The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 14 April 1966 — Page 6
4 TIm Dally Bunar, GraancatHa, Indiana Thuraday, April 14, 1966
Morton News By Win. RbsscH O'Havtr, Conespondcnt
Mrs. Opal Mark and Mrs. Margaret Nelson were guests of Mrs. Albert Whitehead last Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Noel Nicholson, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Lawter and son Bill and Mrs. W. S. Lawter were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Rickey of Kansas, 111. Mr. and Mrs. John Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Ed S cobee and daughter, Janet, and Mr. and Mrs. David Clodfelter and family had dinner at the Fairway Easter Sunday. Recent visitors of Mrs. O. M. Thomas were, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. David Thomas and Pete Mauck. Mauck.. Mr. and Mrs. Mike O’Hair and sons were Sunday dinner guests of Mike’s parents, Mr. and Mds. GUbert O’Hair of Bainbridge. Dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Earnest Keeney Easter Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Hubert McGaughey and family, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Keeney and children, Mr. and Mrs. Don Keeney and baby son and Miss Kathleen Keeney of Indianapolis. Steven and John Wayne Huf- * fman visited their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Rex Call last Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Warren Caywood were Sunday dinner guests of their daughter, Mrs. Jerry Malayer and family of
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Mrs. Mike O’Hair, Mrs. Karen Albin and Mrs. Russell OHaver shopped in Crawfordsvllle Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Wayne Bettis returned to her home on Friday from the Carle CUnic. Mr. and Mrs. William Alexander of Waveland, were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Alexander. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Martin and children, Mike and Debby and Mrs. Floyd Bales attended a famfly dinner on Sunday at the home of Mrs. Martins parents, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Taylor, near Greencastle. Others present were Mr. and Mrs. Burl Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Taylor and baby, Mr. and Mrs. Hallie Taylor of Michigan and Mr. and Mrs. E&rt Green. Mr. and Mrs. Brad Taylor 1 and family of Howell Mich, were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Earley Jackson and family. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Alexander, visited Mr. and Mrs. Glen GosneU of Bainbridge last Tuesday. Easter dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Rex Call were Mr. and Mrs. Max Call and sons near Roachdale, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Call and daughters and Mr. and Mrs. Phil King and daughter, all of Greencastle. Mr. and Mrs. James Wagner and children of Morton. Callers of Mrs. Russell O’Haver Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Phil King and daughter, Lisa, Bob Call and Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Quaver and son Mike. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Barker and sons, Dale and Dick Barker were Sunday dinner guests of Mrs. Mary Barker of Rockville. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Sadler, Mrs. A. J. Sadler and Mr. and Mrs. Howard Davis and children were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Sadler of Rockville. Sunday evening callers of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Bettis were Mr. and Mrs. John Stark of Rockville and Mr. and Mrs. Jake Martin of Morton.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Stultz and sons and Mr. and Mrs. David dodfelter and children called at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Earley Jackson Saturday evening to visit with the Brad Taylors. A preaching mission will be held at Union Chapel Church, April 22, 23 and 24 at 8:00 pan. The guest speaker will be Rev. Elder from Illinois. Everyone in the community is invited to attend these services. Sunday dinner guests of Mr. Mrs. Floyd Tocfaum and Mrs. D. P. Alexander were Mr. and Mrs. Glen Crodian and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Crodian and daughter and Mrs. Julia Bumworth and son Thomas, all of Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. Ugene Goode were Sunday evening supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Phillipe Goode and Mr. and Mrs. Tressman Goode and children, Darla and Darrell were Monday dinner guests. Woman's View By Gay Pauley STOCKHOLM, Sweden UPI —Sweden’s culture considers husband and wife equals in the family circle. But the United States has become a country of momiam, In the opinion of the number one woman in the Swedish government. Ulla Mrs. Martin Lindstrom talked of the differing rales of many Swedish and American women. She’s visited the United States many times. “I fed the men in your country put motherhood on a pedestal,” she said. “It is the chief aim of life. “We do not think it is good that children grow 19 In a ‘mom’ culture... that a woman should be Just the passage for the next generation. "We try to get the husband equally in the family.’* “I’m not saying that all mothers have careers,” said Mrs. lindstrom, Sweden’s only worn a n cabinet member. “B u t they should have a few years of
life.
