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The Tribune from Seymour, Indiana • Page 4

Publication:
The Tribunei
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Seymour, Indiana
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4
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I I MOUR DAILY TRIBUNE. SEYMOUR, IND. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1963 Relocation Of Ind. 135 In Harrison, Washington Okayed INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -A 13.6- mile stretch of Ind. 135 in Harrison and Washington counties will be relocated to eliminate hazardous curves and steep grades.

The State Highway Commission said Thursday the U.S. Bureau of Public Roads has approved the relocation plans. Preliminary- engineering and right-of-way Is. Cheer Leaders Are Elected By Pupils Student cheer leaders have been elected at Shields Junior High School by students, in seventh, eighth and ninth grades, has been announced here. Students in each of the grades who wanted to try out for cheer leaders appeared before their respective student body.

Election of cheer leaders was made by ballot. Cheer leaders elected included the following: Seventh Grade, Marsha Farrow, Sonja Hobson and Danielle Taylor; Eichth Grade, Terrye -Bishop, Ann Elsner and Donna Owens, and Ninth Grade, Terrie Evans, Sandy Gossett and Yvonne Javnes. Faculty members comprising the committee who worked out arrangements included James. F. Deputy, chairman; Jane Coryell, Lola Mae Honn and Tom Gould.

The committee met with all students who tried out, made suggestions and assisted them with preparing yells before the. contestants appeared before the student body. Engineering Offers Made By Civil Service New opportunities to apply for Federal employment in the field of civil and hydraulic engineering aid and technician opened this week, according to a bulletin received by the civil service secretary at the post office. Positions are located in the U. Geological Survey, MidContinent Area, which includes 13 states.

Positions under the civil option are headquartered at Rolla, Missouri, and those under the hydraulic option are located in water resources division offices throughout the 13 states. Federal employment offers wide variety of benefits, including paid vacations, sick leave with pay, and an excellent retirement plan. Employes are also eligible for low-cost group health insurance and life insurance. Applications for these positions, which pay starting salaries of $3,560 to $4,565 a year, are to be filed with the Executive Secretary, Board of U. S.

Civil Service Examiners, U. S. Geological Survey, P. O. Box 513, Rolla, Missouri.

For further details, consult the civil service secretary at the post office in this city. Deaf State Worker To Be At Fellowship Here Don Pettingill, deaf member of the Indiana division of vocational rehabilitation, will attend the Tuesday, night meeting of the Christian, Men's Fellowship to be held at. Central Christian Church here. Pettingill, consultant for the deaf and hard of hearing, is deaf, but speaks, reads lips and sign language. He will show a color movie of the story of vocational rehabilitation, entitled "To Live Again." He will be present to aid in discussion.

It promises to be an Interesting, informative program. Meeting time Is 7:30 p. m. Notices Notices Hubert G. Beldon, 76, at 10 a.m.

Saturday from the Tampico Baptist Church. Burial in Crownland Cemetery at Noblesville. scheduled during, the 1963-65 fiscal period. The section to be relocated lies between U.S. 150 at Palmyra and Ind.

160 at Salem. The new route will be generally parallel to the present highway. The commission said it will become an important traffic artery when the new Ohio River toll bridge at Mauckport is built: The commission also announced of two short stretches of old U.S...35 in Wayne County, with maintenance to be assumed by the city of Richmond and the county. The state system no longer. needs those sections because of consfruction of Interstate 70.

The. awarded to -Johnszh, Depp and Quisenberry of Owensboro, a contract for $280,121 for preliminary engineering design of a 10-mile stretch of Interstate 65 in southwestern Clinton County. Sunshine School Teachers Speak To Seymour Lions Two teachers from the Sunshine School for retarded children were guests of the Seymour Lions Club Thursday, night at the Elks Club and they described the teaching program undertaken by the school. Mrs. Charles A.

Walls and Mrs. Robert G. Davis described their work and stated that retarded children in the middle group are taught at the -school. Some of those in the higher group attend Seymour Community Schools. Purpose of the school, they explained; is to train the youngsters with enough social habits and reading knowledge to enable them to live as close as possible to a normal life.

