The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 25 June 1965 — Page 2

Tht Daily Banner, Greancastla, Indiana Friday, June 25, 1965

Editorial-Wise At Last, A Cold Cure (From: Newton. Iowa, News) We wouldn't like to raise anyone’s hopes permaturely, but it's beginning to look at last as if science, which can photograph the moon at lose range and send men walking about in space, is now making some inroads on the common cold. At Tulane University Hospital it was found that some suspended cotton balls soaked in-an anti-biotic kept everyone in the room from contracting Asian flu, while patients in another room without the substance came down with the disease. Moreover, people who already had colds found the duration was only half what it ordinarily is, and the severity of the symptoms was lessened. Science, with its customary reserve, isn't kicking its heels together and making any wild claims, but it is at least paying some attention to a problem that affects everyone in a completely understandable way. That, in itself, is a triumph.

• —aui> - . , .... The home of Mr. end Mrs. William Langdon of Cloverdal# wa« the setting for the marriage of their daughter, Jenny Langdon. and Leland Roger Fryar last Saturday afternoon, June 19th. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fryar, Bowling Green, are th* parents of the bridegroom. The bride wore a gown of white organza. Her veil was secured by a crown of sequins and pearls. She carried a bouquet of pink rosebuds with a lavender ordchid in the center. Karen Langdon of Los Angeles, Calif., sister of the bride, was maid of honor. She wore a dress of yellow organza and a corsage of white carnations and yellow

rose buds.

Best man was Larry Niehart, Columbus, brother-in-law of the bridegroom. The bride is a graduate of Cloverdale High School and attended Indiana University. The bridegroom is a graduate of Patricksburg High School and is now serving in the U. S. Army. They will live at Fort Gordon, Georgia.

TNI DAILY BANNED

AND

HERALD CONSOLIDATED 24-28 S. Jock ton St. GrMncastU, tnd. Businosi Phono OL 3-S151 Eliioboth Roridon Estate, Publisher S. R. Roridon, Senior Editor Norma HHI. Con. Mgr. James B. Zeis, Managing Editor William D. Hooper, Adv. Mgr. Entered in tho Past Office at Greencastle. Indiana, as Second Class Mai matter under Act of March 7, 1B78. Subscription Pricts Heme Delivery 40c per week Mailed in Putnam Ce. $8.00 gar year Outside of Putnam Co. SI 0.00 par year Outside of Indiana $14.00 par year Bible Thought In everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God. Philippians 4:6. Prayer, should be a daily habit, and what better place than to begin in the home, with all the family together. Jesus needed to pray, our need is even greater for prayer. Personal And Local News Dennis Raymer of Fern is a patent in the Veterans Hospital in Indanapolis. The Reddi Kilowatt Club will meet at the home of Lydia Green June 28, at 7:30 p.m. Mrs. Marie Graham of Columbia Falls, Montana, is visiting relatives in and around Greencastle. Jeffrey O'Neal, son of Mr. and Mrs. Chester O’Neal, was dismissed from the Culver Hospital in Crawfordsville today. Monday, June 28, is the last day to file claims with County Auditor Eston Cooper for consideration by the County Commissioners at their regular monthly meeting on Tuesday, July 6th. There will be an educationaJ meeting on zoning open to everyone Tuesday evening, June 29 at 8:00 p.m. at the Community Building on the 4-H Grounds. The meeting is sponsored by the Putnam County Farm Bureau. There will be a pew rally at the regular Sunday Worship period 11 a.m. at Bethel A.M.E. Church, corner of Crown and Apple Streets. Rev. Sam Kirk, assistant pastor of G o b i n Church will be the speaker. All are cordially invited. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Reeder will be in Cincinnati, Ohio, Saturday to attend the wedding of Mrs. Reeder* granddaughter, Sandra Lee Dahlstrand to Harold Shevers. The wedding will take place at the College Hill Presbyterian Church at 2:30

p.m.

