The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 15 March 1965 — Page 2

Th« Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana Monday, March IS, 1965

Editorial-Wise Nation's Number One Problem The nation's alarming increase in crime has officials concerned from the White House down to the village con* atable. President Johnson has said that he intends to do something about it, but the hard facts are that it is easier for him to aay it than do it. Under present laws the federal government can fight crime only on a narrow front. For instance, it can't do anything about murder. That is a local responsibility. The Federal Bureau of Investigation each year conducts schools for more than 100,000 local and state law enforcement officers on the latest techniques in crime prevention. But then the problem lands right back from whence it came—in the laps of cities, counties and states. There are not enough social workers and from all reports no money to hire more. These men and women, who are working with juvenile delinquents, make occasional break-throughs that are encouraging. But the picture looks black. Even if something were done tomorrow on a national basis, the crime rate would probably increase for the next three years. Too many juveniles already are in the pipelines that flow to the nation's prisons and reformatories. Crime indeed is the Number One problem in these United States.

Arabs Ponder West Germany CAIRO UPI — The Arab world was reported divided today on how to punish West Germany if it establishes diplomatic relations with Isreal. At the heart of the matter was a pledge by President Gamel Abdel Nasser of the United Arab Republic to recognize Communist East Germany in reprisal. An Arab League statement no mention of Nassser's threat, on the Israeli-German question promised sanctions, but it made no mention of Nasser's threat. It appeared that Nasser had failed to obtain Arab unity for any plan of action.

I top political plums

control

of the Paris city council. Minister of Interior Roger Frey said elsewhere in France the voting showed "extraordinary political stability’’ with no major upsets or landslides in

either direction.

The elections came only nine months before next December’s presidential race and were the first since France last went to the polls in national parliamentary elections in November, 1962. De Gaulle is expected to run for re-election, although he has not yet formally announced

as a candidate.

THE DAILY 1ANNM AND HERALD CONSOLIDATED 24-2S S. Jackson St. Graancastln, Ind. Business Phono OL 3-5151 Samual R. Raridon, Publish or Norma HiH, Goa. Mgr. Elisahoth Raridon, Businoss Mgr. James R. Zeis, Managing Editor William D. Hooper, Adv. Mgr. Entered in the Past Office at Greencastle, Indiana, as Second Clou Mai matter under Act of March 7, 1E7E. Subscription Prices Heme Delivery 40c per week Mailed In Putnam Ce. $3.00 per year Outside ef Putnam Ce. $10.00 per year Outside of Indiana $14.00 per year Bible Thought O come, let us worship and bow down; let us kneel before the Lord our Maker. Psalm 95:6. Worship is first in privilege and first in duty. The Lord is our Creator and our Redeemer. Let us bow in reverence and faith before Him. Let us declare 1 to the world that He is our God!

Personal And Local News

The Tip Toppers Home Demonstration Club will meet Tuesday, March 16th at 1 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Lorene Luck. Chuck Bieber is currently working with the U. 8. Bureau of Mines at Rolla, Missouri, after returning from service with the 11th Air Assault Division at Ft Benning, Georgia. The annual guest meeting of the Greencastle Morning Musicale will be held at 8:00 on Tuesday evening March 16, at the home of Mrs. William Kersetter. Program of chamber music will be provided by Mrs. Herman Berg and Mrs. Cassell Grubb.

Soviets Assailed By Red China TOKYO UPI — Communist China today bitterly denounced the Soviet Union for suppressing an anti-American demonstration by Chinese students in Moscow. Peking said Russian police actions recalled the czarist era and were "unprecedented in history." An editorial in the Peking Peoples Daily, possibly written by Mao Tze-tung. chastized the Soviet leadership in terms that have been used rarely since the Chinese campaign against ousted Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev. It accused the Soviets of knuckling under to the United States.

Six More Die In State Traffic By United Rreit International

Six weekend fatalities in Indiana raised the state's 1965 traffic death toll to at least 234 compared with 191 a year ago. Two of the fatal accidents were blamed on snow. The snow

Cro-Tat-Em Club will meet Wednesday at 2:00 p.m. with

Opal Reed.

The Mothers Service Club will meet Tuesday evening at 7:30 with Clova Patterson. Mrs. Lucille Allen entered the Putnam County Hospital Saturday night, her room num-

ber is 225.

The Associate Tri-Kappa will meet with Mrs. James Hughes Tuesday March 16th

at 10:00 a. m.