Thirteen pupils' are attending the school, which meets in the new addition of the First Presbyterian Church in Seymour, It is hoped that the school will eventually have its own building. The teachers were introduced by Robert H. Judd, president of the Jackson County Council for Retarded Children. Judd had been introduced by Paul Prior, who made some remarks on the Jackson County United Fund. Robert J.

Lee was in charge of Thursday night's program and Marion B. Reinbold presided. W. A. Fleenor, member-at-large who now lives in Arizona, was I present at the meeting.

Fleenor is formerly of Seymour, and is a retired Army officer. Mrs. Ida Rush. Formerly Of Sevmour, Exnires Mrs. Ida M.

Ruch. 83. of Columbus. a former resident of Sevmour and widow of the late E. H.

Rush, formerly a Prudential Insurance Camnane agent in Sevmour, died Thursdav at Jeffersonville in a nureine home. Cha heA lived In Columbus until March. when she went to the home ct her son. Lawrence C. olen formerly Sawmour, 400 West 14th street.

TofferennChe was a member of the First Christian Church at bie. Reeides the son. she le survived he a and three great Grandchildren. Funeral services will be conducted at 10:30 a. m.

Monday from the Barkee and Inlow Funeral Home, Columns, with burial in Garland Prank Cemetery at Columbus. Friends mav call at the Coots Funeral Home in Toffersonville n- til Saturdav morning when the funeral party will go to Columbus, and friends may then call at the Barkes and Inlow Funeral Home. Seymour Kiwanis Club To Participate In Plan For Delinquency Prevention Seymour Kiwanis Club met Thursday night at the Seymour Country Club and the board of directors voted to undertake a plan by Jackson Circuit Judge John M. Lewis to educate youth in Jackson County on the prevention of juvenile delinquency. The judge, who appeared as guest speaker at the meeting, presented a supplement to the pamphlet "You and the Law," designed to acquaint youngsters with the laws in Indiana.

"You and the Law." a pamphlet describing what constitutes delinquency, has been widely recommended nationally with Kiwanis International distributing copies. More than 860,000 copies have been printed and more than 700 Kiwanis Clubs are distributing them, Judge Lewis, who is emphatic on prevention of delinquency before it starts, said the pamphlet Is sound except that it deals mainly with New York state law. His plan is to have supplementary information distributed to teachers to clarify points on Indiana law. His goal is to have every sixth grade teacher in Jackson County receive a copy of the supplement 50 that he educate his pupils on the consequences of juvenile delinquency. Such manual would be in loose-leaf form to facilitate revision in case of changes in state law.

The idea arose from the wave of delinquency several months a- go which resulted in 17 juveniles appearing in court, Judge Lewis Newsy Paragrafi. An accident Wednesday at 8:12 a. m. at the corner of Sixth and Ches nut streets involved a 1963 sedan driven by William Edward Lucas, 34, 429 Kessler Boulevard, and a 1958 sedan driven by Janet Marie Fitch, 17, 905 North Elm street. Officer Maurice A.

Rose, of the Seymour city. police department, who investigated, said the Lucas car was traveling east on Sixth and was, making a left turn onto Chestnut street as the Fitch car, traveling south on Chestnut street, started to a right turn onto Sixth street. The left side of the Lucas car collided with the left front of the Fitch car, it was reported. Damages of $200 were estimated to the Lucas car and $100 to the Fitch car. Annual Mission Festival of St.

Paul's Lutheran Church, at Jonesville will be. celebrated at the 10:15 a. m. service Sunday. The Rev.

E. H. Zimmerman, of Fort Wayne, execulive secretary of stewardship of the Indiana district of the Lutheran ChurchMissouri Synod, will be the guest speaker. The public is cordially invited by the pastor, the Rev. Richard E.

Hasz, to attend the special mission service. Larry R. Elgar, 21, of, Seymour, was driving a 1959 model car south on a county road in Bartholomew County about 6 p. m. Wednesday when the car hit a rock and swerved off the road into a ditch, striking a culvert.

