The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 21 February 1968 — Page 4
Pag* 4
The Dally Banner, Greencastl*, Indiana
Wednesday, February 21, 1968
Morton Community News
Mrs. Mary Barker, mother of Harold Barker, passed away last Friday evening at the St. Frances Hospital in Beech Grove. Last rites were held Monday afternoon at the Barnes Funeral Home in Rockville. People of the Morton community extend their sympathy to the
family.
Friends of Mrs. Ruby Mauck and family were saddened by the death of Ruby’s mother, Mrs. Stella Campbell on February 12. She passed away at the Putnam County Hospital. Services were held at the HopkinsWalton Funeral Home with
burial in the Brick Chapel Cemetery. Morton O.E.S. and Union Chapel Church served lunch at the home on Friday. Mrs. Wayne Alexander and Mrs. Russell O’Haver shopped in Indianapolis last Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Vem Sigler visited Mrs. Sigler’s sister, Mrs. Earl Sutherlin at Culver Hospital in Crawfordsville last Fri- | day afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Max Call and family were Saturday evening callers of Mr. and Mrs. Rex
Call.
Recent visitors of Mrs. D. P. Alexander and Floyd Yochum
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were Mrs. Roscoe White Thursday afternoon and Mrs. Ray Clodfelter Saturday for lunch. Mrs. Ruth Fullenwider, of Crawfordsville. and Mrs. Mattie Lear and Mrs. Allie Wilson, of Russellville, called on Mrs. David Thomas one afternoon last week. Sunday afternoon visitors of Mrs. Minnie Sadler and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Saddler were Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Saddler, of Hillsboro, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Pulliam, of Greencastle, and Mr. and Mrs. Ardra Saddler of Rockville. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Stultz and son and Mr. and Mrs. Earley Jackson and family had Sunday dinner at Torr’s Restaurant Mrs. Roscoe Stevens was a Sunday dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs. John Wehrman in Roachdale. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Anderson, of Crawfordsville. were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Anderson, Mr. and Mrs Robert Clark, of North Salem, were visitors Sunday, February 11. Ted Frazier and Marilyn Kincaid, of North Salem, called on the Joe Stultz family Sunday afternoon. Recent visitor in the the Fred Thompson home was their granddaughter, Dianna Hammond, of Reelsville, part of last week. Joyce and Janet Baker, of Bainbridge, and Mr. and Mrs. Rick Parent, of Greencastle, were weekend visitors. Dale Barker was called home from Purdue University to attend last rites for his grandmother, Mrs. Mary Barker. Barbara McFarland, of Bainbridge, was a house guest of Darlene Jackson Friday night and Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Earley Jackson and Mrs. Roscoe White called at the Barnes Mortuary in
Rockville Sunday afternoon to pay their respects to the family | of Mrs. Mary Barker. Mr. and Mrs. Gale O’Hair and family attended the Golden Wedding anniversary Sunday of Gale’s uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest O’Hair, at the home of their granddaughter, Mrs. Taylor and husband of Bainbridge. Mrs. Ethel Lawter is a house guest of Mr. and Mrs. Noel Nicholson. Robert Casteel and daughter, of Pontiac, Michigan, spent the weekend with relatives in Indianapolis. They were visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Doyne Cooper Friday night and they and Jimmie and Cindy Cooper had lunch with Mrs. Russell O’Haver on; Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Martin and children had dinner at the Fair- ( way Restaurant Sunday noon, i They called on the Burl Taylors in the afternoon. Mrs. Burl Taylor. Mrs. Sharon | Clodfelter and Mrs. Charlotte Martin shopped in Crawfordsville one day last week. Mr. and Mrs. Vem Sigler and | Mrs. Russell O’Haver called at the Sunset Manor Nursing Home Thursday evening and visited with Mrs. Ida Wood. Mrs. Myrtle Boatright and Mrs Katherine Call. Mr. and Mrs. Clair Albin and Mr. and Mrs. Noel Nicholson attended the Bainbridge-Russell- j ville ball game at Russellville | Saturday evening. A chili and vegetable soup supper is scheduled for Wednesday evening, Feb. 28. at the Union Chapel Church. Proceeds from the supper will be given in food and clothing for the children of South Vietnam.
CONTRACT BRIDGE By B. Jay Becker (Top Rocord-Holdor In Mosfon' Individual Championship Nay)
But here I am, and I’ve got to do the best I can. So I look the dummy over very careful and I see I have to lose a heart be* cause I can’t eat it, unless maybe I can con these guys out of it. This fellow sitting East, his name is Charlie Four Cents, he can’t beat his way out of a paper bag. If I can give him tha office I’ve got a chance, because he don’t really know from noth-
ing.