“I do not believe that if a woman has good brains... yet sacrifices only for the child, she must put on it so much hope... This is stress on the young.” Mrs. Lindstrom offered these statistics to show what die means: The Swedish family averages three children; onehalf the families have only one child. Say the average marriage, with the long life span of Scandinavians, lasts 50 years. “She’s a mother for 15 years, then mother-in-law, grandmother for 15 years, then mother-in-law, grandmother. This is not enough for that other 35 years.” Mrs. Lindstrom, the wife of the headmaster of industrial schools in Stockholm, is a member of the upper house of parliament, which has 16 women members. The lower house has 30. She has been in parliament 22 years. She is minister without portfolio in the 15-member cabinet, in charge of naturalization, social welfare and consumer problems. And she’s vice chairman of Sweden’s delegation to the United Nations, a member since 1947.
COMMISSIONER FOR REELECTION VICTOR HURST , SECOND DISTRICT Subject to May Primary Damocrat Tiekat
VOTE FOR CHESTER F. QUERY DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE FOR PUTNAM COUNTY ASSESSOR
iiiiiiiimimimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiimMiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiiiimiiiimiiimi' iSheinwold^Bridge era
When In Hot Water Climb Out Quickly By Alfred ShelnwoM
When today’s hand was played in the recent national team championship, one of the world’s most famous bridge players found himself in hot water. There was a way out, but his foot slipped.
Sooth dealer East-West vulnerable NORTH 4 Q1043
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Onenine lead
After much thought South allowed West to hold the first trick with the jack of hearts. West led his other heart to dummy’s king, and declarer led dummy’s queen of clubs to force out the ace. East returned the queen of hearts to South’s ace. Now South had to hope that West had the ace of spades and that he could manage to get three clubs, three spades, two hearts and one diamond. For this purpose he needed a 3-3 break in clubs, a successful finesse against the jack of spades, and a split in the two black aces. It was too much to hope for. Bant turned up with the ace of spades and ran the rest of his hearts to defeat the contract. South was lucky to go down only one. BETTER CHANCE South had a better chance for his contract. Even if East had both of the missing aces, which was a near certainty, the contract could be made if West had the doubleton J-9 or J-10 of hearts. This was not a great deal to hope for. South must win the first trick in dummy with the king of hearts and lead the queen of clubs to force out the ace. If East returns a low heart, South plays low and allows West to win with the nine. Then West must switch suits, and South has time to develop his tricks. East cannot save his suit by leading the queen of hearts because then South’s eight will serve as a third stopper. Nines and eights have their uses. DAILY QUESTION Partner opens with one diamond, and the next player passes. You hold: S-J 8; H-J 9; DK 8 < 5 4; C-10 9 6 5. What do you say? Answer: Bid two diamonds. You have only 5 points in high cards, but your trump length should protect you from a disArmy Planning Three Hew 0CS WASHINGTON UPI _ The Army was reported today to be planning three new officer candidate schools at Forts Lee and Eustis In Virginia and at Aberdeen Proving Ground in Mary-
land.
Similar schools, which provide 23-week courses for the production of 2nd lieutenants, now operate at Forts Benning and Gordon in Georgia, Ft. Sill, Okla., Ft. Belvoir, Va., and Ft Knox, Ky. The Army Times, an independent service journal, said the three new schools are needed to put a total of 42,000 candidates through the OCS courses during the year beginning July 1. Approximately 15.000 candidates are now taking the training. To graduate 42.000 in one year would require an average enrollment of about 20,000.
