The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 14 October 1965 — Page 2
The Daily Banner, Greeneastle, Indiana
Thursday, October 14, 1965
Glenn M. Allen Rites In Florida
Funeral services were held Tuesday at the First Presbyterian Church in Naples, Florida, for Glenn M. Allen. He passed away last Saturday in Naples where he had resided
since 1954. He was 56.
More Rest On LBJ's Schedule WASHINGTON UPI—President Johnson rounds out his first week in the hospital today — on the mend but more tired than he expected to be from his major surgery. The Chief Executive had nothing but more rest and re- ! cuperation on his schedule for his seventh day in Bethesda Naval Hospital. He entered his third-floor suite last Thursday night to prepare for the operation the next morning that removed his gall bladder and a kidney
stone.
Johnson is moving around
more, even lying on his right Murat Shrine - Temp]e of Indi
side where the incision was made, but he tires easily. The, tone of White House reports on his condition is that he is getting well but it will take a
while.
There is still no official esti- - mate of when Johnson will leave the hospital and return to the White House. His doctors said before the surgery he should remain hospitalized about 10 days or two weeks.
Hoosier Woman Doctor Honored INDIANAPOLIS UPI — A woman doctor from Dugger was honored today by the Mental Health Association in Indiana as “Physician of the
Year.”
Dr. Betty J. Dukes won a plaque and a check for $1,000 to be contributed to the medical school of her choice — In-
diana University’s.
Mr. Allen was associated with ; awar( j was f or th e most Faber Hair Realtors. He was outstanding job of recognizing appointed to the Collier County problems of the mentally ill (Florida) Commission in 1962, an( j ac tively participating in elected to the Collier County projects to benefit them and
Commission in November 1962, th e i r families,
and Chairman of the Collier Dukes’ husband. Dr. JoCounty Commissioners in 1965. seph Dukeg also practices
He was a member of Roach- i niedicme in Dugger,
dale Indiana Lodge No. 602 ; The P lac l ue "' as Presented at F. & A. M.. Naples Shrine Club, a l unch eon held during the con-
vention of the Indiana State
Medical Association.
“It is nice to be recognized,” Dr. Dukes said in responding to the presentation. “But I do hope it will serve to encourage other physicians to make an all-out effort for our mentally ill in their own communities.”
anapolis. Exchange Club of Naples, Civil Defense Council of Florida, and the Florida State Association of County Com-
missioners.
He is survived by his wife, Bettie, of Naples; son, Robert Glenn of Los Angeles, Calif.; daughter, Deborah Ann of Ft. Myers. Fla.; brother, Clyde of Crawfordsville, Ind.; sister, Mrs. Helen Hanna of Naples; sister,
White House Press Secretary Mr s- Rllb y R eed of Indianapolis,
Bi!' D. Moyers said Wednesday night that the President said he was more tired than he thought he would be at this stage of recovery.
Ind.; and sister, Mrs. Pearl Gilliam of Crawfordsville, Ind.
Birthday Card DENISON, Tex. UPI —More than 10,000 persons Wednesday j signed a special birthday card | sent to former President Eisenhower, bom in this north Texas city 75 years ago today. Fifty downtown merchants kept signature sheets and customers at times stood in line to ! sign them. The card itself was drawn by Dixie Summerhill, a | high school art student. Birthday cake was served in the Eisenhower birthplace, now
• museum.
