The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 17 August 1955 — Page 3

i

PAGE TIIRF.E THE DAILY

WEDNESDAY, ACGEST 17. BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA

Koreans Stone Yank Officer

SEOU, Koroa. Aup 17—(UP) —Angry South Koreans stoned an American Army officer today In a new outbreak of violence agam^t Communist truce inspector.!. A mob of about 300 stone-toss-ing demonstrators attempted to etorm the causeway leading to tiny Wo!mi Island in Inchon Harbor. They were driven back by/;. S. troops with tear gas and streams of water from fire hoses. One of the rocks hurled by the demonstrators struck 1st Lt. Wayne W. Hansen, 25, of Augusta, Ga., on the head. He was given emergency treatment in

Inchon and then was rushed by an ambulance to a U. S. military hospital at Azcom City, 10 miles ! from Inchon.

EXTRA!

WASHINGTON, Aug. 17 — (UP) — Ex-President Herbert Hoover has branded as an “infamous smear” an attack made by the Democratic Digest against the Hoover Commission on Government Organization. The digest is a magazine published by the Democratic National Committee.

ago from a Communist Chinese prison, with the Distinguished Service Cross and the Silver Star Tuesday for shooting down two Russian-built jet fighters it 8-1 odds.

MONTGOMERY, Ala., Aug. 17—(UP)—The Air Force presented jet ace Capt. Harold Fischer, released three months

SELMER, Tenn.. Aug. 17 — (UP)— A respectable building contractor, whose money "always slipped through his fingers,” was in jail today on charges of robbing his hometown bank of $48,000 shortly after losing his campaign for sheriff. FBI agents arrested Dual King, 43, here while he was on a fishing vacation with his family and charged him with being the masked bandit who last Wednesday robbed the Ackerman, Miss., bank. BLUFFTON, Ind., Aug. 17, — (UP)— Fourteen - months -old Timothy Reidenach was back

■home today minus the peanut which sent him to a Chicago hospital for emergency surgery.

FORTVTLLE. Ind.. Aug. 17 — (UP)— A truck believed to weight about 45.000 pounds attempted to cross a bridge posted for a three-ton limit late Tuesday with the expected results. The truck and the entire 90-

It’s Blackwood

On Bridge

Time To Postpone Pulling Out Trumps

One case where you need to postpone pulling all of the opponents’ trumps is where the trump suit itself offers the only entry to an established suit in dummy,

foot iron span plunged into Fall j x 0( j aV ’ s hand is a simple illustraCreck, halting traffic on Ind. 13 | tion of situation,

about two miles north of herCj

State Police said the truck South was owned by the Marsh Food Durable.

Liner Co., and driven by Richard Byrd. Papers found in the truck indicated it weighed about 45,000 pounds, according to author-

ities.

Penney’s

ALWAYS m R S T, QUALITY?

Teach your budget a lesson in thrift! Shop Penney's for everything from top to foe . for study or playtime ... whether your scholar'* ] bound for college or kindergarten!

BACK-TO-SCHOOL NEEDS

dealer. East-West vul-

NORTH Mr. Abel

You Get MORE Low Prices A * * - -.4 on MORE Items MORE 1 Days of the Week at A&P !

INDIANAPOLIS. Aug. 17 — (UP)—William Arthur Slevin, 37, Indianapolis, was killed late Monday when he fell 20 feet from a utility pole onto a paved alley. Slevin, a lineman for the Indianapolis Power & Light Co., died instantly of compound skull fractures. Witnesses said he was climbing the pole and had not yet attached his safety belt .viien he slipped and fell.

A V ♦

A WEST Mr. Masters

A V ♦ A

8 6 3 Q 10 K Q J 10 A 9 4 2

10 7 5

8 3

A 8 7 5

K Q J 10

EAST

Miss Brash

A 9 4

V K 9 7 4 2

♦ 9 3

A 8 7 5 3

COME SEE, _ COME SAVE AT A&P^

Round Steak

79 c

39c 35c

“SUPER-RIGHT” HEAVY MATURED

STEER BEEF,

INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 17 — (UP)—A soil moisture shortage still exists in half the farming areas of Indiana a weekly crop

report showed today.

M. M Justin, agricultural statistician at Purdue University, reported for the week ending Aug. 13 that “half the reports show soil moisture short, 48 per cent ample and two percent sur-

plus.”

The South 1 A 2 V 3 A

SOUTH Mrs. Keen A A K Q J V A J 6 5 ♦ 6 4 2 A 6 bidding: West North Pass 2 A Pass 2 A Pass 4 A

East Pass Pass All Par-a

“SUPER-RIGHT”—HEAVY MATURED STEER BEEF

BEST

BLADE LB.

