The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 11 July 1964 — Page 2
Page 2 SATURDAY, JULY 11, 1964
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
DON KNOTTS
ENDS TODAY A Laugh Comedy For All! 'THE INCREDIBLE MR LIMPET'
I
OPEN AT 6:45 SAT.,,SUN., FROM 2:00
SUNDAY, MONDAY, TUESDAY SHOWN SUNDAY AT 2:25 -5:2 - 8:20 i./'Nkl 1-IICC AT 7.on
ONE SHOWING MON^JUES. AT 7:30 WINNERS OF 27 INTERNATIONAL AWARDS WINNER OF 7 ACADEMIC AWARDS
ACADfMY AWARD BEST PICTURE OF 1957 WILLIAM HOLDEN
ALEC GUINNESS JACK HAWKINS IE BRIDGE ON THE RIVER KWAI mm • ms mu -« sb * Mm ane me
STARTS WEDNESDAY
[-.psprit A t AWKtNCE WEINGARItN PRODUCTION |*e UfiSiDW MOOT Bum DESK KEVNAOS M IBEll cm>
SWAP MEET EVERY SUNDAY AFTERNOON At th» Midway Driv» In Thaotra Jet. U S. 40 and 43
CORRAL DRIVE-IN THEATRE SeeleyviUe, Indiana Bexoffica Opan 7:00 Show at Dusk SATURDAY "MAIL ORDER BRIDI' Buddy Ebsan—Kair Oullao Lais Nattlatan
"HOOTENANNY HOOT" Tha Brathars Four—Shab Waalay
"NORTH TO ALASKA" (Calar) John Wayna—Stawart Granfar SUNDAY-MONDAY-TUESDAY "BRIDGE ON THE RIVER KWAI" (Color) William Holdon—Aloe Guinnoso
"SOLDIER IN THE RAIN" Stovo McQuaon—Tuasday Wald Jackia Glaasan
MAPLECR0FT AUTO THEATRE Cast of Stiiesrille
TONIGHT Trey Donahua—Connia Stavans "PALM SPRINGS WEEKEND" Rebart Mitchum—Elsa Martinolli "RAMPAGE"
Kan Scott—Marry Andars "POLICE NURSE" SUNDAY-MONDAY-TUESDAY Sidnay Poitiar in "THE LILIES OF THE FIELD"
Don Murray—Carol Ohmart "ONE MAN'S WAY"
Meadowbrook DRIVE-IN THEATRE
TONIGHT All Horror Show "THE HORROR OF PARTY BEACH" Plus "THE CURSE OF THE LIVING CORPSE" SUNDAY THRU WEDNESDAY Rock Hudson, Poulo Prantiss "MAN S FAVORITE SPORT?" (Color) Shirlay Jonas. Rossone Broxii "DARK PURPOSE" (Color) MON TUES. A WED. $1 00 CARLOAD
MIDWAY DRIVE-IN THEATRE
SATURDAY ONLY Dusk to Down Shew Fraa Coffaa and Donuts "MR HOBBS TAKES A VACATION" "SPLENDOR IN THE GRASS" "PARRISH" "TOWN WITHOUT PITY" "THE EXPLOSIVE GENERATION" SUNDAY-MONDAY-TUESDAY "ADVANCE TO THE REAR"
"FOR THOSE WHO THINK YOUNG" Plus Cartoons t Other Features ADMISSION SI 00 PER PERSON
TV HIGHLIGHTS By United Press International SATURDAY Summer Playhouse, CBS. “The McGonicle.’’ A half-hour ; comedy with Mickey Shaughnessy and Tom D’Andrea as a pair of sailors whose attempts to arrange a rendezvous for a j young seaman and his bride aboard their aircraft carrier lead to complications. 9:30 p.m. Major League Baseball, NBC. Milwaukee Braves at Pittsburgh (Pirates. 1:30 p.m. Baseball Game of the Week, CBS. San Francisco Giants at Chicago Cubs. 2:15 p.m. Wide World of Sports, ABC. The British Open golf championship from St. Andrews, Scotland: and the Daytona "lOO’’ stock car race at Daytona Beach. Fla. 5 p.m. NBC Sports Special. College ! diving: and a speed-boating exhibition. 5:30 p.m. "The Woman's Touch in Poli- | tics,” ABC. A half-hour female j slant on next week's Republican National Convention. 7:30
p.m.