County Hospital
Dismissed Wednesday: Anita Edwards Stinesville Helen Mannan, Quincy Kemp Dickerson. Spencer Jeanne Carroll. Cloverdale
Guard Units To Get Call Today | INDIANAPOLIS UPI— Indiana Adj. Gen John S. Anderson was expected to announce late today which 69 units of the I 38th Infantry Division, National ; Guard, will be given more trainI ing to make them combat ready ifor possible use in South Viet I Nam. The Pentagon announced Wednesday Indiana would pro-
THI BAHT BANNIB AND HERALD CONSOLIDATED 24-21 S. Jackson St Grcsncastl*. Ind. Businnss Phono Ol 3-5151 Elizabeth Raridsn Estate, Publisher S. R. Rariden, Senior Editor Norma Hill, Gen. Mgr. James B. Zeis, Managing Editor William D. Hooper. Adv. Mgr. Entered in the Past Office at Greencastle, Indiana, as Second Class Mail matter under Ad af March 7, 1171. Subscription Prices Home Delivery 40c per week Mailed in Putnam Co. SS.00 per year Outside of Putnam Ce. $10.00 par year Outside of Indiana $14.00 par yaar
Bible Thought Thanks be unto God, which always causeth us to triumph in Christ, and maketh manifest the savour of His knowledge by us in every place. II Corinthi-
ans 2:14.
The Christian life is a triumphant experience. God is leading us forward in triumph, from victory to victory. We hail Christ as our conqueror— King and declare our undying allegiance to Him as our Lord.
Personal And Local News
Farber To Serve j Stormy Seas On 3 Committees Slow Refugees DePauw University Dean KEY WEST, Fla. UPI—ForeRobert H. Farber has been casts of more stormy weather named to serve on a trio of at sea promised to bottle up for Hoosier college committees, in- a second day today the small eluding the chairmanship of one boat shuttle of Cuban refugees promoting cooperation among to freedom,
the state'* private and public |
schools ! The weather bureau predict-
ed winds up to 25 miles an hour and rough seas in the 90-mile wide Florida Straits between the Florida Keys and Cuba. The Coast Guard reported it had no report of small boats, leaving the embarkation port at Camarioca, Cuba, bound for, this country since Tuesday
night.
As many as five boats were reported waiting at Camarioca to head for Florida carrying refugees, but were hemmed in by the rough weather. Wednesday, 92 refugees were brought to freedom plus the 15 exile crewmen who sailed to Cuba to get their relatives in four small boats.
I to Sergeant Roy P. Colston, Corps in this area. Baker en- ' listed under the Marine Corps I program of the Guaranteed
Aviation Program.
The new Marine will undergo training at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego, California where he will receive eight weeks of indoctrination
training and will then be tranaferred to Camp Pendleton. California for a four week period of advanced training i prior to returning home on a twenty day leave. Baker will ■ then report to NATTC, NAS, i Memphis, Tennessee where he | will attend school in one of the | many fields of aviation.
Projects now underway under the auspices of the committee on Inter-Institutional Cooperation of the Indiana Conference on Higher Education, which Farber will chair, include programs for sharing of research facilities, library resources, visiting lectureships, personnel and equipment. Dr. Farber also has accepted an invitation to serve on the state selection committee for Fulbright Scholarship candidates and has been named to the steeroing committee of the state - wide conference on honors. The conference will be held at Indiana University in De-
cember.
The passengers from three of the small boats found the going I
Roachdale Women To Attend Delt Sessions
Mrs. Richard Crosby,
Roachdale, will attend the rough on the trip to freedom Alpha Province Convention of until they were transferred to Delta Theta Tau as delegate of two Coast Guard cutters. One Theta Lambda Chapter in La- private vessel made it on its fayette, October 15-16-17. Oth- own with 25 refugees and five er members planning to attend crewmen,
are Mrs. James Reed and Mrs. 1
Coterie meeting has been Woodrow Carr. Since Fidel Castro announc changed to Friday Oct. 22. Locally, Theta Lambda Chap- Sept ' 28 his P 01 ^^
ter has given $1,426.05 to Nurse Scholarship, Kindergarten, Library, Boy and Girls State, Fire victim, Educational boa t s - Games for school and helped a
Senior on trip. ~
Many thousands of dollars
The Women’s Guild will meet at 7:30 at the Whitaker Funeral Home to say the Rosary for Mrs. Eleanor Hall this eve-
ning.
