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

2 Th* Daily Bannar, Graaneastle, Indiana Thursday, April 22, 1965 Boinbridge First, Russellville 2nd. In Livestock Judging Contest

The Bainbridge livestock judging team took top honors in the county 4-H and FFA livestock judging contest held here Saturday. This team, composed of Dick McFarland. Bill Judy, Dick Evens and Hal Hendrich, tallied 1239 points out of a posible 1350, some 52 points over the second placing Russellville 4-H team. Third and fourth place teams were composed of members from the Bainbridge School and Cloverdale 4-H Club respectively. Individual honors for top judging efforts are as follows: out of a possible 450 points: Dick McFarland, 424, Bainbridge. Hal Hendrich, 412, Bainbridge. Keith Carrington, 404, Russellville. Dick Evens, 403, Bainbridge. Linda Niles. 402. Russellville. Bill Judy, 397, Bainbridge.

Reg Johnson, 397, Bainbridge. Gary Clodfelter, 381, Russellville. Larry Clodfelter, 381, Bain- ' bridge. I Dave Carrington, 372, Russellville. Both of these top two teams will represent Putnam County in the District Livestock judging contest. This contest will be at Worthington on Saturday, April 24. The winning team was coached by Vo-Ag teacher Norman ! Evens and the second place j team was coached by Hereford I breeder Morris McGaughey. The Cloverdale team was made up of Jerry Sinclair, Bruce Parker, David Is »3, Larry Williams. Other individuals: from Russellville Melvin Grimes, from Jefferson Twp. 4-H Club Carolyn Hurst, Nancy

Arnold also participated.

Reelsville Wins Forestry Contest; Jackson Jr. Farmer Team Second The Reelsville Plowboys 4-H men of trees common to InForestry team, composed of diana.

Ron Hazel and Nick Aubrey, won first place In the County

The first placing team scored 576 points, while the second

A Local Teenager's View By Janet Staub Yesterday the pupils In the local high school passed another milestone; a six weeks grading period. Most of us have become accustomed to the grading system of A for excellent, B for above average, C for average, D for below average, and F for failure. These grades are put on cards which are passed out the Wednesday after the grading period ends. But someplace in the back of our minds, we remember the elementary cards. They come out like ours but the letter system Is different. S stands for satisfactory, N for needs improvement, F for failure, and X indicates a pupil could do better in this area of his work. Throughout the United States, a vast number of grading systems are used, some students get cards every ten weeks, with ! failure notices appearing at the j five week mark. Some in place ! of A use E. Many schools have taken to j the system of mailing the report cards to the parents in hope j they may see them a little more

1 often.

The number system uses 100 as a basis and failure being

I I MaIAIC I usually below 70. That allows a

] thirty point span between top

The Reddi Kilowatt Club will and bottom. And they may

THI DAILY IANNM

AND

HERALD CONSOLIDATED 24-2S S. Jack*** Si. Graencoslla, In4. Butinati Rhone OL 3*5151 Samuel R. Raridan, Publisher Norma HiU. Gen. Mgr. Elisabeth Raridon, Busineu Mgr. Jamas B. Zeio. Managing Editor William D. Hooper, Adv. Mgr. Entered in the Pest Office at Green* cattle. Indiana, as Second Clou Moil matter under Act of March 7, 1B7I. Subscription Prices Heme Delivery 40c per week Mailed In Putnam Co. $5.00 per year Outside of Putnam Ca. $10.00 per year Outside of Indiana $14.00 per year Bible Thought To love Him w r ith all the heart, and with all the understanding, and with all the soul and with all the strength, and love his neighbour as himself, is more than all whole burnt offerings and sacrifices. Mark

12:33.

The Ten Commandments are summed up in one supreme imI perative; Thou shalt love — love God supremely: love neighbor genuinely. Love calls for one s best. It holds nothing

back.

Personal And

WEDDING SET FOR MAY 2 Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Cummings wish to announce the approaching marriage of their daughter, Sharon, to Eddie Mannan on Sunday, May 2, at 2:30 p.m. in the Cloverdale Methodist Church. All friends and relatives invited.

WGRE NEWS This evening at 7:00, Greencastle Schools on the Air will present a special program of poetry and music from Miller School. The third grade of Miller School under the direction of their teacher Mrs. Harold Spicer will bring an Aprl program of their favorite songs and poems. This week Faculty Fireside, this evening at 7:30 is proud to present an interview with professor Dr. H. T. Ross of DePauw’s Speech Department. Stu Grauel will discuss Dr. Ross's 34 years at DePauw with him. 'The Darling Princess” is the atory for this week on Children’s Playhouse, Friday evening at 5:00 p. m. The cast includes Mary Whitaker as Harold; Pat Luzar as the narrator; Susan Silander as Uliana; Julia Carrey as the Fairy; Mary Williams as Princess One; Steve Sullivant as Gardener; Wayne Sullivant as Michael; and Margaret Chase as Princess Two. Be with WGRE again this year as we bring you the exciting broadcast of DePauw’s Little 500, beginning at 12:30 p.m. Saturday afternooon.

road near Austin. Campbell's wife. May, 39, and one of their sons, Isaac, 13, were rushed to a Louisville, Ky. f hospital in critical condition. The driver of the other car, El* mer Campbell, was injured lesi seriously. Charlton Steward, 44, an em* ploye of the Indianapolis Water Co., was fatally injured Wednesday afternoon when a car struck him as he worked in a street escavation on the west side of Indianapolis. He died about 90 minutes later. The driver of the car, Francei H. Smith, 56. Columbia, S. C, told police he dozed at th$ wheel and did not see the work* men until he was right on top of them. Two other men escaped injury.

