The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 July 1967 — Page 4

Pat* 4

Tha Dally Bannar, Graaneastla, Indiana

Monday, July 10, 1967

Gen. Ike enters Army hospital

GETTYSBURG, Pa. UPI — Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower arranged to enter Walter Reed Army Hospital in Washington today for a routine

examination and some dental work. Gen. Eisenhower was expect-; ed to drive from Gettysburg to Washington during the afternoon. He was expected to stay several days at the hospital. i

Eisenhower’s aide, Brig. Gen. Robert L. Schulz, said Eisenhower’s doctors recommended the dental work and checkup. Since leaving the White House, Eisenhower has had periodic examinations at Walter Reed. He was last in the hospital In May, when he spent 13 days after suffering an attack of gastroenteritis, an inflammation of the digestive tract.

KERSEY MUSIC GREENCASTLE, INDIANA ORGANS

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Mahogany Demo, Built-in laslia

ESTEY ORGAN

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Free Summer Lessons with

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CONTRACT BRIDGE By B. Jay Becker (Top Rocord-HoMor In Masters' Individual Championship Play)

South denier.

Both sides vulnerable.

NORTH 4 A10 4 y 8752 ♦ K963

*A5 EAST

Piano or Organ

KERSEY MUSIC GREENCASTLE, INDIANA

WINNERS—4-H winners of the local senior Judging Contest held recently that will go to Sullivan to compete in the regional today are (left to right) Patty McGaughey, Cathy Niles, Carolyn Smith, Rita Flater, Shirley Albright, Nancy

McGaughey, Rhonda Sutherlin, Marie McKee, Floreen Danforth, Annetta Routt, Vicki Aker, Donna Fordice, Barbara Perkins, Carolyn Torr, and Mary Hutchins.

♦ J

♦ 8842 SOUTH

A 978 ?KQ9 4AQ

4KQJ107 The bidding: South West North East Idk Pass 14 Pass ly Pass Sy Poes

44

Opening lead—five of spades. This hand occurred in the match between Argentina and Jamaica during tha Second World Bridge Olympiad staged

In New York In 1984.

Here is how Arturo Jaques, the Argentine South, described the deal in the June, 1984, issue of the Bridge World magazine: "My partner, Marcelo Lemer, and I ordinarily use very simple A col bidding, but what bid, other than a heart, could I make after my partner’s one diamond response? I had no spade stopper for notrump, and three

PAMOUS HANDS clubs would not be particularly illuminating. And besides, how can partner possibly bid the notrump with my heart holding? “But now he jumps to threa hearts, and again Tm stuck for a bid. I think that bidding three notrump without a spade stopper is surely out of tha question, and in this situation a bid of three spades (after a jump) is not regular fourth-suit-forcing and must show a spade control. I could see no way out, so I just bid four hearts and

hoped for the beat

“When dummy came down I noted with great dlapleaaura that three notrump was ice cold, and that my brilliant (!) bidding had succeeded in getting us to the wrong contract "On the lead of a small spada I went up with tha ace and played the A-K of chibs followed by the jack—unfortunately ruffed by West with the six. "I ovemrffed la dummy, lad a small diamond to tha ace, sad then played the ten of olube, dummy discarding a spade. Then I led still another dub, discarding dummy's last spade, and East now ruffa and returns

a low trump.

"By this time the position Is clear. I put in the heart nine. Which fetches the ace, and I am lucky to bring horns tan tricks for my contract’*

1AM sets week deadline for congress to act on rail strike

(C 1967, King Features Syndicate, Inc.)

WASHINGTON UPI — The i International Association of ! Machinists (JAM) is giving | Congress one more week to work out legislation to block a nationwide rail strike. P. L. (Roy) Siemiller, in a weekend interview with United Press International, said his membership would not wait indefinitely for Congress to act Siemiller said when the union promised the Senate and House : it would not strike while the i lawmakers were attempting to work out a compromise, it did

not anticipate Congress taking a | and the results at that particu-1 of meetings before the 10-day i 10-day holiday. | iar time would determine wheth- | July 4 recess.

Police fight with rioters in Kansas City; 11 arrested

The Senate bill calls for com-

"Unless there is action by the er or not we would withdraw

Congress, we would have to the letter.” j pulsory arbitration of the isnotifv both the Senate and the i ^ ^ _ T .. . sues if agreement is not reached House that we would have to : Senate 811(1 HoU3€ negotiators I 90 more day3 of mediation

withdraw the letter that we are scheduled to resume meet-

ings Tuesday in an attempt to work out a compromise on President Johnson’s anti-strike bill. They were unable to reach agreement after nearly a week

gave them,” Siemiller said. ‘T do not believe that our members will sit tight and stay in the shop even though we ask them to do so over an extended

period of time.

