Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 December 1951 — Page 18
PAGE 18 _ Blackwood on Bridge—
Mr. Heinsite Learns About H
R. HEINSITE made a very bad bid of five spades in today's hand to prevent Miss
umanics
North dealer North-South vulnerable
four original clubs and the two major suit kings. Mr. Heinsite got down to four clubs and
wo.
Two Families Are Planning
a
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Annual Gatherings Here
MER: AND MRS. HARRY
grandparents and 11 youngsters
Aa
Dragoo sons, Douglas, David
and Philip and one daughter, Betsy, and Mr, and Mrs. Odin F. Wadleigh. :
Mr. and Mrs. E. Allan Sherwood, New York, and their family will be unable to join the
RA THURSDAY, DEC. 13, 1951 How to Make Ee Carving Easier ~*~
' Mary, Carolyn, her youngest daughter, is a senior at Tudor Hall. She will entertain friends in preparatory schools and c¢olleges. The older sister, Shirli, married last summer to Frank B. Throop, will, entertain with her husband.
- a ® »
To make carving easy for’ the man of your house, ask your meat retailer to loosen” the backbone of the pork loin by sawing across the ribs close: to the backbone. After roast<"
-
NORTH ' group this year, a : gs Brash-from-making her normal two aces, . : sure to remove the. response; to Mr. Dale's four no s Me. Pale WHEN THE EIGHTH dia- DRAGOO iI, assisted renging From Bw H SE i There will be carol singing They will greet returning col- foe, then place the ro trump bid. He was wasting his HJ 3 . mond was led from the board, bY Mrs. Harry Dragoo Sr., ore, w : ': and x gift exchange, [lege friends as well as young ., tne platter with the rib side ® Jiene Lyme bi D-AKQJ10752 Mr. Heinsite was gone. Suffer- = will entertain with an an- Erie J, Wadleigh and daughters, Swariz. Part married couples. Mr. Throop i8 toward the carver. i Brash out po! Cas : ing mightily, he finally parted ua; family gathering of ‘the Fenny Lou and Debby Anne; ary a senior in Cornell Medical And a word for your carver: WEST EAST with a club. (No other -dis-. AS Ir. and Mrs. Gerald M. Wad- Mrs: Leonard L. Swartz, 4142 ¥ is living in ~—Place the fork firmly in the, ; Mr. School- The couple 8 the bidding. Mr. Heinsit ng ould h b pet- Pragoo and Wadaleigh families top of the roast, then carve; Actually, how- Mr. Muzzy Jin, Lainsite card would have been any bet + leigh, Susan and Robbie; Mr, N. Meridian 8t., is planning her New York. Mrs. Throop will po BT ly : S—4 2 S—AQ10875 ter)® at the Columbia Club from o y annual open house from 4 to 7 aE cutting ;between the ribs, rakx ever - 80 a H—10987542 H—A Miss Brash then discarded 3 to 6 p. m. Sunday. and Mrs. Paul C. Wadleigh, p msDec. 24 for friends of her attend Hunter College next ing one slice with a bone and 5 very ne and D—&6 D—8 3 the king of spades. Next she Guests will include parents, Karen Anne and Mark; three two daughters. ©» Semester. . one. without a bone. Shs os ea O—1382 C—Q109 5 cashed the ace of clubs, led a Tpeurane : ‘ SOUTH low. club and finessed the jack. his bid goaded Miss Brash ~Her king and eight of clubs STARTING SATURDAY Mis Brash 9 S—K 963 took two gore tricks, giving 7 H-K Q 6 her 12 in all. up fall. fhe D—9 4 24 Mr. Heinsite had no reason OPEN EVERY Mr. Muzzy fl C—K to complain. He did, of course, sat there with The bidding: but without justification. It's EVENING UNTIL two perfectly good aces and - NORTH EAST SOUTH WEST true, as he says, that a little since he had bid spades strong- 1D 1S 2NT Pass learning is a dangerous thing. 8:30 P M ly, to coin an understatement, 4NT 58! 6 NT! Pass" But that applies not only to . ® . . he was sure of a spade opening Pass Dbl All. Pass the technicalities of bidding | 3
co MAES OF WATTD, Water, Vinegar ~~ 7 an SE TONGS disvimes may He dors
from Mr. Muzzy. But he couldn't leave well enough alone. He doubled, And that set Mr. Muzzy to thinking. This ended the defender's chances,
‘ner not to’ make his ‘‘normal” lead. He also remembered that the first choice is a lead through the first suit bid by dummy.
