Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 November 1951 — Page 9
, 1951 nen ean rive
Nov. 14 KOREA. d by the tion of ceived its i week, vas turned ficials® ay, ters here Houghton, and Mrs, chairman ernational
hroughout in launch0 provide food and rea’s war’ 2s. Memesident of contribute
jonal goal $1,500,000, » 150,000 tile packin any to CAREany local
A-TV
ptitie brur in New t WednesPreviews.” sion’ shqw AM-TV at K. America’s rs. It is {zens Gas
interviews ances Mcrt. Fach 'w famous and show designed Appearing As Sevenm. Ladies gue ill feature 28 and
chool nored
rs Associ v mothers y¥ in the - re. Elizaashion co“At Home
® Was In and Mrs. ded.
mall and and
Sea iy
NOV.
A
WEDNESDAY,
Nei
is
Blackwood on Bridge
Failure to Check Signal Card Costly
Mr. Muzzy led the King of spades against the four heart
contract. wr. Meek played the eight and Miss Brash the queen. When he saw the queen, Mr, Muzzy looked wise and winked at the kibitzers. “You must think you're playing with children,” he said to Miss Brash. Thereupon he laid down the ace of spades-—and the opportunity of beating the contract was gone forever. . = Mr. Muzzy when Miss Brash ruffed the second trick. “No szpades”’ he asked, as if he had been cheated.
looked puzzled
» » »
MISS BRASH picked up the
outstanding trumps in two leads, ending on the heart. She
ruffed off dummy’'s last spade then led the ten of clubs. Mr Meek could take hiz ace any
When he was 12 could cash
time he wan ted. fn with that card } Just one diamond. If he returned a- club, Miss Brash would discard three of her dianvonds on dummyv’s club
14, 1951
~
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
ys
ras i 4 ; . es td
TURNABOUT — Butler University coeds Miss Betty Fiddes (left), * junior from Detroit, Mich., and Miss Elizabeth Keeling (right), Waldron freshman, model the gowns they expect to wear Friday to Butler Panhellenic dance in the Indiana Roof ballroom.
“North dealer East-West vulnerable NORTH Mr. Dale S—-763 H—A Q 9 D—K R
# C—K QJ 33
WEST EAST Mr. Muzzy Mr. Meel S—A'K 54°? S—J 10 9 H—4 3 H—-7 5 P7543 D—A Q6 C—9 2 CA 6 5} OUTH Jo Brash S H—K J 10 R 6 2 D—J 10 8 2 C10 7 The bidding: NORTH EAST SOUTH WEST
} C Pass 1 H Pass TH Pass 1 H Pass + H All Pass suit and lose one diamond at
the end. On a spade return, Miss Brash would win all the remaining tricks, making fiveodd. She would discard a dia-
.
mond from her hand and ruff
in dummy. Then hercother diamonds would go off on dummy's clubs = n n IF MR. MUZZY had made
the mest likely shift of a diaond at trick two, Miss Brash would not have had a chance. The loss of one spade, one club ind two diamonds would have been automatic.
Why play a high spade on the first trick?” asked Mr Muzzy Didn't you play the eight spot or something? Maybe ‘I should carry a pocketful of deuces around just situations like this Mr. Meek replied. Or maybe a arge sign with foot-high letters Ving ‘please shift As vou see, Mr. Muzzy could
have checked his own hand and dummy and seen everv spade under the eight spot. It would have clear, then, that Mr, Meek. far from giving a come-on, was playing the lowest spade he had. After all. he couldn't play the discouraging deuce if he didn’t have it,
ow
Give the Finest: - Gift of All—
By AGNES
Pledge Your Blood
H. OSTROM
mes Club E
OMORROW is the deadline “set by the post office for
mailing servicemen's gift
packages overseas to assure
their arrival before Christmas.