4-H Forestry Identification 1 placing team scored 509. The Contest. This contest was held | Reelsville Plow Boys also had ■Wednesday night at the Coun-1 the third placing team, comty Extension Office. The second j posed of Steve Morlan and place team, the Jackson Jr. Herschel Rigney, compiling a Farmers team, was made up of | score of 283. Alberta Wood, Pam Keck, and Individual scoring placing David 'Wood. was — first individual Nick Both of these teams will rep- Aubrey with 346, second placing resent Putnam County in the individual was Alberta Wood District 4-H Forestry Contest ^ with 272, third placing indion Saturday, April 24th at Wor-! vidual, David Wood with 237, thington. ! fourth placing individual, RonThis contest has two parts, nie Hazel with 230. one part a quiz on different Coaches for the teams were aspects of trees common to In- j Jim Wood for the Jackson diana, the other part having Junior Farmers and Robert to do wdth identifying 25 dif- England and Vince Green for ferent herbarium and seed speci-1 the Reelsville Plow Boys.

Public Service ! 1 Indiana Statewide would welcome the opportunity to justify this project before an impartial and duly authorized commission delegated to protect the public interest.” It Is significant that many co-op members and officials do, not favor this wasteful expenditure of tax money. Major! support comes from certain federal power zealots in Indiana and in Washington who refuse to acknowledge basic economics, said Blanchar.

‘‘Great economics can accrue to electric customers through technoligies of power pooling and bigger generating units,” he said. "Yet the co-op project ignores such economies.” Public Service Indiana has mad# continuous efforts to achiev mutual agreement in the area of power supply. Many rural electric co-ops outside the power plant group have taken advantage of favorable rates available since 1960 — more than a year before the Rural Electrification Administration in Washington authorized the loan.

meet with LaDona Ellison Monday April 26th at 7:30 p. m. It will be a baby shower. The New Providence Church, south of Mt. Meridian, will hold a songfest Sunday afternoon from 2 to 4 o’clock. Come sing

with us.

Mrs. Meme Gruenholtz left yesterday for Sweetwater, Texas where she will visit with her son Jack Gruenholtz and fam-

ily for ten days.

Mr. and Mrs. William O. Robbins of Roachdale, will enter- ? tain with an open house from 2 until 5 p.m. Sunday, April 25, in honor of Mr. and Mrs. John Wenninger and daughter of

Merced, Calif.

Word has been received of

even grade every month! If none of the above systems

j suit you maybe we should use the Kindergarten way, they

only get cards twice a year.

Weather Makes Nation's News

By United Pres* International

Rain and chilly temperatures buffeted northern New England today. Warm, dry air poured

into the Southwest.

Unseasonably cold temperatures, some only a degree above freezing, accompanied the rain into New England. The weather bureau said one station,

the death of Charles Steegmil- M° unt Washington, N.H., ex-

DANCE V.F.W. POST 1550 Friday, April 23 JOHN WOOD COMBO MEMBERSHIP STAG, WED., APRIL 28th

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ler, a former resident of Greencastle, in EauGallie, Florida, Wednesday morning. Funeral services will be held Friday with burial in Melbourne, Fla. Those who have not preenrolled their child in Fillmore Kindergarten or first grade for the school year 1965-66 — may enroll in the office of the principal In the High School building between 9-3, April 28. Please bring your child’* birth certificate. Professor Harry Davis of the faculty of John Herron Art Institute will give a lecture and demonstration in drawing tonight at the DePauw Art Center. Davis’ appearance at 7:30 p. m. in the gallery is being sponsored by the Putnam County Art League. DePauw University Registrar Mrs. Value M. Williams is attending the 51st annual meeting of the Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers in Chicago. More than 700 representatives of 600 American colleges and universities are attending the four-day session which ends tomorrow.

Why shop around for "bargains”? The best "buys” is the quality cleaning you’ll always get at Old Reliable WTiite Cleaners.

perienced wind gusts up to 60 miles an hour. Extremely dry air moved across southern New Mexico from the desert. Truth or Consequences, N.M., reported a relative humidity of 6 per cent. Light thundershowers sprinkled the Dakotas. The only other rain reported W’as along the Washington and Oregon

coasts.

Prairie du Chien, Wis., La Crosse, Wis., and Dubuque, Iowa, bore the main force of the rampaging Mississippi River, swollen from melting northern snow accumulations. 1 Some 35,000 persons have j been forced from their homes along 600 miles of Mississippi banks from the floods that have taken at least 13 lives in six states. The nation’s early morning low of 27 was registered at Traverse City, Mich., and the high was 83 at Blythe, Calif. Afternoon showers were predicted from the northern Rockies through the western Great Lakes region and along the eastern Gulf Coast through

Florida.

