The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 19 December 1964 — Page 2
The Daily Banner, Greeneastle, Tndiana Saturday, December 19, 1964
Sheinwold On Bridge Some Tricks Come Back If You Turn Them Down National Men's Team Champion A beginner must be taught to win a trick whenever it is offered to him on the principle of the bird in the hand. A good player is not in such a hurry because experience has taught him that some trick's don’t run away. Sooth dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH * A 2
K 6 3
O J 10 7 * 10 8 7 42
BELLE UNION SCHOOL NEWS The annual P. T. O. Christmas program will be presented in the Belle Union gym Tuesday, December 22nd at 7:00 p. m.
WEST A 974
S? Q J 16 4
O 843
A K53
EAST 4 85
A 9 8 7 2 O KQ95
■* J9
SOUTH 4 K Q J 10 6 3
V 5
O A 6 2
South
* AQ6
West North
Emf
1 4
Pass 1 NT
Pass
3 4
Pass 3 NT
Pass
4 4
All Pass
Opening lead —
9 Q
West’s queen of hearts won the first trick, and South ruffed the next heart. Declarer then led a trump to dummy's ace and returned a low club to try a finesse with the queen. West won with the king of clubs, and that was the end of the defense. South ruffed the next heart, drew the rest of the trumps and led out the ace of clubs. The jack dropped and the rest of dummy's clubs were good. South got rid of both diamond losers on dummy’s long clubs. ’’Why were you in such a hurry to scoop up that first club trick?” East grumbled as the opponents scored up the game and rubber. CITES RULE ‘‘That's the rule,” West defended himself. “Second hand low, third hand high, and fourth hand win the trick if
you can.”
That’s the rule they teach bridge players in their cradles, so East had to smile politely and change the subject. It’s both useless and impolite to expect your partner to play be-
yond his strength.
Since readers of this column are all as strong as Samson, we can see that West would defeat the contract by refusing the first club trick. He will get his club trick later, and East will get two diamond tricks. Declarer can set up dummy’s long clubs, but he can never get to them since
dummy has no entries.
A strong West player would notice that East played the nine of clubs on the first club trick. If this play indicates the J-9, West shuts out dummy’s
All the grdae chlidren will be “dress - up” day for the students of Belle Union as the day will begin with a religious program recalling the always beautiful Christmas story. This will be followed by a gift exchange, singing of carols and refreshments.
In the early evening the Panthers will play Coal City at Reelsville. Following the ballgame. the Junior Class will
THE DAILY BANNED AND HERALD CONSOLIDATED 26-28 S. Jackson St. Grooncastlo. Ind. Business Phono Oi 3-5151 Samuel R. Rariden. Publisher Elisabeth Rariden, Business Mgr. James B. Zeis, Managing Editor William D. Hooper. Adv. Mgr. Entered in the Post Office at Green, castle, Indiana, as Second Class Mail matter under Act of March 7, 1878. Subscription Prices Heme Delivery 35c per week Mailed in Putnam Co. $7.00 per year Outside of Putnam Co. S8.00 per year Outside of Indiana $12.00 per year Bible Thought Behold the Lamb of God. which taketh away the sin of the world. John 1:29.
Ag. Department Puts Farm Debt At $36.6 Billion
School vacation then begins, and regular classes resume on
January 4. 1965.
Reelsville
School News
(Dec. 21 - Jan 4)
Dec. 22—P. T. A. Christmas program in the Gym at 7:30
p. m.
No reporter has ever been
sponsor a sock hop “around the I S iven greater news to broadChristmas tree” at the B. U.' cast to the world than 111131
gym. |
Personal And
Local News
A son was born Friday at the Putnam County Hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mat-
thews of Spencer.
The Putnam County Auto License Branch will be closed Friday and Saturday, Dec. 2526, in observance of Christmas. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hartmar. Bainbridge, Route 1, are the parents of a son born Friday at the Putnam County
Hospital.
City firemen were called to the Paul Gould residence, 31 Sunset Drive, at 3:25 Friday afternoon. They reported a faulty kitchen stove. City Officer Alva Hubble arrested Pauline Smythe, 41 Cloverdale, at 12:35 this morning on South Bloomington Street, charging her with driving 50 miles an hour in a 30mile posted zone.
Dec. 23—School Christmas Program, exchange of gifts. Dismissal for vacation will be
approx. 11:00.