Loyal order of Moose 1592 will meet Sunday morning June 27, to enroll new candidates in the

Sheinwold On Bridge Expert Defensive Signal Used To Defeat Contract By ALFRED SHEINWOLD About thirty years ago, Hy Lavinthal, of Trenton, N. J., wrote about a defensive signal that all experts have enthusiastically adopted. His Suit Preference Signal is a way to show by your play in one suit where you have your side strength. North dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH A QJ 10 AJ5 O 74 * K Q J95 WEST EAST ♦ 9 6 53 2 ♦ AK V 743 K? 62 08532 OQJ10 96 ♦ A ♦ 10762 SOUTH * 874 V K Q 10 9 S 0 AK * 843 North East South West 1 + 10 IV Pass 2 V Pass 4 V All Pass Opening lead — ♦ A

(North Viet Nam) In tot*.! violation of the Geneva agreements.”

Janet Lynn Scobee, Bainbridge High School junior, U attending Hoosier Girls State at Indiana University this week. She was elected City Chairman on the Federalist ticket of Cahill City and is a member of the State Central Committee.

Anniversaries

Birthdays

Brenda Jo Cody, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Max Cody, eight

years old today.

Julia Jones, Fillmore, 13 years

today, June 25th.

Card Of Thanks I wish to thank my friends, neighbors and ! fives for cards, flowers i visits during my stay

many rela-

and

in the

W r est leads the singleton ace of clubs, the best opening. Unless West is crazy, this lead of dummy's suit is clearly marked as a singleton. If the defenders are nonexperts, West will lead a diamond at the second trick, hoping to reach his partner's hand with the suit he has bid. This is natural, but it doesn’t work. South wins the diamond switch and draws trumps. Then he runs the clubs and gives up one spade at the end, scoring 650 points for game, rubber and

one overtrick.

EXPERT SIGNAL 1 hospital. Special thanks to the East defeats the contract by neighbors who helped with my using the expert signal. East stock and crops. Also the minplays the ten of clubs at the isters for their visits and P ra y*

first trick. This play of his high- ers * est club cannot mean that East wants a club continuation. Everybody knows that the lead is

a singleton.

Instead, this signal means that East’s strength is in spades, the higher side suit, instead of diamonds, the lower side suit Heeding this signal, an expert West shifts to the three of spades at the second trick. East takes his two spade* and returns a club. West ruffs and returns a spade. East ruffs and leads another club. West's ruff puts the contract down three before South can even gain the

lead.

Lois Clark..

A Local

Teenager's View

Lessen Penalty WASHINGTON UPI — The Senate has decided to lessen the penalty for misguided, pranksters who board airliners and jokingly announce they are . carrying a bomb in their lug-

gage

By Janet Staub

Well, it seems that as a town grows, it becomes A ‘‘typical | town” full of gangs, and “tuffs.” As Greencastle developes its business, recreational and residential areas, let s keep it from becoming a "typical town.” Th« trouble makerg may not be new families, or old families.

Some players use this signal ^ e y ma y ^ rom P 001 " so much that they lose sight of middle ® lass families, or even the primary use of the high card T arn i lies > Th e y can be little —as a signal to show strength kids * middle-aged people, but

in that suit rather than as a way to show strength in a dif-

ferent suit. DAILY QUESTION As dealer, you hold: Spade 8 7 4 Heart K Q 10 9 8 Diamond A K Club 8 4 3. What do you

most of the time It is blamed on teenagers. I won’t gay all I teens are angels, but likewise, not all teens are juvenile delinquents. A typical teenager, when caught doing something | wrong, gives the reason that they didn't have anything to do,

say?

ANSWER: Bid one heart. You and their P arent s didn't want

Moose. Breakfast will be served have 12 points in hgih cards and them h an ^i n S around the house 9:30 to 10:30 to candidates, 1 point for the doubleton, enough a11 the time -

for an optional bid. You decide 1 The first part of this excuse to bid because you have a very 1 is true because the typical trou-

and sponsors before the class enrollment. The Greencastle Ritual Staff will have charge of the ceremony starting at 11:00 a.m S Sgt. Morris D e W a y n

Senators Thursday approved ; Cam P be11 and wife and

their two children, David Lee and Patricia Dawn, flew here

strong five-card major suit.

a bill that would cut the present penalty from a maximum

of a $1,000 fine, a year in pris- Saturday, June 19th, by jet to on to a civil penalty of not visit their parents, Mr. and Mrs.

more than $1,000.

