The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 February 1967 — Page 3
Ifrom the* ox AGENT'S OFFICE
ni
By Youth Aflont JERRY WILLIAMS
The 4-H Com and Soybean members are to be honored Saturday. The Junior Crops Jamboree will be held Saturday, Feb. 11, at Purdue. Those attending will be Marshall Brattain, Greencastle; Gary Wallace and Steve Albin, Bainbridge; Larry Keeney, Russellville and leader Ward Robertson, Bainbridge. Each county is allowed to send four members and a leader. Each representative must be at least 14 years of age. This is an educational experience in addition to being an *ward. They will get to meet some of the top agricultural educators at Purdue, champion corn and soybean producers and some
top entertainment.
will be two sessions this year. The Saturday session will be primarily for the younger members and the older members on
Monday evening.
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I just received word that Ward Robertson, R. 2, Roachdale was elected to his second three year term as a director of the seventh district of the State Holstein Association. The seventh district includes thirteen counties.
Several Putnam County Junior Leaders will be attending the District Junior Leader Conference at Terre Haute on Thursday, Feb. 16. This is a workshop to train Junior Leaders to work better in their club. The Junior Leaders will be sponsored by the Putnam County Farm Bureau. Training will be received in recreation, song leading, achievement records, judging, program ideas and personality improvement.
* • •
The 4-H Adult Leaders will be offered training at the District Rotary 4-H Adult Leader Conference. This year there will be two sessions, one at Crawfordsville on February 15, and the other at Terre Haute on February 21. Programs from which they may choose are as follows: Programming In the local club to meet the needs of tomorrow’s youth; Youth in Focus — Personality Development; Youth Develoment through Junior Leadership; How to Organize and Plan a 4-H Club Program for your
Club.
As of now, those planning to attend are: Mrs. Wendell Brattain, Mrs. Bill Rowings, Mrs. James Farrow, Mrs. Sandra Williams, Mrs. John Pershing, Mrs. Betty Sendmeyer, the Home Economics Agent, and myself. • • • 4-H officers training will be 1 held Saturday, Feb. 18, at 1:30 p.m. and Monday, Feb. 20, 7:30 p.m. at the Greencastle Jr. ; High School. All club officers • should plan to attend. There
Court To Rehear School Ruling NEW ORLEANS UPI—The full 12 member U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals plans to dej&de If the Supreme Court's 1054 ruling that schools should -be desegregated “with all deliberate speed” should have a September deadline in the deep South. -i-. The appellate court agreed ^Thursday to rehead a Dec. 29 -decision which in effect, by a vote, affirmed that the court’s policy would be the same as that laid down by the • Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW). Southern officials asked for •the full 12-man court to rehear the case. The judges will not meet in joint session but will communicate by telephone and mail to reach a decision. 7‘Th« features of school des e g r e gation throughout the South will be significantly affefcted by the outcome of the rehearing,” NAACP attorney Jack Greenburg of New York saj}d. Veteran civil rights attorney A. P. Trueaud of New Orleans said the Dec. 29 decision “fully implements” the Supreme Court’s Brown edict and is highly significant. ' The Brown decision, handed down by the Supreme Court in ^954, declared school segregation unconstitutional and ordered class rooms integrated Urith all deliberate speed. ; Louisiana Atty. Gen. Jack Gremillion, who Joined Alabama authorities in asking for the rehearing, described the ruling as the first step in the destruction of the public school system.
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Mailing Rates May Be Raised WASHINGTON UPI — The government is considering a plan that would produce $5.5 million in postal revenues by raising mailing rates for 40 mass circulation magazines. Key provision of the proposal is a surcharge that would add to the mailing costs of the most widely circulated magazines such as Look, Time, Life, Reader’s Digest, the Saturday Evening Post and TV Guide. The surcharge of three tenths of a cent on each copy distributed over 500,000 for each issue would be levied in addition to an overall boost of 20 per cent in second class mailing rates already proposed by the administration. Newspapers and magazines are the primary users of second class mailings. The six mazagines in the group of 40 are mailed to more j than 50,000 subscribers and are ! read by about 50 million Americans. They would pay nearly two thirds of the surcharge or j $3.5 million.
Barnard News
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Page and family entertained the following guests Sunday in honor of the birthdays of Martha Ann Page and Ed Perkins, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Perkins and son. Bill, Mr. Maynard Noland, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Selch and daughters all from North Salem and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Maddox from Plainfield. J Friends of the community are sorry to hear of the serious illness of James Wright of Waka- j rusa. He is the son of Mrs. Bessie Wright. Mrs. Eliga Page, Mrs. Vela Page and Herschell Page called on Mr. and Mrs. Willie Pritchett near Ladoga, Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Donnis Hertel called on Mrs. Maude Falin Tuesday afternoon. Mr. Kenneth Plunkett attended a meeting in Indianapolis Wednesday and Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Jewell Page called on Mr. and Mrs. Orville Perkins, Mrs. Rose Miller and Mr. and Mrs. Wm. McMullin Sunday afternoon. The Ladies Aid met Thursday at the home of Myrtle Plunkett. The morning was spent sewing carpet rags.
