The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 20 July 1955 — Page 4
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PAGE POm WEDNESDAY, JTl.Y 20, 1905 THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
FERN Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burks and daughter, entertained the following guests Saturday evening with an ice cream supper: Mr. and Mrs. Robert Targett, Mrs. Dan Wallace and Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Wallace and family from Knightsville. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph ShaughB*«sy of Clarkshill spent Saturday visiting Mr. and Mrs. Don Heber and daughters. Mrs. Ernest Heber and Mrs. Ross Fumey attended the cooking achool at the Voncastle Theatfa at Greencastle Thursday afta*noon. Miss Anna Mae Burks returned home Saturday after spending
Heber, Misses Anna Mae. Jane,
| end Barbara Burks.
| Mrs. Harlan Nelson and grandtwo weeks at KnightsviUe. 0( pleaiBU , t Gardens *» t . Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Cox call- J ec * ^ r - an ^ Mrs. Joy Cummings ed on Mr. and Mrs. Ernest He-J one P ast w-eek. ber Thursday evening. j Ernest Heber combined his Robert Burks has the new f OUr acres c f oa ts Tuesday and school bus for Madison Twp. He J lhey tumed out 240 bu of oat£ "Mitchell Monday for it. f our acr es. He has a wonderMrs. Robert Burks and daugh- ful crap of vegetables,
ters, Mrs. Ernest Heber and Mrs. Raymond Miller, Jr., and daughters from Dimedale w’ere in In-
dianapolis Monday,
j Mr. and Mrs. William Walsh and Bryan Wright of Greencastlc were visiting relatives at Fern
Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Heber had as their dinner guests Sunday, their five granddaughters. Misses Vivian Mae and Rutn Ann
JET GOVERNOR
SIOUX FALLS. S. D.—(UP) When South Dakota Gov. Joe Foss flew to Washington, D. C., recently to attend a conference, he did it the modern way. Foss, a Marine pilot and ace in World War II, flew to Washington in a
Jet plane.
ARCHITECT SHOWS NEW DESIGNS FOR AIR ACADEMY
Members of the Senate appropriations subcomm ittee get an explanation from architect Nathaniel Ow’ings of how his firm has re-designed the prop osed Air Force academy at Colorado Springs, Colo., to meet the objections of critics. He told the group in Washington that the amount of glass in the main buildings has been reduced 70 to 90 p er cent.
AS AN OCCAN 8N££Z£...
It s Blackwood On Bridge Backward Finesse Saves Miss Brash Again today the ladies emerged triumphant, as the better sports writers say. Miss Lucy Brash, one of the world’s luckier women, battered her way into a game contract as shaky as a politician's promise—and thin made it by means of well-con-j sidered backward finesse. West dealer. East-West vulNORTH Mrs. Keen A K 8 6 3 V A 6 3 ♦ Q 7 A 10 8 6 4
Standing in the middle of his cornfield. 25-year-old farmer Richard L. Alleman (left) plays host to a group of Russian farm experts starting a 12-day study of Iowa agriculture. Alleman’s farm is near Slater, la. With him arc (from left) Petr Svechnikov, chairman of a Soviet collective farm; Aleksandr Ezheviski, assistant to the USSR minister of farm implement production, and an interpret-
REELSVILLE ANNUAL HOMECOMING Thurs. • Fri. - Sat, July 21 • 22 - 23 HOME CCQKlD MEALS Each Evening Starling at 5:00 P. M. THURSDAY NIGHT - Heme Talent FRIDAY NIGHT -- Jim Shelton and his Pick-A-Pocket Program SATURDAY NIGHT -- Lulu Belie Si and her Country Folks Jamboree. RIDES AND CONCESSIONS
ace and back to vard the kingjack would’win if Mr Sleek held the queen. But Miss Brash didn’t go for that play—not yet, anyway. First she wisely did a little checking on Mr. Abel’s first hand vulnerable bid. Clearly he had little enough. Could he have opened without the queen of hearts? Yes, it was barely possible. Mr. Meek had shown up with two honor cards— the jack of spades and f.ie jack of diamonds. All in all. it appeared that any unplayed honor card was much more likely to be in Mr. Abel’s hand than in Mr. Meek’s.