j ble makers are like stone walls. They don't hear or see a thing and they won't use their brains to think of something constructive. The second part of the excuse may also be true because a teenager around any household

LONDON UPI—Communist presents quite a problem. When

Olyn Campbell, and Mr. and China today ‘‘sternly rejected” parents take the responsibility

* Bid Is Rejected By Red China

SUMMER TIME FUN TIME let uj (it yeu (or Prescription Sun Glosses At A Price You Con Afford. Glasses for the Entire Family At SPENCER OPTICAL CO. 781 E. Morgan St. Spencer, Ind. 9 00 AM.. 5:00 P.M. Doily Including Saturday 9 00 A M.-8 00 P.M. Friday 9 00 A.M. - 12 00 Noon Wed. For Appointment Call Spencer 829-3981 Spencer, Ind.

Singer Sidelined LAS VEGAS. Nev. UPI — Singer Dinah Shore could not perform in her show at the Riviera Hotel here Thursday night because of an acute attack of

bronchitis.

Miss Shore, who was replaced just a few miles south of Green .

temporarily by Eddie Fisher,

remained in her hotel suite even though doctors advised her to go to a hospital.

Hear Beatles

MILAN, Italy UPI — More than 32.000 Italian teen-agers

packed Milan's cycling arena There is no “ Bar K ain Ma * ic '’ Thursday for two performances Cleaning when you by the Beatles. ! care al30U t y° ur clothes and posm sessions, you should not take The shows were unusually i . -.i. , ^ J chances with “cut rate clean-

quiet. Only 10 youths had to be

a Commonwealth bid to send a British-led Viet Nam peace

mission to Peking.

A Communist New' China News Agency broadcast monitored in London blamed the war on the United States and charged that Britain has given Washington “full backing." The development came as members of the peace mission, encouraged by new indications of possible support from Russia, delved into ways to end the

titled “Do Plants and Animals war in Nam.

Need Each Other?” The camp The Communist news agency visit helped the children to find: said Red China ' s note of rejec-

| tion was handed to British In-

M.

Wilford in Peking this morning by Ting Hao, deputy director of the Chinese Foreign Minis-

Mrs. Newport of Brazil, before I returning to Washington State j to finish his career in the Air j Force and also to make their fu-

ture home there.

Twenty students and five adults from the Junior Department of the First Christian Church Bible School enjoyed a nature hike at Camp Friend this week. The camp is located

of rearing a child, it includes teaching them right from

wrong.

Let it never be said that Greencastle is a "typical town.”

castle on the Manhattan Road. The lesson for the day was en-

the answer. The juniors also i

found nature specimens to help ‘ ^ erim Charge d Affaires K.

fill the terrariums they have been making in Bible School.

try's Department of West

European affairs.

It quoted the note as saying the substance of the Viet Nam problem was that the United States has been continuously

thrown out of the hall for screaming too loud.

ing. Old Reliable White Clean- expanding its war of aggression ers. i against South Viet Nam and

OR.

J. F. CONRAD

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MASON'S JEWELERS Bogistered Watchmaker South Side of the Square

Mr. *nd Mm. Georg# Frederick William# anounc# the July 24 wedding plans of their daughter, Mis* Malinda Jane Williams, and Freedrick Nicholas Wendelboe. The future bride was graduated from DePauw University. She ig a member of Alpha Phi and Kappa Kappa Kappa sororities. The prospective bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas P. 'Wendelboe of Canonsburg, Pa. He is a senior at DePauw University and a member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity.

Let’s all back the Community Activity Council which is working diligently on an all-age, allaround recreational program. My apologies to all Fathers for forgetting to wish them a "Happy Father's Day" last week, and now I say, “Happy Father’s Day, Fathers."

County Hospital Dismissed Thursday: Olive Brown, Greencastle Ralph Hanks, Greencastle Louise Haverly, Greencastle Helen Mason, Greencastle Charles Knight. Reelsviile Joy Lawrence. Quincy Ren Meek, Fillmore Conrad Clearwaters, Cloverdale Births:

RECTOR

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and Mrs. Oim Sutherlin, I Mr. and Mrs. Melvin ChurcH Cloverdale, a boy, Thursday. I Coatesville, a boy, Thursday.

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