aster. When you are short in both major suits you should stretch a point to keep the opponents out of the auction. TELEVISION IN REVIEW By Dick Du Brow HOLLYWOOD UPI—Watching Sandy Koufax and Don Drysdale during the weekend on ABC-TV’s "Hollywood Palace,” it suddenly occurred to me where I had seen the whole thing before. There is this movie that makes the rounds on television, see? It is called “Take Me Out To The Ball Game,” and the stars are Gene Kelly and Frank Sinatra, and the team needs them desperately, but they are out on the vaudeville circuit during the off-season. Finally, they rejoin the other players, and with Jules Munshin they sing about the great double-play combination, “O’Brien to Ryan to Goldberg,” and the team is saved, and Kelly wins Esther Williams, who is the club owner. Kelly, in the story, is the great lover, and Sinatra is shy about girls. It is an old movie. All I can tell you about Koufax and Drysdale, who agreed to do the “Hollywood Palace” when they were still holding out for more money from the Dodgers, is that It is a good thing they signed their baseball contracts before they revealed their act. If the Dodger officials had seen the act first, they could have knocked the price down. Drysdale was originally expected to sing with his own guitar accompaniment, and Koufax was to have concentrated on humor because, the producer explained, he “has been a favorite speaker at dinners.” What happened Saturday on the “Hollywood Palace” however, was the usual embarassing athlete -in-showbiz stuff. The boys swapped sad gags with Gene Barry (the guest host) and Milton Berle, and joined in for a few bars of a song with the performers, and did a few steps, and took their 87,500 apiece and went home. All right. That’s the way we Dodger fans really want our boys to be: too natural and reserved to fit into flashy television showbiz. Leo Durocher, okay, but not Koufax and Drysdale. And with Koufax especially, there is an incredible, unintentional tendency toward the dramatic which needs no script, and which might be the envy of every actor in our town—and as an example I will tell you what happened here Saturday to keep him Hollywood’s personal No. 1 celebrity, above television and movie stars: By coincidence, the same night Koufax was set to appear on the “Hollywood Palace,” he also was lined up to pitch an exhibition game here in Dodger Stadium against the Cleveland Indians. The baseball contest started first, and every Koufax fan in this Dodger-conscious town wondered how he would do after the long holdout and only a few innings of work this spring, and with the season beginning this week. With fans all over the city listening to his performance by radio while awaiting his “Hollywood Palace” appearance, he proceeded to be purely fantastic. He worked six innings and turned in a no-hit job, striking out nine, walking only one, retiring the last 16 men in order —and perhaps revolutionizing spring training. But hold: For again by coincidence, he finished his chore about five or 10 minutes before the "Hollywood Palace” began. Thus, almost immediately after his heroics, his taped presence emerged here on video. All over town, you could hear script writers throwing their typewriters out the window.
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TO ALL THE PEOPLE OF PUTNAM COUNTY
Dim to th« dutios of my office, I am sorry I won't bo aUa to coll on oach off you personally os I would liko to do boforo tho May Primary.
kennIthknauer County Commissionor Candidoto Second District Raid Political Adv.
Bainbridge Club Holds Meeting Activities galore now that the Bainbridge Saddle Club has become a land owner. Recreation days, they are called, that sounds much better than “work days,” besides a lot of fun is sandwiched between the tasks of brush clearing and fence building. Directors meetings, often and sometimes lengthy, prior to or following regular club meetings or special ones held at the Bill Williams home. The more faithful members have been working each Sunday and some Saturdays. Their efforts are making a big showing now. The new fence row is cleared and posts set, ready for the woven wire. The road leading to the club grounds has been covered with crushed rock and the well is to be dug this week. Harold Flint, former owner of the acreage, furnished the food for a wiener roast March 20. More than fifty members were working that day and his gesture was really appreciated. April 9th was the regular meeting night, a pitch-in dinner, tables loaded with delicious food. Attendance numbered about 75. The entertainment committee was the James Ritter, Bob Moore and Gerald Burdette families. The first stunt was a cake walk with Betty Williams as winner. Team edntests using Easter candies were hilarious. The final was musical chair. Wayne Marks, Jr., was runner-up and picked to win but Bill Grey was more fortunate. William Perkins was winner in the mystery man contest. This was the night for the drawing. Robert Michael won the portable television. Mr. Etcheson of Jasper won the horse shoeing service and Geneve Williams held the winning ticket for the 320 certificate from the Williams Tack Shop. John Higgins had sold the most tickets and won a year’s membership in the club. April 17 is the next creation day at the club grounds. Bring food for a wiener roast. The major improvements should be completed soon then it will be time for more pleasure and less work. Six shows are planned, starting in May and ending In October. A “warm-up” show, ride and get-together is planned for April 24. All summer meetings will be held at the club grounds.
CAST ADDITION HOLLYWOOD UPI — Barbara Rush has been added to the cast of “Hombre” which stars Paul Newman, Richard Boone, Fredric March. -
GARNER GETS LEAD HOLLYWOOD UPI —James Garner will play the lead at MGM in “Grand Prix” which rolls in Monte Carlo in May.
