The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 8 September 1965 — Page 2
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Th* Daily Banner, Graancastla* Indiana Wednesday, September 8, 1965
Editorial-Wise Watch For The School Bus School bells, good ole golden rule days, veaam' and writin’, etc. It s that time of year again when the children trade their baseball bats, pet frogs, dolls, and summer games for school books. And it is also that time of year when the school bus becomes one of the most utilized vehicles on the road. School bus transportation facilities have been utilized to the fullest extent throughout the county uo that »U children needing transportation aids can be furnished with proper rides to and from school. Consequently, drivers will have to take heed of the larger n’unoer of th« big yellow vehicles ttiat v ill be ma l <- uig inoie frequent stops in our Cities and tmougliout Ine ru:at district;. Indiana’s traffic toil can surpass the present record toll easily enough without help from Putnam County motorist. T/et.’s all combine with local and state authorities and make our highways safe for the future citizens by taking extra care when approaching a school bus.
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] Sheinwold j On Bridge Defeat Opponents Before You Relay By Alfred Sheinwold. There's nothing dangerous about leading an ace-king-queen suit against declarer. The danger’ cornea wnen you rekuc.
West dealer
North-South YuinemMo [ NORTH 1 -A Q10 87
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O A1105 mot ♦ AK10 ?*ST CAST A 42 4 A6 ^Jio84 i O Q 32 * *T2 49543 SOUTH 4 .KJS5 3
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O 9&6i w *QT6 Ytesc Notdi * 1 V Double 3 ^ 3 A Paw 4 4 AU Pas. Opening lead — K We^t opened the king of hearts and continued with the queen, feeling sure that it was safe to lead such a strong suit. The lead was so safe that it gave South his contract. South ruffed the second heart and led a trump to force out the ace. East returned a trump for lack of anything better to do. and South won. Declarer tried a diamond finesse, losing to the queen, and the defense was then at the end of the road. The king of diamonds was sure to show up on the next round of the suit, and South had no further problem. RELINQUISHED CONTROL West had every reason to know that South would ruff the second heart. East’s jump to loipe hearts showed fourcard support, which left only one heart for South to hold. Leading a second heart meant relinquishing control of the play to declarer. West could see that his king of diamonds was useless unless his partner had the queen. But if East did have the queen of diamonds prompt action might lead to a diamond ruff. At the second trick West should lead the king of diamonds instead of going to sleep with a second round of hearts. Declarer wins in dummy with the ace of diamonds and leads a trump. Now East must step up at once with the ace of trumps to take the queen of diamonds and lead a third diamond while West still has & trump. West ruffs, defeating the contract. The time to relax is when you Lave tiie setting trick safely stashed away. DAILY QUESTION As dealer, you hold: S-Q19 8 T H-5 4 D-A J 10 5 C-A K 10. Fhat do you say? ANSWER. Bid one diamond, not one spade. There is very little advantage In opening with a weak 4-card major suit when you have another biddable suit.
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HERALD CONSOLIDATED 24-2S S. Jackson St. Gruncastlf, Ind. Business Phene OL 3-5151 Elisabeth Reridtn Estate, Publisher 5. R. Rariden, Senior Editor Nonna tiill, Gen. Mir. James B. 2»i\ Menaginf fcditer William D. Keeper, Adv. Mgr. Entered la the Pest Office el Gree» cost!*, Indiana, as Second Class Ma3 matter under Act of Match 7, 1171, Subscription Prices Home Delivery 40c per weefc Mailed in Putnam Co. $1.00 por your Outsido of Putnam Ce. $10.00 per year Outside of Indianu $14.00 per year
ftiortri bunion
I*et/ier re/ers to upptis
The Edwin Brown family reunion was held Sept. 5 at his home near Roachdale. All seven children were in attendance. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Brown, Roachdale; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Clark and family, Danville, HI.; Edwin L. Brown. Tampa, Florida; Mr. ; and Mi’s. Sam Parke and son. i Danville, Illinois; Mr. and Mrs. j Leon Ratliff and family, Waveband; Bart Brown and son, Muncie; Mrs. Dick Friend and family, Indianapolis; Mr. and Mrs. Don Cade and family, Chicago, Illinois; Mr. and Mrs. Keith Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Shirley Brown, and Mr. and Mrs. Rodger Brown and family, all of Tangier. NOTICE Dale Pieice was appointed Advisory Board member, replacing Hubert Cox,- who has mover from the township. Appointment was made at the August 31st meeting. Ralph Furney, Trustee
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i Bible Thought Blessed are they which do hanger and thirst after righteousness; for they shall be filled. Matthew 5:6. How complacent we are, luke warm, hardly caring for righteousness! Righteousness should be for the lodestar of moral purpose and the goal of spiritual dedication. Personal And Local News The Goodwill truck will pick up on Tuesday, September Mth. Please call OL 3-6587. Regular meetings VFW Post 1550 Thursday at 8 p. m. Members axe urged to attend. Fillmore Garden Club will meet Friday, September 10th, with Mrs. Grace Albright Called meeting of VFW Ladies Auxiliary Thursday at 8:00 p.m. All members urged to attend to discuss plans for the Fish Fry. The Young Mothers Study Club will meet tonight at 7:30 o’clock with Mrs. Joyce Braden. Mrs. Bee will have the program. Castle Toppers Home Demonstration Club will meet this evening at 7:3 p.m. with Mrs. Karen Wood. Mrs. Naomi K. Bock has returned home after spending a very pleasant vacation at Virginia Beach, Va. The members of the Business and Professional Women’s Club are asked to meet tonight at 7:30 at the home of Mrs. Vernon Heath, 302 So. College. The Goodwill Committee will meet at the Presbyterian Church on Monday, September 13th, at 7:30 p.m. Important business will be discussed. The Women's Study Club will meet Friday at 2 p. m. at the home of Mrs. Ruth Savage, 716 Terrace Lane. Mi's. Charles Rector will present the pro-
gram.