"Politics '64.'’ ABC. A halfi hour review of this week's GOP platform fight. 8 p.m. ! Saturday Night Movie, NBC. "Edge of the City.” An Army deserter (John Cassavetes) must decide whether to go to police after his best friend (Sidney Poitier) is killed in a fight. Repeat. 9 p.m. SUNDAY Discovery, ABC. Children's show. On the day before the start of the Republican convention, former President Dwight D. Eisenhower appears on this program in an interview with a group of Gettysburg, Pa., school children. The interview was filmed on the back stairs | of Eisenhower’s office on the Gettysburg College campus. 1
p.m.
"Religion and Race: Summer 1964." CBS. A look at the civil rights hole of the emergency commission on religion and race of the National Council of
' Churches. 10 a m.
Look Up and Live, CBS. The start of an eight-part series about the images of man as reflected in curernt production of the stage, movies, television and contemporary music. The first broadcast includes sequences from the film "Winter Light,” and the open theater's off-Broadway adaptation of Friedrich Nietzsche’s "The
Madman." 10:30 a m.
Face The Nation, CBS. Sen. Thurston Morton, chairman of the Republican convention, is
THE DAILY BANNER
AND
HERALD CONSOLIDATED 24-21 S. Jackson St. OroMcestlo, Ind. Buslnoss Phono Ol 3*5151 Samuol R. Raridon, Publish*r Elizabeth Raridon, Busin ass Mgr. William D. Hoopor, Adv. Mgr. Entorod in tho Past Office at Greancastlo, Indiana, as Somnd Class Mod matt or uador Act of March 7, 1171. Subscription Prices Heme Delivery 35c per week Mailed in Putnam Co. $7.00 per year Outside ef Putnam Ca. S3.00 per year Outside ef Indiana $12.00 par year Bible Thought Ezra had prepared his heart to seek the law of the Lord, and to do it, and to teach in Israel statutes and judgements.—Ezra
7:10
The secret of noble character is a heart prepared to seek the law of the Lord and to do it. Personal And Local News A son was born in the Put-j
nam County Hospital to Mr. and Mrs. William Zeigelman,.. , . . , islature
Cloverdale.
GOOD OLD DAYS (Continued from Page 1) are trustee* of the college, Mr. James Talbott, who is also the postmaster, Mr. Rees Hardesty, a cabinet maker, a sturdy citizen of great worth, and president of the board of trustees: Capt. W. H. Thornburgh, the most enterprising businessman of the town and a man of taste, as I soon discovered in our conversation, and Dr. A. C. Steven-
son.
Dr. Stevenson, who is a tall, dignified gentleman is, I learned later from Col, Lynch, a physician of prominence and a native of Kentucky who sought this state because of his position to slavery. He conversed with me most entertainingly on the subject of education in the West, in which because, perhaps, of my acquaintance with Professor Caleb Mills, I take greater interest than heretofore. Dr. Stevenson is one of the trustees of Asbury College and is, as is Professor Mills, an advocate of the establishment of free schools in which he Insists, in addition to the regular curriculum training should be given in agriculture and the mechanical arts. I learned too,
and is a follower and
! great admirer of Henry Clay.
Here to my great delight I heard again the name of Calvin Fletcher, who, I am told, is one of the trustees of the college.
(Continued next week)
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Davis, 605 South Main, city, are the parents of a son born in the
Putnam County Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Woodruff, Spencer, are the parents of a daughter born in the Put-
nam County Hospital.