CUTS

Chuck Roast

3 TO 5-LB. AVERAGE

Spare Ribs .

Sirloin SSeak

Matured Steer Beef

Standins,7-Inch

Heavy Matured Steer Beef

Rib Roast

Smoked Eae:n Squares Thick Sliced Cacon Su| *‘ r

Right’

LB. I -LB. PKG.

85c

Cooked Salami S r T".

8-OZ. PKG.

59c

OL.fi..... Uncooked, Medium rsney otirimp ( 5_ LB . box $3.i9>

LB.

25c

Breaded Shrimp john ‘. .

10-OZ. PKG.

99c

Fish Sticks S Jekve .

10-OZ. PKG.

33c 65c 49c 39c

The week was spent

straw and hay and cleaning fence rows, Justin reported, as weather conditions allowed farmers to be outdoors nearly

full time.

“Pastures arc holding up well” the report said. “Corn is 88 per cent silked with 47 per cent m roasting ear or harder, including 26 per cent in dough stage. Pods are setting on 72 percent of soybeans. About 25 percent of peaches have been picked and 46 percent of tomato fields have

been picked once.”

LIBBY FROZEN

T Pies 4 89c

SULTANA

Pe

tea

Green Beans

Iona Teas Mayonnaise

Sandwich Spread

Iona Cut

New Park . Select Duality

New Pack . .

ANN

PAGE . .

ANN

PAGE

Beans

Hunt’s Apricois

GIANT 3-LB. 4-OZ.

CAN

29c

1-LB. CAN 1-LB.

CANS

10c 35c

Cherries

S 49c

PT.

JAR

Kraft Cheese Whiz 80Z ,LB

Jane

Parker

Sandwich Bread Pels Naptha Scap Woodbury S:ap

Cut-Rite Wax Paper

I !4

JAR 29c JAR

-LB.

LOAF

INSTANT LARGE GRANULES BOX 2 BATH O REG. CAKES 25c ** CAKES

125-FT. ROLL

33c 49c 19c 30c 26c 25c

2 2

Del Monte Cling Peaches

Grapefruit Juice Pineapple Juice

6X or Brown Sugar, . 2 Charcoal S R E E A D L . . - . . Pork & Beans campbell-s

Dry Milk Solids

29-OZ. 4Q r CANS 1-LB. ORft CANS 33c 21c 46-OZ. OJU

CAN 1-LB.

PKGS.

2 49c

^ 16 OZ. ■> CANS

MORTON

Janet Albin visited her grandmother, Mrs. Mary Lou Albin of Greencastle from Tuesday until Friday evening of last week. She spent Sunday night with Sharon

Call.

Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Goode, were Mr. and Mrs. Hurst and children of Belle Union and Mr. and Mrs. Tress Goode and daughter. Mrs. Ella Burk of Park County was a visitor Tuesday of Mr. and Mrs. Claud Burk, Mrs. Wayne Alexander was a caller O n Wednesday afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Earl Woodworth and daughter Ella Mae are visiting in the home of the Woodworths daughter, Mrs. Charles Smith of Michigan city.

Mr. Masters opened the king of diamonds and one of dnmmy’s entries went out like a light. Mrs. Keen won the trick with the ace on the board. She saw that she had two losers in diamonds, one in clubs and one in hearts. In fact, she had three bad hearts unless they could either be ruffed in dummy or discarded on dummy’s club suit. Well, ruffing them in dummy was out bc-

l,a ‘ !? g cause the second round of hearts

would have to be lost before any

ruffing could be done.

CLUB SUIT

What about the club suit then? There were enough clubs on the board to offer a parking place for all three hearts, provided the play was timed correctly. Mrs. Keen cashed just the ace and king of spades, leaving the eight spot in Mr. Masters’ hand and the ten on the board. Then she led her singleton club. Mr. Masters went right .up with the ace. It would have done him no good to duck as Mrs. Keen could have continued clubs, throwing losing diamonds from her hand until the ace was ploy-

ed.

• ******** «»:•'»*■ I

Colorful boys* sliirls of cotton gingham. Woven plaids / n handsome full-tones. Wrinkle-shed finish. Machine washable. Styled with long sleeves, rounded collar.

SPECIAL

Thrifty, handsome boys’ slacks of H’o . ounce sheen gabardine blended of rayon, nylon - Dacron adding extia w r ear, fine crease retention! Machine washable.

sizes 10 to 20,

3.98

KEEPS DEUCE Mr. Masters cashed his queen and jack of diamonds and followed with his last diamond. Mrs. Keen ruffed and, of course she was careful to ruff with the jack of spades, retaining the deuce to reach the board with the ten. She discarded her three low hearts on dummy’s clubs. If she had picked up all of the opposing trumps beginning at trick two she would have had no play for her contract unless the defense went completely haywire.