The mishap caused about $200 damage to the front and under: carriage of the auto, according to the County sheriff's department. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Fisher, of Columbus, have chosen the name James Bradley for their son, born late Tuesday night in Bartholomew County Hospital, Columbus. Mrs.

Fisher is the former Miss Jeanine Weaver, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James D. Weaver, 140 South Park Drive, and Mr. Fisher is the son of Mr.

and Mrs. Stanley Fisher, Seymour R2. Mrs. Hazel Berry, formerly of this city, is a patient in Williams Nursing Home, Scottsburg R2, and would appreciate hearing from friends here. Mrs.

Berry's eyesight is failing, it was learned. She is a sister of Mrs. Charles A. Linke, of this city; Miss Ethel Carson, of Bloomington; and Mrs. L.

R. Geyer, of Vallonia. Mrs. Raymond Spurgeon, of Brownstown, has been admitted to Columbus. Bartholomew She is in County Room Hospital, Mrs.

Fred Scudder, of North Vernon, has been released from Bartholomew County Hospital at Columbus. Mrs. Ernest Yeager, of North Vernon, has been released from Bartholomew County Hospital- at Columbus. Revival services will start. Sunday at the Freetown Pentecost Church of Jesus Christ with Mabel Schulz, Bloomington evangelist, preaching each night at 7:30 p.

it has been nounced by Elder Orval Greathouse, pastor. Everyone is invited. Man Arrested Continued from Page 1 robbery, firearms, and intoxication, and served terms in six penitentiaries. He was wanted for parole violation after having originally been given a 20-year term for robbery from Tarrant County, Texas, Gibson was driving a 1956 blue and white sedan belonging to Burns when Sgt. Konkle saw him at the north edge of Crothersville on U.

S. 31 after hearing the man in the car was wanted at Henryville for drawing a gun on a service station attendant there. Sgt. Konkle drove alongside him when he pulled into a driveway at a service station just south of the old Clara D. Carter School and took him into custody at gunpoint.

Shortly afterward Trooper Neal Schiller, of the Charlestown state police- post, who had been pursuing the man, pulled up and Gibson was returned to Clark County. A roadblock had been set up at the U. S. 31-50 junction east of Seymour by Cpl. Robert R.

Pond, Troopers Robert N. Lewis, Gerry Welton and Ronald Miller after Sgt. Konkle had radioed he was chasing the man north on U. S. 31, but the roadblock was not needed.

A. R. Gee Receives Milwaukee Road Pass In recognition of having been employed by the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad for 45 years, A. R.

Gee, of Seymour, has received a silver pass signed by William J. Quinn, president of the railroad, good for lifetime travel on all Milwaukee Road trains. Gee is an agent on the Terre Haute division of the Milwaukee Road. The pass was issued in favor of Mr. and Mrs.

Gee, who reside at 818 Ewing street. Church Of The Nazarene Crothersville Rev. Leroy E. Shipley, Pastor Sunday, 9:30 Sunday School. Morning Worship Service, 10:30 a.

m. Junior and N.Y.P.S. Services, 6:45 p. m. Evangelistic Service, 7:30 p.

m. Wednesday, 7:30 Praise and Prayer Service. This Sunday morning the Church will- take part in the semiyearly Alabaster Box opening. Antique Auto Tour Is Set This Weekend The Fifth Annual WFBM-TV Antique Auto Tour will make its 150-mile trek across southern Indiana on Saturday and Sunday, according to Tom Carnegie, WFBM Director of Sports and this year's tour director. More than 150 units, including antique, vintage and classic vehicles will leave from the rendezvous point at the Southern Plaza: Shopping Center in Indianapolis P'enroute to Bloomington for an overnight stay.

The cars will visit Franklin, Edinburg, -Columbus, Gnaw Bone and Nashville before arriving at Bloomington. A refreshment stop is planned at Franklin and an hour and onehalf break for lunch is planned on the Court House Square at Columbus. At Bloomington, the group will tour downtown before parking all cars for inspection downstown. Highlight of the tour will be huge chicken barbeque at IU's Memorial Stadium and a special swimming demonstration by IU's champion swimming team at Royer Pool. Sunday the tour will make very leisurely trip enroute to Indianapolis via State Road 37 to Paragon, to Ellis.