Washburn Chapter DAR will will meet Tuesday, March 16, at 7:30 with Mrs. Ira Moore on

West Walnut Street.

The Business & Professional Women's Club will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the home

of Miss Edith Browning.

The Putnamville PTA will meet Thursday, March 18th, at 7:30. Members are asked to attend this important meeting. Federated Reading Club will meet with Mrs. Elmer Seller Wednesday afternoon at 1:30

made an Indiana 67 hill near i 0 ’ clock - Miss Ida Wood wil1

the

Sheinwold On Bridge By ALFRED SCHEINWOLD National Men’s Team Champion If you’re in training to be a wine taster you need a very delicate nose, and today’s bridge hand may not help you very much. If you just want to play good bridge all you need from your nose is ability to smell fish. South dealer Neither side vulnerable

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French Voters Back De Gaulle PARIS UPI — President Charles de Gaulle’s government emerged today from nationwide local elections in a significant test of popularity. The administration claimed to have held its ground everywhere and almost certainly to have won one of tha nation’s

Gosport hazardous, and Helen Baus, 46, Evansville, was killed Sunday. Seven other persons were injured when the Baus car collided wtih one driven by James Groover, 50, Indianapolis. Dale C. Hyatt, 18, Gas City, was killed Sunday when his car swerved out of control on slushy Indiana 21 nine miles south of Peru and collided with a truck driven by Billy Bevington, 37, Peru. Bevington and a passenger in the truck were hurt. Coleman Shaw, 24, East Chicago, was killed Sunday when he drove through lowered crossing gates at an East Chicago city crossing into the side of a Baltimore A Ohio Railroad freight train. Clarence Johnson, 33, Indianapolis, was killed Sunday on Indiana 37 near Noblesville when his car veered off the road, hit a utility pole and overturned, throwing him out. Police were uncertain whether he dozed or lost control of the car otherwise. The Sunday deaths followed a fatality-free Saturday.

DOLLAR VALUEPLUS

In an emergency, the value of medicine can hardly be reckoned in dollars. Medicine is priceless when needed. Yet it is an interesting fact that nationally the average coat of a pharmaceutical prescription is about $2.50 — and more than half of all prescriptions cost less than $2.00. Although higher than 20 years ago, the increase in the cost of medicine lags far behind that of other, and less essential, commodities. When you purchase a prescription, you are sharing in the fruits of scientific research. You are getting today’s best buy.

COANJPHARMACY

\ PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS \

iutncaitU

have the program. Lowell McCammack, 57, Cloverdale, Route 2, was arrested Friday afternoon by Sheriff Kenneth Knauer on a public intoxication charge. Fathers Auxiliary No. 1 of the Veterans of Foreign Wars will meet Wednesday evening at the Gen. Jesse M. Lee Post 1550 Home. Members are urged to attend. Howard Hall, 28, Greencastle, Route 1, was arrested by City Officer Bill Masten, on Ind. 240 at 12:14 Sunday morning, and charged with failure to have an operator’s license. A short in the wiring resulted in an estimated $475 damage to a 1961 Oldsmobile convertible at 6:45 Saturday evening. City firemen said the car was owned by Roland Jones, Greencastle, Route 4. The Clinton Homemakers will meet Thursday evening, March 18th, at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Lawrence Thomas. Mrs. Malcolmb Berry will give the lesson. All members are urged to attend, as there will be important business unTimothy James Burns, a freshman in Indiana State University, has been pledged by the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity in Terre Haute. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Burns, 4 Paradise Lane, and a 1964 graduate of Greencastle High School. Professor Clinton Gass of DePauw University returned this weekend from the East where he served as an evaluator of National Science Foundation institutes for teachers at Hunter College and Rutgers University. Gass is head of the department of mathematics and astronomy and has served as director of NSF summer sessions at De-

Pauw.

Please feel free to make any suggestions which might j impress our service to you. Old Reliable White Cleaners.

East Pass

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response of two hearts will be passed. If partner is doubled at one notrump you should bid

two hearts.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Franklin McCarty, Bainbridge, wish to announce the approaching marriage of their daughter, Linda Kay, to Stanley Eugene Everts, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Everts, Fillmore. The bride-to-be is a graduate of Bainbridge High School and

Tiger Cubs Maryland. At the present time there are about 2200 dentists in Indiana and they are able to solve only about half our dental problems. The I. U. Dental School with one of the very highest reputations in the country is only graduating about 90 Dentists a year. No relief is in sight until the school is enlarged. Dentists have been carrying a larger workload in the past several years by using assistants — Hygenists, and Dental Laboratory Technicians. This is a great future for our young people as qualified assistants are in short supply. For instance — the Dental Hygenist study program is only two years and should be considered seriously by many of our young women when planning their fu-

ture.

