The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 16 August 1965 — Page 2

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Th# Daily Banner, Greaneastla, Indiana

Monday, August 16, 1965

Beatles Pack Shea Stadium

baseball Mets, where a stajfe had been erected over second i base. Police estimated about 115 Beatle maniacs suffered minor injuries, or fainted, or became

NEW YORK UPI— The sound hysterical during the spectacle,

was unbelievable and more than Guards in the grandstand a little terrifying. gently slapped the faces of long

What started as a Joyful haired girls on the verge of colshriek quickly became a steady la P^ in £ in ecsta sy.

scream, then a deafening howl

THI OAltT KANNiR

AND

HMALD CONSOLIDATED

24-2S S. Jackson St. Grsoncastlo. Ind.

luiinost Rhone 01 3-5151

Elisabeth Raridon Estate, Publisher

5. R. Roriden, Senior Editor Norma HHL Gen. M§r.

James B. Zeis, Managing Editor WiHiam D. Hooper, Adv. Mgr. Entered in the Rost Office at Green-

Whether any of the fans ac- «• *•«•"«• Class Mail

and finally an ear-splitting roar ! tuall y heard their idols P la y or '" U,M Att °* M ° reh 7 * lt7i ‘ like the takeoff noise of a giant, sm « was d «ubtful. But the kids Subscription Rricoo iet or the lannchimr of a rocket did not seem to mind - Mos t ap- H* 1 "* Oelivery 40c per week

», P»- U y ,0 .cream ou, C. a-

more than 55.000 Beatles' fans- their undying love and thou- Outside of Rutnom Co. 510.00 per year almost all of them sobbing teen- sands of astatic moppets could Outside of Indrano $14.00 pot year age girls. And it went on and on ^ seen chan «nP their own |

for the full 30 minutes that the choruses of “I love Ringo,’* or

four mop-top minstrels from 1 * ove Geor £ e - Liverpool. England, performed 1 ' Sunday night at Shea Stadium. |n Memory

For the Beatles it was the

sound of success. Promoter Sid Tn lovin £ remembrance of our Acquaint now thyself with Bernstein said the sell-out con- beloved husband, father, and m m> Rn( i he at peace; thereby cert, the first in a cross-country grandfather, John W. Pritchett, shall come unto thee. Job

U.S.-Canadian tour, had grossed ' vho P ass€d awa y Au *u st 16 ' ‘22:21.

$304,000 and that the shaggy . . .. . .. haired singers would get about ' nK>u K h his amiles are » one for - ; ^ m . uch *

ever newspaper and news magazines, And his hands we cannot touch 1° the radio and television

news casts keeping us in-

ories

Bible

Thought

Sheinwold

On Bridge

Act like Sportsman But See Your Error By Alfred Sheinwold

It’s good tactics to congratulate an opponent on his fine play. This makes you look like a sportsman—and diverts attention from your own mistakes

County Hospital

formed on world happenings. So little time given to acquaint ourselves to the news from

$160,000 for their hard day's

night.

Li te modem day Pied Pipers w « w ’ i11 nev « r lose mem '

the British quartet lured their

young fans to the huge circular ^ one we loved so much stadium, home of New York's God £ ave us strength to face it

And courage to bear the blow God. If we would reverse this

what it meant to lose him and ®P end more of our time No one will ever know j listening to God s news, w e God saw he was suffering would be citizens of a spiritual

So he closed his weary eyelids kingdom.

And whispered peace be thine, j

Sadly missed by his devoted oa I A J wife, children, and all their | GTSOIldl AnCl

families,

WHITAKER

■r' 1

South dealer North-South vulnerable NORTH A J 9 7 5

AK5

: 0 KQ6 4k 10 6? WEST EAST A KS32 A 4 S?76 C?8432 C 105 O J 9 8 4 3 A A KQJ 7 *832 SOUTH A AQ10S V QJ 109 O A 7 2

A 94

South West North East 1 A 2 A 3 A Pa« 4 A All Paw , Opening lead —> * K West led three high clubs, and South ruffed the third. Declarer then led out the ace and queen of trumps. West carefully refused to win the second trump trick, and South was down. If South led his last trump, West would win and lead a fourth club to punch out dummy’s last trump. West would then collect a two-trick penalty with his last trump and last club.