At the annual meeting of the Bainbridge Cemetery Association. Dr. I a W. Veach wes xeeiedcd secretary, and O. Bruce Lane was re-elected president, each for a term of three years. Marvin Graham, 20, Waveland, Route 3, was jailed Tuesday evening by Sheriff Kenneth Knauer and Deputy Paul Mason on a Putnam Circuit Court warrant charging malicious tres-
pass.
Mr. and Mrs. Ottis Hopper of Sarasota, Florida, have been spending a few days with Mrs. Hopper’s brother, Mr. and Mira. Everett Kverman and Mr. and Mrs. Phil Everman and son, Roimy. Mr. and Mrs. Bumace Prichard, Sr. have received a letter from their son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Pritchard, of Dixon, 111., thanking their many friends for the lovely flowers and words of sympathy as result of the tragic death of their son, Christopher, who was killed in a headon crash August 19. Christopher was the grandson of the local residents. The Christian Womens Fellowship of the First Christian Church will hold their group meetings Thursday, September 9th. Meetings at 2:00 P.M.: Group No. 1 with Mrs. Wm. Patterson, Group No. 2 with Carrie Pierce, Group No. 3 with Mrs. Ralph West. Meetings at 7:30 P.M., Group No. 4 with Mrs. Howard Burkett, Group No. 5 with Mrs. Staten Owens, Group No. 6 with Mrs. Algan Moore, Group No. 7 with Mrs. John Whitaker, meeting at 9:30 A.M., Group 8 at Fellowship
Hall.
Educate your clothes to fine drycleaning. Old Reliable White Cleaners.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray M. Reedof ft. R. 1 Reelsville wish to announce the approaching mar.xage of their daughter, Clelus Ann Dickey to James Charles Ellis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse H. Ellis of R. R. 2 Greencastle. The wedding will take place September 18th.
Will Attend Demo i Women’s Luncheon Several local women will be In Indianapolis Saturday, September 11, to attend the annual State Democi’atic Women’s Day luncheon at 12:30 p.m. in the Claypool Hotel there. Mrs. Barbara Stratton Bolling Assist. Chief of Protoc for Women’s Activities and Special Events in Washington, D. C., will be the featured speaker. She is one of the first of President Lyndon B. Johnson’s "fifty women” to be appointed to a high government post. Among those who have purchased tickets for the event are: Mrs. Helen Mason, County Vice Chairman; Mrs. Carrie Miller, Mrs. Charles Shuee, Mrs. Regina Shannon, Marilyn Call. Tickets may be obtained from Marilyn Call, Roachdale R. R. 1.
-Hurricane ocean began breaking up, sending pieces of glass flying across the room. The lobby was evacuated of guests and seaspray began flying in. The Red Cross reported some 18,000 people had taken shelter in 147 shelters set up between Fort Pierce and Key West. Thousands more, impossible to count, heeded suggestions they flee to stronger shelters if their homes could not withstand the fury of Betsy. Behind it, Betsy — which did a turn-about from a northward course Sunday night, left Nassau and much of the northern Bahamas in a shambles.
