. m.—Mrs. L. E. Sheridan. Chapters I and CB of P.E.O.— 8:00 p.m. Mrs. James Poor. Tuesday Progress History Club- -2:00 p. m.- Mrs. Earl Sourwine.
REVIVAL NORTHSIDE FAITH TEMPLE CLOVERDALE Sun.. Oct. 20th thru Sun. Oct. 27 7:45 Evangelist GENEVA BUSLEY Prophetess of the Lord Reveals the intent and dei sires of the heart. Many peo- | pie lieing healed. \Ve urge lyou to attend these services.} t‘ PI HI.1C IS INVITED
Personal And Local News Briefs
Delta Kappa Gamma will meet at the home of Mrs. Harold Hardman. 715 E. Walnut, at 7:30 p. m. Saturday, Nov 2. Jerry Sears, 21, Terre Haute, was lodged in the Putnam County jail Friday by state police on a warrant charging non-support. Corporal George M. Bradford of Mooresville is slated for promotion to first sergeant at Indiana State Police general headquarters in Indianapolis. Susie Case. R. R. 1, Cloverdale, and Judy Scholl, 803 Gardenside in Greencastle, are among 21 women students initiated by Sigma Kappa social sorority at Indiana University. Boy Scout Troop 99 will have have a family piteh-in supper ahd Court of Honor Tuesday, October 29th at 6:30 p.m. in Fellowship Hall of First Christian church. AH registered scouts and tleir parents are invited bring a well filled basket and table service. Coffee will be furnished. a post card from Oklahoma gives some idea of what they are seeing and hearing. The Putnam County boys are still on the move with their eyes, ears and minds open. They are hoping to bring back ideas to improve our county, state and the nation. It was signed by John A. Grimes of Russellville.
ing the ceremony was held in the DePauw Memorial Student Union Building. Those w r ho assisted in the serving were Mrs. John Zeiner, Fillmore, sister of the bride. Miss Wilma Harkness, Indianapolis, sister of the bridegroom, and Mrs. Stephen Sutherlin, also of Indianapolis, sister-in-law of the bride. Miss Virginia Conzelman, Indianapolis, assisted in registering the guests. Miss Sutherlin is a graduate of Greencastle High School and Indiana Central Business College, and is attending Indiana University Extension in Indianapolis. Mr. Harkness attended Indiana University and graduated from Indiana Central Business College and also attends Indiana University Extension. Both are employed in Indianapolis, where, after a short wedding trip, they will make their future home. GOOD OLD DAYS . class, with a high average of 96 bushels per acre. This high record w r as made by Rex Hathaway.
> .. 4 Wmm “ 11
Mrs. Ronald Floyd Harkness
First Christian Church was the scene of the wedding this afternoon of Miss Sarah Frances Sutherlin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy C. Sutherlin, and Ronald Floyd Harkness, son of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Harkness, Indianapolis, in a double-ring cerer.iony performed by the Reverend Maxwell James Webb. Miss Sutherlin, who was given in ma :- riage by her father, wore a gown of white Skinne.* satin. The fitted bodice featui ed a high bateau neckline and three-quarter length sleeves. The controlled dome skin, with a rnedriff insert extending into a back bow, had a detachable chapel train. A satin pillbox held her three-tier elbowlength veil. She carried a bridal bouquet of <>rehids and lilies of the valley. Miss Rebecca Sutherlin served as her sister's maid of honor, and bridesmaids were the Misses Cindy Fuller a n d Donna Reed, Indianapolis, Miss Linda Wright, El wood, and Miss Donna Losev, Greemvood. All of the attendants wore moss green satin sheatn
dresses, featuring three-quarter length sleeves and matching organza overskirts. They wore matching satin pillbox hats and carried basquettes of yellow and bronze fugi mums. The flower girl was Miss Sandra Zeiner, niece of the bride. Mis. Sutherlin. mother of the bride, wore a pearl-green brocade ensemble with moss green accessories and a corsage of salmon sweetheart roses. The bridegroom’s mother w’as dressed in a beige ensemble with brown accessories and a corsage of orange sweetheart roses. Mr. Harkness’ best man was Fred Clift of Indianapolis, ami the ushers for the occasion were Douglas Atkins of Lafayette, and Dave Galbraith, Mike Hodgson, and Hal Bean, all of Indian-
apolis.
Mrs. Evan Crawley, Sr., organist for the ceremony, played a selection of bridal numbers. The vocal soloist was Dean Duvall of Indianapolis. The wedding reception follow-
Sheinwold On Br idge Hasty Play Ruins Defense By Alfred Sheinwold As a rule, an ace has its finest hour when it captures an opponent's king. If you have an ace that pleads for such an opportunity, tell it to be patient. They also serve who only stand and wait. South dealer Neither side vulnerable NORTH A 8 6 2 V 9 5 2
O A
+ K Q 9 8 7 4 WEST EAST
uccn iiuni me uouDieion a-z or clubs. If so, dummy’s clubs would
be no threat.
< Al Tiors PLAY Declarer was more cautious than East. He returned a low club from dummy, allowing East to take the jack. South could regain the lead and return his last club to win the four remaining clubs
in dummy.