Dismissed Sahirdayi Mrs. Arthur Griffin and son,

Clayton

Anita Higgins. Bainbridge James Chadd, Spencer Robert Ziegelman, Clover-

dale

Pauline Runnells, Cloverdale

Marcia Welty, Poland

Theron Zumpy, Bowling

Green

Mrs. Hal Sampson and

Greencastls

Wanda Ash, Greencastle Donald Girton. Greencastle Norvella Goodman, Green-

castle Births:

Mr. and Mrs. Norman Handy, Greencastle, Route 4, a boy,

Saturday.

Dismissed Sunday: Mrs. Clarence Shrader and daughter, Cloverdale Dallas King, Brazil Laura Smith. Martinsville Norman Beach, Port Arthur,

Texas

Elizabeth Thrasher, Green-

castle Births:

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Boiler, Roachdaie. a girl, Sunday.

In Rome areas but “turned down ’ the next few days” to help re-

store responsible Negro leadership in the riot-plagued city.

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Local News V.F.W. Ladies Auxiliary will meet Wednesday at 8:00 p. m. at the Post Home. Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Hollowell of Bradenton, Fla., arrived in Greencastle today to visit with friends. Mrs. Evelyn Cline and Mrs. Maune McCammack left Sun- , day for a vacation in Concordia, Kansas and Colorado Sprmgs. The Emera Club will meet at 6:30 Wednesday, August 18th for their annual picnic with Mrs. Nell Kersey. Dnnks will be

furnished.

Clinton Homemakers Club will meet with Mrs. Wayne Bettis at 1:30 p.m. August 19. Special program will be given by Enola and Shirley Wagner. Harry Michael. 69. Poland, Route 2, passed away in the Putnam County Hospital Saturday morning w'here he had been a patient since Wednesday. Fathers Auxiliary No. 1 of the Veterans of Foreign Wars will meet Wednesday night at the Gen. Jesse M. Lee Post 1550 Home. Members are urged

to attend.

The Golden Link Club will meet Wednesday at 6:30 p m. for a picnic at the home of Mrs. Irene Grubb. Members please bring some little gifts for enter-

tainment.

Ernest Stites, 59, city, was reported in fairly good condition • at the Putnam County Hospital this morning. Mr. Stites w^as injured in a local traffic accident Saturday night. Walter Tate was given oxygen at the Fire Department Sunday morning w-hen he had trouble breathing and he was then taken to the Putnam County Hospital. Col. and Mrs. Thomas A. Robbins and family of Balboa Heights, Canal Zone are here visiting Mrs. Robbins’ parents. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Crump j and other rela lives. They will return home Sept. 2 where Col. Robbins has one more year of service. Kimball, their oldest son, will remain to enter DePauw University this fall.

Mrs. Irene Rogers Is Hostess to Club

The Maple Heights Craft Club met Wednesday afternoon with

, Mrs. Irene Rogers.

Nine members w r ere present and almost everyone brought i something they had made that! would make suitable Christmas ;

gifts.

The September meeting will | be with Mrs. Marie Crawley and the project will be decorated

stationery.

Delicious refreshments were served by the hostess and a so-

ter dummy to draw trumps Ume was enjoyed with the jack and nine. The rest i -

would be easy.

! South saved a trick by aban1 doning trumps. West got the eight of trumps as well as his J king, collecting 100 points for

i defeating the contract. South congratulated West on

his fine play. If West took the second trump and led a fourth ! club, South could ruff and en-

I because they’re not virtuosos"— 1 Elizabeth B. Hall, educator, is

! building a college.

Mrs. Hall, 55 former headmistress of the Concord, Mass., | Academy, a girls’ preparatory school, is the daughter of the late Thomas H. Blodgett, chairman of the board of the American Chicle Co. and director of

several other firms.

Her “early college” is being

built on what was formerly a son, family estate at Great Barrington. Mass. It will be called Simon’s Rock, named for a landmark on the 190-acre, property and will be for girls 16 to 20.

