The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 1 March 1967 — Page 7
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Sheinwold on Bridge
Be Ready With Odds After Losing Hand By Alfred Sheinwold When you’ve gone down at a cold slam contract don’t sit still and let your partner do all the talking. Jump right in with a statement of how the odds favored your line of play. South dealer Neither side vulnerable NORTH A 107
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Opening
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South took the ace of hearts and led out five rounds of trumps to encourage a dub discard. When nobody obliged, declarer cashed the king of diamonds, led a dub to the ace, cashed the ace of diamonds and returned a dub. West took two dub tricks, and South was down one. South quickly pointed out that he would have made the slum if the four missing dubs had broken evenly or if West had started with a singleton king or queen. “The odds were S to 1 la my fever/* South summed it up. South would have had nothing to apologise for if his play had been as accurate as his mathematics. He should not have relied solely on the dubs. Other Suit Boats should take the king eg diamonds at the second trick. He gets to dummy with the tan eg spades, discards a dub ea the ace eg diamonds and ruffs a diamond. If both opponents follow suit, South knows that Bis dhunonda will break
eg hearts hj duhttuy to fuff anethes diamond, fhen ha draws trumps and gets to dummy with the has eg dubs to discard a second dub en dummy's last dtamoad. S» loses only one dub trick. If either opponent shows out cn the third round of diamonds, South can abandon the suit He draws and fells back on the
HERBICIDES COMPLETE LINE FOR ALL CROPS Clyde Hunter RmIsvIIU Phone 672-3340 Ron Hutcheson Grooncastlo Phono PE 9-2459
clubs. This gives him two lines of play instead of just one. There is a very slight risk that an opponent will ruff the first or second diamond, but this is so slight that it can be disregarded. DAILY QUESTION As dealer, you hold: S-10 7; H-A; D-A 8 7 4 3; C-A 9 8 5 3. What do you say? Answer: Bid one diamond. Three aces may not be wofth an opening bid when you have balanced distribution, but they are certainly good enough when you have two 5-card suits.
Sets Trial Date FORT WAYNE UPI—Federal Judge Jesse Eschbach set March 30 as trial date for Bryce Sabourin, who Tuesday pleaded innocent to the $3,650 robbery of a savings and loan association here last Jan. 16. Sabourin had been arrested by Fort Wayne police the same day as the loam company robbery, but w8ls released from jail by mistake and again recaptured. Sabourin’s attorney was granted permission to obtain psychological aid for his defense.
4 YOOR HEALTH
By LESTER I» COLEMAN, MJ>.
Smoking Among College Frosh 1CT SON altered a good col- ettes a day anytime X feel like
lege last September. He had excellent grades in high school and never was involved with
clubs and fraternities.
▲t the present time Mb grades are passable but nothing like what they were before. He began to smoke almost immedi-
ately after he entered college, insisting he could stop anytime he wanted to. In only six months he Is now smoking a pack a day. Do you think there
Dokmaa can be any he*
latlonahip be-
Me poor grades and the feet'that ha is smoking so ex-
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ItaL 1. XX, CaBtonia Sear Mrs. D.: Tour problem to so typical that there must be fcwdwiia eg thousands of readers who are saying; *TChat is our problem. 1 * to feet, tt was my problem, too, until I laid down the no smoking law to my own daughter. This was probably the stogie restrictive acte in tte ftiaUonablp with my
Soto jwitmil problems with
We protect our children by teaching them safety in crosstog streets, hi playing games; hi drtsing a car and in almost wary phase of dally living. We protoot them against the cold, vaednato them against contagious disease and offer them their greatest chance for Stealthy security. Yet many of ns allow them to be exposed to ana eg the great threats to their fine and happhteas by actually being afraid to lay down the tow og "dart." Xt is an accepted psychological fact that adolescents get thdr greatest security from the reasonable limits that are set down for them by their parents. You did not restrict your son and feu into the same trap that parents fell into when they listen to their sons say, "an the boys and girls are doing it, and Z can give 19 the three cigar-
Youngstem graduate remarkably quickly from three to five to 20 a day and then stay “hooked** into adulthood. Xt la then that they realtoa how difficult it is to stop smoking until some heart or Xungoondittaa forces them to do so. Now about his grades. An interesting study was performed on more than 3,000 ftsshmen at the University of XlBnola. Borne very revealing statistics came out of this inquiry about their smoking habits. . Sixty percent af fl» fMhmoi did not smoka Almost half eg thm* who did anoha said they wanted to atop hut emdd not. Mure than 80 percent «Mkid at least a pack a day. Of particular totamt ma tta finding that "the amount ef allowance seemed to have a relationship to smoking. When parents gave fen financial auppoet the number of freshmen who smoked was above atveraga Only 20 percent eg those who received sole from a scholarship And now a feat af pgrttoifrg Interest to yon. Than was a the
Only 16.7 pwotot of with an "A" Fiftyedna prnneat eg tha mtm vlth
smokers. Whathar or not achievement and amahtog oaa be identified with each ottor in difficult, but these are the feota. Dr. Dorothy F. Dona who performed this study Ibrcefbny urged that collages reconsider their wwoMwg regulations and institute programs to taka tha social pressure to SBMhactt et college freshmen. • 90 SPEAKING OV YOtTft HEALTH— habit with a Dr. Oolemm uwimaae fetters from readers, and, wMfo he eonnot undertake to aaatoer each one, he wOt me qneationo to hie column whenever possible and when they are of general Infereat. Address your letters to Dr, Coleman to core 0/ this news* paper.
