The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 24 January 1966 — Page 3
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Says Held For Robbery Attempt LAFAYETTE UPI — Three Michigan youths were held here 'today following an attempted T armed roAbery of a service station Sunday in which the 66-*year-old owner was pistol whipped. E. L. Banes, the station own*er, was listed in good condition at a Lafayette hospital. Police said the three were Gerald Courser, 15, Stephen Baldwin, 14, both of Blanchard, Mich, and Gary LaMonte, 13, Rockford. Mich. They were held in the Tippecanoe County Jail .on preliminary charges of arm/ed robbery, assault and battery
In commission of a felony, vehicle taking and Juvenile delinquency. All three are runaways, police said. They were captured on Indiana 18 near Brookston in White County shortly after the beating.
Severe Storm moval of the snow. Turnpikes and expressways in West Virginia, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Ohio were treacherous ribbons of snow and ice. Police halved speed limits to protect motorists. A half dozen traffic deaths in Ohio were blamed on the snow and Indiana listed four traffic deaths as due in part to slick roads.
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Miiimiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiie Sheinwold°« Bridge
Bridge Expert Enjoys Occasional Advantage By Alfred Sheinwold In most bridge hands the good player will get the same result as the expert. Just a few times per evening the expert will do something that gives him a slight advantage, and this is enough to make the expert a steady winner.
North dealer Both sides vulnerable Norm A 10962
V KQ
O AKS2 A A95
EAST
A 4
V 765432
O 76
A J1072 SOUTH A AKJ87
V AJ
0 Q104 A K83
East Sooth Pass 3 A Pus 4 NT Pan 5 NT Pan 6 A
WEST
A Q53 V 1098 O J9S3 A Q64
North 1 NT
4 A 5 V 6 V
Opening lead —
w«n Pass Pan Pass
All Pass
9 10
South won the first trick with the queen of spades and tried the diamond finesse. East won with the king of diamonds and returned a spade to the ace. South ran the diamonds, cashed the top hearts and then tried the club finesse. West won with the king of dubs and defeated the contract with the rest of the spades. South was a good player. He would have made the contract if either finesse had worked or if the queen-jack of hearts
had dropped. Still, South was not an expert because an expert would have made the contract. CORRECT ORDER An expert takes the two finesses in the correct order. After winning the first trick, South leads a heart to dummy’s king to try the club finesse before touching the diamonds. West wins and returns a spade to the ace. South takes the rest of the clubs and then tries the diamond finesse. East wins with the king of diamonds, and now we see what makes South an expert: Blast cannot return a spade. This is South’s reason for taking the two finesses in the correct order. If South loses both finesses he will still make his contract if East - started with only two spades. It may look dangerous to weaken the hearts by using up dummy’s king, but there is no danger unless both finesses fall— in which case the spade threat is worse than anything that can happen in Hearts. DAILY QUESTION Partner opens with 1 NT (16 to 18 points), and the next player passes. You hold: S-K J 7 6 3 2 H-8 3 2 D- 5 2 C-K 6. What do you say? ANSWER: Bid four spades. You may be a point or two shy of the 26 usually needed for game, but the length of your suit should give you a good play for ten tricks.
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THROUGH THE NATIONAL WINDOW
By Lyle Wileoa The best selling article In the Republican stock-in-trade right now is a 70-year-old item by name of Everett McKinley Dirksen. Next best seller on Republican shelves is section 14-B of the Taft-Hartley Act which Dirksen is determined shall not be repealed. Dirksen and 14-B are money in bank for the Republican Party. Section 14-B is the right-to-work section of Taft-Hartley. It is the part of the labor law that permits states to forbid compulsory unionism within their borders. Nineteen states have done so. Big labor insists that President Johnson make good on a long-standing Democratic campaign promise to repeal 14B. Dirksen organized a filibuster in the last session of Congress and beat the attempt to repeal 14-B. LBJ really did not make much effort for repeal last session. He is expected to hit hard for repeal in this session of Congress. Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield of Montana has announced that repeal will be the first major Senate business. LBJ may be making one of his rare political muscalculations. Some supporters of 14-B, also may be kidding themselves. Not all of them, however, could be so foolish as to do that. Most of them are real political pros. The pros report that public opposition to repeal of 14-B is even more pronounced now than it was last session. Dirksen’s sturdy opposition to
Futile Filching RICHMOND, Calif. UPI—A thief with a sticky tongue was the object of a police search today. Officers reported 45,000 trading stamps stolen from a gasoline station sometime over the weekend. Before going to all the trouble of licking the stamps, worth an estimated $27,000 in merchandise, police advised the thief to consider that fact that they know the serial numbers of the stamps.