Myron Carl Clodfelter of Greencastle, a sales representative for International Min-
erals & Chemical Corp. in this j Agricultural Department Friday area, will attend a special | forecast a 1964 corn crop of meeting at the company’s: 3 888,433,000 bushels and a
wheat crop of 1275.304,000
Forecasts Large 1964 Corn Crop
WASHINGTON UPI
The
northern operations offices in
Indianapolis.
Brick Chapel Home Dem. Club To Meet The Brick Chapel Home Demonstration Club will meet Tuesday, July 14th at 1:30 with Mrs. Frank Sanders. The lesson will be on "Terry Cloth.”
Masonic Notice anniversaries Groveland F. & A. M. No. 542 Birthday stated meeting Tuesday, July Lelia Rogers, Putnamville, 14, 7:30 p.m. Friends invited. Ind., 78 years old Sunday, July Fred Everts, W.M. 12th.
AMATEUR ENTERTAINERS WANTED $100 First Prize $300 Total Prizes July 23 24, 25 RUSSELLVILLE TRI-COUNTY FAIR Thursday, July 22, 8:30 p. m. Vocal - Dance Friday, July 23, 9:00 p.m. Instrumental -- Novelty Saturday, July 24, 8:30 p.m. Finals
ENTRY BLANK
NAME .... ADDRESS
Night You Perform (Check above) Mail to John Ratcliff, Russellville, Indiana
j interviewed. 12:30 p.m. Issues and Answers. ABC.
• Those questioned are William Miller, present GOP party chairman, and Leonard Hall, who formerly held the post.
1:30 p.m.
Sunday, NBC. A look at in- | teresting incidents in convention history and distinguishing characteristics of San Francisco, where the upcoming get-togeth-er will be held. 5 p.m. CBS Sports Spectacular. The deciding match for the first world professional grass court tennis championship. At the Longwood Cricket Club, Boston j
5 p.m.
U.S. Summer Olympic Trials, ABC. Boxing and judo events from Singer Bowl at the New York World’s Fair, and equestrian competition at Gladstone, N.J. 5 p.m. Meet The Press, NBC. Gov. William Scranton is interviewed. 6:30 p.m. "Republican Convention Preview,” NBC. Chet Huntley and David Brinkley are anchormen. 6:30 p.m. "Republican Convention Preview,” CBS. Walter Cronkite is anchorman. 6:30 p.m. "Politics '64 ABC. GOP convention preview with Dwight D. Eisenhower, William Lawrence, Howard K. Smith and Edward P. Morgan. 7:30 p.m.
Among the 3,500 freshmen who will be entering Western Michigan University at Kalamazoo this fall is Dennis Cox of Greencastle, who has been getting a two-day advance taste of campus life. The Young Mothers Study club will meet at Robe Ann Park for their annual family gathering and wiener roast to night at 7:30 p.m.
GRACE B.APTIST CHURCH Rev. Gary W. Miller, Pastor. 9:30 a m. Bible School classes for nursery through adult. The Bible in its entirety is taught in our Sunday School. 11 a.m. Morning worship ser-
vice.
6 p.m. B.Y.F. 7 p.m. Evening Gospel Hour. Tuesday, July 14th 7 p.m. Community census. July 15th, 16th, 17th 7 p.m. Christian Evangelism Training Class, i Saturday, July 18th 10 a.m. Visitation. Our invitation to you—To all. who are weary and need rest; j to all who are lonely and seek friendship; to all who sorrow and need comfort: to those bu^ dened by sin and seeking forgiveness . . . this church says welcome and may Christ meet your every need.
bushels. The first production estimate of the year of the 1964 corn crop compares with last year’s output of 4,081,791,000 bushels and the 1958-62 average of 3,670.215.000 bushels of the key livestock feed. The wheat forecast was made up of 1,015,640,000 bushels of winter wheat and 259,664,000 bushels of spring wheat. The wheat estimate compares with prospects last months of an all-wheat crop of 1,213,068,000 bushels. This was made up of 80.863.000 bushels of winter wheat and 232,205,000 bushels of spring wheat. The estimate for the spring wheat crop last month was based largely on prospective planted acreage reported in M^rch. Last year the all-wheat crop was 1,137,641,000 bushels. The five-year average production was 1,252,847,000 bushels. Soybean acreage for 1964 was estimated at 31,715,000 acres, compared with 29,516,000 acres harvested in 1963.