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Have Second Go-Round At Missed Opportunity
By ROBERTA ROESCH What are some things that you can do when you want to change a dream to a deed and rid yourself of the feeling you’ve missed opportunity? This is a question I’m asked constantly as I listen to women tell me there’s no real pleasure in their daily existence because they hate the work they do or dislike the way their lives are going. Hearing Different Notes One woman who felt this way —to cite an example—was a young wife and mother who tearfully told me that she had given up the study of music for the whine of the washing machine and the whoosh of the kitchen floor polisher. "When I did this,” she said, ‘T thought housework was what I wanted. But now I know I could do much more if I had another chance.” Another woman who spoke to me about a missed opportunity was a girl who is in secretarial school because parental pressure kept her out of dramatic school. A third individual who lives with regrets every day is a girl who realizes after years of working as a hospital secretary that she would have been much happier in the career as a doctor that she could have had. Daily Regrets "My folks would have paid for my schooling,” she said, “so every day of my working life I live with the feeling Fve missed opportunities that I wish I had.”
If you’re a woman who feels the same about the lost chances of life there are several things that you can do to change a dream to an actuality. First of all, face the facts about whether there’s still time for a change when you come to this crossroads in your life. Second, if there is still time (and very often there is) reach out to missed opportunities and give yourself the satisfaction of making the effort to do what you think you would be much happier doing. Third, refuse to be stopped from exploring new possibilities simply because you are afraid you will be ridiculed for having made a wrong turn in the first place. Fourth, if the missed oppor-
A Secretary, She Passed Up Her Chance To Be A Doctor tunity you think you should have requires further training,
find sane way to get this through night classes, scholarships, family help or what you will. Don’t give up before you start because your present situation makes it almost impossibly difficult. Fifth, once you reach out to missed chances plan to make the total effort to do something about the new opportunities
The Daily Banner, Greencestle, Indiana Wednesday, March 1, 1967
most of us can have by trying. On The Right Track As you do, you may find you are on the right track for turning a dream to a reality. But if for some reason you have to give up your goal and you have to return to something else, you will still have the sat-
isfaction of knowing you haven’t missed out on a dream just because you never rolled up your sleeves and gave it an honest try.
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7-C
in a new series. The XIII Amendment had declared, “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to
their jurisdiction.”
But this had not ended all forms of slavery in the States and ^Territories. In 1867, Congress enacted further legislation against involuntary servitude, for a reason documented in a book, Two Thousand Miles on Horseback: Santa Fe and Back, by James F.
Meline.
In this collection of letters written during meanderings through the Southwest in 1866, James F. Meline recorded a settler in Santa Fe as telling him, with a gesture toward & tall, handsome man of Mexican derivation: "That man there is my slave.” "Your slave!” said I, "Why, what do you mean?” "I mean that I bought him. He owed his former master three hundred dollars. I paid the money, and now I own him.” "But,” said I, "if he chooses to walk off, and work for himself, you have no law to get him back.” "That is very true,” he replied, "but they don’t know any better.” Meline continued, "There are thousands still held here in slavery and peonage, simply because they don’t know any better, or because long years of hopeless toil have produced an apathy and ignorance ..." Congress took action in 1867 to extend the provisions of the XIII Amendment. It enacted that "the holding of any person for service or labor under the system known as peonage is hereby declared to be unlawful, and the same is hereby abolished and forever prohibited in the Territory of New Mexico, or of any other Territory or State of the United States... /* CLARK KINNAIRD
■&TZIS67
TWO THOUSAND MILES ex HORSEBACK SANTA FlS AND BACK.
A SUMMER TOUR THROUGH KANSAS, NEBRASKA, COLORADO, AND NEW MEXICO, IN IU£ YEAR 1U*.
JAMES F. MELINE.
NEW TORKt PUBLISHED BY HURD AND HOUGHTON 4M B»pc«« Stukt 1888.
[|] Title page of original printing in 1868 of the documentary account quoted in the text at left. There is a new, facsimile edition for present-day readers, published by Horn L Wallace, Albuquerque, New Mexico. Meline was a New Yorker of French ancestry who joined the Army in the Civil W'ar. He held the rank of colonel in 1866.
Distributed by King Feature Syndicate
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