Lake near Eminence for lunch. The Tour will leave Bloomigton at 10 a.m. and is scheduled to arrive at the Lake at 11:15 a. m. The cars will leave for Southern Plaza Shopping Center at 1 p.

and they are scheduled through Mooresville at 2 p. m. The caravan is scheduled to take Route 67 to I-465 and return to Southern Plaza at 2:45 p. m. Special permission has been granted for the tour to.

use unopened I-465 from 67 to the Shopping Center. Four telecasts will feature the tour highlights. At 9:30 a. m. Saturday, a Channel 6 program will televise the tour leaving the Shopping Center.

A show at. midnight Saturday features the tour as it progressed during the day. An hour WFBM-TV telecast Sunday afternoon at 4:30 p. m. brings the awards ceremonies to Hoosier viewers.

Frank Prater will be master of ceremonies on all telecasts. The awards program will be repeated for the benefit of tour participants at 11:15 p. m. Sunday. Four Indicted In Promoting Students' Trip WASHINGTON (AP) Four New York City men were indicted today on charges of conspiring illegally to organize and promote a trip by 59 American students to Cuba last summer, the Justice Department said.

Those named in the indictment, returned by a federal grand jury. in Brooklyn, were: Lee Levi Laub, 24; Phillip Abbott Luce, 26 and Stefan Martinot, 24, who were charged with Illegally traveling to Cuba and back. Anatol Schlosser, 26, like the others, also was charged with conspiring to recruit and arrange for the trip. The grand jury charged that the defendants formed a committee ton promote the trip to Cuba, recruited travelers and raised travel funds. The alleged conspiracy began in October 1962, and continued until Aug.

29, 1963, the day the travelers returned, the indictment said. The conspiracy charge cited 31 overt acts, including a number of meetings in late June in New York, Paris and Czechoslovakia. Laub assertedly distributed applications for the student trip in New York City and at San Francisco State College, the grand jury said. Three of the six counts charged Laub, Luce and Martinot individually with leaving the United States for Cuba via Europe, without valid passports. The other three counts charged them with returning to this country from Cuba on Aug.

29 via Spain, again without necessary passports. Two other persons who, the Justice Department said, made the trip to Cuba were named as co-conspirators, but were not indicted: They are identified as Salvatore Cucchiari, 19, and Ellen Irene Shallit, 20, both of New York City. Dale Siefker Gets Purdue Scholarship Dale F. Siefker, Seymour R2, has received a scholarship to Purdue University through the State and Purdue Alumni Scholarship Foundation. He is one of nearly 500 students from throughout Indiana to receive scholarships to Purdue.

All of them are enrolled as freshmen this fall term. Dr. Donald R. Mallett, Purdue vice-president and executive dean, also announced that this year, for the first time, state and special merit scholarships have been made available to Purdue's extension centers and campuses. Siefker is enrolled at the main campus at Lafayette.

BANK ACQUISITION SET SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) -Associates Investment Co. will acquire the First Bank Trust Co. of South Bend under a stock exchange plan announced Thursday by 0. C.

Carmichael board chairman of both firms. The rate. will -be 1.2 shares of Associates for 1 of First Bank. Schneck Memorial Hospital News Mrs. Nettie Weihe, Seymour R4, was admitted Thursday afternoon for medical treatment.

Mrs. Lloyd Combs, Brownstown, was admitted Thursday afternoon for medical treatment. Dale W. Bowman, 601 West Fourth street, was admitted Thursday night for medical treatment, Earl Hobbs, Brownstown underwent surgery this morning. Mrs.

William Edward Bennett, Hayden, underwent surgery this morning. James W. Halbert, 113 South Pine street, was admitted Thursday night for medical treatment. Jim Owen, Paris Crossing, underwent emergency surgery Thursday night. Howard Perry, 418 East Third street, was admitted Thursday night for medical treatment.