Hospital Notes Dismissed Friday: Mark McGaughey, Vincent Green, Greencastle; Norris Ferrand, Fillmore: James Henrey, Bainbridge ; Sylvia Underwood, Coatesville; Forrest Freeman, Spencer.
Lists Discount Price PITTSBURGH JPI — Westinghouse Electric Corp. announced Friday the elimination of a 16 to 20 per cent discount on the list price of turbinegenerators 16,500 kilowatts and larger. A spokesman said the price increase was necessary to bring selling prices more in line with actual costs.
Joan Improves HOLLYWOOD UPI —Actress Joan Crawford, 56, continued to show improvement Friday in Cedars of Lebanon Hospitalwhere she has bem confined with a recurring respiratory
virus infection.
A spokesman for Miss Crawford said she was "doing fine.” To Build New Plant By United Frets International DETROIT: Ford Motor Co. announced it will build a $90 million auto parts plant south of Detroit that will create 4,000 new jobs. Henry Ford II said the company expects even greater output of cars and truck in the year* to come.
Putnam Court Notes Eve Mae McCoun has been granted a divorce from James L. McCoun, and has had her maiden name restored to Eva Mae Chadd. She was also given custody of four minor children. Theresa Ann Cully vs Edgar Lee Cully Complaint for Abso-
lute Divorce,
Clinton-Madisoii Club Has A Picnic
Brandt In Hospital BERLIN UPI — West Berlin Mayor Willy Brandt entered the West End Hospital Friday for removal of an abcess on his hip.
Sheinwold On Bridge Make Ruff Harmless By Winning Correctly By ALFRED SHEIN WOLD If you can’t stop a defender from ruffing, arrange matters so that he ruffs a trick you were going to lose anyway. This may be more important than drawing trumps immediately. West dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH 4$ K I 63 V AK O K 9 5 4 KQ94 WEST EAST * AQ 4 94 S? *5 QJ 1074 0 QJ 10763 0 8 ♦ A 7 2 4 J 108 5 3 SOUTH 4 108752 9632 O A 4 2 4 6 West North East Sooth 1 O Double 19 14 2 0 4 4 All Pass Opening lead — 0 Q South saw the danger of a diamond ruff, but he thought that leading trumps quickly was the best safety measure. He therefore won the first trick in his hand with the king of diamonds in order to lead a trump at once. This was such a safe play that it cost South his contract. West stepped up with the ace of spades and led the jack of diamonds. Declarer had to play dummy’s king, and East ruffed. (If declarer played low from dummy, East would discard and ruff the next diamond.) Eventually, South led clubs, and West took the ace of clubs and another diamond trick. Down one — at a cold contract. NO HURRY There was no hurry about drawing trumps. The important thing was to win the first diamond trick with dummy’s king. If East managed to ruff the next diamond, he would ruff only declarer’s loser instead of a top diamond. Declarer should lead the king of clubs from dummy at the second trick. West can take his ace of clubs and lead a diamond, but South plays a low diamond from his hand when East ruffs. East cannot get a second ruff, because West’s only entry is the ace of spades. When West gets in with the ace of spades. East has to follow suit with his last trump. This kind of problem may occur even when the opening lead is less obviously dangerous. If West’s opening lead Is the eight of hearts, for example, declarer must not try to get to his hand with the ace of diamonds. He must lead the king of clubs from dummy so that he can get to his hand by way of a club ruff. DAILY QUESTION Dealer, at your left, bids one diamond, your partner doubles, and the next player bid one spade. You hold: S 9 4 HQJ 10 74 D 8 CJ 10 85 3. What do you say? Answer: Bid two hearts. You have only 4 points in high cards, but your distribution is excellent. Partner guarantees support for all unbid suits, so you should have a good fit in hearts and clubs. (Copyright 1964, General Features Corp.)
