The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 November 1956 — Page 4

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NEW MOl ItS For Your Convenience FAMILY FIK' ;E MONDW. TUESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY FROM 9 A. M. TO 6 P. M. < IX>SKD .NOON WEDNESDAY < I.OSED 1:00 P. M. SATURDAY TIicm- Mourn Effective November 3, 19o6. FAHIILY FINANCE 22 E. WASHINGTON’ , PHONE 1478

Blackwood On Bridge Imagination Needed For Good Trump Management li many situations where the winning play for declarer is to postpone leading trumps, the necessity for that postponement k? far from obvious. In today’s deal, for example, it was completely hidden as far as Mr. Muzzy was concerned, anyway. South dealer Both side<» vulnerable

under

your hat!

NORTH Mr. Dale i

* Q 7 6 2 * 8 7 6 3 WEST EAST Mr. Champion Mrs. Keen AAJ102 A Q 8 5 4 V 5 4 3 V 7 2 494 4 K 10 8 5 * Q 9 4 3 * J 10 SOUTH Mr. Muzzy A K 6 3 V K J 10 9 6 4 A J * A K 5 The bidding: South West North East

1 </ 1 • s 2 V j 4 V ’’ass

Pass

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The best way to avoid a trap of this kind is to pause before playing that first card from dummy at trick one and plan your play. Forget about overtricks. Concentrate on the safest method of play which will bring in enough tricks for your contract, figuring on unfavorable distribution of the opposing cards. PLAN PLAY Look at w'hat happened to Mr Muzzy in this hand. Mr. Champion led the nine of diamonds, the deuce went on from the board and Mrs. Keen promptly ducked. Mr. Muzzy won with the jack and smiled happily at this favorable development. He could see no danger. As he

DIPLOMATS BUSY AS EGYPT-ISRAEL WAR FLARES

EGYPTIAN PRESIDENT Gamal Abdel Nasser is engaged in a round of diplomatic discussions as his troops fight to repel an invasion by Israeli forces. Here he is shown as he met with Soviet Ambassador Evgeni Kisselev (top left), British Ambassador Sir Humphrey Trevelyan (lower left), United States Ambassador Raymond Hare (top right) and French Charge D’Affaires M. Dorget (lower right). The crisis has split the U. S., England and France. (International Eadioplwtos)

FACES GRAVE OVER MIDDLE EAST DEVELOPMENTS

White House conferees (from left) are Secretary of State John Foster Dulles. President Eisenhower, deputy presidential assistant Gen. W ilton B. Persons and Defense Secretary Charles E. W ilson.

Leaving State department, these diplomats don’t seem very alarmed. From left: Chuiles Lucet, French minister; Ahmed Hussein, Egyptian ambassador; J. E. Coulson, British chaige d’affaires.

CONCERN IS EVIDENT on the faces at the White House conference on the Israeli-Egyptian situation. There were diplomatic conferences at the State department, too, as the Middle East war threat •teamed hotter and hotter. The 90-minute White House conference produced a reaffirmation of the U. S. pledge to aid any victim of aggression in the Middle East. (International SoundphotosJ

| analyzed it, he had one club loser and either one or two spade losers. If the ace of spades happened to be on his right, he could lead up to his king and win a trick with that card on the first or second rewind of the suit. He :ould then ruff a spade in dummy and actually make five-odd. But in order to lead up to the king of spades he had to enter ummy. That was easy and he led the nine of hearts to the ace A spade was returned and the king put up. Mr. Champion won with the ace and led back a trump. Worried now, Mr. Muzzy won on the board and led another spade. Mr. Champion won with the 'en and proceeded to lead the last trump off the board. Now Mr. i Muzzy had to lose three spades and a club for down one. SEE THE NEED ‘‘Did you think you bid five, Muzzy?” asked Mr. Champion. “Certainly not,” replied Mr. Muzzy hotly. “Can I help it if ‘he ace oi spades was behind my dng?” Mr. Champion grinned wickedy. “In a word, yes,” he said. “In act, I think I can prove that you vere trying to make five-odd. Tell me, what would you have led it trick two if you had held three ■pades to the six spot instead of Jiree to the king?” "I’d have led a spade from my land,” Mr. Muzzy admitted. ‘There’d be no point in using a trump to enter dummy to lead a spade up to a six spot.” “Exactly,” said Mr. Champion. “With a weaker holding in spades you would have made your contract. You used a vital trump at trick two just because it’s usually the correct play to lead up to a king. Good trump management requires enough imagination to see the need for an unusual play now and then.”

SUEZ CANAL’S SOUTHERN ENTRANCE CLOSED TODAY CAIRO (UP)—Egyptian forces shot down three more British planes today, making a total of nine downed since Thursday morning, the Egyptian genera! headquarters announced. The headquarters communique said Anglo-French forces have carried out 42 air raids on Egypt in the past 24 hours. It added that the attacking bombers hit hard at ‘thickly populated towns’ but casualties are not yet known. Bi itish and French bombei s sank a big fishing ship in the southern entrance of the Su°z Canal Thursday night, blocking the entrance to the waterway, according to the communique Earlier the Egyptians reported the sinking of a naval unit by bombers in Lake Timsah, a link in the canal. News of the situation here has been sparse since President Gamal Abdel Nasser declared a state of emergency Thursday, putting into effect martial law and censorship. The emergency decree named Nassar miiitaary governor general with virtual dictatorial powers. Cairo crowds cheered Nasser tumultuously as he passed through the streets to and from the *second emergency cabinet meeting in two days. There was no indication that Egypt’s reported military reverses had dimmed Nasser’s popularity.

NO PAPERS DELIVERED

( LE\ ELAND, (UP)— Truck drivers refused today to deliver the Cleveland Plain Dealer because it also carried the titles of the city’s two other struck newspapers. The truck drivers’- action left the city without a newspaper. Even though its contract with the American Newspaper Guild expired the previous midnight, the Cleveland Plain Dealer had published its regular edition this i morning.

MAKE SURE

Too, Have the "NEW

look';

pur look Ard

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JOHN DUE’S SHOE SHOP 204 S. College* Ave,

BRITISH, FRENCH ON CYPRUS

BRITISH SUPPLIES and French paratroopers are shown on Cyprus, where reports had them iumoing off by planes for the Suez innal area. (International Soundphotos)

Ice cakes upward of 200 feet 1 thick and sevenu miles wide drift in summer across the Artie Ocean.

•HE DAILY BANNER f .1., NOV. 2, 19.»6 Page 4 GREENCASTI.E, INDIANA*

A SHOOTING RID STAR

TWO OF HUNGARY’S “fighters for freedom” climb a ladder toVip down a Red Star at p the security administration building in Keokemet, Hungary. The rebel forces have refused to lay down their antML

POLAND'S NEW Communist party boss Wladyslaw Gomulka is shown addressing a throng estimated at 200,000 in Warsaw,

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where he told Poles that Soviet troops would remain as long as' NATO has bases in West Germany. (Inttrviaiionai KadioptiotoMf '

PARTY LINEUP OF THtl

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REPUBLIC AN REPRESENTATIVES: DEMOCRATIC T 7; i REPRESENTATIVES: '

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THE 1952 PRESIDENTIAL VOTE

ER6,mS

DEMOCRATIC POPULAR VOTE

PERCENTAGE OF DEMOCRATIC POPULAR VOTE: 44.5 ELECTORAL VOTE: (521)

Fill IN AS YOU LISTEN TO THE ELECTION RETJCHS