and play but to the humanics | of bridge as well. | Mr: Muzzy always opens his partner's bid suit-—even when he shouldn't. He would have
opened a spade in today’s deal |
|
ou " So out came the six of dia- —if Mr. Heinsite hadn’t douWHAT DOES the double of monds—and Mr. Heinsite closed bled. a slam mean? Mr. Muzzy his eyes in bitter resignation. Mr. Heinsite knows this. | doesn’t know all about that Miss Brash cashed seven Therefore he is the one who | subject, but he knows a little. rounds of diamonds, getting flubbed it, and all for the |
He remembered vaguely that the doubler is asking his part-
everybody down to six cards. In her own hand she kept her
chance of gaining a measly 100 points.
imi * HES Eliminate Odor In Home Freezer Sweet Potato 5 TES » . Puffs With Pork wil i If your home freezer has de- ora small electric heater—to Garnish your pork loin roast~ Shaired | veloped unpleasant odors, try bring out the odor particles platter with sweet potato puffs. 1 persons d these tips for dealing with the and get them into the air. Fol- To prepare, cut marshmallows situation. First, try washing all low this with a blowing-out of In half, then shape one-fourth
interior surfaces with soap and
water, then go over them with
a cloth wrung from clear water. Wipe dry. If this doesn't work, try washing your freezer with soda water in a solution of one teaspoon of baking soda to each
may also prove. effective.’
one cup of vinegar to a gallon
air by your electric fan, Activated charcoal, placed inside the warm freezer as a follow-up, will absorb odors, or a commercial, wick-type air freshener may be used.
Delayed Action
mant within a tree for as long
cup of mashed sweet potatoes around each half marshmallow. | Roll in crushed corn flakes | and fry in deep hot lard (360 | F.) until brown.
Holidays at Home Miss Jane Adams of Indiana University and Miss Diane Ad-
amsoal-Stephens. College. . will...
arrive Wednesday to spend the
of water. as 10 years. When the tree be- Christmas holidays with their In more drastic cases, try comes weak, the disease parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. D. | using heat—from your toaster emerges. Adams, 6250 N. Sherman Dr.
IN 1942
400,000
IN 1946
200,000
IN 1948
muisisimin ew
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BULOVA
4-Dia. Watch
19 Jewels 17-21 Jewels
17 Jewels 25 $H2%
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DIAMOND WATCHES
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17-19 Jewels
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There’ joyme! money of Ho fee. C saves every
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FOR 65 YEARS ROST HAS FEATURED INDIANA'S LARGEST SELECTION OF FINE WATCHES." YOU CAN NOW SELECT FROM THE NEWEST 1952 STYLES BY THE WORLD'S FOREMOST MANUFACTURER S—EACH WATCH IS DOUBLY GUARANTEED.
y your i store.
: HOO FIN
NOW-iust installed—the
600,000
Indiana Bell Telephone «and we’re still growing!
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USE ROST'S BUDGET PLAN M. O'C SMALL DOWN PAYMENT—BALANCE — WEEKLY OR MONTHLY TO SUIT YOUR NEEDS NO INTEREST OR CARRYING CHARGE RR
JEWELERS AND SILVERSMITHS 25 N
ALL PRICES INCLUDE FEDERAL TAX
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WEPPEIPIT CL FEPTFTRrY| Prrrreer
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® The 600,000th Indiana Bell telephone was installed during the past month. Since 1942 the number of telephones in service has doubled. We are going right ahead . . . present plans call for an expenditure of about million dollars a month through 1952 to bring more and better service to more people. We have been able to grow mainly because over the years a million people have been willing to put their savings into the business. And here’s the result: In 1940, 2 out of 5 families in the territory we serve had Indiana Bell service. Today, 4 out
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INDIANA ra a
mS ty yy oy —— | —y —— vy —— — oy
BELL TELEPHONE |
COMPANY
Uy al Tel rs h Hit | I Pl { |
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GINES
HAMILTON LON
of 5 families have telephones. 17-19 Jewels 17-21 Jewels 15-17-21 Jewels 17 Jewels 17 Jewels It’s evident people recognize that good tele- ie 50 $ 75 75 50 btn phone service is worth more than it costs. , a 49 up : 33 up $29 up 7 | up hf | 5 3
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