The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 8 October 1965 — Page 2

Th« Daily Bannar, Graancastla, Indiana Friday, October 8, 1965

A Local Teenager's View By Janet Staub Jubilant fans, joyous team members and, of course, a very sad team: that was the protocol on the local gridiron last week. The “very sad team" was, of course, the Plainfield Quakers. They were quite silent and downtrodden after the encounter. The jubilant fans remained long after the game celebrating the long sought after victory. Cow bells and horns blared as some of the fans made their way to a very successful sock hop. Report has it that the players celebrated, but two of the coaches (two hours after the game) were sitting down calmly (?) watching the late

show.

Most of the fans (students, that is) were happy, and cooperated by yelling with the cheerleaders, even though there was a big gossip session in the middle of the pep block. On this weeks agenda is “Homecoming.” So, along with the bands, floats, Queen, and Princesses are the Mighty Tiger Cubs going for “TWO IN A ROW.” DID YOU NOTICE? Those Jaycees are up to it again . . . a "road rally.”

P^alph Masson, District Secretary of Membership Cultivation. Mrs. Lowell Walter, District Secretary of Program | Materials, will announce the Honor Readers and Mrs. Richard Tucker, District Treasurer, will have charge of the Pledge Service. A memorial, roll call of churches and a service of recognition completes the morning program. Rev. Loveland will offer the noontime grace. The new' Program Materials will be on display during the noon hour. The officers’ workshop wdll be at 1:00 p. m. A playlet, special number by Mrs. John McFarland of Greencastle and a report of the Study book of Acts by Mrs. Ralph Steele, wufe of the Terre Haute District Supt., and Honorary District President concludes the day s program. Luncheon reservations should be sent to Mrs. Glenn Flint, Greencastle, R. R. 1 by Satur-

day.

THI DAILY BANNED AND HERALD CONSOLIDATED 24-28 S. Jackson St Grttncostlo, Ind. Businass Phono Ol 3-5151 Elizabeth Raridan Estato, Publisher S. R. Raridan, Sanior Editor Normo Hill, Gan. Mgr. Jamas B. Zais, Managing Editor William 0. Hooper, Adv. Mgr. Entarod in tho Post Office at Graancestle. Indiana, as Second Class Mail maftar under Act of March 7. 1878. Subscription Price* Homo Delivery 40c per week Mailed in Putnam Co. 88.00 per yeai Outside of Putnam Co. $10.00 per year Outside of Indiana $14.00 per year

Merchants Learn About Shoplifting

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Methodist Women To Meet Oct. 15 The fall South East Sub-Dis-trict workshop of the Terre Haute District Woman's Society, Northwest Indiana Conference of the Methodist Church will be held on Oct. 15 at the Brick Chapel Methodist Church, fiv« miles north of Greencastle. Mrs. C. J. Rogers of West Lafayette is the Conference President, Mrs. W. N. McCutchan of Terre Haute is the Terre Haute District President, Mrs. Glenn Flint of Greencastle is President of the hostess Society, Rev. Clarence Loveland is the host Pastor and Mrs. J. Homer Loveall of EpworthBrazil is the Sub-District Leader. The workshop will begin at 9:15 a. m. and will continue through the afternoon with the noon luncheon featuring the 25th Anniversary of the Woman's Society of Christian Service. Mrs. Robert Matheny, District Secretary of Spiritual Life Cultivation, wall lead in the opening worship followed by Progress Reports by Mrs.

Meeting Is Held By Jefferson Belles The Jefferson Belles Home Ec. Club met Monday evening, Oct. 4th, in the home of Gypsy Hacker. In keeping with the gay season of October, the club members arrived in a variety of Halloween costumes. Gypsy added to the fun by decorating her home with Halloween cut-outs. During the business meeting, officers w'ere elected for the coming year: President, Joyce McCammack; Vice Pres., Alice Hacker, Sec., Evelyn Goodpaster; Treas., Shirley Cooper; Reporter, Wanda Williams. Committees were formed and preparations were made for our forthcoming Euchre Party. It w T as reported that our sale of Belle Union School plates was progressing nicely. The lesson for the meeting was the Pros and Cons of Home Movies. Joyce McCammack and Oressa Bright showed home movies and told the mistakes made wdiile filming and how 1 they hoped in the future to prevent them. In both cases it was decided that “Experience is the Best Teacher.” During the movies, the hostess served cider, donuts and nut cups to 9 club members. Gypsy Hacker and Karen Allen received gifts from their secret sisters. Oressa Bright was given a tube of Cool Touch Cologne, lilac scented, for the door prize.