Paul Kleis, secretary of the Crawfordsville Club, was our visiting Rotarian.

some of them wrapped in color- where punch and birthday cake ful quilts, were still standing in were served, line when the barricades were

taken down. A cheer went up when the wooden planks were removed.

Johnson Will Speak Tonight

WASHINGTON UPI-Presi-

is presently employed at Ameri-1 dent Johnson goes before Con . can United Insurance. Her fi- gress and the nation tonight to ance graduated from Fillmore outline the voting rights mesHigh School. He is stationed at ure ij e hopes will correct "a the U.S. Army Base, Aberdeen, dee p and very unjust flaw in

Maryland.

The wedding will be held Saturday. April 24th at onethirty in the afternoon in the Groveland Presbyterian Church.

American democracy.”

The Chief Executive accepted an invitation from congressional leaders to make an extraor-

dinary appearance before

Immediately following the cere-l joint session of the House and

James W. Henry Honored On Birthday The eightieth birthday of James W. Henry of Bainbridge was celebrated Sunday by a dinner at Hunt’s. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Henry of Spiceland, Mr. and Mrs. Oland Henry of Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. George M. Henry and son, Gary, of Indianapolis and Rev. and Mrs. Smiley Irwtn of Greencastle. The observance was continued in the afternoon at the home of Rev. and Mrs. Irwin,

Don’t forget IRISH or anyone else. Send a GREEN CARNATION in a bud vase only $1.29 delivered EITEL’S FLOWERS

The Queen The Duchess The Duke A RAPPROCHEMENT, as they say in diplomatic circles, is underway in London with the meeting arranged between Queen Elizabeth and the wife of “Uncle David," the Duchess of Windsor. It comes about because of the duke’s third eye operation in a London hospital Elizabeth was 11 years old nearly three decades ago when the duke, then King Edward, abdicated to marry the former Wallis Warfield, a divorcee. And the royal family proceeded to ignore her.

mony a reception will be held

in the church.

Opening lead —

Suppose you put yourself in the West seat. You lead the king of spades, and your partner plays the deuce of the three. (Experts differ on which card East should play in this

situation.)

South wins the first trick with the ace of spades and leads the deuce of clubs. Right here your nose should speak up, announcing: “Herring!” Why is South tackling an obviously weak club suit instead of setting up dummy’s long diamonds? Unless South is an absolute beginner there can be only one answer to this question: The diamonds are already set up, and South is trying to steal his ninth trick before the defenders know what is going on.

STEPS UP

If West’s nose warns him that something fishy is going on, he will step up with the ace of clubs and cash the queen of spades. South must drop the jack of spades, and West defeats the contract with the rest of the spades. South would make his conract if West played a low club at the second trick. Dummy's queen of clubs would win, and declarer would then run five diamonds and two hearts, winning the first nine tricks. South cannot make the contract by running the diamonds before touching the clubs. East discards his two remaining spades to tell West what he can; and West sees that the jack is unguarded. West’s first discard is a heart, and he can then discard two clubs since by that time he knows the whole

story.

In general, whenever declarer at a notrump contract starts a weak suit instead of working on dummy’s long suit, the defenders should assume that the long suit is already established. They may have to take their tricks while the taking is good. DAILY QUESTION Partner opens with 1 NT (16 to 18 points), and the next player passes. You hold: spades, 5, 3, 2; hearts Q, 10, 8, 6' 5; diamonds 6, 5; clubs 8, 7, 6. What do you say? Answer: Pass with most partners; bid two hearts with a conservative partner. You are probably better off at two hearts than your partner would be at one notrump, but you cannot be quite sure that your

ANNIVERSARIES Birthday Debra Schimpf, one year old, March 15th.

Senate at 9 p. m. EST. Major television and radio networks planed live coverage of the event.

