The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 22 November 1967 — Page 8
tog* •
Th« Daffy Bannar, Oraaneasffa, Indiana
Wadnaaday, November 22, 1967
January draft call 34,000 November meeting held by
Roachdale Progress Club
WASHINGTON UPI — The draftees originally inducted Defense Department has issued i about two years ago when it a January draft call of 34.000— was in the midst of its initial nearly double the 18.200 men strength buildup for Southeast scheduled to be inducted into Asia." the Pentagon said,
the Army in December.
The increase signals the be-
Draft calls averaged 30.390 a month and totaled 364.680 in
The Roachdale Woman’s Pro- and legislation, gress Club held its November Mrs. Retta Silvey read a meeting at the home of Mrs. paper on, "The Early PilWalter Worick, the theme of grams.”
the meeting was Thanksgiving.
Morton News By Mrs Russell O’Havei. Correspondent
CONTRACT BRIDGE By B. Jay Becker flop R»c«rd-H*W§r In Maltara' Individual Championship Flay)
The president, Mrs. Albert
A beautiful decorated birth-
Rev. William M. Patterson called on Mr. and Mrs. Z.
Burkett last Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Call visited Mrs. Marion Huffman and
ginning of a series °f 1966. The terms of these met. McFerran. opened the meeting ^^“ children last Monday afternoon.
draft calls expected to average wi)1 eX p ire in 1968. The 1967 about 30.000 a month through draft totaI fell to 218,700.
1968 compared to a monthly 1
average of slightly more than Almost all the 1968 draftees 18.000 this year. are expected to come from ‘The principal reason for the among single men or men who higher January draft call is that married after Aug. 26. 1965:
the Army is now replacing the who are between the ages of 19 thankful for.'
relatively large number of and 26 and are not students.
by reading a Thanksgiving
poem.
After the flag salutes were given Mrs. Guy Beck gave the
devotions.
Roll call was answered
Retta Silsey honoring her nine- Mr - and Mrs - Wa ^’ ne Bettis tv-third birthday. Mrs. Silvey and Mr - and Mrs - Jake Martin
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Harold Emmons and
received several nice gifts. Mrs. Worick assisted by Mrs
Twelve members of Union Chapel M. Y. F. and their sponsor, Mrs. Hubert McGaughey, attended the sub-district M. Y.F. Sharing Festival Sunday afternoon at the First Methodist Church in Brazil. Their dona-
tion was $50.00.
South dealer. North-South vulnerable.
The community is saddened because of the death of Beulah
LADIES NIGHT Wednesday, Nov. 22nd AMERICAN LEGION POST No. 58 Promptly at 8:00 p.m. Guests Invited
k' refreshments,
nineteen members giving what The next meeting will be a
Mrs. Frank Plunkett, secre- Christmas Party with a covtary, read the minutes of last ered dish luncheon at the home meeting and Mrs. Carl Eggers. of Mrs. Cecil Perkins. treasurer, gave the financial report. A firkin is a tub for holding The department chairman butter or fish, equal in content gave reports on Mental Health to one-fourth of a barrel.
Jennie Blaydes, served delicious daughter, Cheryl, of Tip City, yochum Saturday morning at
Ohio.
the Putnam County Hospital. Our heart-felt sympathy is ex-
tended to the family.
Sunday evening callers of Mrs. A. J. Sadler and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Sadler were; Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Sadler o f
Rockville. Mrs. A. J. Sadler and j^s "aodfefter' and “children
Mrs. Howard Divis called on
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Hall o f Colorado called on Mr. and Mrs.
TEEN DANCE Friday, November 24 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. GREENCASTLE ARMORY Music By "ALL THESE BLUES" Formerly "ME AND THEM GUYS"
Mrs. Sadler's sister in Crawfordsville and found her im-
proving in health.
Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Clones and three grandchildren of North Salem, called on Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Clodfelter last Wed. Miss Waunetta Lough and Mrs. James Clodfelter and daughter, Cindy, called on Mrs.
last Tuesday. The Halls are friends of the Clodfelters and
are moving to Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Leland Allgood were Sunday dinner guests o f Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mitchell
of Ladoga, R. R. 1.
goods called Sunday evening on Mr. Clifton Clones at the Culiver Hospital in Crawfordsville
. . ^ 0 0 and on their daughter. Mrs. Maxine Callender Sundav even- ~ ^ » v, . „
Sam Dutcher and family o f
Jo
Crawfordsville.