ABNORMAL FINESFO**’ Cfn nTis Teasonlng' MigVT" Brash placed the heart queen on her left and that meant the normal heart finesse would lose. Well, what about an abnormal finesse? That’s right doum Miss Brash's alley. Nobody could call her a routine player. At trick six she led the jack af hearts, determined to let It go If it wasn’t covered. Mr. Abel covered with the queen and dummy’s ace won. Now the trey of hearts was led back, Mr. Meek played the four and Miss Brash put in the nine, w'hich was a w’inner. She coneedcd a club at the end, making four spades on the nose.
WEST Mr. Abel A 7 2 V Q 8 7
EAST Mr. Meek A J 5 V 10 5 4
♦ A K 10 4 2 ♦JOS * K 7 2 A Q 9 5 3 SOUTH Miss Brash A A Q 10 9 4 ‘ V K J 9 ♦ 8 6 5 A A J The bidding: West North East South 1 ♦ Pass Pass 2 A Pass 3 A Pass 4 A All Pass Mr. Abel won the first two tricks with the king and ace of liamonds. Then, fearing a shift to any of the other three suits might lose a trick, he continued with a third diamond which Miss Brash fuffed on the board with the eight of spades. She ■ drew tflie outstanding trumps in two leads, ending in her own hand, and then paused to consider her chances. f She" was frank with herself— thfy didn’t look too good. Two tricks were already lost and there was a sure club loser. FIND THE QUEEN What about hearts? A “normal” finesse, leading low to the
SEE US! SIMPSON M. STONER, Insurance
PHONE 6
FSWHwJEP' -‘'P 1 ‘“CroS
/Vo wonder this Hardtop is the HIT OF THE YEAR T
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THAT'S
zrs 4-DOOR HANDY
3nc/pr/cecf for $ct/on /
COOKING!
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• Yes, your flameless electric range brings you welcome relief during these hot, sticky days. For no matter how much you cook or bake, your kitchen stays degrees cooler! That’s because the surface units make direct contact with the bottoms of pots and pans;:; heating the food instead of the kitchen air. And the oven is so perfectly insulated on all six sides, no heat escapes once the oven door is closed! Compare the features and performance of the cleaner, safer electric range with old-fashioned cooking devices. Then, join the thousands of modern homemakers who are switching to cooler electric cooking!
This one you’ll just have to see. It’s a beauty. It’s a brand-new kind of car. It’s a Buick Riviera with ]our doors. And to top it all—it’s a Special —the lowest-priced of all Buick Series. Know what that means? It means you can have the newest hit in hardtops—the most advanced new body design yet—and you can have it in the price range of America’s smaller cars. It means you can have a steel-roofed car with the long, low, sweeping sportiness of a convertible—with no center posts in the side window areas—and with two separate doors to the rear. And you can have all this hardtop
beauty with sedan comfort and convenience at the easy-to-take modest extra cost of a 4-door model over a 2-door model. But if you think that’s all —listen: .This gleaming grace of automobile is a Buick through and through—a ’55 Buick, from the hottest-selling line of Buicks in all history. So here you have the soft, firm steadiness of Buick’s all-coil-spring ride and torque-tuhe stability. 11 ere you have Buick brawn, Buick solidity, Buick handling ease, Buick styling and visibility and interior luxury. And here you have the lift and life of vigorous ^Plw V8 power of record might—and coupled to the spectacular
performance of Buick’s Variable Pitch Dynaflow.* AVhy wait a day longer —when you can come in right now and try the first true hardtop with the extra comfort, room and convenience of a full-sized 4-door sedan? Drop in tomorrow, first thing —for a look at the price, and an idea of the whopping-big trade-in deal our huge sales volume permits us to make. *1 -uUc Pitch Dynafi'fW it ft}* nniy Bitick hu: /r t'rlay. It is standard on PO ADM ASTER, optional at extra cost on other Series.
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SEE YOUR Ztec&uc APPLIANCE DEALER
PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY OF INDIANA, INC.
v 1 II /// Thrill of the year is Buick
'
in History f
Come
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WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK WILL BUILD THEM
jlM HARRIS CHEVROLET
Phone 346
riil’VltOIJ’T-itt i< K
115 North Jackson Street*