Jan. 4—School regular time.
resumes
Fillmore
School News December 21— PTO-Chorus to present Christmas program.
December 22 —Cascade vs Fillmore. Seniors to serve supper 5 until 10. Sock hop until
11 o’clock.
December 23—School Christmas treat furnished by teachers. School dismissed at 10:30 a. m. FHA dance 8:00 p. m. until 12:00 p. m.
ANNIVERSARIES Birthday Beth Ann Fogle, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Fogle, R. R. 1. Greeneastle, 3 years today, Dec. 19th.
WASHINGTON UPI — The Agriculture Department estimates the farm debt on Jan. 1 will total $36.6 billion, up $3.4 billion, or 10.2 per cent, from
Jan. 1, 1964.
The total debt will include real estate debt of $18.8 billion, up $2 billion, and non-real estate debt of $17.6 billion, up $1.4 billion, from Jan. 1 1964. The real estate debt hopped up 11.5 per cent while the hike in non-real estate debt was 8.9 per cent. The department said this was the first time since 1960 that real estate secured debt rose considerably faster than non-real estate debt. The department said the rapid rise in the real estate debt to a large event reflected low
term basis and a desire of lenders to have greater securi- Mrs Cox Hostess ty on their loans, the depart- To Tip To pp er C i u b ment said.
enneui ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY *
Christmas time anytimel Count on Penny's for convenient
Credit... Just buy it.. | Charge it ^
OPEN TONIGHT Til l. »:00 W Penneys in Greeneastle will be open every night till 8:00 until Christmas
~ve. Buy all your gifts at Penneys.
West Clinton Twp. I Mr. and Mrs. Morris Irwin Mr. and Mrs. Paul Nichol and Mrs. Aileen Overstreet entertained friends with a card s P enl * a-sl Saturday in Indian-
review of agricultural Tip Toppers Home Demon- Saturdav evenine apolis. There were several
, stration Club met at the home P art y on ^aturdaj evening. ^
and Madison ‘ *' enjoyed their P ait
In a
finance, the department said
taxes levied on farm real estate °* ^ Irs - Fla^P 11 Cox, Dec. 15
in 1963 increased by $70 million, or 5 per cent, above the amount levied in 1962. Preliminary reports indicate 1964 levies will be up another 5 per
cent.
Government purchases o f
dairy products in November ^ thaTTh e "'h a d'written 7o7~our eluded: Butter. 316,000 pounds; ^ ^ ^ the HaHg
cheese, 4.8 million pounds; and non - fat dry milk, 13.8 million pounds. This compares with 1963 purchases of butter, 1.8 million pounds; cheese 12.4
The Clinton
Friendly club _ _
The meeting was called to Christmas party in the home of order by the President Mrs. ^j rg j ra Hutcheson. After all Bealyn Milhon, with the pledge j la( ^ finished eating a lovely to the American Flag, and the m en soon began playclub creed. j n g car( j Sj an d ladies had their Mrs. James Goodin led us in program, also exchange gift to singing the song “Tip Toppers” secre t Pales and a grab bag.
departed late thanking
Invin's pupils who took
In speech contest.
Mrs. Ray Clodfelter has helped with parties at Countryside Inn this week.
IN MEMORY
In memory of Charles H.
Mrs. Hutcheson for a most en- Smith : v ' ho P assed a "’ a y Dec ‘
joyable evening.
His smiling way and pleasant
face
Mrs. James Goodin installed Mr> and Mr8> Gerald Clodthe new officers. President, f e ]f er entertained with a party
Mrs. George Walton. Vice for their aunti Mrs . vViHiam Are a Pleasure to recall. President, Barbara Boschen, Wp ] ter 0 f Q arv i n( j on Sunday He had a kindl ‘ V word for each
er prices for feeder cattle and pounds; and non-fat dry milk, Secretary, Mrs. Charles Chest- e y0njng There were around ^ d d * ed
less costly feeding operations, and smaller incomes of cattle producers and feeders. But it also may have reflected a desire of borrowers to place more
of their financing on a longer ! dry milk, 111.3 mlilion pounds.
3.8 million pounds. nut. Treasurer, Mrs. Jack An- fjf^y relatives attending and all Uncommitted stocks on hand derson. enjoyed a luncheon together, as of Nov. 30 included: Butter, j A t ^ on of .'all departed late, hoping to 27.4 million pounds: cheese,: flcers Traini alI members meet again soon.
