The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 7 November 1955 — Page 6

THE HAtLT BANNER, CREENCASTU. INDIANA D ' p “». sz - w - PAOE SIX MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7. I*SJ. bash, 96.

Dountown Bowling

l^-ague W

L

Home Supply

18

6

Stoners Ins

..... 15

9

Jasper Mt. Ex.

14

10

V F w

13

11

v y w a ■

12

12

1st Citz Bk

10

14

Clear View

. 8

16

Lone Star No. 3 6 18 600 Series—C. Crawley 606. 500 Series— Blocker 594. McDonald 592. Priest 560. Stites 552. Slavens 547, Burkhart 543. W. Brarttain 539, Sears 538. Murray 531, Zieg’elman 514, Hoskins 513, Deacon 512, Cromer 507, Bowman 505, Long 504. 200 Games—C. Crawley 224, vV. Brattain 214. 201. Blocker 212. McDona'd 210. Stites 210 >ears 203, Burkhart 201.

FINISH THIKI)

After losing only one meet all -eason. DePauw's cross-country team finished third behind Ball State and Valparaiso in the conference competition yesterday in Indianapolis. The harriers of Coach Bob Harvey also took fourth in the Little State affair and tied for sixth in Big State. All three meets were run simultaneously on the Soutn Grove course. Brr!l State's defending champions repeated in the ICC with 24 points, followed by Valparaiso, 55; DePauw, 58, and Butler, 92. The Cards scored 41 points to successfuly defend their Little State title, with Valpo second at 87. Next in order came Han-

Big State leaders were Notre i Dame. 29; Indiana, 42; Ball State. 94: Valparaiso. 146: Hanover, 149; and DePauw and Wabash, 154 each. Bill Blake led DePauw runners with a third in the conference race, which was won by Don Schroeder of Valpo. Ball State’s Bob Mullen took second. Other Bengal competitors in the ICC meet were Dick Hershberger, eighth; Ron Young, twelfth; Gerry Heirmann, seventeenth; Dave Clark, eighteentn Duane Osborn, nineteenth; and Scott Wycoff, twenty-fifth. John Owensby, former Butler star now running for Hanover, copped first in Little State, and Wabash's Grant Van Horn was runner-up.

_<rl H Miss Brash A none V 8 6 4 ♦ A 6 2 * A K Q

7 6 4 2

T*ie

biddiig:

Ea.t

South West

North

1 A

3 A Pass

Pass

Dbl.

4 A Pass

Pass

Dbl.

Pass 4 A

Pass

Pass

5 * Pass

Pass

Dbl.

All Pass

When Mr. Abel played the king -he calmly threw off the deuce of diamonds. Note tnat if Mr. Abel had saved ore of his smaller spades, he could have played it on this trick and Mrs. Keen would have won with the jack for a lead

through dummy's queen of diamonds. HOPELESS RETURN As it was, however. Mr. Abel r ound himself in the lead with three hopeless choices of a return. He could lead a spade or heart, either of which could be

ruffed in dummy while Miss Brash discarded the last losing diamond from her hand; or he could lead a small diamond which could be ducked in the closed hand and won by dummy's pi ©position. Actually, he led a spade and Miss Brash dropped her six of

diamonds and ruffed with dummy’s ten of clubs. She was very lucky to tind Mr. Abel with the singleton club holding, but apparently she took th s as no more than right. Her only comment was. ••Partner, or a moment I thought we had missed a slam.”

MAPLECROFT AUTO THEATRE Just East of StllervllJe on C. S. 40 Tonight Jack Webb & Janet Leigh “PETE KELLY BLUES” Johnny Sheffield ami Nancy Gates “LORD OF THE JUNGLE”

Blackwood On Bridge Miss Brash Can Play With The Best Of Them Miss Lucy Brash may be the world's loosest bidder, but she can play the cards with the best j >1 them, as illustrated in today's ' deal. East dealer. East-West vulnerable. NORTH Mr, Dale

WEST Mrs. Keen A J 8 7 2 V J 7 5 2 ♦ 10 8 5 A 8 5

9 6 4 3 A 10 Q 7 4 3 J 10 3 EAST Mr. Abe!

A K Q K Q 9 K J 9 9

10 3

Mr. Abel tried to keep up wi; h her in the bidding but finally give it up as a bad job and doubled five clubs. That was a mistake too. Mrs. Keen opened the deuce of spades, Mr. Abel played the queen and Miss Brash ruffed. Looking the situation O' er she saw that she had one heart loser and probably two diamond losers. That is, Mr. Abel’s strong bidding made it fairly sure he had the king of diamonds behind cummy’s queen. To eliminate one of these losers Miss Brash proceeded as follows At trick two she led a heart arid put in dummy’s ten when Mrs. Keen played low. Mr. Abel won with the queen and returned a club which was taken on th" board with the jack. SPADE RUFFED Another spade was led and ruffed in the closed hand. Mr. Abel played the five of spades on this trick. Now a heart was led to dummy’s ace and a third spade returned. Here Mr. Abel made the careless play of the ten spot, which gave Miss Brash a chance to make her contract. She ruffed the third lead of spades in her hand. At this point she was ready for the crucial play. She led her last heart, ruffed it with the trey of clubs and returned dummy’s last spade.

VOTE » EM 04’IS AT I <' ECONOMY EFFICIENCY EFFECTIVE GOVERNMENT

COUNOILMAN-AMARGE

CLERK-TREASURER

MAYOR

m

Charles E. Shuee COUNCILMAN, FIRST WARD

Raymond S. Fisher

ECONOMY

Grover T, IJoel COUNCILMAN, THiRD WARD

smi* Wlmm ' ?

Claude Carmichael

COUNCILMAN. SECOND WARD

1. Careful administraticn cf available ,'und:, 2. Undertake only essential projects. 3. Full return for each dollar o? city expenditures.

EFFICIENCY

1. Better street maintenance. 2. Regular office hours for city offices, 3. Vigilant police protection.

.wrm

EFFECTIVE GOVERNMENT

1. Improved traffic control. 2. Greater parking faci iiies. 3. Overall, long-ranga city planning.

Raymond L. C 5 No:! COUNCILMAN FDUTuM V7A!>3 ■pgitj

Clark F. Norton

FOR TRANSPORTATION To The Polls on Election Day ».»s WE URGE ALL , TO VOTE “THIS 1> YOUR AMERICAN PRIVILEGE”

Bookkeeping Quarterly Taxes Financial Statements DONALD RILEY Public Accountant

R. K. 2, S. Jackson Stroot Grwnrastlr, Indiana

THcphonr 189-R

DAIRY YOUTHS EARN SCHOLARSHIPS

BE-ELECT FJM CRAWLEY

MAYOR OF GREENCASTLE

k / pledge continued progressive government for Grcencastle, and will continue to devote the time and effort so essential to getting the job done efficiently and economically.’ Yo'jr Support and Influence Will be Sincerely Appreciated.

Winners of $300 university scholarships—awarded annually by the Kraft Foods Company to outstanding participants in its Junior Dairyman program—received their awards during a recent honor banquet at the Sirloin room of Chicago’s famed Union Stock Yards. Scholarship recipients were Gerald Haas (above left) of Bentley, Mich., who is associated with the Kraft plant at Pinconning; and Charles Nickc.son (right), of Greencastle. Ind., a Junior Dairyman at the Kraft plant in Marshall, Ind. Making the presentation is Neil Stronach, production manager of Kraft s Central Division. Chicago. The two winners were joined by 16 other outstanding Junior Dairymen for a full-day's ‘’graduation” tour of the International Dairy Show. All arc in their fourth year of JD projects.

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