Walter admitted Monday for medical -treatment, returned home Thursday afternoon to Medora, Mrs. William Clause, who underwent surgery September 19, returned home Thursday afternoon to 601 West Second street. Amy Trowbridge, admitted September 4 for medical treatment and who underwent surgery September 5, returned home Thursday afternoon to Brownstown, Hallie Grant, admitted September 15 and who underwent surgery September -16, returned home Thursday afternoon to 108 Windhorst Court. Mrs. Myron Smith, who underwent surgery Tuesday, returned home Thursday morning to 1318 North Vine street.

Earl Parker, admitted Sunday for medical treatment, returned home Thursday morning to 231 South Broadway. Boxman, Seymour R2, underwent surgery this morning. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Poole, North Vernon, are parents of a daughter born this morning in surgery.

Mr. and Mrs. Glen Bane, Medora, are parents of a daughter born this morning. Mr. and Mrs.

Max Wineinger, Cortland, R1, are parents of a daughter born Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Robert Barber and son, Mark Steven, born Tuesday, returned home Thursday night to North Vernon R2. Mrs. John Downs and daughter, Tina Marie, born Monday, returned home Thursday morning to North Vernon, Mrs.

Marion King and' son, Randy Lynn, born Sunday, returned home Thursday morning to Crothersville. Two Convocations Next Week Before Seymour Students In addition to the Chain of Missions program before 1 the student body Monday, a convocation will also be held Tuesday for Seymour junior high and high school students. Walter Kronemeyer, better known as "Uncle Walt," of Chicago, will present a lively topic on jungle trails to primitive tribes in Africa when he appears here Tuesday in morning and afternoon performances, He will be appearing here through School Assembly Services, of Chicago, under sponsorship of local schools. He will appear at Seymour Senior High School at 9:30 a. and before the junior high student body at 1:40 p.

m. Local schools present several convocations during the school year. Convocations will be presented by the School Assembly Services and by the Antrim Association, of Pennsylvania. Well known performers and travelers who have played to outstanding audiences are on the agenda to appear here during the school Performances will include professional variety of music, science and physical education. A speaker from the Chain of Missions program here starting Sunday will speak to the junior high student body at 10 a.

m. Monday in the Girls' gymnasium. Marion County Sheriff Dies After Surgery INDIANAPOLIS (AP)- -Marion County Sheriff James O. Hiner, 45, died in Indianapolis Community Hospital early today, He had undergone surgery but his condition had not been considered serious. His office said a blood clot caused death.

A former state trooper and detective, he took office as sheriff last Jan. 1. Survivors Include the widow: daughter, a student at Purdue University, a son, Deputy Sheriff Douglas Hiner; one grandchild, the parents, a brother and a sister, FORMER PREXY DIES LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) Dr. Leon S.

McDaniel, 76, who founded Kanawha College at Charleston, W. Va. in 1932 and was its president until it merged with Morris Harvey College in 1939, died Thursday. He was a member of the Governor's Committee on Aged and Aging. Butler President Assails State School Recruiting INDIANAPOLIS (AP) The president of Butler University says Indiana's tax-supported colleges and universities may destroy private colleges through "unfair competition' and should "start charging tuition that is I realistic." President Alexander E.

Jones told a legislative investigating committee Thursday. that the four state schools are actively and agi gressively recruiting students away from private schools. Jones said the state schools are undercutting the smaller schools on student fees and are placing too great a load on taxpayers for support of the institutions by failing to charge realistic student fees. He told the State Colleges and Universities Study Committee that the student ratio between state and private schools in Indiana has changed from 50-50 in 1959 to 70-30 in favor of the state schools. Spurgeon On Committee James W.

Spurgeon, of Brownstown, state senator of Jackson, Washington and Scott counties, is co-chairman of the legislative investigating committee. The Butler president said the state institutions, have expanded in many instances to duplicate what private schools already offer. Jones said student fees at Indiana and Purdue universities and Indiana State and Ball State Teachers colleges should be raised to a level near the tuition charged by private schools. Dr. John A.