25.1 million pounds; and non ‘ fat 1 a ff ended
Sadly missed by Father and Mother, Sisters and Brothers
Indiana Republicans Losing Conservatism
Mrs. George Walton reported on the County meeting she attended at the Fair building. Eleven members and two guests were present. Mrs. Cloyd Allen gave a re-
port on safety.
INDIANAPOLIS UPI —Indi- ■ ana, a state that pioneered for the populus 11th and 4th. Disthe nomination of Sen. Barry | tricts and the 10th District
M. Goldwater, has lost much
of its conservatism.
Republican leaders at two meetings this week took action that might herald the unseating of oldtime GOP rightwinters because of the landslide
Trouble spot or jackpot dream a little. You’ll be thrilled with our Top Quality plus our Top Value Stamps. Old Reliable White Cleaners.
It was voted to send and pay the expenses for a delegate to
The vote against the reigning attend t h e National Home powers probably will be heavi- Demonstration conV ention to be
er, when the conservativemainstream issue is raised at
later meetings.
More significant yet was the cessories in the
action in the inaugural meet
victory of the Democrats in the lnciiana Republican gor j es usefulness, beauty, prac-
Mayors Association the follow- ^ convenient> where to find il18 ’'’'y - them, typ es > arranging, bal-
The organization adopted a
pressure on Walter Beardsley reso i u tion saying the Demo- \ n n tv,* and Mrs. Cecil Harden, Indiana cratic landslide in this state A repo 1 as ^ lven on the of thP rnp national landslide m this state Xmas party he]d at ^ new members of the GOP national ca]]g for a GOp re c 0gni ti 0 n of „ nnimnnit v h.nimr
committee, and on State Chair
£ 1 1 1 x
X
3
x X X X
X X 1
Mrs. Chas. Chestnut reported s on outlook.
X X X X X 3 X X X X X X 4
She X
X
acces- x
X
held at Purdue in August. The lesson was given by Mrs. Charles Chestnut on “Ac-
Home.”
emphasized, selecting
November election.
The upshot may be terrific
Eitel’s
Flowers 25 fo Off
On All
CHRISTMAS BOX CARDS Do-It-Yourself CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS NOVELTY CHRISTMAS CANDLES
t
-11 Children
man Robert N. Stewart to support the ouster of Goldwater’s hand-picked national chairman,
Dean Burch.
destroyed the determined.
home, was not
Hospital Notes
KINSTON, N. C. UPI —- Five children died early today when fire destroyed their frame
home near here.
The five, their ages ranging from 6 months to nine years,
Dismissed Friday: Shirley Talley, David Sink, Jesse York,
Estill Meek, Violet Taber, Mrs. were the children of Mrs. Verda Paul Smith and daughter, Spence, who escaped without
long club suit by refusing the Greeneastle; Mrs. Jerry Or- injury from the burning tenant
man and son, Poland; Frank house about five miles west of
Walters, Coatesville; Phyllis here off U. S. 70.
Powell, Rockville.
community building in Clover-
“the people’s desire for political jdalei twenty three memb e rg
moderation.” Extremism ap- and attended>
peared to be the chieftarget. , Secret sister ^ were ex .
The group, who possess the . . . ..
, . ^ changed and the meeting was only remaining formidable Re- ,. . ... .. . , „