More than 18,580.000 persons bought fishing licenses in the United States in fiscal 1954.

Penney’s boys’ socks . . . with ii'tkled wear! Reinforced ® at rub-points with nylon! Made of mercerized cotton reinforced from top to toe with long-wear nylon. sizes 6 to ggg pair

CHICAGO “WELCOMES” RUSS DELEGATION

9 & 6/10 OZ. CAN

Ve!

LARGE BOX

GIANT BOX

63c

0 x y d o I

LARGE GIANT BOX BOX 034'

Ajax Cleanser 2 cans 23c

Crisco JUST REDUCED! 3 can 87c

Durkee l^argarh?

1 LB. CTN. fc* G

Camay Soap J KEGJ CAKES

Dole Pineapple

ED

29c

SLICED

20-OZ.

CAN

WATERMELONS

59c

GRAPES, 2 Lbs 39c

Every Melon Guaranteed 24 LB. AVERAGE

RED OK SEEDLESS

CABBAGE, Solid Heads . . 10c

IT’S CHERRY PIE TIME! JANE PARKER LARGE 8-INCH

Cherry Pie

Sandwich Buns 0R H011)00

REGULARLY 49c

Classic, cut Orion sweaters made for Penney’s by a new costlier spinning process’ Greater beauty, longer waar! Glowing .shades: red, maie, blue, others. Sizes 7 to 14. Cardigan 3 33 Slipover 2,90

Boys’ fine quality eanibetl cotton T-shirts, athletic shirts, and briefs. All are machine-washable in lukewarm water. Sizes 2-18. T-Shirts oik Athletic Sliirls 39c Briefs 49c

Soft! Lush! Orion pullovers for boys! 100'/, .bulk Orion in trim-fitting fine gauge knit, Hand-looped V-neck. Ribbed cuffs, tail. Washable! Shrink-resistant! Superb colors. sizes 10 to 18, 3 QCJ

Girls’ Soft Knit Briefs in a rayon and cotton blend. EhiSticized lace around leg bands for comfort. P astels, brights and white. Sizes 4 to 16.

Penney favorites — haek-to-school jumper dresses! Colorful in stripes, plaids or solids — each with its o.\n ■blouse;, all in fine cottons you’d expect to cost dollars more. Sizes 3 to 6\„ 2,98

Sizes 7 to 11. 3 98

She’ll Ire a model pupil in a Penney school dross! Terrific styles in Dan River’s “Bountiful" cotton cna.e. resistant, wonderful’y washable. Stop, shop Penney’s today. Sizes 3 to (iv, 2,98 Sizes 7 to 14. 3 93

'

NOW SLICED

FRESH DAILY . . •

JANE PARKER

REGULARLY 29e •

. 8 pkg. 20c I'A LOAF I7C 6 25c

9 r 'L 25c LB. 63C

White Bread JAXE PAKKER

Blueberry Muffins

Cinnamon Breakfast Rolls

NEW YORK SHARP

Sharp Cheese

Sunnybrook Grade “ft" Eggs s E , RE L f SIZE ??v39t Aliped nhoococ SWISS - pimento. American u-lb. 9Q r oiiccu uneeaca mel-o bit processed . . pkg. Ched-O-Bit Cheese Food 2 ^ 69c All prices in this ad effective thru Sat., Aug. 20th AMMICA’S WtEMOST FOOD UTAtOt . . . StNCt 1150

'$ u P er Ma^ts

fnl OAlAT AhANTK 4 PACWC TIA‘COMPANY

Visiting Russian farm experts are met with a barrage of pickets and bees outside the ConraJ Hilton hotel in Chicago. Valdimir * * > ' (*' %»• t * t * 191 <i?<b i JlO ignored the p.cKets and hopped into a waiting cab.

A KISS FOR NEW USAF SECRETARY

ni.-> oMimusSi..n m ms halt.!. i_>ona;a yuanes, 6i. re- • cerves a kiss from his wife after taking the oath as U. S. Air Force secretary in the Pentagon, Washington. j

* ^'

where there’s smoke there should he an EXTENSION TELEPHONE An extension telephone in your kitchen lets you take... or make... calls and still watch your dinner. Costs so little, too. Call our Business Office today.

'generaTi General Telephone Company of Indiana, Inc. STSTE ** ' /J Memlte*. One the Qleat Jetephone Oyitcml £eudnf Ameiioa