The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 9 February 1965 — Page 2
t Th« Daily Bannar, Graancastla, Indiana Tuaaday, Fabruary 9, 1965 Editorial-Wise Inspiration From A Ch ild Probably there are a number of readers of The Daily Banner who are not familiar with the Greencastle connection of the little girl featured in an editorial last week in The Indianapolis Star. The child is a niece of Mrs. Mildred Armstrong, and a granddaughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Rollie Staten. The Star editorial follows: “Ten-year-old Barbara Staten has seen more tragedy in the past few months than most of us are called upon to absorb in a lifetime. And she has endured pain such as few persons will ever know. This courageous lass lost her parents, brother and her grandmother in the holocaust at the Fairgrounds Coliseum and she herself suffered burns over 70 per cent of her body. Twenty-four days on the critical list in a hosptial ended with the fear that the uncomplaining girl would undoubtedly be a cripple for life. Indeed, at the time she started therapy at the Crossroads Rehabilitation Center, this young lady could not even sit up. She is a fifth grader today, back in school and studying, among other things, ballet. She walks with a barely perceptible limp. She has undergone surgery several times and more is in the offing. Last week, for many understandable reasons, this girl was named Easter Seal Child of the National Society for Crippled Children and Adults. She will visit President Lyndon B. Johnson in the White House during the spring as part of her official duties with the society. Indianapolis wall never forget that tragic Halloween night at the Coliseum when so many useful lives were suffed out wtih an instant of blast and flame. Barbara Staten will be one of our many reminders of that dreadful night. But she must know that the people of Indianapolis and the state as well are rightly proud of her for her magnificent courage and undaunted determination to get well so that she may live a useful life. It is more rewarding yet that, in Barbara s words, she wants “to help people in pain and trouble.” She has known enough of both to have a unique understanding.”
Indiana Property Tax Collections Will Be Higher
THI DAILY MUNIR
AND
HIRALD CONSOLIDATED 24-21 S. Jocktan St. GrttncaiHa, lad. Butin*** Mien* OL 3-S15I Samuel R. Raridan, Publi*h*r Norma Hill, G*n. Mgr. Elizabeth Rariden, Butin*** Mgr. Jam** B. Z*w, Managing Editor William D. Ha*p*r, Adv. Mgr. Entered in th* Rost Office at Greencatti*, Indiana, at Second Clou MaE matter under Act ef March 7, 1171. Subscription Price* Ham* Delivery 40c per week Mailed in Putnam Co. $S.OO per year | Outside of Putnam Co. $10.00 per year Outside ef Indiana $14.00 per year Bible Thought Having then gifts differing according to the grace that Is given to us, whether prophecy, let us prophesy according to the proportion of faith. Romans
12:6.
Every talent or endowment is : a gift from God. Every such | gift is a sacred trust. It ought to be used with fidelity toward ' God and with love toward other
persons.
Personal And Local News V.F.W. Ladies Auxiliary will meet this evening at 7:30 p. m. at the Post Home. St. Paul’s Study Club will meet Thursday at 1:30 p.m. with Mrs. Donald Riley. Woman’s Study Club will meet Friday afternoon at 2 o’clock with Mrs. Elmer Seller. Delta Gamma Alumnae will meet with Mrs. Kenneth Wagner at 1:30 Thursday after-
noon.
Mr. and Mrs. Larew Moon of Plainfield visited Mr. and Mrs. William Price, Sunday after-
noon.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Cagle, 405 Bloomington Street, wish to announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Sandra Kay, to Robert Wayne Porter. Mr. Porter is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Porter, 506 North Erie Street, Rockville. An April wedding is being planned.
Craft Open House Set For Thursday The Craft Open House, which was postponed because of bad weather, will be held in the Community Building at the Fair Grounds on Thursday, February 11, from 1:00 to 4:00
p.m.
The meeting is sponsored jointly by the Putnam County ' Craft Club and the Home Demonstration Club Council. Any organization working with ! crafts is invited to send representatives, as well as any individual who wishes to learn
worthwhile crafts.
After the open house a list of crafts to be taught will be sent to people registering. They may indicate their choice and will receive further information about learning the various
crafts.