Ellen Clodfelter, Beckev ., , ^ M rs - Jop Stultz and Boiler and Sally Shannon were Jeff and Rickey c . allpd
among the girl scouts who went j to see the Elfs’ and Shoema1 ker at the theater in Craw-
i fordsville on Saturday.
sons
on Mrs.
A1 Gray and daughter Sunday afternoon.
NORTH +J9642 V J»5 + KJ3 + AQ WEST EAST A? *853 ¥ 7642 *KQ10 *1082 4965 A K 7 65 3 +10911 SOUTH 4 AKQ10 4A83 4AQ71 The bidding: South West North East 14 Pass 3 4 Pass
64
Opening lead—two of hearts* It is seldom wise to paint a
false picture of your hand when you are a defender, because the chances are that you will fool partner Instead of declarer and thus frustrate the very purpose
The All- of your design. However, there are hands
where you don’t care a tinker's dam whether partner is fooled or not, and in such cases it is possible to gain an advantage by abandoning normal defensive procedure and by deliberately misrepresenting your hand in
order to deceive declarer. Here is such a case. Assume
you are East and partner leads
a heart on which declarer plays
low from dummy. Your normal play would be the ten which forces the ace from declarer’s hand. If you now imagine yourself in declarer's seat, you can sea that he will automatically m&ks six spades. He draws threa rounds of trumps, cashes four diamonds discarding a heart from dummy, and then takes • club finesse. When it succeeds, the rubber is over and on top of all your other troubles you are on the wrong aide of a vulnerable slam. Now let’s go back to trick one and play the king of heart* instead of the ten! Tour purpose is to create the impression is South’s mind that your partner led a heart from a holding of four to the Q-10. That is what declarer is al* most certain to think, and. If ha does, he will surely go down. Ha will draw trumps and either immediately or eventually lead a heart towards the J-9 in dummy, fully expecting your partner to have the Q-10. It is next to inconceivable for him to first cash four diamonds in order to discard a heart from dummy, because that would force him to rely on a club finesse to make the ei*m. Since he can avoid the club loser by discarding one foam dummy os his fourth diamond, he is practically certain to rely on the heart situation and wind up going down one.
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Mike O’Hair and mother Mrs.
Gilbert O'Hair of Bainbridge called on relatives In Effingham Sunday. Mike’s grandmother, Mrs. Stella O’Hair, returned to her home in Bainbridge
with them from Effingham. Mr. and Mrs. Clair Albin
were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Miller and
family of Clinton Falls. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Clark
of Danville spent Tuesday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs.
James Anderson.
Mrs. Fred Thompson Mrs. Russell O'Haver.
Working conditions on agenda at ISTA meeting INDIANAPOLIS UPI—Work- fiasco growing out of tha
change in the adjustment factor on assessed valuation and tha ceiling on local tax rat* will mean the strangulation of school progress in many communitiea in 1969 and will hit at least a dozen communities in 1968.”
ing conditions will be emphasized more than pay hikes when Indiana's teachers negotiate with their school board employers on their next contracts. That became evident through
and reports on meetings held last
Mrs. weekend in Indianapolis by the attitudes of politicians
Jake Martin. Mrs. Ruby Ever- Indiana State Teachers Associa- and goj^ 0 f pubij C toward man and her mother, Mrs. I’ on and Bloomington spon- education are glaringly revealed Perkins. Roachdale and Mrs. sore d by the Indiana Federation v> -h en it is noted that no local Shirley Baker. O. E. S. Dist. °F Teachers AFL-CIO. un jt 0 f government except
In addition the board of direc- schools is saddled ^ a llmlt on tors of the Indiana School Property tax.'’ Wyatt aaid. in
reference to a S4.95 adjusted rate limitation put on property taxes for school purposes by the
1967 Legislature.
Deputy of Bainbridge. attended Friends Day at Rockville
O. E. S. last Wednesday even- Boards Association-represent
ing Mrs. Theressa Wimmer, cousin of Mrs. O’Haver. received her 50 year pin and our
Grand A. Patron. Dr. Koenig, tiatjng workshop untll January.
received his 25 year pin. Mrs. Dewey Stultz. Mr. and
Mrs. George Stultz and son. called on Ray Stultz, near
Kingham, Sunday afternoon.