Miss Cindia Robbins spent the weekend with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Jewell Page. Mrs. Elma Cheney recieved word her sister was to have surgery Tuesday morning in Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Page and family took Mr. and Mrs. Paul Page to Indianapolis Saturday night, to see Mrs. Bessie Hoosier, who is a patient in the St. Vincents Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Hop kins attended the funeral of Charles Purcell Sunday afternoon, then later called on Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Lively and family.
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A COMPLETE SELECTION OF COLOGNES, PERFUMES
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COSMETICS
SHEINWOLD ON BRIDGE
[>on’t Cross Bridge Till You Come To It By Alfred Sheinwold The trouble with growing up is that you must settle for pie or for ice cream. If you were still a child you could take a little of each until you decided which you really liked. Try playing most bridge hands like a child. South dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH 4 K872
S? 2
O AJ874 4 1054 WEST EAST 4QJ109 4 A 6 54 KJ 8 V Q 9 5 4 05 O 632 4 J87 62 4 93 SOUTH
4 3
V A 107 63 O KQ 109
4 AKQ
South West North
East
1 V
Puss 1 4
Pass
2 0
Pass 3 0
Pass
4 4
Pass 5 O
Pass
« 0
AH Pass Opening lead
A Q
West opened the queen of spades and then shifted to a trump. South won with the nine of diamonds and wondered whether hearts or clubs would break well. If the seven missing clubs were divided 4-3, South could cash the three top clubs and the ace of hearts. Then he could cross-ruff the rest of the hand. If the seven missing hearts were divided 4-3, South could
ruff three hearts in dummy and draw trumps. Then the rest of his hand would be good. South tossed a mental coin and chose the cross-ruff. Unfortunately, East ruffed the third high club and South was down. TRY BOTH South couldn’t tell which suit
Wrong Engines WASHINGTON UPI — The Army spent $1 million for 10 locomotives to use in Thailand then spent another $2.3 million to replace them when it found the first group couldn’t do the job, according to government auditors. The General Accounting Office (GAO) told Congress Thursday the Army knew before shipping the locomotives in August 1963, that they were the wrong type but that one unidentified Army official said to cancel the manufacturer’s contract “would undobutedly cause quite a furor.”
Boy, 6, Drowns TELL CITY UPI — Walter Lee Schaefer, 6, drowned Thursday afternoon when he fell into Figler Creek behind his home near Siberia in northern Perry County. Authorities said the youth, son of Thomas Schaefer, apparently slipped while playing next to the water.
would break well, but he should have tried a little of each. After winning the second trick with the nine of diamonds he should cash the ace of hearts, ruff a heart, return to his hand with the ace of clubs and ruff another heart. If either opponent fails to follow on the third round of hearts, South may still be in position to try the cross-ruff. This will work if the opponent with five hearts has three or four clubs. In the actual hand, both opponents follow suit to three rounds of hearts. Now South gets to his hand with a trump to ruff one more heart. He ruffs a spade, draws the last trump and shows his hand. Youth is a wonderful thing. DAILY QUESTION Partner opens with one heart, and the next player passes. You hold: S-A 6 5 4; H-Q 9 5 4; D6 3 2; C-9 3. What do you say? Answer: Bid two hearts. This weak hand is worth only one response. Raise a major suit rather than show a new suit.
Close Inspection TUCSON, Ariz. UPI — A city prison farm trusty, recaptured after a brief escape, told police he jumped from a supply truck because he had noticed a “very affectionate” couple riding in a taxi. The woman was his wife, he explained.
Th« Dally Bannar, Graancastla, Indiana
Friday, Fabruary 10, 1967
—Morale Is Low vote of 27 to 1. The lone dissenter was Rep. Lucien N.
Nedzi, D-Mich.
In its report, which has been circulated among all members, the committee said it was “painfully aware of shortcomings in the combat readiness capability of the reserve components which are largely the result of the failure of the ex-
Sand To Desert LONDON UPI—Forget those gags about coal to Newcastle and hair to Liverpool. Britain 1b exporting sand to Egypt. The United Arab Republic has ordered several tons of specially treated sand at $154 a ton from the British Industrial Sand Co. It will be used to help Suez Canal authorities determine which way the canal bed is
drifting.
ecutive branch to provide meaningful and understanding support to the reserve components.” The report speaks of all reserve components, but the committee was known to be primarily concerned with the Army’s organized reserve and the Army National Guard.
DR. J. F. CONRAD OPTOMETRIST
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