involve performances in Ohio and New York. First stop for the 40-voice group under the direction of Professor George Gove will be Saturday in Cleveland where a concert will be given before the North Central Jurisdictional Conference of the Methodist Church. Later Saturday evening, after an appearance at a Cleve-land-area DePauw alumni meeting, the entourage will entrain for New York City. New York’s famous Christ Methodist Church will sponsor the choir’s New York appearance, a chapel concert Sunday at 5 p.m. DePauw’s President Dr. William E. Kerstetter will deliver the church’s Sunday morning sermon. The choir also will sing for the worship service.
Three Hoosiers Named To Board Three prominent Hoosiers are among the six initial appointees who have accepted posts on the newly - created President’s Board of Fellows at DePauw University. The Board, which will be further expanded, is designed as a consultative group to assist in devising and executing long range objectives envisioned by the university. It will work in conjunction with the college’s Board of Trustees and Visitors under the direction of the President. Distinguished Hoosiers named to the group include John Burkhart, president of the College Life Insurance Company of America: J. Kurt Mahrdt, pres-
THE DAILY BANNER ident of the Indiana National Bank; and Howard W. Sams, chairman of the board of Howard W. Sams and Company, Inc., publishers. All are residents of Indianapolis. Other appointees are John Swearingen, president of Standard Oil Company of Indiana; Howard Shepherd, retired chairman of the board of the First National City Bank of Young, executive vice presiNew York; and Edgar B. dent of the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, Inc., New York City. Swearingen resides In Glenview, HI.; Young and Sheperd both live in New York City.
Martin Radio & TV Repair Closed for Vacation July 13th to July 27th
On Vacation OFFICE OF Dr. Krider Will be closed from July 13-20
TERMITES CAN BE STOPPED General pest control for Moths, Roaches, Ants, etc. PRICES REASONABLE - RESULTS GUARANTEED Reliable Exterminating Company PHONE COAN PHARMACY - Ol 34123
Choir To Appear In Two Cities The DePauw University choir Friday launched a three-day Eastern concert tour that will
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Save at the friendly First-Citizens Bank and Trust Company
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HIM
NEWS
Sherry Shinn opened the meeting July 6th at 1:30 p.m. at the Evens home. June Canar gave the 4-H pledge and Linda Ellis gave the pledge to the
American flag.
The Clinton-Madison Friendly Club held its annual picnic I
at Robe Ann Park July 9. A: Songs were led by Theresa bountiful lunch was enjoyed by Bruner and Susan Nelson. 12 members and five guests The business was Record after Maude O'Haver had re- Book checking and problems turned thanks. After the busi- Roll call was "Plans For After ness meeting was held in the The Fair.”
afternoon, contests, Password, and other games were enjoyed
by all.
Rhonda
Reel gave
Pact From AF
SAN DIEGO, Calif. UPI
Convair division of General Dy-} Brownies,
namics Corp. said it has been awarded a $3 milli n follow-on contract for advanced telemetry
j and instrumentation for the I Air Force'a eastern test range.
Vicki Aker read the minutes of the last meeting. We then met with our junior leader groups for a few minutes.
Shinn and Melinda a demonstration on Debra Evens gave
a sewing demonstration. Health and Safety report was given by Mary Adamson on “Swimming Safety.” Recreation was by Vicki Earl and Wanda Evans, j
NOTICE! We have moved to our new office. 122 W. Washington (Across from County Jail) Kimball R. Larkin INSURANCE