CORRF.CTFXG THE RECORD SAN FRANCISCO UPI — Contrary to popular belief, a ship's captain is not empowered to perform a marriage cere-
ing the employers—worked on revision of its negotiation guidelines but will not hold its negoUnless there is legislative re-
Robert H. Wyatt. ISTA exec- lief, teachers will need more utive secretary, told about 600 skill and understanding in both teachers from throughout the school finance and intelligent state that “negotiation for sal- negotiation because of the seary increases is not the only or vere tax and educational dis-all-important reason for nego- tress facing the schools in 1969, tiations between teachers and; Wyatt told tire ISTA salary school boards.” workshop.
“Outside the area of mone- “Indiana ranks 14th in per tary benefits there is a whole capita personal income, but in
mony. However, in the early world of issues and problems total public school revenue as a days of sailing when a voyage ; that relate sharply and power- percent of that income, it is tied took many months, the per- fully to the satisfaction with for 29th place with Alabama formance of a marriage cere- which a teacher functions in his > and Oklahoma,” Wyatt said. He mony by a captain was usually chosen life career.” Wyatt said, said that if there is no special recognized as valid. Wyatt noted that the “tax legislative session relief, teach-
ers should concentrate on “time-to-teach items, associated with the various kinds of non-profes-sional assistance and supportive
sendee.”
Try and Stop Me
By BENNETT CERF
fpWO VETERAN New York taxi drivers were having a • bite together after hours. *‘My luck gets worse and worse.” grumbled one. “Just today I got two tickets from
blank blank cops, blew a
kA ■ M ■-.
■V;
tire, broke down in traffic and had to be towed to the garage, and drove one skinflint thirty miles out in Long Island. He gave me a twenty-five-cent tip!” “H m p h h,” sneered the other. “You think YOU have had bad luck. All this week my off-duty sign wouldn’t light up!”
Pierre Nordon. in his absorbing biography of Sir »*-wArthur Conan Doyle reveals that in his early days as a • s. doctor, Doyle filed one year's tax report showing no income whatever. The tax office returned it with “Most unsatisfactory” written in the margin. Young Dr. Doyle resubmitted it, adding to the tax man’s complaint, “I entirely agree!" Then, in 1886, Doyle created the immortal Sherlock Holmes—and his monetary worries were ended for good. Many responsible critics are convinced that Sherlock Holme* stories will still be hugely popular long after that upstart James Bond is completely forgotten. Indeed, when Author Doyle got so tired of his creation that he had Sherlock done in by his arch-enemy. Dr. Moriarty, bereaved readers went into mourning, and so many baskets full of protest poured in that he had to write another story bringing his-hero triumphantly back to the land of living. • • • “A pro is a man who can do his job when he doesn’t feel like it. An amateur is a man who can't do his job when he does feel like it”—James Agate. C Wer. bjr Bennett Cerf. Distributed bjr King Feature* Syndicate
MONON GRILL WILL BE CLOSED THANKSGIVIN6 DAY Closing Wednesday Midnight Till 5:00 A.M. Friday
He referred to class size, dutyfree lunch and rest periods and time for study and preparation which presumably could not b* obtained except throno-h tcarhot*, aide assistance. However. Robert Thornberry, director of the IFT. said that in tiie federation's conference nt IU. attended by about 5 persons. some consideration was given to asking for salary increases in some places, in addition to n-nrUinv rcinrtl. tions. “Some of me salaries are so inadequate we are going to ex- ■ pect to get salary increases in some places.” Thornberry said. He conceded these would have to come from property taxes unless there is an increase in state support. He said the IFT has taken no position for or against a special legislative session to reliev# schools facing a financial crisis partially because of reduced state support and the imposition of a property tax rate ceiling. “It puts us in a difficult bargaining position.” he conceded. The ISTA represents the preponderance of Indiana teachers. The IFT won exclusive bargaining elections in Gary. South Bend and Lake Ridge and is challenging the ISTA in Hammond at an election set for Jan. 12.
ANOTHER VOTE ROME UPI—The 116-nation United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization <FAO) scheduled another vote today in an effort to elect a new direc-tor-general after two inconclusive ballots. The two candidates were Holland’s Addeka Henrick Boerma and Chile’* He man Santa Cruz.