"In my judgment, we would be willing to give them a week. Depending upon what happens

and negotiation. The House measure would merely extend the deadline another 90 days and unions would be free to strike if no agreement is reached by the end of that period.

AUDITIONS FOR “MOON IS BLUE” July 10-11 - 7:00 P.M. Jr. High Auditorium Presented Aug. 31, Sept. 1 & 2 Director, Bob Cole: 0L 3-5402 PUTNAM COUNTY PLAYHOUSE

Hong Kong bus stormed by Reds HONG KONG UPI — Three ony and followed a weekend of hundred Communists stormed a j bloody violence that killed nine j bus in the heart of the Kowloon | persons and injured scores of j tourist section today, smashing | others. Riot police broke up the ! windows and beating the bus disturbance. ! driver. ! British army troops, reinThe attack marred an uneasy forced by a battalion of tough 1 quiet in the British crown col- Gurkhas, patrolled the Shatau-

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kok border area where machinegun fire from the Communist Chinese side killed five Hong Kong policemen Saturday. A British army commander appealed to his Chinese counterpart to help prevent further border fighting. At least four other persons were killed Sunday when police and Communist demonstrators battled in the western part of Hong Kong. A series of riots and demonstrations flared throughout the colony Sunday and was capped Sunday night when a Chinese civilian tossed a “fish bomb” Into the British half of the divided border village of Shataukok. The blast injured one soldier. The British army commander, Lt. Col. Denis OLeary, broadcast an appeal to the commander of Chinese soldiers in the Communist side of Shataukok asking his cooperation in preventing another outbreak of violence. A government spokesman said later, “there has been no response from the Chinese army to the appeal, but there have been no further incidents.” Gurkha Commander Lt. Col. Ronald McAllister said Sunday that Communist Chinese army troops had manned the machine guns which raked a Hong Kong police post on Saturday and killed five policemen.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. UPI— Police and about 150 Negroes engaged in a two-hour clash in Swopes Park Sunday night in which a hail of rocks and bottles was answered by tear gas. Police mobilized a 60-man tactical squad and assigned it to patrol duty in the wake of the disorder. The Rev. John Bethel, who identified himself as the housing chairman for the Council on Racial Equality (CORE), blamed police for the incident and cited a number of complaints including “police brutality.” Po-, lice said the incident arose when four officers attempted to make arrests and a crowd interfered. Bethel also revealed that militant “black power” advocate Stokely Carmichael was scheduled to arrive in Kansas City today, but said the trip was planned before Sunday s disturbance. He said Carmichael would be asked to “help civil rights leaders detremine a course of ac-

tion.”

A police spokesman said the special “tactical squad” of 60 officers would “concentrate on any situation that needs more control than the ordinary force can provide.” Officers arrested 11 persons

after the Swopes Park incident on charges of disorderly conduct and failure to obey officers. Missiles thrown by the crowd broke windows or dented four police cruisers and several

private vehicles.

One Negro and one policeman were injured, neither seriously.

Body of man is found FORT WAYNE, UPI — The body of Tracey Goyer, 30, Fort Wayne, was found hidden in tall grass along Indiana 1 Sunday night, and authorities believed he was a Fourth of July weekend traffic accident victim. A 14-year-old girl found the body and a motorcycle lying flat in the high grass nearby. Investigators believed Goyer was killed on the holiday when his cycle struck a pole and hit a fence, the vehicle and body landing in such a position htey could not be seen by motorists. The accident happened inside Fort Wayne. Police identified the body through fingerprints. They said nobody had reported Goyer missing.

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ELKS CLUB CATFISH DINNER $1.50 STAG July 11 Ssrving 6:30 p.m. Elk Members Only

Come To The Central National Bank 24 West Washington Street Greencastle, Indian* and apply for your

Thousands of Putnam County shoppers are now using the CNB “Town & Country” Charge Cards . . . WHY NOT YOU? You will be able to walk in to most businesses and professional offices in Greencastle and buy without cash. Help boost local business. CH-A-A-A-A-A-A-RGE! with Town & Country, that is. You don’t have to be a customer of ours to apply for a Town & Country Charge. Just stop in or phone.