The Home Demonstration
Dr. J. A. Throop has returned Council wil1 serve li * ht refres h-
INDIANAPOLIS UPI —The Indiana Taxpayers Association said that $609 million will be collected in property taxes this year, an increase of more than $38.3 million over 1964. Executive secretary Walter T. Horn said only 11 of the 92 counties decreased property taxes In the past year. He said the 1963 Legislature enacted legislation aimed at relief for property taxpayers. “However, more revenue from new sources seems to have been considered as merely more
governmental money to spend and the plight of the property taxpayer becomes steadily more critical,” Horn said. Horn said to make the outlook more gloomy, the current legislature is considering bills "for increased spending, increased borrowing and higher limits in property tax rates.” This year’s tax rates rang* in size from $1.80 in Lawrenceburg Twp. of Dearborn County to $12.35 in Calumet Twp. of East Gary in Lake County.
from Florida where he visited the past three weeks with Tab
Christie.
The Good Cheer Club will meet Thursday, February 18th instead of February 11th as previously announced. Mrs. Audrey Etaley has accepted the position as receptionist in the office of Dr. D. H. Austin. 201 South Indiana St. The Happier Homes Home Economics Club will meet this evening at 7:30 o’clock with Mrs. Beryl Kerr, 1015 South Indiana Street. There will be a meeting of
ments.
BAINBRIDGE SCHOOL NEWS Pre - school roundup of all prospective first graders that would attend the Bainbridge school this year is to be theld on Friday, February 12, at 1:30 in the Bainbridge Lions Club building. A child must be six on or before October 15, 1965, to enroll in next year’s first grade. All parents of children that are to
South Putnam School News
At a meeting of the principals of the South Putnam Community Schools, E. B. Carver, principal at Fillmore, and Keith Helms, principal at Reelsville, gave reports of education trips made last month. Mr. Carver represtened South Putnam Community Schools at the National Secondary School Principals Meeting at Miami, Florida. Mr. Carver gave a report to the principals and superintendent concerning ideas and trends in education which were discussed at the meeting. Mr. Helms represented Reelsville High School which was one of six schools selected in Indiana to participate in the College Entrance Examination Board meeting at Evanston, Illinois. Mr. Helms will also take part in the National meeting in New York City next October. The following reports were given at the principals meeting:
Mr. Helms Report:
Keith Helms, principal of Reelsville High School recently attended a meeting of the College Entrance Examination Board at Evanston, Illinois. This meeting was for the 21 new secondary school members of the Midwest Region and it was to acquaint them with their duties and responsibilities on the CEEB. The six member schools on the Board from Indiana are Hammond High School, Marion High School, North Central H. S., Pendleton H. S., Reelsville H. S., and Fort
Wayne South Side. Mr. Carver’s report:
The trip to the principal's convention at Miami Beach was
very educational.
The first lecture which proved to be one of the highlights of
DPU Grad Dies; Rites Wednesday Mrs. Kathryn Tofaute McCormack, 55, wife of Buren H. McCormack, vice president and editorial editor of the Wall Street Journal, died Monday of cancer in Irvington, New York. A native of Bedford, she graduated from DePauw University in 1932 and was active for years in’church, civic and charitable organizations In Ir- | vington. In addition to her husband, she is survived by two daughters; one son; her mother, Mrs. Ola Tofaute, and a sister, Mrs. Helen Parker, both of Bedford. Last rites will be held Wednesday with private burial in Sleep Cemetery, North Tarrytown, N. Y.
Miss Karen Sue Cunningham Mr. and Mrs. Sherman L. Clark, R. R. 1, Greencastle, announce the engagement of their daughter, Karen Sue Cunningham, to David Walter Holmes, son of Bea Maxwell of 411 West Market Street, Crawfordsville. Miss Cunningham is a 1962 graduate of Technical High Schol in El Paso, Texas. She was a member of the modern dance club, DE Club, band and participated in the Sun Parade in Texas a drummer for three years. She is now employed at R. R. Donnelley’s & Sons. Her fiance has returned from service three years with the armed forces. He is now employed at Raybestos-Manhattan, Inc. Miss Cunningham is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Seller, Sr., of Roachdale.
University Status INDIANAPOLIS UPI—Governor Branigin Monday afternoon signed into law two House bills changing Ball State at Muncie and Indiana State at Terre Haute from College to University status.
Let hot roasts, pork, beef, poultry stand 15 to 20 minutes j in a warm place before carving i with an electric knife. In this time, the juices set.
