The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 22 February 1965 — Page 2

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2 Tht Daily Bannar, Graancastla, Indiana Monday, Fabruary 22,1965 Editorial-Wise Who Tells Them? (From: Plainfield Messenger) A national newspaper columnist has revived a suggestion which hasn't been heard for several years—that persons on relief rolls be denied the right to vote. And it will get just about as far as it did when first suggested back in the 1930’s. The proposal was made by Howard E. Kershner, who repeats a lot of the old warnings; that too many people in America have learned they can live with little effort, that those who receive public charity soon come to look upon it as a right and to feel that no stigma attaches to the recipient. and that public relief destroys the initiative, self-reli-ance and character of those who receive it and embitters and discourages those who are penalized more and more to pay it. Only a handful of political leaders seem to agree with Mr. Kershner, or if many do agree they never let the relief recipients know it. And why should they? With relief rolls increasing nationwide, what office-holder would have the nerve to criticize those on relief? In many big city areas, these people hold a balance of power. And yet, if there is going to be the Great Society, who is going to speak out and tell these folks that they must find a way to pull their share of the load? Well, certainly not the politicians as long as there are many of these people and as long as they have a vote.

Our

how

lips cannot tell

miss you.

Our hearts cannot tell what to

say,

God alone knows how we miss

you

Our hearts cannot tell what tc

say.

God alone knows how we miss

you

In a home that is so loneome today. , Sadly missed by wife and daughters.

County Hospital

and

In Memory

In loving memory of my dear husband, Leffel G. Goss, who passed away thirteen years Feb. 21, 1952. February brings sad memories. Of my loved one gone to rest God took him Home It was his will. But in my heart he liveth still. The Golden Gates were open-

ed.

A gentle voice said come. And with farewells unspoken He gently entered Home. Friends may think the wound

is healed

I live in memories Garden Dear Of the happy days we have known A happy home we once enjoyed How sweet the memory still. But death has left loneliness The world can never fill. Wife, Iona

Dismissed Sunday: Doris Casper, Greencastle Sherri Grove, Cloverdale Terri Grove, Cloverdale

Births:

Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Estes, Rockville, Route 1, a girl, Mon-,

: day. ~

Dismissed Saturday: Mrs. Frederick Starnes daughter, Greencastle

Opal Wright, Greencastle Leamon Littrell, Greencastle Homer Williams, Greencastle Mrs. Von York and son,

Greencastle

Neva Blunk, Greencastle Chester Adelhelm, Green-

castle

Lawrence Brant, Greencastle Lillian Long, Roachdale

THE DAILY EANNiR

AND

HERALD CONSOLIDATED 24-28 S. Jackson St. Graancastla, Ind. Businass Phona 01 3-5151 Samual R. Raridan, Publishar Norma Hill, Gan. Mgr. Elisabatk Raridan, Businass Mgr. Jamas B. Zais, Managing Editor William D. Hoapor, Adv. Mgr. Entarad in tha Past Office at Graancastla, Indiana, as Sacond Class Mail mattar undsr Act of March 7, 1S7S. Subscription Prices Homo Dslivary 40c per week Moilad in Putnam Co. $8.00 per year Outsido of Putnam Co. $10.00 par year Outside of Indiana $14.00 per year Bible

Helen Burnside is a patient in : declarer would take the king i

the Putnam County Hospital.

Her room number is 226. The Martha Washington Club

will meet Wednesday night at

7:30. Mrs. Lucille Jones.

and ace of trumps. West tried to escape by ruffing the last diamond with the queen of trumps. Declarer over-ruffed in dummy with the

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Deer, king of hearts and then led the have returned home from Key ten of hearts from dummy for Haven Tavernier, Florida, j a finesse through East’s jack, where they spent the last two! As South gathered in his weeks. & twelfth trick, the fun began. Judy McNeff, a senior in The defenders insisted that Greencastle High School and South would have gone down

Ron Baker, a senior in Reelsville High School are serving as Pages in Indiana Legislature

in Indianapolis today.

Sheinwold

On Bridge

Celebrate All Week Honoring Kibitzers By Alfred Sheinwold

In Memory

Mrs. James Haltom and

daughter, Cloverdale James Sipple. Cloverdale

Nada Minnick, Bainbridge Dorothy Cline, Coatesville Bertha Hutchins, Stilesville

row

To the land of peace and rest, God has taken you, dear one

But they little know the sorrow _ Where y° u have eternal rest

That lies within my heart

concealed.

Since you have gone first and I

remain

In loving memory of Earl Al-

len, who departed this life eight Births:

years ago, February 22. 1957. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Wood, From the land of pain and sor- 1040 Avenue C, a

day.

To walk the road alone,

You are waiting by the river, Just across the silent stream

Whene sweet flowers

blooming.

Anniversary

Birthday

Lori Jean Watson, 2

are ever Sunday, Feb. 21st.

Brian Allan Turner,

years,

son of

And the banks are always Mr - and Mrs - 0ra Turner, Jr green. years old February 22nd.