__ ,, . . , . . dismissed with the club collect. They apparently to date have publican power m the state, r, , i. t . .
, . . . ^ A ^ „ Refreshments were served by
been against dethroning the also resolved that the Novem- the bogtess right-wing national party head, her debacle of the party should "
The GOP state committee bring about “realistic recogni-} voted to indorse the policies of tion of the decisive importance the three leaders this week, but of the middle class, and a it was significant that there broader base of appeal to all
were six members who dissent- voters as individuals, if the Re- Marshall, the administration's yy- r i r • •• ed from the indorsement— the publican party ever is to win top civil rights troubleshooter, ^ y ^ iflCDlOY'X 0T l IV 0^ Dll Cl tSZCCCt committeemen and women from again.” is resigning his Justice Depart- I if J J <3
Marshall Quitting WASHINGTON UPI—
TERMITES CAN BE STOPPED
General pest control for Moths, Roaches, Ants, etc. PRICES REASONABLE - RESULTS GUARANTEED
Reliable Exterminating Company
PHONE COAN PHARMACY - OL 3-3123
Burke ! If X
If y
Good Old Days-
first trick. If East’s nine is played from 9-6. West can wait to play his king on the jack of clubs instead of the queen. Either way the club
trick will not run away. DAILY QUESTION
Partner opens with one spade, college grounds. Seeing the and the next player passes. You horse was getting beyond her hold: Spade 9 7 4. Heart Q J control, she pulled the animal 10 4, Diamond 8 4 3. Club K 5 | sharply into the sidewalk near 3. What do vou say? i Mrs - Dunbar's residence on ColAnswer: Bid one notrump.' * e £ e Avenue. Mrs. Meikel was
The hand is just barely worth a response since you have a count of 6 points. Since you have neither good support for partner's suit nor a good
The victims, all sleeping in the same room when the fire broke out about 3 a. m„ EST, included five-year-old twins.
thrown out and suffers some severe injuries. Her left shoulder is badly sprained, but there
were no bones broken.
Steel Talks Resume Jan. 5
of your spend in
own you notrump.
suit
must re-
st j*
k if If if v I y y y y y y y y y
EITEL’S FLOWER CEMETERY WREATHS
AND
BOUQUETS
New Swim Wear
SAN FRANCISCO UPI — Professional swim dancers in North Beach nightspots will get the perfect Christmas gift this year for the woman who has
everything.
Police have announced that the dancers must wear pasties j or nets after Christmas and that performers undraped the waist will no longer
PITTSBURGH UPI — Bargainers for the nation’s basic steel industry and the United Steelworkers Union (USW) were encouraged today by the progress of their first round of
talks.
Negotiations were recessed Friday for the holidays and will resume here Jan. 5. The union’s contract with the industry runs out next April 30. If no agreement is reached by that time the rank-and-file of the nation's third largest union is free to
strike the next day.
to Both David J. McDonald, ^ USW president, and R. Conrad Cooper, chief bargainer for the
$1.99 to $6.99 Guaranteed Not To Fade
jl j tolerated.
* Said Police Captain Charles ‘‘ Big 1 , 1 ” st ® el firms ' ^pressed X Barca Friday, “bare-bosomed Spir ‘ t Of /° od wil1 when S 1 dancing just wasn’t good the- ^ ™ et Wlth “ ewsmen ^er
I the adjournment.
Depart-
ment post. He will be replaced by his chief aide. John Doar. President Johnson Friday announced Marshall’s resignation as assistant attorney general in charge of the department's civil rights division and Dear's appointment to the post. Marshall, one of the architects of the new civil rights law, has been a key figure in nearly every rights crisis since he joined the Justice Department in 1961. In a letter to Johnson he said “compelling personal reasons” prompted him to resign his post. i
I would like to extend to all of Virginia's friends and neighbors, to the hospital staff and doctors and to all who helped and prayed for her during her long illness, my most sincere thanks and lasting gratitude. In her memory, at this time of the year. I would like to wish all of you a "Very Merry and Joyful Christmas and my deepest hope that everyone may enjoy the very best of health, happiness and prosperity during the coming New Year. May God bless you all and bestow the best of everything upon you.
Elmo Sweet
17TH MARRIAGE—Hotelman and Baptist preacher Glynn Wolfe, 50, gets a marriage license in Los Angeles with 18-year-old De Merle Rankin Wolf for his 17th trip to the altar. She had divorced him three weeks before because he was seeing too much of a previous wife. He has had 15, one of them twice and now De Merle a second time. All teenagers. De Merle has two children by a former husband.
USE YOUR CREDIT
Rus-sells
OPEN KITES TILL 8:30 P.M.
CHOICE COLORS LIVING ROOM SUITES PRE - XMAS TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE Now is the time— To get double your old suites value —- and use it as a down payment. 12 new suites to select from Hurry.
OFF TO THE FAR EAST— Bob Hope and actress Jill St. John ■it their “steed” in Los Angeles, a Military Air Transport Service jet, before taking off with a troupe of entertainers for GI bases in the Far East. The 25,000-mile tour includes Korea, the Philippines, Guam, Thailand, South Viet Nam.
So that our employees may have a vacation We Will Be Closed December 22th to January 5th
Be looking for you January 5th
SATELLITE DRIVE
IN
420 BLOOMINGTON STREET
