The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 May 1965 — Page 2
Th# Daily Bannar, Graaneaatla, Indiana Saturday, May 29, 1965 Editorial-Wise Advice To Teenagers (From: Milwaukee Journal I Always we hear the plaintive cry of the teenagers: "What can we do? Where can we go?” I can make some suggestions. Go home! Put on the storm windows. Paint the woodwork. Rake the leaves. Mow the lawn. Learn to cook. Scrub the floors. Repair the sink. Build a boat. Get a job. Help your pastor, the Red Cross, the Salvation Army. Assist the poor. Study your lessons. And when you're through—and not too tired—read a good book. Your parents do not owe you entertainment. The world does not owe you a living. Your village does not owe you recreation facilities. You owe the world something. You owe it your time and energy, and your talents, so that no one will be at war or in poverty, or sick, or lonely again. In plain, simple words: Grow up; quit being a cry baby; get out of your dream world; develop a backbone, not a wishbone; and start acting like a man or lady. I'm a parent. I'm tired of nursing, protecting, helping, appealing, begging, excusing, tolerating, denying myself needed comforts for your every whim and fancy, just because your selfish ego, instead of common sense, dominates your personality and thinking. 51st Alumni Banquet Held By Bainbridge High School
IMS DAILY BANNtt {
AND ^
HIRALD CONSOLIDATED 24-28 S. JackMii Si.
GrMitcMtto, Ind.
Busin*** Phan* 01 3-9151 Samuel R. Raridan, Publisher Norma Hill, G*n. Mgr. Elisabeth Rariden, Business Mgr. James B. Zeis, Managing Editor William 0. Hooper, Adv. Mgr. Entered in th* Post Office at Greencastle, Indiana, as Second Class Mail matter under Act of March 7, 1B7B.
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Bible
Thought
As my father hath sent me, even so send I you. John 20:21. What a privilege; to be the personal representative of the
God of the universe.
Personal And
Local News
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Helton left today for their home in Phoenix, i Arizona, after spending a week
with her mother and frienda, | Neither side vuInerable
Mrs. Carl Elmore.
Sheinwold On Bridge Detectives Challenged To Spot Bridge Crime By ALFRED SHEESWOLD The time has come for all good detectives to come to the aid of the police force. A bridge crime was committed in the hand shown today, and a good detectvie should be able to spot the crime and the criminaL South dealer South dealer Neither side vulnerable
NORTH * A K 4
V A 1063
O J 9 8 7
* J 2
WEST EAST A 87S3 A Q 1092 Q 4 2 K 9 8 7 O Q 10 0 42 A K 9 8 3 A Q 10 7
SOUTH
South
A J6
J 5
O A K 6 5 3 A A 6 5 4
West North
East
1 O
Pass
1
Pass
2 O
Pass
2 4
Pass
2 NT
Pass
3 NT
All
Opening lead — A3
South refused the first two
The 51st Alumni banquet of Bainbridge High School was held Saturday evening in the gymnasium with 209 members
and guests present.
The meeting was called to order by president, F. L. Priest.
"School Days” was sung and , ** ja cke d in quantity,
immediately followed by a beautiful invocation by Mrs. O.
a class of 27. He welcomed the
seniors and wished them sue- and run June 11. Time for clascess in the future. se s are 1 o'clock to 3:30 each The next speaker was Robert afternoon. All children are wel-
Huffman. Mr. Huffman said his come to attend,
class made up in quality what j The Russell Township Farm
Bureau will have its meeting at
Toastmaster Clodfelter then Christian Church at 7:30
talked to the seniors and in-
Vacation Bible school at Am- c ^ ul:) bnt won t* 16 third, ity Baptist Church, 5 mlies east discarding the three of hearts
of Cloverdale, will start June 1
p.m., Wednesday, June 2nd.
B. Lane. A three course dinner troduced the speaker, Jerry y ance Denny will speak on farm was served by Mrs. Steward Schuck. Schuck responded with p rob ] ems and t here will be the
words of appreciateion to the
and her assistants.
After the dinner Mr. Priest alumni for their hospitality to introduced toastmaster, John the graduating class. Clodfelter, who will graduate A report by Shirley Rooker from DePauw University in on the officers for next year June. Mr. Clodfelter then intro- was given. President for the duced the first speaker, David next year is Estoll Cooper; vice Lane, a member of the class of president, Patricia Houser; sec1955 and a graduate of Purdue retary, Carol Porter, and treas-
urer, Roy Wayne Hanks. Mr. Clodfelter then introduc-
ed the last speaker, Paul Crodian of the 50 years class, who
gave a very interesting talk.