What makes it rare, perhaps

unique, is that it will combine In four years the last two years of high school and the first two

years of regular college. It will operate on Mrs. Hall’s

belief that college should not be denied a person just because he or she doesn’t have “a ministry of talents to dazzle college

admitting authorities.”

She said with the current emphasis on EVERYBODY owning a liberal arts degree, the 1 secondary schools have become “lock step credit—gathering machines w-here all the attention is on the credits” togain college admission. “The value of the courses themselves

has been lost.”

Simon's Rock’s curriculum will take into consideration today’s early marriage rate. “If a girl marries in the middle of her regular senior college life,” she said, "there's a big chunk of work left unfinished.” The curriculum will accept the humanities but mathematics anr the sciences will be taught, the latter on the assumption that youngsters may not have.

Stopping nere overnight after addressing a religious convention in Puerto Rico, the civil

rights leader said a lot of work is necessary if further rioting is to be avoided. "Police pow'er can only bring about a temporary peace,” King said.

Card of Thanks

MI FFED HAND

South knew' he had muffed .the hand. After ruffing the third club South should lead the queen of spades without

first cashing the ace of trumps. County Hospital. I also wish to If West refuses the first trump, thank the Roachdaie O.E.S. and South must lead his other low' Pioneer Sunday School class, trump. Sumerset Church, my neighbors,

relatives, and friends for flow-

I wish to thank Dr. Schauw'ecker, Dr. Wiseman and Dr. R. L. Veach, the nurses and nurse aids, for their good care while I w'as in the Putnam

If west takes the second trump and leads a club, South ruffs with the ace of trumps and can get to dummy to draw' trumps with the jack and nine. If West refuses the second trump. South draw's a third trump with the ace and then plays the side suits until West is willing to take his king of

trumps.

ers. cards and visits. Thanks to each and every one who helped in any way. Leoma Carrington

Card of Thanks

Keeping the ace of trumps allows South to retain control. Cashing the ace of trumps prematurely a 1 low's West to gain

control of the hand

We wish to acknowledge with deep appreciation the kind- 1 nesses, sympathy and many floral tributes extended by our relatives, friends, and neighbors. We wish to thank the doctors, nurses and nurse's aids of the Putnam Co. Hospital for their services at the time of illness

QUESTION and P a - sa > n P 0 f °ur beloved hus-

band and father, Cecil Ray Phil-

lips.

We also wish to thank Rev. Dallas Rissler for his comforting message, the Scott sisters and organist Mrs. Charlene Bosley, and Whitaker Funeral Home. Mrs. Zelma Phillips A Family

Dealer, at your right, opens with one spade. You hold: S-A Q 10 5 H-Q J 10 9 D-A 7 2 C-9 4. What do you say? ANSWER. Pass. Your opponent seems headed for trouble. If you bid or double, you will probably take your opponent’s

place in the soup.

In Memory In loving memory of Clara Butler Henry, w'ho passed away two years ago August 14. 1963. She has taken her last long journey On that beautiful ship called Rest Away from this w'orld of sorrow's To a home of eternal rest We have only your memory dear To treasure our w'hole life through But its sw'eetness will last forever As we cherish the memory of you Husband, daughters and families and grandchildren. King Will Go To Los Angeles MIAMI UPI — Dr. Martin Luther King made plans today to go to Los Angeles “within

ANNIVERSARIES Birthdays Phetney Ann Baker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Baker. 10 years old Auugst 16. Weddings Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Baird, Greencastle R. 1, 42 years August 16th.

A Woman's View By Gay Pauley NEW YORK UPI — The student with the straight A average in all subjects finds little trouble getting into college. It’* the student with A’a In some : courses, and just the so-os Cs in others who’ in trouble. ; For these latter ones—gifted

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Chief Is Robbed DARTMOUTH, Mass. UPI— Manuel V. Medenros returned from a family outing Sunday and found that thieves had broken into his south Dartmouth home. The burglars took more than $600 in goods and cash. Medeiros is the chief of police.

'A second thought

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