Minute Women, perhaps
to remember with such a package. But, there is a finer gift you and your “Buddy” can send for any wounded boy in the Korean area. Money can't buy it. Only you can give it. Make tomorrow your personal deadline to pledge a gift of lifesaving blood to assure its arrival in time to save a wounded GI. = = = RED CROSS Blood Center, 18 W. Georgia St., will be open from 2 to 8 p. m. tomorrow. Call LIncoln 1441 to make an appointment for your gift. The Indianapolis Medical Society Women’s Auxiliary have a group pledged to send lifesaving gifts, They include Dr. and Mrs. W. Burleigh Matthew, Dr. and Mrs. Walter Ramage, Mesdames Georgia Rader, H. T. Moore, Bennett Craft and Howard Williams. Mesdames Ted Grisell, G, V. Ryan, Joseph Shugart, Lester Bibler, Jack R. Hall and K. H. Stephens. Other Minute Women and their “Buddies” pledged to give at the Center are Mrs. Thomas W. Ledwith, Sunnyside Guild; Mrs. Floyd Lively, Marion County PTA Council; J. C. Cravens, Indianapolis glumnae Chapter, Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority; Mrs. Sam Chermin, Indianapolis Section, National Council of Jewish Women, and Mrs. John W. Lee, Club = - = MISS NANCY STOUT, Indianapolis Junior League; Donald R. Gruber, Lutheran Child Welfare Association; Louis James McNamara, St. Joan of Are Women's Club. and Mr, and Mrs, Charles Bass, Hoosier Auxiliary VFW, Mrs. Catherine Snow and Mrs. Mabel Blacker, Speech and Hearing ((nter Women's Club; William Roark, Wayne Township Volunteer Fire Department Auxiliary, No. 9; Mrs. W. T. Dailey Sr. Lambda Epsilon Chapter, Epsilon S8igma Alpha Sorority: Mrs. Arval Scales,
and Mrs. R. P. ‘Behan, Butler
t the price you pay for other foods today
A quart of milk
compared with the price of bananas
It's true—the food. that gives you the most health value
actually saves money, too. According to latest government
figures, a dollar spent for milk is worth $1.36 —every milk
dollar gives you a 36¢c bonus, because the price of milk has
stayed that far behind the price of other foods
Try it on your pocketbook. Drink more milk, serve more
milk, make more milk dishes—milk is today's biggest
food bargain.
(I makes your
food dollar wort
A
: : i
is worth =
WIGHER IN VALUg
Inter Alia
Semper Fidelis Temple.”
you have no one in particular
University Sigma Nu Mothers Club. LJ ” ” MRS. JOSEPH EADE and Mrs, Donald Brown, School 82 PTA; Mrs. Betty Jean Hartsock, School 75 PTA; Mrs. Juanita Byers and Mrs. Maxine Casner, School 46 PTA; Mrs. Ann Richmond, Miss Mary Lou Wallace, Mrs. R. M. Barrick and Steve Rosenbaum, School 45 PTA, and Mrs. G. M. Carr, School 35 PTA. Mrs. Margie Garvey, Indianapolis Deanery, National Council of Catholic Women, St Philip Neri; Mrs. Ruth Stie) and Mrs. G. A. Seal, NCCW Sacred Heart: Mrs Julius Day
on, Mrs. C. M. Forsha an Charles L. Millet, NCCW, St Joseph; Mrs. A. C. Dun:
NCCW, Holy Name, and Mrs Flora A. James and Mrs. Rose lyn Ardezzone, NCCW, Ho Rosary.
Gray Lady Clas:
To answer an urge: need a Gray Ladies cla: for volunteer service in th
Red Cross Defense Bloo program will begin Nov. 26, ac cording to Mrs. Fred Abernathy Red Cross Gray Ladies chairman.
“The present Gray Ladies
volunteers need more assistance
HONOR BANNER—Mrs. Mildred R. Smith, William S. Aspinall, H. L. Helms and Mrs. Charles
. Newman (left to right).
n handling the increased numwer of blond donors at the Blood
Center and at temporary cen ters set up in business estab-
ishments and industrial fimrs 1 Marion County,” Mrs. Abner1thy stated. The daytime class will meet vice, Nov. 26 and Nov. 28
'd Graders Win RED CROSS flag flies today in the second grade room at John Strange School.
It hangs in honor of two
Times photo by Dean Timmerman,
Newman, 23d Inf. Reg., 2d Division, has been at Heartbreak the = Ridge in Korea. . “And he's just lost three men recently,” says hig mother. “I know he'll aprpeciate all these blood gifts for the wounded.” n es =
MRS. NEWMAN also has a son, Pvt. Harrison Newman, in room OCS in Ft. Riley, Kas. At the. presentation yesterday were William S. Aspinall, PTA second vice president, and H. L. Helms, principal. John Strange PTA is enrolled in The
servicemen, sons of the teacher, Mrs. Charles W, Newman. The flag was given by school PTA for the room with the highest number of donors of gift blood at this week's mobile unit operation in the school. = = ~ MRS. NEWMAN'S room tied with the third grade taught by Mrs. Mildred R. Smith. But pupils in Mrs. Smith's room asked the honor banner be placed in Mrs. Newman’s room in honor of her two boys. Times Modern Minute Women's Since Aug. 2, Lt. Edward blood donor drive.
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