Rus-sel Is
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17 W. Franklin OL 3-4315 Furniture Values at everyday low prices Suggestions For a new summer look CARPET Laid Wall to Wall 501 Nylon .... $4.49 to 813.50 METAL KITCHEN CABINETS Gleaming White — Base or wall — Even utility. LOVE SEATS Just the thing for a special open spot — Decorative and rocks. MATCHING TABLES Maple, walnut, f ruitwood and priced $7 to $59. FOOTSTOOLS Adjustable or plain and mighty colorful. DESKS-BOOKCASES And if your size is not shown, ask for a catalog. CHAIRS Over 200 — And we never run out of these known brands.
TELEVISIONS Nobody shows finer line and you get a Philco if we know what’s good.
By GAYLORD P. GODWIN WASHINGTON UPI—During an awards ceremony the other day at the Agriculture Department, President Johnson praised Secretary Orville L. Freeman as “one of the greatest administrators the government ever has known.” Considering Freeman’s ticklish position as middleman between cost-conscious housewives who buy food and the fanners who produce it and want to get the best price possible, he may have to exhibit some talents as a juggler, too. On March 31 and again Tuesday — with his chief looking on —Freeman predicted that the average price of all farm products would drop by 6 to 10 per cent next fall and winter. Significantly, the ceremony at which he spoke was one to honor. Agriculture Department employes for cost-reduction suggestions. The occasion for Freeman’s March 31 farm price forecast i was the Labor Department’s report of a % per cent jump in the consumer price index in February. Freeman said the downtrend in farm prices for raw products promised lower retail food prices in the future. On Tuesday, he seemed to modify this statement somewhat. “If the food industry will respond quickly to lower farm prices, retail prices to consumers will diminish,” the secretary said. "This requires responsible action by the management of our food marketing firms, for without such action lower farm prices will simply mean larger profit margins for the marketing firms — with no benefit accruing to the consumer.” Whether the reason behind that statement was to mollify irate farm groups is not known. Freeman said in March the department’s target for the farmer is net farm income. He said this can be maintained — and increased — by expanded production. He said the farmer may have to sell his produce at a lower price, but could sell enough to maintain his net.
The March report on farm prices through the 15th showed average prices 13 per cent above those of March, 1965. Calculation shows, however, that if average farm prices drop 10 per cent by year’s end, the parity ratio would be about 74 per cent instead of the present 82 per cent
Now You Know By United Pre$* International The bayonet was invented in Bayonne, France in 1640 and gets its name from the name of the city. They were first used in battle in 1647 at Ypres.
Maiden Voyage MOSCOW UPI — The Soviet Union’s new luxury liner, the Alexander Pushkin, left Leningrad Wednesday on its first transatlantic voyage. The 21,000-ton Blast German built vessel was scheduled to make stops in Helsinki, Copenhagen, London, and Quebec en route to Montreal.
Governor Dies PROVIDENCE, R. I. UPI— William S. Flynn, governor of Rhode Island from 1922-1924, died Wednesday of a heart ailment. He was 80. Flynn was one of the youngest men ever to be elected governor of his state, winning tho office at the age of 37. He retired from politics after an unsuccessful bid for the senate in 1924.
Grand Opening FRIDAY and SATURDAY April 15 and 16th MEET YOUR NEIGHBORS We have moved in ready to serve you with GAS - HEATING AND COOKING. L. P. GAS CARBURETION FLAME WEEDING DRYING APPLIANCES: Tappan Ranges, Hotpoint Refrigerators, Siegler Flame Heaters GRAIN MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS
Door Prizes
Refreshments
JEBB’S GAS
East an Rd. 240
Phone 244-4198
\V ho s got the leanest, meanest look in town?
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The Guy in Stretch Levis
DuPont Nylon does the trick. Its built-in “give** makes Stretch Levi’s fit a guy all the way down, with no strain. And its bnilt-m toughness gives a guy months o£ extra wear! Swin gin’ sportswear colon in 75% cotton 25% Du Pont Nylon. Only $5.98 a pair. jj # sw w n aw owe “torry w intomoM. You can tell them by the Tab.—'' >s Ss^
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