'Wall' Removed In Selma, Ala. SELMA, Ala. UPI — City police today removed a 30-foot long wooden barricade called the “Selma Wall” put up to

Raps Air Control

WASHINGTON UPI — RepHenry B. Gonzalez, D-Tex., claims that inefficient air traffic control was responsible for

the Feb. 8 crash of an Eastern ! stop hundreds of white and NeAir Lines DC7B off New York 18ro civil rights demonstrators City. from marching on the county

courthouse.

“Today is voter registration day. If they want to go down

In loving memory of my dear j and register, they can,” said

In Memory

husband. Howard C. Appleby, who passed away two years ago March 15th, 1963. To your grave I often wander, A little solace there to find, There to pray and there to

tell you

Of the broken heart you left

behind.

Wife, Jessie and Family

County Hospital Dismissed Sunday: Stephanie Walton, Greencastle David Kranbuehl, Greencastle Wanda Davis, Greencastle Lotta Thomas, Greencastle Ethel Robbins, Roachdale Births: Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Rumple, Worthington, a girl, Sunday. Dismissed Saturday Lester Haltom. Greencastle Kathryn Detloff, Greencastle Bessie Baxter, Greencastle Betty Ogle, Greencastle Imogene Friend, Greencastle Georgia Rogers. Greencastle Otto Gabbert, Spencer Mrs. Robert Rogers and daughter, Clayton Births: Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Shrader, Cloverdale, Route 2, a boy, Saturday.

Public Safety Commissioner Wilson Baker. Baker pointed out Dallas County is under a federal court order to speed up the registration process. The barricades were removed at 7 a. m„ EST, after the demonstrators had maintained another all-night vigil they first took up last Wednesday at a point on Sylvan Street in a Negro housing area. About 100 demonstrators,

Strawberry Tarts Our own home-made pie crust filled with fresh strawberries, topped with ice cream or whipping cream.

30

Strawberry Tart SPECIAL 4 Tarts for $1. Thi$ offer i$ good only March 15 Thru 18th, 1965 CARRY OUT 01 3-9977

DOUBLE DECKER Drive-In 1058 INDIANAPOLIS ROAD

Topple styi •

My Old Fat Friend AT WHITE CLEANERS Can make your closets LARGER

GET TOP VALUE STAMPS TOO!

INSTANT ANALYSIS How do you like your eggs? One restaurant proprietor says: If you like your eggs hardboiled, you are persistent, dynamic, sincere. If you like them soft-boiled, you are gentle, patient, kind. Medium-boiled means you're calm, cool, collected. If you prefer poached, you’re speedy, peppy, intelligent. If scrambled eggs are your favorite, you're artistic, nervous, passionate. If you like them shirred, you're fastidious, romantic, sensitive. And, if you like eggs raw, you're overbearing and conceited. Now you know! f" Billboard sign of the times: "Now you | can borrow enough money to get com- | | pletely out of debt." |

SAVIN’ SERVANT Electricity is your savin' servant! Saves you from so much of the hard labor of housework. With electricity to help you in so many ways, you feel fresher, look younger—and have more time to spend with your family, tool

MIRROR MAGIC From Mrs. B. F. of Franklin comes this idea on removing hair spray film from mirrors. First apply rubbing alcohol taking care not to let it touch the finished frame. Then, follow with a soft water rinse and a thorough polishing. Thank you, Mrs. B. F.

TROUBLE FREEI It's as trouble free as any heat can be! Clean . . . Comfortable ... Quiet . . . Safe ... Flameless electric heating! No wonder over a million and a half homes in the USA now heat the modern, flameless electric wayl

I'd like to say a special 'Thank You" to all the folks who have written to me. I love to get those letters! Keep them coming. I’ll be looking for your ideas and favorite recipes. Send them to: Kathy Kilowatt, Plainfield, Indiana.

APPLE COFFEE CAKE

“V

Watch those sleepy eyes open wide when you serve this breakfast or brunch delight!

8" square pan 2 cups biscuit mhc 2-3 tbsp. sugar legg Vi cup evaporated milk Vi cup water

400* preheated electric oven 2 tart apples 1 tsp. cinnamon V* cup sugar 2 tbsp. flour 3 tbsp. soft shortening Serves 4-6 In a bowl combine 2 cups biscuit mix, 2-3 tbsp. sugar, egg, evaporated milk and water; mix until thoroughly blended. Turn into 6-inch greased square pan. Top with rows of sliced apple. Combine remaining ingredients until crumbly, sprinkle over apples, Bake 25-30 minutes or until done.

PUBLIC SERVICE INDIANA