Leave Saigon At LBJ'S Orders
SAIGON UPI — The first of □re than 1,800 American
the convention, was given Sat- women and children ordered to urday evening by Henry Cabot leave South Viet Nam by
Lodge, formrely U. S. Ambassador to Viet Nam. His lecture, "The Crisis in Southeastern Asia,” brought forth some of the problems and objectives
South Viet Nam
President Johnson took off the United States today. There
were no tears.
The order followed Sunday’s disastrous guerrilla attack
which the U. S. is confronted against a U. S. helicopter base with in this 20th century. an d two retaliatory air raids by The next evening I attended American and South Vietnasessions concerning the “Legal i mese fighter - bomber pilots on Aspects of the Curriculum and Communist military installathe Extra-curricular,” conduct- | tions in North V iet Nam.
ed by E. C. Bolmeier, professor of education of Duke Univer-
cashes the ace and king of hearts, and leads a spade to dummy’s ace. Then comes the key play: declarer must lead the jack of hearts from dummy. East must cover with the queen of hearts, and South discards his second club. This
be in next year’s first grade are
The Women of the Moose Wed- urged to attend this meetmg
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The poetry of Robert Browning will be focused upon tonight in the third renewal of DePauw University’s popular readings in English series. Xi Beta Eta chapter of Beta Sigma Phi will meet at the Public Service Club Room at 7:30 this evening. Members are reminded to bring jewelry
in need of repair.
The Mothers Club of Omnes Chapter of DeMolay will meet at the Masonic Temple at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. This is an important meeting and all mothers are u rged to attend. Alva Cummings, 33, Memphis, Tenn., was lodged in the Putnam County jail at 9:45 Monday night by State Trooper Jack Hanlon. Cummings was booked for operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicants. The Sherwood Christian Women’t Fellowship will meet Wednesday, February 10 at 7:30 with Mrs. John Klebush. Mrs. Eldena McCarson will be co-hostess. Mrs. Burke Coyner will give the Study and Mrs. ; Glenn Deem wiil lead the wor-
ship.
They should bring the child’s birth certificate so that the student can be officially enrolled at this meeting.
Six ways to squeeze more savings out for you. Ironing and pressing facilities. Old Reliable White Laundry & Cleaners.
County Hospital Mrs. Roger Cox and son, Greencastle Mrs. Frank Flint and daughter, Greencastle Pattylou Richardson, Greencastle Mrs. Leonard Bean and son, Cloverdale Edna Wilson, Roachdale Phillip Burchett, Roachdale Ruth Hyatt, Bainbridge Births: Mr. and Mrs. Donald Rfed, Greencastle, Route 1, a girl, today. Mr. and Mrs. James Buis, Stilesville, Route 1, a girl, today.
ANNIVERSARIES Birthdays Brenda Lee Miller, 16 years old today.
SPEAKING OF MONEY by Randall Collins A Cloverdale reader asks about mint marks and their purpose. There is a great deal of misunderstanding regarding these tiny letters found on most U. S. coins. There are many people who believe that the marks and the engraver’s ini tials are the same. This is not the case at all for both have their purpose in appearing on our money. The custom of placing letters or symbols on coins to denote their mint location dates back to the early Romans. From the time of Gallienus (260-68), when mints were established all over Europe and the East, it was necessary for the place of mintage to be clearly indicated. This ancient custom led to our modern concepts of placing the inital of the issuing mint on the face of the coin. United States coins have been struck at seven different locations. The first mint to strike a coin was the Philidelphia Mint in the year 1792, Additional facilities were later built at Dahlonega, Carson City, Nevada and Denver, Colorado. Coins struck at all these mints carried a mint letter with the exception of Philidelphia. World War II nickels did carry a “P” mint mark to denote Philidelphia. At the present time the Denver and Philidelphia Mints are the only coin producing plants in operation. Since production varies at £ach mint for a given year the mint mark identifies a low mintage issue. This, of course, led to collecting coins by mints. For example, in 1950 the Philidelphia Mint struck ten million Jefferson Nickels, whereas the branch mint at Denver issued only three million. Consequently 1950 nickels carrying a “D” mint mark are much more in demand by collectors and are worth anywhere Ofrom $18 to $25.00 per coin.