If East had been less dramatic he would have defeated the contract by refusing to win the first club trick. Declarer’s best continuation is a low club from dummy. East wins with the jack of clubs and returns a diamond to dummy's ace. East still has the ace of clubs, and the dummy is dead. Declarer wins only one club trick instead of foo’" and has to work hard to go down only one. DAILY QUESTION Partner opens with 1 NT (16 to 18 points!, and the next player passes. You hold: S-7 3 HJ 7 D-J 10 8 7 3 2 C-A J 5. Answer: Bid two diamonds. Safety is only part of your idea. If partner has 17 or 18 points and good diamonds, he will bid again, and then you will be happy to go to game in notrump. If partner has a lesser hand, you will be pleased to play the hand at two diamonds.
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AKQ94 *73 10 643 VJ7 0965 OJ 10 8732 * 3 * A J 5 SOUTH * A J 10 5 4? A K 8 O K Q 4 * 10 6 2 South West North East INF Pass 3 NT All Pas* Opening lead — 4 South won the first trick with the king of hearts and led the six of clubs. West followed with the three, and declarer played dummy’s king with a flourish. With an even grander flourish East took the king of clubs with the ace. You could almost hear the drums and trumpets in the background. If you had a keen ear you could also hear the defense collapse. East returned a diamond to dummy’s ace. hoping that South had started with only 10-6 of clubs and that West's three had
Home Laundry League 10-22-63 \Y Moores Shoes 17 Hinkles Dance 15 McMillans 15 Home Laundry ll 1 ^ Starrs 13 PepsiCola 12 Headley's 10 ^ Torr’s 10 Over 350: C. Masten, 456, C. Lear 430, K. Bennington 426. R. Black 423, P. Lambert 419, J. Bean 418, M. Boswell 416. M. Shaw 416, N. Wood 411, C. Thomas 406. B. Tharp 400, M. Templeman 393, R. McKee 391, M. Cassell 390, J. Rinker 386, J. Taylor 385. M. Rader 375, K. Scott 367. V. Starr 361, B. Alexander 360, E. Roach 358, M. Allegree 352.
C ALLS OUU FIGHT TIPTON, Ind. UPI—Tipton Circuit Judge Oliver Wheatley Friday night called off a scheduled 10-round “punishment" fight by two teen-agers wearing 16-ounce gloves in a courthouse record room.
ELKS CLUB JUKE BOX DANCE Free Musis Free Snacks Sat.. Oct. 26
LAD0N - ROACHDALE 7:30 FRI. SAT. SI N. MATINEE 2:30 SUN.
KIRK DOUGLAS LAURENCE OLIVIER JEAN SIMMONS CHARLES LAUGHTON PETER USTINOV JOHN GAVIfl
-.TONY CURTIS
SPArtaCIIS
TECHMICOLOR A UNIVIKAl INTEAH.'lONAl .rttAlt
We're your wardrobe’s best friend. Old Reliable White Cleaners.
ANNIVERSARIES Birthdays David (Tobe i Nelson, 89 years October 26th. Carl Douglas Berry, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Berry, Kendallville. Ind.. and grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Newgent. R. 1, Greencastle. 4 years old today.
Now... new name, new size, new style, new spirit, new car!
Shell Heating Oil dealer offers free budget plan “Let us divide your heating oil bills into easy-to-handle monthly installments—no carrying charges or other extras.’*
ELLIS OIL CO. Plant Phone OI. 3-5818 Res. OL 3-9084 Wayne Nelson Phone OL 3-9523
City Judge
Lawrence Crump
FOR ECONOMIC BUSINESS-MANAGED CITY GOVERNMENT (Paid Political Advertisement)
Announcing FAIRWAY RESTAURANT Will be closed Monday thru Thursday of next week for re-modeling and redecorating. Open for business Friday, November I. BILL & HAZEL
DANCE SAT.. OCT. 26th
John Wood Combo American Legion Post No. 58 Dancing Every Saturday
New CHEVELLE ! by Chevrolet
Only this could come between Chevrolet and Chevy IT. The Chevelle is a highly polished car on a trim 115inch wheelbase. Remarkably agile and easy to handle and park. But it’s roomy inside, with many of the comforts
you’d expect in a bigger car.
Its ride comes from the people who developed the Jet-smooth kind. Its four engines—V8 or 6 —carry that irrepressible Chevrolet spirit all
See five entirely different lines of cars at your Chevrolet Showroom-CHEVROLET, CHEVELLE, CHEVY H, CORVAIR & CORVETTE JIM HARRIS CH EVROLET - BUICK
wiiliUi trie veil All
Ncii- Chevelle Malibu Sporl Coupe (foreground) with Malibu Super Sport Converlibit the way up to 220 hp*. Its lively, graceful styling and Body by Fisher craftsmanship make its modest price all the more remarkable. And it comes in three series and eleven models—wagons, sedans, sport coupes, convertibles.
Want to check further? Consider this your invitation for a real hood-raising, door-slamming, seat-bouncing, wdieel-turning time of it at your Chevrolet dealer s. ^optional at extra cost.
MSN. Jackson St.
Greencastle, Ind.
I'M GOIKG TO VOTE FOR.... LAWRENCE CRUMP FOR CITY JUDGE
because he will bring a fresh view to facing up to the reality of an ever-changing world.
VOTE REPUBLICAN
(Paid Political Advertesment)