University and a prominent
Putnam County farmer. Lan« gave a resume of his
classmates of ten years ago. Several were graduates out of
Common Sense Driving Urged
Meeting Held By Historical Society
The Historical Society held a dinner meeting at Old Trail Inn
INDIANAPOLIS UPI — Law Wednesday evening with good enforcement and safety officials attendance. Mrs. William Boatissued their traditional pre-hol- vvright, president, opened the iday ple^ today for ‘‘common meeting with ‘‘The Bones of the sense” driving through the Me- B ody.” She mentioned four morial Day weekend. kinds: wish bones, funny bones, “Regardless ot Traffic condi- jaw bones, and back bones. She tions. there needn't be one appointed a nominating corndeath if drivers will Just use a mittee: Mrs. Russell Clapp, Mr. little common sense,” said Robert McCullough, and Mrs. State Police Supt. Robert A. perry Michael. The Society O’Neal. agreed to buy a book for the The Indiana Traffic Safety archives: “The Descendents of Foundation urged motorists to John Ashton and John Ames drive with low beam headlights Arno id.” This will be helpful burning throughout the 78- for genealogies,
hour period, and executive di-
rector A. E. Huber suggested Dr. Manhart .vice-president, reduced speeds and full com- introduced Dr. Harold Rollings pliance with laws and courtesy of the DePauw history depart-
ment, who gave a very inter-
annual ice cream supper. Mrs. Emma Smith will ob-
serve her 98th birthday Monday at her home at 211 South Arlington. She has resided in Putnam County all her life. Her father, a veteran of the Mexican War, lived to be 101.
Roy Rightsell, 37, city, was
jailed by sheriff's deputies Friday afternoon and booked on charges of reckless driving, public intoxication, leaving the scene of an accident and carry-
ing a concealed weapon.
When winter changes to spring, no need to risk summer damage from moths and other dangers, when you can store them free at Old Reliable W’hite Cleaners
Putnam Court Notes In the suit of William A. Lawrence versus Russell Rogers and the City of Greencastle, Judge Francis N. Hamilton has found for the plaintiff in the amount of $300 damages and costs. The suit was the result of a traffic accident involving Lawrence's auto and a police car driven by Rogers on North Jackson Street
in 1962.
rules.
“A single act of disobedience esting account of the “Indiana or error in judgment on today's Revolutionary Trends and Excrowded highways can be ex- periences.” Before and during cessively costly in human lives the Revolutionary War, the and property,” Huber said. | counrty was governed by many The Office of Traffic Safety ordinances, but Indiana history previously issued a warning actually begins with the Treaty that 15 to 20 persons probably of Greenville in 1795. When would be killed in traffic be- "Mad Anthony Wayne” defeated tween 6 p. m. Friday and mid- the Indians at Maumee, this night Monday. treaty was formed. Seven years State police planned their admission info the Union — one usual blanket patrol coverage. ] a ter Ohio was knocking for with all possible personnel on 0 f t he most striking facts in our
duty.
history. Indiana, part of the
Governor Branigin ordered Northwest Territory, came in
the Indiana National Guard to
help troopers patrol. Two state police helicopters will watch for traffic bottlenecks and reckless drivers. Much of the patrol will be concentrated in the Indianapolis area because of the 500mile race which annually draws upwards of 200,000 fans to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
Dr. Burns, D.C. CHIROPRACTOR Tues. thru Sot. 9-12 1-5 Tues., Thurs., & Fri. Evenings 7-9 South Jackson 8 Sunset Oriv* Phone Ol 3-5814 21 •Tt.
1816. In 1940, the bicentennial of Thomas Jefferson, Julian Boyd succeeded in having a sum of money set up for the purpose of editing and publishing historical documents of the Jefferson papers to preserve these for future citizens. Soon there were movements made for four other priority projects: those of Alexander Hamilton, Benjamin Franklin, the Adams of Boston, and James Madison. The Madison and the Jefferson are more interesting to Indiana since more of our people came from Virginia rather than from farther north. These writings of the Revolutionary Fathers are a wonderful preservative of
American history.