Logan, president of Rose Polytechnic Institute, also told the committee that recruiting by the state schools "is getting prety rough." Officials of Huntington College and Indiana Institute of Technology also appeared before the committee and expressed concern about recruiting and fee schedules. North Vernon Men Fined, Sentenced In Seymour Court Two North Vernon men were fined and given suspended penal farm sentences in Seymour city court Thursday after both pleaded guilty to traffic charges. George Ronald Jones, 34, was fined $15 and costs of $21.75, totalling $36.75, and given a six months sentence at the state, penal farm, suspended on a charge of failure to possess an operator's license, and was fined $1 and costs of $21.75, totalling $22.75, on a charge of driving a vehicle with improper registration. Fines and costs amounted to $59.50. Clyde F.

McCrory, 30, owner of the truck Jones was driving, was fined $15 and costs of $21.75, totalling $36.75. and sentenced to six months on, the penal farm, suspended, on a charge of permitting an unlicensed driver to drive his vehicle. He was fined an additional $5 and costs of $21.75, totalling $26.75, on a charge of knowingly allowing his vehicle to be driven while improperly registered. Fines and costs amounted to $63.50. Captain James P.

Flynn, of the Seymour city police department, arrested Jones at 10 a. m. Thursday after noticing the panel truck Jones was driving had the license plate turned up making it impossible to read the plate. When Flynn stopped Jones, he found the plate had been issued to an automobile, and the driver failed to have driver's license, a charge on which he had been arrested on two past occasions at Shelbyville, and Harris County, Texas. Sgt.

Maurice L. Wright, of the Seymour state police post, assisted Captain Flynn here in making the arrest of McCrory. B58s Being Operated Between U. Spain WASHINGTON (AP) -The Strategic Air. Command has started sending small groups of B58 Hustlers, the nation's fastest longrange nuclear bombers, on regulat transatlantic flights to Spain.

This was learned today on the heels of a new U.S.-Spanish agreement extending American base rights in Spain for five more years. The agreement, signed in New York late Thursday, covers three SAC bases and the Rota Naval Base. The Air Force said the mile-an-hour B58 began operating from the United States to the Moron Air Base in Seville and the Torrejon Air Base within the past few weeks. Kiefer Initiated Into Honorary Group Michael Kiefer, junior, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Louis J. Kieter, 221 West Harrison Drive, was recently initiated into Blue Key, a national men's honorary at Ball State Teachers College, Muncie, To be eligible for membership in Blue Key, one must have and maintain a grade average above the overall average of men on campus. Kiefer is a member of Sigma Chi social fraternity and currently is editor-in-chief of the Ball State News, He is a graduate of Seymour Senior High School, town Man Dies Of Heart Attack James Kindred, 81-year-old resident of Brownstown who moved his family there from Kentucky by covered wagon in the early 1900s, died af 6:30 a. m. today of a heart attack at his home on West Walnut street.

Mr. Kindred at the age of 28 moved to Brownstown from Kentucky with his family in a covered wagon. In 1909. He had sided there since. He was born December 17, 1881, in Kentucky, the son of the late John and Annabelle Carpenter Kindred.

He was first married to Maggie Kinworthy who later died. To this union was born three children. On November 13, 1914, in Brownstown, he was married to May Cockerham. She also preceded him in death. Survivors are four daughters, Mrs.

Nancy Willingham, of Los Angeles, Mrs. Maggie Lustig, of Seymour, and Mrs. Kenneth Jones and Mrs. Theodore Wagoner, both of Brownstown; three sons, Ralph and George Kindred, both of Brownstown, and -Pat Kindred, of Bellview, Washington; 24 grandchildren and 17 great grandchildren. Three, sons, two brothers and three sisters preceded him in death.

Funeral services will be Sunday at 2:30 p. m. from the Zabel Funeral Home in Brownstown with the Rev. Richard Wilkens, minister of the Brownstown Baptist Church, in charge. Burial in Fairview Cemetery, Friends may call at the Zabel Funeral Home after noon Saturday.