repeal has made him something of a hero to the citizens who might be expected to contribute money to the GOP. Republican money-raisers report that Mike Quill’s disgraceful conduct of New York transit strike sent political shock waves all the way to the Pacific Coast. Many persons with money to contribute now consider it their patriotic duty to contribute to the Republican Party in support of Dirksen and 14-B. Sen. Thurston B. Morton, R. Ky., was chairman and fund raiser last year for a big dinner honoring Dirksen. It was a sellout. The dinner raised about $500,000. Dirksen is returning the compliment. He is chairman and fund raiser for a Feb. 3 din ner in Washington, D. C., to honor Morton, the funds to be used in this year’s Congressional election campaign. Dinner managers report that Dirksen’s appeals to prospective givers have touched an especially responsive nerve among those citizens who were shocked by Quill’s savage transit strike. As one Republican fund raiser put it: “Contributing to Ev for this dinner is a sort of salute to Americanism in honor of Ev’s opposition to repeal of 14-B. Maybe 14-B isn’t all that important. But a lot of good citizens believe it to be, Moreover, Ev will lick Lyndon on this one again.” If so, Dirksen will be a very great asset indeed to the Republican Party when the time comes to raise Presidential campaign funds for 1968. J As the man with his fist on the party’s money throttle, Ev might even whomp up enough money and enthusiasm to steer the Republican Party back on the track, ready to roll. Political conservatives should be willing to listen to Dirksen. He was for Barry Goldwater and before that he was a notable Taft man. Dirksen never has seriously offended the party liberals, either. Old Ev is a legitimate middle-of-the-road political pro with a list to the right. He has been around a long time. Dirksen may be the only GOP operator capable of coping with LBJ in politics.
Th« Daily Bannar, Graaneastla, Indiana 3 Monday, January 24, 1966 0A. T. Co.
I said, “Show me a filter cigarette that really delivers taste and I’ll sat my hat!”
Fight chilly days with piping hot food! Corn muffin pancakes and saucy sausage spell golden goodness for those vigorous days ahead. This fabulous family treat is as simple to create as it is irresistible to eat. Using a corn muffin mix you can quickly come to the rescue of your family’s need for food that satisfies. Serted with sauteed apple slices, they’re a real flavor treat. —And just look at the different ways you can make these Hearty-Day Cakes, too! Four different ideas with just one practical muffin mix. As the temperature drops, add variety and vigor to breakfasts and lunches with Hearty-Day Cakes. HEARTY-DAY CAKES Make* 6 servings One 12-oz. pkg. (2 cups) 1-2/3 cups milk Flako Corn Muffin Mix 1 lb. pork sausage meat, 1 egg cooked and drained Empty contents of package into howl; add egg and milk, heating until fairly smooth. Pour about 1/4 cup batter for each pancake onto a hot, lightly greased griddle. Sprinkle with sausage. Bake to a golden brown, turning only once. Serve with butter and syrup. Variations: Com Cakes: Using above recipe, omit sausage. Sprinkle each pancake on griddle with drained whole kernel corn before turning. Blueberry Cakes: Using above recipe, omit sausage. Sprinkle each pancake on griddle with fresh, frozen or canned blueberries, 'rained, before turning. Cheese Cakes: Using above recipe, omit sausage. Add 1/2 cup L od cheese to batter before baking.
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