Pumpkins Bittersweet & Gourds Sweet Potatoes Bowman's Apple Cider Sorghum Syrup Try Our Prices ERNIE'S Fresh Farm Produce Jet. 36 & 43

DPI! Woman’s Club To Meet Monday The DePauw Woman's Club will hold its first meeting Monday, October 11, at 6:15 in the DePauw Union Building. Cochairmen for this fall dinner meeting are Mrs. Dwight Ling I and Mrs. Roger Cox. Newcomers to DePauw r will be introduced at this time. Mrs. J. P. Allen w’ill give a talk entitled “Agean Odyssey” about her recent visit to Greece. This year's officers for the group are Mrs. John Ricketts, president; Mrs. Charles Johnson, vice president; Mrs. Allene Enloe, secretary; Mrs. Stephen Early, treasurer; Mrs. Howard Burkett, membership chairman; Mrs. Garret Boone, publicity; Mrs. Robert Eccles, his- ; t o r i a n ; and Mrs. Norman i Knights, program chairman.

Bible Thought Delight thyself also in the Lord; and He shall give thee the desires of thine heart. Psalm 37:4. Here is the one sure way to get everything that you have ; really wanted in life. But our desires need a bath, in Christ. After His cleansing, they are new'. Only by putting the Lord first can we get what we de-

sire.

Personal And Local News Mrs. Ida E. Dreyer of Limedale has entered the Putnam County Hospital for observa-

tion.

Delta Kappa Gamma will meet Saturday at 5:30 at the home of Mrs. Harold Garriott’s, 708 Highwood. Singing at Antioch Baptist Church will be held Sunday, October 10th at 2:00 p.m. Everyone welcome. Bro. Clyde Simpson, will preach at the Long Branch Church of Christ, Sunday, Oct. 10, 11 a.m. Joint meeting of Chapters I and CB of PEO Wednesday, October 13th at 7:30 at the home of Mrs. Walter Ballard. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Harrah has returned from a trip to St. Petersburgh, Fla. last week, Mrs. Harrah is the daughter of Mrs. Jessie Appleby of Clov-

erdale.

Estil Pittman, 41, Roachdale, was lodged in the Putnam County jail at 4:40 Thursday afternoon by Deputy Sheriff Paul Mason on a non-support

charge.

The Jaycee waves are to meet at IBM for a tour at 8:00 Monday evening. There will be a business meeting at the home of Mary Jane Monnett after

the tour.

each other. Some of the canny The Brick Chapel Home thieves w r alk through the stores Demonstration Club will meet; with shopping bags in their with Mrs. Ted Bock Tuesday j arms, boys and girls with Oct. 12 at 1:30. Mrs. Frank , schoolbooks in their arms, pros Sanders will give the lesson on sometimes use “boosters.”

Greencastle’a Lions Club will be selling candy on the square this evening and tomorrow in an attempt to raise funds for various organizations that are dedicated to fighting cancer, heart disease and other worthwhile purposes. Shown above is Mayor Raymond S. Fisher wkho is donating to the cause. Banner Photo—Frank Puckett, Jr.

iJiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiimiiiimmmiiimiiimmmiiiiimimmmmmmimii' |Sheinwold ^ Bridge

and June Carol Rodgers, R. Mallory, Bainbridge.

By Bob Simmerman

A “seasoned” anti-shoplifting detective related his ideas and views to the retail merchants of Greencastle in a two hour long meeting held in the Savings and Loan Community Room Wednes-

day night.

Uncounted Ninespot Protects Declarer By Alfred Sheinwold If a player tells you exactly how' much he counts for a nine or a ten. don’t believe him. Only headaches come from that ! kind of counting. As a practical matter, you consider nines and tens only in borderline situa-

tions.

Sgt. Frank A. Spallina of the Indianapolis Police Department remarked that “shoplifting deprives the merchants in the nation of somewhere between three and five billion dollars of

every

caution must be used. Approach him quietly and tell him that he has some merchandise that has not been paid for. Take the merchanise from him and lead

him back to the store.

“Use force, but be moderate,’

retail merchandise

month.” ,

Who steals the merchandise ? 1 remarked Spallina ' “ You must

be kind to the susepet at all

times.”