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County Hospital Dismissed Wednesday: Ailene Schroer, Greencastle Lela Monnett, Grencastle George Blanchard, Greencastle Janet Dickey, Greencastle Roy Detro, Greencastle Mrs. Norman Dunn and daughter, Greencastle Mrs. Raymond Talley and daughter, Greencastle Robert Black, Greencastle Mrs. Bernard Snider and daughter, Greencastle Caroline Crosby, Roachdale Paul Long, Clay City Maxine Allee, Quincy Lucy Swim, Brazil

Worry Clinic HAYS, Kan. UPI — Housewives will have an unprecedented opportunity to let off steam on just about any frustration at a "women's worry clinic” next week. Some of the topics to be discussed at the clinic, sponsored by the Ellis County Association for Mental Health: "Bridges— budgets — babies.” "Readin’ — writin’ — riot.” “Chaos: Yeah, Yeah!” "H-bombs, alcoholism, manners and morals.”

2 More Added To Traffic Toll By United Press International Two deaths late Wednesday raised Indiana’s 1965 traffic fatality toll to at least 372 compared with 325 a year ago. Bud Compbell, 41, father of nine children, was killed when he backed out of the driveway of his home into the path of another car on a Scott County

Woman Held In ; Bank Shortage j BLUFFTON UPI — Thf head bookkeeper of the Farm* ers and Merchants State B&nh remained in the psychiatric seo tion of Clinic Hospital here t<i day as the investigation int^ an alleged bank shortage of $216,000 continued. The alleged shortage at thl bank was uncovered when coi^ siderate associates of the ho* pitalized bookkeeper handled her duties during a previou* hospitalization several week! ago. State bank examiners weii working on the books of the bank when the bookkeeper, p 45-year-old Bluffton antique dealer outside banking hour* was found wounded with wri^t and arm slashes in her horm Monday night. a

NOTICE MY OFFICE WILL BE CLOSED SATURDAY-ONLY April 24th) Dr. Burns, D.C. CHIROPRACTOR South Jackion & Sunset Drive Phone OL 3-5814

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20 So. Vin« St. If you havo o notion to buy notions, wo have thorn. Alto knitting s u p pl i o B and tho finost soloc* tion of summor cot* tons yot.

FINAL PROGRAM TONIGHT Great musician Vincent Persichetti, shown here in rrhearsal with DePauw University student musicians, will help wrap up the college’s Contemporary Music Festival tonight. Ending a rigorous three-day lecture-dem-onstration-performing schedule on the campus, he will conduct the 55-member symphony orchestra and university choir in the finale of tonight’s 8:15 p.m. concert in Meharry Hall. The musical selection will be one of his own compositions, "Te Deum.” The concert's first number, "Concerto for Orchestra,” by Bela Bartock will be played by the symphony under its regular conductor, Professor Herman Berg. Over 400 persons attended last night’s Meharry Hall program that included performances by the wind ensemble, The Aeolian Trio and a piano concerto by Dr. and Mrs. Persichetti.

Many Volunteers WASHINGTON UPI — More than 3,250 Navy men have offered to serve in South Viet Nam in answer to a call for volunteers, according to a spokesman. The Navy now has about 1,000 men in South Viet Nam, advising the South Vietnamese navy and filling "housekeeping” jobs.

One Solution SAN FRANCISCO UPI — Parking problems in this c ity are acute, but one organization Wednesday began distributing bumper strips with one possible solution. “Trouble perhaps ? Support planned parenthood,” the strips read.

son on things to be considered in applying fertilizer, cost and

benefits.

Mrs. Frank Toney gave a lesson on Curtains and Draperies. She explained the different types of windows and suitable curtains and materials for them. One thing to be considered is the reasons for the use of curtains or draperies. As she referred to a book for her

ports from officers. Mrs. Sin- explanations her audience beclair gave a safety lesson on cam e greatly interested in it, guarding against accidents. “Guide to Window Beauty,” She brought out an interesting p U t out by Kirsch Co.

The hostess received a set of

Mrs. Alexander Hostess To West Marion Club

West Marion Home Demonstration Club met for their regular monthly meeting at the home of Mrs. J. L. Alexander with eight members answering roll call and another attending a district Home Demonstration Club meeting. The usual business was conducted with re-

The PHILLIPS APARTMENTS on Mansfield Lake OFFERS YOU A FRIDAY EVE. TO SUNDAY EVE. WEEKEND VACATION SPECIAL During April and May Furnished Apt. including Fishing Beat and Meter All For Only $25.00 For Informotion Call ar Write Cecil R. Phillips OL 3-6833 V. O. Bex 43 Greencastle, Ind.

fact in that the number one cause of death among the one year to thirty four year old group is accidents. Mrs. Ray Lawson gave an Outlook Les-

place mats as a gift from her assistant hostess, Mrs. Carl Barker, who will entertain the club in May.

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