Topple says

My Old Fat Friend

AT

WHITE CLEANERS Gives QUALITY & SERVICE Always

Thought

As we have therefore opportunity, let us do good unto all

men. Galatians 6:10.

The hallmark of the "Chris-

tian” spirit is charity towards National Men’s Team Champion

Since we cannot count on a preidential proclamation to announce National Kibitizer’s Week, this column will take up the burden. Take a kibitzer home to your bridge game some night this week. If you're lucky he may start a high-level rhubarb like the one that developed when today’s hand was

played.

North dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH A K 6 5 2

K10 7 O A 6

* J864

WEST EAST 4 QJ 109 4 A 8 7 3 V Q 6 5 S? J8 0953 0 10 872 4 10 52 4973

SOUTH

4 4

^ A 9 4 3 2

0 KQJ4 4 AKQ

North East South West Pass Pass 1 Pass 3 Pass 6 V All Pasi Opening lead — 4 Q W'est led the queen of spades and continued the suit, forcing South to ruff. While declarer frowned at the dummy, the kibitzer broke in: ‘ Down one.” "The queen and jack of trumps don’t fall?” South muttered, not looking at the kibitzer. “I told you, didn’t I?” the kibitizer demanded. "I have to play it out,” South announced, and he led out his three top clubs in quick succession. Next he led a diamond to the ace and ruffed

another spade.

“You’re wasting time,

kibitzer warned, but South

all. No one would argue that J this is “natural.” It goes against (nature because it is only of

‘ Christ.

Personal And Local News

V.F.W. Ladies Auxiliary will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at

the Post Home.

Cassell C. Tucker Unit No. 58 American Legion Auxiliary will meet this evening at 8:00 p.m.

at the Post Home.

Mrs. Ida Day has been dismissed from the hospital and is in the home of her son, Rev. Wilbur Day, 27 South Jefferson Street, Knightstown, Indiana. The West Madison Home Demonstration Club will meet j

boy, Satur-! w ith Mrs. Paul Aker Wednes- 1

day,, February 24th, at 1:30

— p.m. Members come for dessert.

The Young Mothers Study Club will hold their annual! smorgasbord Sunday, February 28th, at 1 p.m. at Hollandsburg. j If there are any cancellations please notify Thalia Poynter by

Saturday morning.

Please call Mrs. Florence I Boatright for reservations for the Putnam County Historical Society dinner meeting on Wednesday. Reservations must be in not later than Tuesday

noon.

There will be a meeting Tuesday at 7:30 p. m. at the Reelsville High School, concerning development of a Water System for Reelsville and outlying areas. Everyone is urged j

if the kibitizer had keep quiet, their complaint was with the kibitzer, but they couldn’t take his slam away. The argument is still going on. The players were wrong, of course, to argue with the kibitzer. He had looked carefully at all the hands and was entitled to state his own opinion South had no business playing the hand so well, but this is the kind of embarrassment that a kibitzer must be brave about. DAILY QUESTION Partner deals and bids one! heart, and the next player passes. You hold: Spade A 8 7 3, Heart J 8, Diamond 10 8 7 2, Club 9 7 3. What do you say? Answer: Pass. You have 5 points in high cards and can count nothing for distribution. You would respond if partner opened with one spade (by raising to two spades), but you cannot respond to one heart.

■ V I ^ and > increasing Indiana’s week*

fdy Tribute To 1011 ** iea> * ** * I and that for the year to 170 Geo* Washington com P ared with 1301 year ago *

State police said the boy*

WASHINGTON UPI — Con- were killed when their car gress pauses today to pay trib- skidded out of control and wai ute to George Washington on struck by a big truck one mU , the 223rd anniversary of the southea8t of Portland at the first president’s birth. intersection of Indiana 26 and

The often-quoted phrases of Indiana 67.

Washington’s stately farewell

address were to be read once ! A car driven by Jerry R. more in the House and Senate Beaty, 17, Muncie, was passing chambers according to a cus- a string of trucks when his ma-

tom which began on Feb. 22, 1901. Sen. James B. Pearson, RKan., was designated to read the address to the Senate, and Rep. Del Clawson, R-Calif., to

chine careened out of control on an icy black top road and was hit by a truck operated by Fred

H. Romine, 43, Portland. Beaty, Douglas C. Smith,

17, and Rudy A. Berg, 18, wer«

the House. The annual reading hilled. Another companion, usually takes about 45 minutes. Gary D . Haller, 17, Muncie, was Former Sen. Barry M. Gold- hospitalized in Indianapolis in water, R-Ariz., breezed through crit ical condition, the 7,641 words of the text in 41 minutes as the 1957 stand-in Romine escaped with minor for Washington. That stands as ’ injuries, an unofficial record for speed, Two other personSi in recent years. an eight-year-old child, wer*

killed Sunday night.