Cubans who no longer want to live on his island, 195 refugees | have come out of Cuba on small
Herbert Brattain, Greeneastle vide 9,875 men for the new pro-
Helen Pierce, Greeneastle Jane McCarter, Greeneastle
Anniversaries
Birthdays Virgil J. Ader, 71 years old October 17.
African Will Speak Friday At DePauw
The director of broadcasting services in Sierra Leone. John Akar, will lecture on “The African Personality” at a 10 a. m. DePauw University convocation FTiday in Meharry Hall.
Commentator, playwright, the
actor versatile
and 38-
! gram, the second highest total in the United States. Only | Pennsylvania was listed to I train more men, the total over
116.000.
j Officials said besides 9,623 men from the 38th. 158 men will ! enter the program from the 199th Ordance Company at Kokomo, 252 men from the 192nd Ordnance Company at South Bend, 186 from the 890th Transportation Company at Fort Wayne and 16 from the 394th Adjutant General postal unit in
Judson.
The groups besides the 38th Infantry Division are Army Re-
serve units.
Anderson said Wednesday the remaining 30 units of the 38th
Mrs. Maurie Baily Wright
and her daughter Martha, State have been wisely used in the Librarian of Indianapolis ware diversified fields of its phil-
anthropies during the 62 years of the existence of Delta Theta Tau Sorority. Members freely give of thousands of hours of their time to assist organized charities. The local chapter works in conjunction with Mental Health, Cancer Drive.
guests of Miss Vernia Jackson
Thursday.
City firemen ware called to the Ben Dean home, 713 East Washington Street, at 9 p.m. Wednesday. They reported an estimated $25 damage to a furnace blower motor. Funeral services wlil be held for Mrs. Ida Dreyer, Saturday at 2:00 p.m. at the Rector Funeral Home. Interment will be in Forest Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the fu-
neral home.
Elvin Smiley, 50. city, was arrested by Officer Bill Masten on South Bloomington Street at 11:25 Wednesday night.
vear-old African is appearing would go into low r power units, Smile y was booked at the coun-
ty jail for driving while under the influence of intoxicants.
at DePauw under the auspices with the program scheduled of the Danforth Foundation be implemented by Nov. 1. and the Association of Ameri- S
can College*.
fall
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Akar was named head of broadcasting in the emergent African nation in 1960 after serving the United States’ “Voice of America’’ and the British Broadcasting Corporation as an announcer.
American - educated at the University of California in Berkeley where he received the B. A. degree, Akar later mixed graduate study in law and,
economics before moving in a outright and his daughter, new career direction, dramat- j Barbara Ann. 2, was taken to ; ic®* ! an Indianapolis hospital with
severe injuries in the crash on
Fatal Accident
On Indiana 136 A Crawfordsville mnn was killed and his little daughter | injured seriously today when their car crashed into the rear of a road oiler truck, raising Indiana's 1965 traffic fatality i toll to at least 1,121 compared
with 1,046 a year ago.
Clyde I. Lytle, 23, was killed
U. S. 136 at Mace.
Registration for youth art classes will be continued this Saturday from 9:30-10 a. m. in the DePauw University Art Center. According to the Art Center staff, openings are still available in the junior high and high school level art classes. Mrs. Lurene Hansen of this city underwent major surgery on Tuesday Oct. 12th and is recovering at Burnham City Hospital. Room No. 103 Champaign, Illinois. She would deeply appreciate hearing from her friends.
You mend your ways.—We’ll mend the rest. Old Reliable White Cleaners.
In Memory
In loving memory of Pauline Sims Dorsett, loving wife, j mother and grandmother, who passed away October 14. 1959. It is lonesome here without
iflllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII* iSheinwold ^ Bridge
Nobel Winners
Evening Circle To
Meet Tonight
The Evening Circle of the Presbyterian Church will meet Thursday evening with Mrs.
Larry Cox.
Mrs. Tucker Gray will be assistant hostess.