“All types and ages, the rich, the poor, the beggar, the professional thief, the teen-ager,

Some of the things the sca-

the drug addict, the housewife, l SOned Crime P reventin S veteran employees themselves, and the em P hasized w ere to always

South dealer Both sides vulnerable

NORTH A A Q 2 V 109

O 109 62 A A 10 64 WEST EAST AJ 1084 A K 6 5 <?K85 <?7 6432 0 A7 0 854 A 97 5 2 A K 8

SOUTH *97 3 V A Q J

O KQJ3

A QJ3

South West North East 1 NT Pass 3 NT All Pass Opening lead — A J

little boy around the corner. You can’t tell a shop-lifter by

looking at him.”

One merchant asked Spallina you go to court always know

have a witness to the theft who can identify positively the stolen article and the suspect, before

how the shoplifter operated and how did they accomplish the act so cleverly? The sergeant answ'ered by saying there W'ere hundreds of techniques that the ! shoplifter used, most of them,

being completely different from pec ^ " as cau S^ 1 ^-

Spallina reminded

the following things: how and

j where in the store the articles gone down.

! were stolen, how the suspect ‘ I concealed the article, w'hen the

the article,

and how' and by whom the sus-

On today’s hand South would have made the same opening bid if his nine of spades had been an eight. But he w'ould have

If South gets two spades he can go after the clubs and make sure of nine tricks with three clubs, three diamonds, two spades and one heart. If the defenders abandon spades, South can afford to take a heart finess at the end. If South had the eight of spades instead of the nine. West would be able to con- | tinue spades on taking the ace i of diamonds. The defenders w'ould then get three spade tricks and would defeat the con-

tract.

DAILY QUESTION Partner opens with 1 NT (16 to 18 points), and the next player passes. You hold: S- J 10 8 4 H-K 8 5 D-A 7 C-9 7 5 2. What do you say? ANSWER: Bid two clubs, the Stayman Convention. If partner can bid two spades, showing a 4-card or longer spade suit, you will raise to three spades. If partner bids anything else, you will bid two notrump.

County Hospital Dismissed Thursday: Nancy Cox, Knightsville Mary Shanklin, Gosport Donis Hertel. Roachdale Gertrude White, Cloverdale Evelyn Perry, Cloverdale Marjorie Strobel. Greencastle Fred Norris, Greencastle James York. Greencastle Mrs. Crawford Burris sr*l daughter, Greencastle Births: Mr. and Mrs. David Clones, Crawfordsville. a girl, today.

the mer-

chants of one thing in closing his speech. “Just remember this, you cannot tell a shoplifter by looking at him, it could be you or the guy next door.”

chiudren and money.

1 Boosters is the slang term giv-

Miss Glenda Purcell has en- en 10 f Ms w f ^ en ? °‘ ,en

or coats, or pillow cases fastened to the lining of one’s coat. What is the best w r ay to stop

rolled as a freshman at Evansville College, Evansville. Glenda, w'ho plans to major in music,

.... . . . ! shoplifting ? There isn’t any one w'as salutatonan of her grad-i „ , , ' . , uating class of Roachdale High ° S ° P mS ’ U „ . , „ i .. . . ^ about the most effective w'ay to School. She Is the daughter of , 0 A J . , Mr. and Mrs. Charles Purcell. sl0W the a '‘ d H °" n 15 t0 d ' s l >la> '

your merchandise in a manner that makes it hard for the thief

OUR SPECIALTY WEDDING and BIRTHDAY CAKES PAUL'S PASTRY SHOP

IDS N. JACKSON ST

PHONE OL S-m«

Roachdale.

The Big Walnut Baptist

Church of Reelsville wall dedi- Spallina. cate its new parsonage the af- There are many laws applyternoon of Oct. 17, 1965. There ing to the conviction of shopwill be open house at the resi- lifters, but the one most effecdence. After morning worship tive is the OAPA which conthere will be a carry in dinner, solidated the many different Rev. John Knight, D.D. of the laws against minor misdemeanState Baptist Convention will ■ ors such as shoplifting. The speak afternoon. OAPA law was passed January 1, 1964 in an effort to help halt When w'e clean your knit, you the wave of small crimes that

Youth Convicted For Two Deaths VALPARAISO UPI — Richard Dobeski, 17, Long Beach, Thursday was found guilty of first-degree murder in the deaths of Kerry and Shawm,

West led the jack of spades and declarer wisely played dummy’s ace. There was no need to finesse as long as South

had the nine.

If South played dummy’s ; queen, East would take the king j and return the suit to force out; j the ace. The defenders wmuld get three spades, the ace of diamonds and at least one other j

king.