North Viets Get Soviet Weapons

MOSCOW UPI — Diplomatic sources said Sunday Soviet

Miss DePauw publicity throughout the ’65-’66 school year. The preliminary judging, beginning March 30th, will be climaxed in the final pageant on April 17th. The Miss DePauw Pageant will feature evening gown appearances, talent performances and a question-answer period. The Collegians, a vocal group, will also be present to provide entertainment. The pageant is open to the public and promises to be an exciting evening.

Negro Leader Returns To Selma

Kathy Sue West, New Castle, was killed in a freak accident caused when a tire came off a truck and hit the car in which she was riding. The car, driven by Sam R. Elam, New Castle,

ground-to-air missiles, jet fight- went out of contr ol. ra n off er plance and technical advisers Indiana 3 south of Sandusky in are en route to Communist Decatur County, and struck a

North Viet Nam to defend telephone pole,

against any new retaliatory air strikes by the United States. Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin promised assistance to

the Hanoi regime during his Harold Jackson, 25, Vevay, trip to Communist Asia earlier was killed when his car went this month. Although dispatch out of control at high speed of the military aid could not be and overturned in a curve on officially confirmed, the Krem- Indiana 250 west of Pleasant in lin has made it clear that the Jefferson County.

Soviets will follow through on

Kosygin’s pledge.

The truck was driven by Donald W. Cummings, Leamington,

Ont.

The first of seven weekend highway deaths occurred Satur-

12 More Killed la State Traffic ly United Press International Three teen-age boys from Muncie were killed late Sunday night in a traffic crash on an icy patch of road near Port-

Two of them were train collisions.

In ear-

Banner Ads Pay

i SELMA, Ala. UPI — Dr. Martin Luther King returns • here again today to open the : sixth straight week of a voter | registration drive in Alabama's

^ ^ _ _ u black belt described as “the to attend. There will be a rep- went 9P w ^. the °f .i ia Mast stand for white suprem-

monds. He ruffed a diamond

resentative from FHA to dis-

cuss the possibility of the tern.

sys-

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in dummy and ruffed dummy's |

last spade.

LAST THREE CARDS By this time South and East each had two trumps and a diamond. Dummy held two trumps and a club, and West had his three original trumps. When South led his last diamond, West was trapped. If West ruffed low, dummy would

acy.

King was scheduled to lead another march to the Dallas County Courthouse in a drive that has resulted in violence, mass arrest and growing ten-

sion.

The march will be without benefit of a parade permit and it could lead to a face-to-face showdown between King and Alabama Gov. George C. Wal-

over-ruff with the ten. Then lace.

Mr. and Mrs. Max R. Flynn in front of their Gold Medallion Home in Plainfield, Indiana. “IT'S CLEAN, COMFORTABLE AND WE LIKE THE REASONABLE COST OF FLAMELESS ELECTRIC HEATING IN OUR GOLD MEDALLION HOME!’’

"Going to college and raising three-year-old Ricky keeps me hopping," says Bunny Flynn. "On top of that, I'm a finicky housekeeper. I want my white draperies really white. With clean electric heating I can keep them that way." Max Flynn, supervisor at an Indianapolis truck body plant, finds his Gold Medallion Home with electric heat suits him, too. "We live on the windiest rise in town. But if we didn't see the trees leaning, we'd never know the wind was blowing. There's never a chill draft or cold spot in the house with flameless electric heat. And still it's economical. Our neighbors didn't believe it until a session over the fence when we showed them our electricity bills." If you plan to build or buy. Public Service Indiana has the information you need to put your family in a Gold Medallion Home with Flameless Electric Heat.

DAY BY DAY, THIS COLD MEDALLION appears on more and more homes throughout America. Where you see it displayed, it identifies a home fully-equipped with Fiameless Electric Home Heating and appliances, Full Housepower Wiring, and Light for Living. These homes will be as modern tomorrow as they are today.

0

PUBLIC SERVICE INDIANA

FBEE GAS CREDIT CARD USERS 5 WINNERS EACH WEEK SHOEMAKER’S ^ SERVICE MAPLE AND BLOOMINGTON STREETS

THE LAMP

IN THE WINDOW

sma

Symbolic of the earlier days of American pharmacy was the lighted lamp in the drugstore window. All through the night it glowed, a beacon of hope, a symbol of unselfish service. Although the historic lamp is now practically extinct, the fundamentals of pharmaceutical practice have changed but little. The responsibilities of the pharmacist are greater today than ever before — he is a vital factor in medical care. Your patronage is invited.

Invited! k A SPECIAL DAY FOR OUR FRIENDS □LIVER FARM FAIR

COANJPHARMACY

Ymssini SAunaulit

\ PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS \

Wednesday, February 24 between the hours 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Your entire family is Invited

* NEW EQUIPMENT * new movies * DELICIOUS REFRESHMENTS * EXCITING AWARDS

Something for Everyone

WE'LL BE

EXPECTING YOU!

WEDNESDAY

FEBRUARY 24th

9 a.m. - 5 p.m.

PUTNAM COUNTY FARM BUREAU CO-OP Asso.

•UINCASTU, INDIANA

ILIZAIiTH ST.