County Hospital Dismissed Tuesday: Martha Hughes, Cloverdale Mr*. Charles Thomas and h&ugxuei. - , Coatesville Mrs. Elmo Horner and daughter, Coatesvllle Timothy Padgett, Bainbridge Wilma Cox, Greencastle Jewel Pelfrey, Greencastle Births: Mr. and Mrs. John York, 317 Melrose, a boy, Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Jay Dee Johnson, 800 North Madison, a girl, today. ,
Gun Victim TERRE HAUTE UPI — Everett F. Cox, 18, Indianapolis, was recovering in Union Hospital from gunshot wounds caused by the accidental discharge of a shotgun in the kitchen of a friend’s home. Cox and Max Williams, 15, R. R. 3, West Terre Haute, were preparing to go squirrel hunting when Williams loaded the weapon in the kitchen of his stepfather’s home. The gun went off and Cox was hit in the left leg below the knee.
Marriage License John Robert Collins, farmer, rural Greencastle, and Carolyn Sue Boswell, at home, rural Greencastle.
Card of Thanks We wish to thank all those who assisted in any way during the illness and death of our husband and father, Ora Neese. The Family
CELEBRATE GOLDEN WEDDING ANNIVERSARY Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Boswell celebrated their golden wedding anniversary Sunday, Sept. 5th, with a dinner with their family at Redwood Inn at Crawfordsville. Mr. end Mrs. Boswell were married at Brazil, Sept. 9th, 1915 and have lived in and around Greencastle all their lives. They have two children, Capt. and Mrs. Harold E. McCullough of Fort Knox, Ky., and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Eskew and Ricky and Denny Eskew of Crawfordsville.
Needy Student Program Ends WASHINGTON UPI — The Post Office Department’s celebrated summer work program for "needy" students was over Tuesday, but the controversy surrounding it lingered on. Rep. Albert H. Quie, R-Minn., said he still wanted to know the names of the 3,380 boys and girls who got post office summer jobs through their congressmen. Several of the "needy” students were relatives of legislators, including the son and niece of millionaire Sen. Hiram L. Fong, R, Hawaii. Quie believes there may be more of such cases and he wants to find out, whether they be Democrats or Republicans involved. He said in an interview today that his target was not the youngsters or the congressman who recommended them for jo or, but the Post Office Quie iet congressmen know ike jobs claimed the Post Office did not were to go to boys and girls who needed the money to return to school. “I think it’s a good program and I want to make sure the same thing doesn’t happen next year,” Quie said. "The Post Office was trying to gain favor with members of Congress”. The Minnesota Republican said he hoped that White House aide Lawrence F. O’Brien, who is soon to succeed John A. Gronouski as postmaster general, will make the names public O’Brien told a Senate committee last week that, offhand, he saw nothing wrong in revealing the names. He said he would take a careful look at his predecessois decision in the matter.
Burns Are Fatal FORT WAYNE UPI — Two-year-old Richard L. Brown Jr., died in Parkview Hospital from third-degree burns suffered Thursday night when fumes from a spilled can of gasoline ignited in the garage of his home near Fort Wayne. Authorities said sparks or a pilot light on a furnace in a utility room adjoining the garage set off the fumes which badly seared the child.
Thant of the United Nations. Thant flew into Londan today on his way to Pakistan and India. He called the situation "extremely grave.”
BELTS FOR BELTERS NEW YORK (UPI) — Ring Magazine has awarded championship belts to fighters sinco 1922.
-Kashmir
said a dozen planeloads of Indian paratroopers dropped deep within Pakistani territory northwest of Lahore early today. Lahore was the objective of the first Indiana invasion of Pakistan’s teritody on Monday. The day of serious escalations in the undeclared war developed despite an emergency peace mission by Secretary General
Closed SATURDAYS Beginning Sept. 11 DR. BURNS, D.C. CHIROPRACTOR lues, thru Sat. 9-12 1-5 Tues., Thurs., & Fri. Evenings 7-9 Phone OL 3-5814 South Jackson & Sunset Drivo
RECTOR FUNERAL HOME AMBULANCE SERVICE PHONE OL 3-481•
Cookie Haul
LOS ANGELES UPI — A truck was stolen Tuesday when its driver left it for a few minutes to have someone open a lock driveway gate. Stolen with the truck was its load of about $2,500 worth of cookies.
State Lacking Tomato Pickers INDIANAPOLIS UPI — Tomato growers and canners in Indiana reported a shortage of 1,400 workers by the end of last week. The weekly farm labor bulletin of the Indiana State Employment Service farm labor division said although seven per cent more migrant workers were employed in the state than at the same time a year ago, there was a need for 1,000 pickers and 400 plant workers. “The tomato harvest continues in volume,” the report said. “Most areas report a shortage of pickers and many also have a shortage of in-plant labor. Nearly all processing plants are operating at capacity with many experiencing a glut of tomatoes.” ANNIVERSARIES Weddings Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Rader, 47 vears. September 8. i
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