Mrs. Brunow Ahlbrand's Mother Dies Thursday Mrs. Clara Gingrich, 88, 822 North Ninth street, Lafayette, died Thursday, according to word received here. She was the mother of Mrs. Brunow Ahibrand, formerly of Seymour.

Mrs. Gingrich had visited in Seymour frequently when her daughter. and husband lived here and' made many friends here who are shocked to learn of her death. Funeral services will be conducted at 1:30 p. m.

Saturday from the Hippenstreat. Funeral Parlor at Lafayette. Missions Continued from Page 1 afternoon at 1:30 she will speak to a group of ladies at the home of Mrs. Walter Stone, 305 West Fifth street. At 7:30 p.m.

at the Presbyterian Church, she will address the first through sixth grade teachers of the various church schools. Speakers in the Chain of Missions program Sunday are Robert Bruns and Vern Rossman, both missionaries to Japan. The Rev. Mr. Bruns speaks at the First Methodist at 9:30 a.

m. and at the St. Paul Congregational Church at 10:30. Mr. Bruns addresses members of the church boards of First Baptist, First Methodist, Central Christian and First Presbyterian at 3 p.

m. at First Methodist. The Rev. Mr. Rossman has a similar engagement at 3 at the St.

Paul Church, speaking to church boards of Trinity Methodist, All Saints Episcopal, First Nazarene, St. Paul and the Evangelical United Brethren churches. The Rev. Mr. Rossman will preach at the Central Christian Church at 8:50 a.

m. At 10 a. m. at the First Baptist Church worship service. At 6, the Rev.

Mr. Bruns will talk to youth groups of the First Presbyterian, First Nazarene and Central Christian at Central Christian Church. Mr. Rossman will be at the First Baptist at 6:30 to speak to youth groups from First Baptist, First Methodist and Trinity Methodist. PERSONALS Staff Sergeant.

Marvin Earl Young, Mrs. Young and sons, Joseph William and Kevin Patrick, have returned to their home in Lebanon, after spending several days here with Sgt. Young's parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Earl Young, of 501 East Tenth street, and other relatives.

Mrs. William Earl Young and son, John William Young, of this city, visited Mrs. Hazel Berry, at the Williams Nursing Home, 'Scottsburg, recently. Mr. and Mrs.

Douglas Fisher and their newborn son, James Bradley, of Columbus, will come to this city Saturday afternoon, where Mrs. Fisher: and infant son will spend several days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James D. Weaver, 140 South Park street.

B'town Township FB Sets Meeting Tuesday Brownstown Township Farm Bureau will meet at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday in the study hail of Brownstown Central High School and the main business will be election of officers. Members are asked to attend with ideas for discussion, The pet and hobby club and handicraft club are also to meet, with the pet and hobby members asked to attend with masks. Refreshments will be served.

Mrs. Clarence Pottschmidt is women's leader and Russell Cross is township chairman. Seymour Markets September 27, 1963 Wheat, No. 1 $1.79 Wheat, No. $1.78 yellow corn New white corn Soybeans, No.

1 yellow $2.47 Oats 60c Rye $1.00 Heavy hens 12c Leghorn hens 7c Old roosters Pullet eggs 15c Eggs (Grade A large) Eggs (Grade A medium) Current receipts Seymour Livestock September 27, 1963 HOG MARKET 170-180 lbs. $14.50 180-190 lbs. $15.00 190-210 lbs. $15.50 210-230 lbs. $15.25 230-250 lbs.

$15.00 250-270 lbs. $14.50 270-300 Ibs. $14.00 Sows Boars No Cali Market INDIANAPOLIS GRAIN Indianapolis, Sept. 27 (P) The following bids were made Thursday by local mills for grain delivered by truck; No. 2 red wheat $1.78 a bushel; No.

2 white shelled corn $97c; No. 2 white oats 36 lbs. or more 57c; Noe. 2 yellow shelled corn 97e; No. 1 yellow soybeans (13 per cent moisture) $2.47, COLUMBUS PRODUCE COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Eggs prices at farms A jumbo 35-43; large 32-40; medium 26-36; small 13-23; large 20-30; undergrades 10-17.