Declarer actually took the ace of spades and led a diamond to force out the ace. If West led the ten of spades back, dummy’s queen would drive out the king, and South’s nine would be high. If West led back a lowspade, South would play lowfrom dummy and get a trick

Marriage License Kenneth Ferman McClain, machinist, Marion and Sherry Kay Hood, at home, Greencastle. Harold Michael Boesen, USAF

WATCH REPAIR SIMPSON Jewerly Main Street CLOVERDALE Hour* — 8:30 to 4:00 Closed All Day Wed.

COST OF LIVING GOES UP! Yon nee it every day In the papers and magazinefl Well .... We're doing our part to keep it down! 'Quality Costs No More' at SPENCER OPTICAL CO. 781 E. Morgan St. Spencer, Ind. For Appointment Call Phone 829-3981 Open 9-5 Daily — Inc. Sat. 9:00 A.M.-8:00 P.M. Friday Wednesday 9 A.M.-12 Noon “Glasses for the entire family” At prices you can afford

to reach easily was the reply of J°hnston, two neighbor children, j the nine or the queen.

Aug. 31, 1964. j queen.

A Porter Circuit Court jury

will really have a fit. Old Reliable White Cleaners..

AMERICAN LEGION LAS VEGAS NIGHT SATURDAY, OCT. 9 FREE BUFFET Sot., 30 — Tommy Wills, Recording Artist

ANNIVERSARIES Birthdays Harold Jackson, Fillmore, today, October 8th.

plagued the retail merchant:

throughout the nation.

Thefts covered by the OAPA are classified as felonies. Un- ^ like misdeamnors that are pun- j ishable by a sentence and fine not exceeding $500, a crime classified as a felony can cost the party charged up to $5000 and or a prison term of not less

of seven men and five women deliberated for one hour before returning the verdict and recommending life in prison for the youth, whose attorneys based their case on a plea of insanity. The prosecution had sought a life term for Dobeski, terming the youth “cunning and shrewd” and a “rebel against society, hostile, independent, hot-head-ed, a liar, and evasive.” Judge Alfred Pivarnik order- j ed a pre-sentence investigation j for Dobeski and set no date for ‘

formal sentencing.

The bodies of the tw-o youngsters were discovered in a craw-l space under the porch of Do-

JIM'S SHOE REPAIR Com* ut, JOHN and JIM 204 SO. COLLEGE

RECTOR FUNERAL HOME AMBULANCE SERVICE PHONE Ol 3-4810

PIZZA

After 5:30 p.m. ’til 11:30 p.m.

Mozzarella Cheese Italian Style Sausage Imported Mushrooms Deluxe (with everything)

small 10" .95 1.25 1.25 1.85

large 14" 1.65 2.00 2.00 2.60

PICK UP OR DELIVERY

(25 cent charge an all delivery orders 1.25 and over, 40 cent charge on all delivery orders under 1.25) CAMPUS DOUBLE DECKER

600 SO. LOCUST STREET PHONE Ol 3-3210

| than one year or not more than t>eski s Ij ° n g’ Beach home.

Clark’s Ready Mix SAND and GRAVEL—MASONRY SAND BAG CEMENT and MASONRY CEMENT REINFORCING WIRE and RODS FOR QUICK SERVICE PHONE REELSVILLE, 672-3441

Water which does not evap-

orate or soak into the soil usu- ; ^ - Authorities said the youth streams 8 marshes or lakes The ' WHEN SOMETHING IS was legalIy sane and knew the land area from which the water STOLEN, the clerk or whoever consequence, of his

j witnesses the act must notify acu the supervisor or owner of the *

store, and the police at once. They must keep the suspect in sight until he is approached. WTien approaching a suspect,

drains to a watershed.

given point is a

Dr. D. H. Austin

local

Chiropractor 201 South Indiana Street Telephone OL 3-3024 Announcai new oHica hours Baginning Sapt. 7. 1965 By Appointment Man. (9-12) (1-5) (6-9) Wad. (9-12) (1-5) (6-9) Fri. (9-12) (1-5) (6-9) Tuas. (9-12) (1-5) Thursday (Closad) Saturday (9-4)

Putnam Court Notes Mary Ellen Carver vs Robert E. Carver, Jr., complaint for

absolute divorce.

OUR COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY IS NOW OPEN for Self Service Business Between 6 a.m. and 10 p.m. WHITE LAUNDRY & CLEANERS 309 NORTH JACKSON

Don't Forget To Pay Your FALL TAXES at BAINBRIDGE BRANCH BANK FULL SERVICE BANKING All Personal and Real Estate Taxes May Be Paid Here At Any Time. BRING IN YOUR TAX STATEMENTS. "PAY WHEN CONVENIENT TO YOU."

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