sity. The lecture, concerning what has been proved legally profound in school affairs, was very enlightening from the standpoint that there are numerous legal aspects which must be understood and taken into considertaion when dealing with every day school problems. Following this lecture I sat in on the last half of Wayne O. Reed’s “The Federal Government and Education.” Mr. Reed is the Deputy Commissioner of Education, U. S. Office of Education, Washington. D. C. Mr. Reed was very open and frank concerning dispersement of govern ment funds to the U. S. schools. John M. Section, principal of Northeast High School, St. Petersburg, Florida, conducted Monday’s general session. Mr. Sexton is the president of the N.A.S.S.P. The address “Training Responsible Citizens: The Unfinished Agenda,” by Stephen K. Bailey, Syracuse University, N. Y., stressed that we
At Danag air base 350 miles north of Saigon, a battery of Hawk anti-aircraft missiles was declared ready for action. The deadly rockets were dispatched to this country by the Defense Departmen to fend off any air attacks by Communist planes — whether from North Viet Nam or Communist China. The Vietnamese fighter pilots who carried out Monday’s air strike against North Viet Nam were given a heroes’ wel-
come in Saigon.
for give* East a heart trick and prevents West from getting a club trick. As a result, West can never gain the lead to give East a diamond ruff. The defenders get one spade, one heart and one club, but nothing else.
DAILY QUESTION
Partner opens the bidding with one club, and the next player passes. You hold: Spade 7 6, Heart 9 5 4 2, Diamond 10 8 4 2, Club K 8 2. What
do you say?
Answer: Pass. You need at least 6 points for a response, and in this case you can count only 3 points for your king and perhaps 1 point for the doubleton. It is not enough.
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Sheimvold On Bridge
Students Of Crime Challenged By Hand By Alfred Sheinwold
National Men’s Team Champion Students of crime should study today's hand very care-
educate not only for academic | f u n v . i t isn’t hard to see who
proficiency, but also to train youth to fit into the patterns of society and become responsible, contributing U. S. citizens. Tuesday, January 19th, we were given an opportunity to view some of the schools in the
Miami area.
All in all it was a very educational and enjoyable trip.
Card of Thanks We wish to thank our many friends, neighbors and relatives for their beautiful cards, flowers, gifts and their help in making our 50th anniversary a success. Also the beautiful hymns by Bro. Bowser and Providence Choir. Many thanks to Mrs. Marjorie Lisby and sons. May God Bless all of you. Mr. and Mrs. Horace Robinson and Family.
Card Of Thanks We wish to acknowledge with deep appreciation the many kindnesses, expressions of sympathy, food contributions and many beautiful floral tributes extended by our relatives, friends and neighbors. We wish to thank Dr. Lett, nurses and nurses aides at the Putnam County hospital for their kind attention at the passing of our beloved husband and father, Emery R. Sutherlin. Te especially wish to thank Dr. Ernst. Brother S. F. Hester, Brother Guy Hester, singers from the Church of Christ and the Whitaker Funeral Home for their kind understanding and services rendered. Mrs. Flossie Sutherlin and Children. 1
belongs behind bars, but you can’t put him there unless you can state just what he should have done to stay out of jail. East dealer Both sides vulnerable
NORTH
6 A 8 V J87
O KQJ76 * 653 WEST EAST A 76 A K54 S? 9542 Q 1063 O 10842 0 9 + K82 4LAQJ94 SOUTH * QJ 10 932
S? AK
O A 5 3
4k 107
South West 1 4k Pass 3 4k Pass
All Pass
Opening lead —
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North
2 O 4 4
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West opened the deuce of clubs, and East took the ace of clubs and returned the nine of diamonds. South won with the ace of diamonds and led a trump to the ace and a trump back from dummy. East stepped up with the king of spades and returned the four of clubs to west’s king. Back came a diamond, and East’s ruff defeated the contract. You now have all the clues you need. Decide for yourself before reading on who the criminal was and just where he deserted the paths of virtue. DEEP-DYED CRIMINAL Sou*h was a villiainous criminal, for he should make his contract. He should spot the diamond return as a singleton and should know exactly what East plans to do. A Counterplot would save South from a life in prison. South wins the second trick with the act of diamonds,
WHERE GREENCASTLE SHOPS W'lTH CONFIDENCE ADLERS
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