County Hospital Dismissed Friday: Thomas Lisby, Greencastle Mary Humphrey, Greencastle Oscar McClaine, Greencastle Lucille Wilson, Bainbridge Mrs. Robert Green and daughter, Bainbridge Cecil Quinlan, Stilesville Olive Bourne, Coatesville Lois Snow, Coaesville
Births:
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Corns, Spencer. A daughter, Friday.
CLUB CALENDAR Tuesday Present Day Club—2 p.m. Mrs. Nelle Gillen, 303 E. Seminary.
from dummy. Declarer led out the ace and king of diamonds, dropping the queen, and cashed dummy’s jack and nine. Since he was unable to get to his own hand for the last diamond he succeeded in winning only eight
tricks. Down one.
You now have enough evidence to spot the crime and the criminal. Decide for yourself be-
fore you read on.
Don’t put the bidding under microscope. Five diamonds would have been a reasonable contract, but so was three notrump. South was the criminal, but his crime took place during
the play of the cards.
NEEDED GOOD BREAK South needed five diamond tricks to make the contract and therefore needed a good break in the suit. He would be safe if the queen was singleton or doubleton — if he played the hand correctly. The important thing was to prevent the suit from be-
ing blocked.
When South takes the third round of clubs he should discard a diamond from dummy. Then South leads out the ace of diamonds to see if the queen drops. When only small diamonds appear, South leads his last club and discards another diamond from dummy. The defenders get their three club tricks, but declarer can win a spade or heart return in the dummy and can then lead dummy's last diamond to the king. Wlien the suit breaks, South manages to get all fvie diamond tricks instead of only
four.
DAILY QUESTION Partner opens with one diamond, and the next player passes. You hold: Spade Q 10 9 2 Heart K 9 8 7 Diamond 4 2 Club Q 10 7. What do you say? Answer: Bid one heart. With two 4-card suits, respond in the cheaper suit. If partner has four hearts, he can raise at once. If not, he can show a 4-card spade suit (if he has one). You can thus discover a 4-4 fit in either major suit if such a fit exists.
THE GOOD OLD DAYS High School Notes .... Principal Rosenburg came near having a very serious accident yesterday after school had been dismissed when in company with Paul VanArsdel he went to the high school attic and was looking over the lumber that was left from the "crazy house,” which was one of the best attractions of last year’s carnival. Mr. Rosenburg did not notice the sign “Watch Your Step” which was posted in a conspicuous place and consequently he stepped off of the boards and broke the plastering, and had it not been for the laths he might have fallen to the floor below. Mr. Rosenburg is absent from his work today because of a slight attack of grippe. He will likely be able to attend school tomorrow. There was no publication of the local papers on Decoration
Day.
June Draft Call of State is 13,308 . . . Thirteen Thousand three hundred and eight men must be furnished by Indiana in the second draft call beginning June 5, according to information received at Indianapolis from Washington by Maj. Robert Baltzell, state conscription officer. Harry W. Moore, secretary of the local conscription board, said today that no notification of the number of men Putnam County will have to send to the national army during June has been received here.
Judge Suspends Prison Sentence INDIANAPOLIS UPI — Mrs. Wilma Fleener, 38, former employee of the Union Bank & Trust Co., Franklin, was given a suspended prison sentence and fined $5,000 Friday in Federal Court for making a false entry at the bank involving a
$35,000 shortage.
Judge William E. Steckler sentenced Mrs. Fleener to three years on ine count of a grand jury indictment, and two years on each of two other counts, all to run concurrently. The sentences were suspended and Mrs. Fleener was placed on probation for two years. The maximum sentence for I each count was five years imprisonment and $5,000 fine.
low and John Hersey; actress Helen, Hayes, and jazz master Duke Ellington.
Hartford City Has Bomb Scare HARTFORD CITY UPI—A bomb scare resulted in evacuation of students from Hartford City High School yesterday afternoon and their dismissal for the remainder of the day. A male voice told the school office clerk in a phone call that “a bomb has been planted in the school.” School officials dismissed classes shortly after 1 p.m. while a search was made of the building.
much as $100 million total construction contracts would hav# been in existence in Indiana aa of March 11, the date Governor Branigin signed a new act of the 1965 Legislature into law.
In Memory
Scandal Figure Will Be Studied NEWARK, N. J. UPI — Anthony De Angelis, central figure in one of history’s biggest commodities scandal, Friday was ordered to a federal penitentiary for a complete threemonth study prior to final sen-
tencing.