CARD OF THANKS
We would like to thank the doctors, nurses, and blood donors and also our neighbors
STOCKHOLM UPI — The and friends for all they have $56,400 Nobel medicine prize done.
for 1965 was awarded to Professors Francois Jacob, Andre Lwoff and Jacques Monod. all of France. The medicine award was the first of this year's prizes to be announced.
Joyce Powers Katrina Lee Powers Imogene Powers The Wagle and Gowin Families
Must Do Well WASHINGTON UPI—House Republican Leader Gerald R. Ford, Mich., predicts the “death knell” if his party does
News of Boys Ronnie Lynn Baker, 18. son of Mr. and Mrs. Herman William Baker, Route 2, Greencastle, has enlisted in the United States Marine Corps for
not do well in next year's elec- a period of four year, according
tions. Interviewed on UPI Audio's Washington report, Ford said a bad showing by the GOP next yeir would also mean that the 1968 Republican presidential nomination “won’t be sought after by a great many people.” The GOP leader said that the party's most important task was to recover from its disastrous defeat in 1964, when the Johnson landslide caused heavy Republican losses in Congress, state legislatures and governors’ mansions.
representative for the Marine
NOTICE The office of Dr. W. J. Krider is closed because of illness.
you
Sad and weary is the way, Life is not the same to us. Since you were called away In our hearts your memory
lingers,
MOORE'S SHOES Weil »id» of Squor*
Sweetly, true
Choose Decisive Play : If You Have One By Alfred Sheinwold
When a good bridge player goes to Heaven, all of his finesses will work. That isn’t enough to make it Heaven, be-
tenderly, fond and cause the same thing some-
times happens here below.
There is not a day, Dear one, We do not think of you. Sadly msised by the Family.
REV. I MRS. LEON COOK
REVIVAL SERVICES Through Oct. 17 7:30 Each Evening Sunday — 9:30 A M. - 10:30 A.M.
7:30 P.M.
EVANGELIST - SINGERS -- MUSICIAN WE WELCOME YOU FIRST CHURCH OF THE HAZAREHE 315 NORTH JACKSON ST. GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
.South dealer Both sides vulnerable
NORTH
4 4
A Q 5 3
6 10762 A J653
WEST EAST A 6 A Q 5 3 2 109 87 K J 6 2 0953 OK84 + Q10 742 *A9
SOUTH
A A K J 1098 7
V 4
O A Q J
A K 8
In practice. South tried the trump finesse. It worked, butthe queen did not drop. South took three trumps and led a fourth trump to the queen. RETURNS DIAMOND
I
East got out with a low diamond. South won a finesse with the queen. He cashed the ace, hut the king did not drop. South then gave up a diamond to the
king.
Now East got out with the king of hearts. South ruffed and had to lose two club tricks
at the end.
As the play went. South finessed in spades and diamonds, but one finesse was not enough in either suit. Only in clubs would one lead be decisive. South should lead a club from dummy at the second trick. If he gets a trick with the king of clubs he is home, for he can afford to give up one club, one
South had a finesse in each spade and one diamond. A finsuit, but wisely rejected the esse in spades or diamonds just heart finesse. He took the leaves South where he was beace of hearts and wondered fore he took it, even if the which suit to lead from dum- finesse happens to succeed, my. He could lead a spade to DAILY QUESTION try a finesse with the jack; ! Partner opens with one spade, or a diamond for a finesse with and the next player passes. You the queen or jack: or a club for hold: S-Q 5 3 2 H-K J 6 2 Da play of the king. K 8 4 C-A 9. What do you
South
West
North
East
2 *
Pass
3
Pass
3 *
Pass
3 NT
Pass
4 A
All Pass
Opening lead — 10
South didn’t know it at the time, but anl play he tried would work. It wasn’t Heaven, because South could make only one of the three plays and didn’t
know which to make.
say?
ANSWER: Bid three spades. This shows strong trump support (4 or more cards), with 13 to 16 points, counting distribut- | ing as well as high cards.
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