So I start pulling trumps and I keep pulling them till I don’t have any more left. I’m hoping Charlie will get mixed up. Next I run the A-K-Q of clubs, and when I cash the queen Four Cents looks worried. You see, dummy by this time has the K-3 of spades and nine of hearts. Charlie don’t know what to throw because he’s got the Q-J of spades and K-Q of
hearts.
Would you believe it, Mr. Becker, he threw the queen of hearts and made my A-10 good and we knocked off the grand slam. I tell you this fellow don’t know what time of day it is. Should my partner have bid seven? Yours truly. Butch. Dear Butch: I don’t think so, but I’ve been wrong before. I wouldn’t squawk if I were you. Just keep on playing your cards the way you played them this hand and Four Cents will be out of money in no time.
3-31-M
Wall Street Chatter
NEW YORK UPI Spear & Harris, Upham A Co. notes
South dealer. North-South vulnerable.
NOBTH ♦ AKS V 942
+ KQ87
A A K J
WEST EAST ♦ 96 ♦ Q J10 8 75 ♦ 8753 ♦ itQ J6 ♦ 642 ♦ + 6532 +874
SOUTH
M2
♦ AID ♦ AJ10953 + Q1O0 The bidding: South West North East 14 Pass 3 4 8 4 Pass Pass 4 NT Pass 5 V Pass 7 4 Opening lead—nine of spades. Dear Mr. Becker: I been reading your columns lately and I figure you play pretty good. I wanted to ask your opinion cm a hand we played at the chib yesterday. The way I look at it my partner shouldn’t have bid seven but he did. This don’t make sense to me because here we got a 700-point rubber stashed away and 750 for a little slam, and he takes a gamble to lose the whole thing just to try and make a big slam. This don’t look like good percentage to me.
i Staf. Inc—says "a number cf the conglomerates and high flyers have been so badly battered In recent weeks that they are becoming attractive buys for the long pull.” The firm feels that “to some extent the decline of these glamor issues was a healthy thing. Many of them were selling at unrealisti- ; cally high price-to-earnings ra-
tios.”
(O 1968, King Features Syndicate, Inc.)
Religion In America
The Alexander Hamilton Institute advises investors to use any market rally to lighten up on issues which have questionable prospects for this year or where astronomical P-E ratios prevail. A well-defined, conservative trend now exists which will continue until meaningful Vietnam truce negotiations get underway, according to the investment firm. Two men convicted WARSAW UPI — A Warsaw court sentenced Alfred Kipper, a Pole, to nine years in prison and a 322.900 fine and Eugen Scharbatke of West Germany to six years and six months in prison and a 85,000 fine upon conviction of cooperation with , anti-Polish West German organ- ! izations, the Polish news agency said today.
that a number of war scores have occurred in the past 70 years, including the sinking of the Maine in 1898 and the Lusitania in 1916, Pearl Harbor in 1941 and the Cuban crisis In 1962. It says that such crises the market has gone down 4*» percent to 27% per cent. But eventually from 72 per cent to 100 per cent of all such losses were regained. The firm adds * “We would not be surprised if the same pattern of recovery la followed at this time.”
\yxy.
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Joost de Blank was a Christian leader who cannot be accused of slighting the social ap-
plications of the Gospel.
As Anglican archibishop of South Africa from 1957 to 1964, he fought a courageous and un-
compromising apartheid.
battle against
About 2,000 years from now, the star Gamma Cephei will probably be our pole star.
A massive coronary attack in 1964 forced him to give up his stormy post at Cape Town for a
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quieter assignment as canon of Westminster Abbey in London. There, until his death last month, he found time for constructive brooding over the social action controversy which has brought many denominations and local churches to the brink of schism. His conclusions are expressed in a little book entitled “The Return of the Sacred” (MorehouseBarlow), which would be excellent material for Lenten discussion groups. Archbishop de Blank gently rebukes both "Christian pietists” who are entirely preoccupied with traditional aspects of worship and evangelism, and “Christian secularists” who think of the church’s mission solely In terms of social service. The pietists, he says, need to remember the central affirmation of the Christian faith — “that God became man in Jesus Christ.” The deepest meaning of the incarnation is that “God has set His seal on the whole of life . . . nothing lies outside His concern.” “Jesus, at the beginning of his public life, came preaching that the kingdom of heaven was at hand. Now whatever else the kingdom means, it is certainly not limited to a person’s private spiritual development. “It must include man’s life in : society, with all that this means in terms of race, nation, politics, economic well-being and educational opportunity.” He then warns secularists that the church cannot save Itself from irrelevance by becoming so immersed in the ordinary life of mankind that it loses all sense of the sacred. “A church which thinks of itself exclusively as an Instrument in the hands of those who have a conscience about the present state of the world is inadequate to meet the deepest needs of the human personality,"
he says.
“Man needs more than to be clothed and housed and fed. There Is a famine of the spirit which may well be the major problem of those who live In the affluent society of the west ... our Lord came to this world to help people to be, and not just
to do.”
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