De Angelis, who had pleaded guilty to charges in a $100 mili lion fraud was ordered sent to the Lewisburg, Pa., federal penitentiary for the study which will also include psychi1 atric examination. U. S. District Court Judge Reynier Wortendyke Jr. imposed a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison and $40,000 fine, but under a rarely used statute in the penal code delayed the start of the term pending the results of the study from the director of the Bureau of Prisons. When it is completed, Wortendyke can change the sentence or let it stand.
Arts Festival At White House
WASHINGTON UPI — A day-long White House Festival of the American Arts will be
Theodore "Teddy” Roosevelt, held June 14 to spotlight the former President of the United creative work of leading artists States and official political dis- in poetry, prose, ballet, music turber of the Republican party, and drama. was in Greencastle for a few The first such festival ever minutes Tuesday afternoon. to be held In the executive Headlines from 1918 mansion, it will begin with LIFE OF CITY BECOMING prose and poetry readings and NORMAL AFTER SEVEREST will wind up with dramatic proCOLD WAVE SINCE 1884 . . . ductions on the White House MORE TOMATOES MUST BE lawn in the evening. GROWN .... POPULATION Among those invited to partiON STATE FARM AT RAPID cipate are poets Mark Van DoDECLINE . . . PATRIOTISM ren, Robert Lowell and Phyllis IS KEYNOTE TO MEETING. McGinley; novelists Saul Bel-
Sales Tax Up To Contractor INDIANAPOLIS UPI — Atty. Gen. John J. Dillon ruled Friday that the burden for paying sales taxes on materials used in construction shifted from the buyer to the contractor effective last March 11, even though the contractor may have signed a fixed price contract before that date. "It is my opinion,” Dillon wrote, "that the acts of 1965 impose the duty upon suppliers of materials to builders and contractors to impose and collect from builders and contractors the sales tax as provided in the act and it also becomes the duty of the builder and-or contractor to pay the sales tax.” Dillon said this is true even though "the tax may adversely affect financial interests” of parties to the contracts. Dillon said he was not undertaking to answer "the effect, if any, the unexpected shifting of the tax burden may have on the duties or obligations of either party to such a contract.” A spokesman for Hoosier contractors, Jack Fenstermaker, president of the Indiana Building Congress, said he felt the decision "does place an unfair burden on the contractor if he is forced to pay a tax of which he had no knowledge at the time he signed the contract." One source estimated that as
In loving memory of our husband, father, and grandfather, John E. Ogles, who passed away May 30, 1955. Time helps to ease the sorrow, That parting always brings But leaves untouched th# memories Of happy treasured things. So through the days that followed Many memories we hold dear Continue blooming in our hearts That keep you, Loved On# Near! Sadly missed by wife, son and family.
In Memory
In loving memory of our dad and granddad, Jess Elliott, who ; passed away May 29, 1963. In our hearts your memory lingers, Always tender, fond and true; There's not a day, dear dad, We do not think of you. Children and grandchildren
In Memory
In memory of Walter L. Carmichael w ho pasesd away May 29. 1964. Where he sat and talked with U8 There’s just a n empty chair And silence now at evening Seems more than we can bear Though we knew-that some day There would be that empty chair Yet we could never picture Home without him there. We never fully realized How deeply one can car# Until we stood alone one night Beside his empty chair. Sadly missed by Wife, Maude, Son, William, Daughter, Loretta
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Poultry Study Will Be Made INDIANAPOLIS UPI — The Indiana Legislative Advisory Commission agreed to sponsor a study committee on the possibilities of an industry - wdde program for promoting poultry. Rep. Jack N. Smittherman. RMooresville, a hatchery owner, and Robert L. Hogue, executive secretary of the Indiana State Poultry Association, told the commission such a study Is needed to keep Southern states from winning a battle for the poultry market. House Speaker Richard Bodine, D-Mishawaka, said "we are loaded with study committees now” but the commission voted to carry out the requested study. LaVaughn Hawkins, director of the School Traffic Safety Education Division of the State Department of Public Instruction, outlined a need for money to finance training programs for the state’s 7,000 school bus drivers. He said there was no provision in the budget for the next biennium for that purpose. The commission adopted a resolution urging the State Budget Agency to allocate the money from available funds. The commission also approved a partial list of lay members on some other study committees.
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