Delivered to major Ohio cities, loose, large A 43-47; medium 36- 40; small 25-27; large 36-41; carton large A 46-52; medium A 39-45; small, A Poultry prices at farms, fryers 13-15; hens heavy, 14-15; light 7- PERU, Ind. (AP) A pickup truck overturned on Ind. 19 south of Gilead Thursday and spilled 500 pounds of dynamite, but the cargo did not explode. The driver, Karen Ulsperger, 33, Peru, was hospitalized with injurles suffered in the wreck. CONTRACT BRIDGE By B.

Jay Becker invited ministers and civic groups to "critique" on the cases and these individuals unanimously advocated some form of education to stop delinquency. The judge is a firm believer of stopping delinquency before it starts and the best way is to acquaint youngsters with the consequences, He believes: this program should start before a youngster is a teen-ager. The Rev. J. T.

Moore offered to have the supplement produced by mimeograph at Central Christian Church, After the judge concluded his talk, President Howard Haberstich called a board meeting to discuss the project and take action on it. Judge Lewis was introduced by Wyatt. Floyd, program chairman for Thursday night's meeting, H. Don Swiggett, chairman -of the Kiwanis effort in the WHASI Crusade for Children, reported On the substation the club operated last weekend and said the collection of cash and pledges was more than double that of last year. Members were reminded that' the club will meet at 6:15 p.

m. Monday at the country club instead of Thursday in Joint meeting with the Seymour Exchange Club as part of the Chain of Missions program sponsored by the Seymour Ministerial Association. The speaker will be the Frank LaFont, a Church of God missionary to Kenya, Africa. Kiwanians are asked to make their reservations with Ray Kendall by noon Saturday, (Top Record-Holder. in Masters' Individual Championship Play) You are South, both sides Strategic vulnerable.

The bidding has been? East South West North 14 Dble. Pasa Pass What would you now bid with each of the following five hands? 1. AJ7 4064 2. AK73 VAK5 KJ4 4AJ32 3. 4 KJ82 45 4A.J9 4.

AKQ943 K8 4A72 5. 4 AQ85. J6 4A53 1. Pass, A takeout double announces the values for an opening bid. It may be based on as little as 12 points in high cards or as many as 20 points in high cards.

It may have good distributional values or it may have no distributional values. In other words, the double is a flexible bid that shows indeterminate values. Once you've doubled, the duty arises at the next opportunity to indicate whether the double was based on minimum, maximum or intermediate values. In the present case it is clear that the double was of the minimum class, and the best way to show this is by passing partner's response of one spade. There can scarcely be a game under the circumstances, since, it partner had 8 very good hand, he would have bid -two spades instead of one, 2.

One notrump. This may seem like 8 terrible underbid with a 19-point hand, but it is I 1968, King Features QUIZ the winning bid in the long ber run. It is important to rememthat partner's spade response does not guarantee any strength whatever and that he probably has a poor hand. He unlikely to have as many as 7 points, considering that East opened the bidding, that we have 19 points, and that there are only 40 points in the deck, If North la unable to bid over one notrump, the outlook for game is poor. 3.

Four spades. Granted that North doesn't have much of hand, he la still not likely to lose more than three tricks. There Is a limit to how far to carry pessimism. A jump raise to three spades might bring a pass from North with 8 hand that offered a good play for game. 4.

Two spades. The single raise merely indicates extra values, distributional Or otherwise, beyond a minimum double. It invites partner to" bid again with a promising hand, bearing in mind that the two spade bid shows limited values. 5. Three spades.

This is about all that can be done, despite the trump fit and 18 high-card points. We can't jump to four with a hand containing so many losers, since partner may have a practically worthless hand. Even nine tricks cannot be guaranteed, but the mild risk of going down at three is more than offset by the possibility of successfully reaching game. Syndicate, Inc.).

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About The Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
529,645
Years Available:
1896-2024