The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 8 September 1967 — Page 7

Friday, Saptambar 8, 1967

Tha Daily Bannar, Graancastla, Indiana

Paga 7

Bainbridge News

Mr. and Mrs. Don Phipps and family were recent Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Byers Jr. and family of Kokomo. Mr. Phipps and family were guests for supper last Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Richie of Brazil. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Bullerdick and Geraldine visited Saturday and Sunday with Jack Bullerdick and son, Melvin, in South

Bend.

Mr. and Mrs. John Raymann

Texas, last Thursday evening. Miss Monnett is the daughter of Mrs. Betty Evans of Greencastle. She was married to John Bernard Stamley III of Texas, at the church there at 8 o’clock. Sheri is a former resident of Greencastle. The young couple wil Hive in Dallas. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Goodman vacationed from Saturday through the holidays in the Smoky Mountains and Virginia. Mrs. Jane Baker of Green-

address is 312 Melrose, Greencastle, off N. College. The community has been grieved by the death of six residents in the past four weeks. They were Ross Hanks, Willis Bundy, Willis Dickson, Went*

Gilley, Mrs. Corda Rogers and Mrs. James Skelton. The last five lived within three or four blocks of each other. Another was Mrs. George Stisher, who was a Bainbridge R. R. resident.

CONTRACT BRIDGE By B. Jay Becker (Top Record-Holdor in Masters' Individual Championship Flay)

BIDDING QUIZ

spent the weekend in Washington, Indiana, where they visit-

ed his relatives.

Mr. and Mrs. Walter Steele, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Steele and family, Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Judy and Mr. and Mrs. Dick Judy and son* were Sunday dinner guests of Dr. Scherschel and sons in Bedford, honoring the birthdays of Mr. and Mrs.

Walter Steele.

Mrs. F. L. Priest took her daughter, Melanie to Butler University last Thursday where she assisted in Sorority Rush Week. Mrs. Priest was met there by her husband and they drove to Bakalar Base in Columbus, Indiana. She was privileged to enjoy the parade and troop review and many other activities on the base. They returned home Saturday and went to Clinton Sunday afternoon to see the Little Italy Festival. They spent Labor Day at the rodeo in Palestine, Illinois. Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Sharp, Mr. and Mrs. Lowell McCammack and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hess and family, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Bullerdick and sons enjoyed a wiener roast at Wildwood Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Steve Jones and daughter, Lori, spent the

castle was an overnight guest Saturday of her son, Jerry and family. On Sunday Mrs. Baker, Jerry and Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Elliott and family, Mr. and Mrs. Max O’Hair and family of Greencastle, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Baker and Rhonda and Mr. and Mrs. Bradley Baker of Lafayette were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Austin and daughter at a six o’clock dinner. Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Sands and Mary attended the golden wedding anniversary Sunday of Mrs. Sands’ sister, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Clark of Mt. Meridian. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Van Cleave and sons were guests at a cook-out supper, Monday evening of Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Van Cleave. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Stevens and family spent from Wednesday till Saturday of last week sight seeing in Cincinnati and Santa Claus, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sterrett were among the many attending the State Fair at Indianapolis on Thursday. Among those going back to Indiana State at Terre Haute this fall will be Treva Raymann and Joan Tippin, seniors; Darlene Buzzard, June Purcell,

Partner bids One Diamond, next player passes, neither side vulnerable. What would you bid now with each of the following four hands? 1. 493 485 4KQ862 4AJ73 2. 4KJ9 f AJ8 4Q7 *K9862 3. 4 AJ7 4A10 4KJ643 4AJ8 4. 4AQ93 4AQ87 4— 4A9875 1. Two clubs. You don’t have quite the values for a jump to three diamonds (forcing to game), and are too good for a simple raise to two diamonds (which indicates 6 to 9 points). As usual, when faced with this dilemma, you bid a side suitr— in this case, clubs — planning to show the diamond support at the next oportunity without jumping the bidding. In effect, by combining these two bids, you show the type of hand that originally was worth a raise to two and a half diamonds. In general, when you make two bids of this kind, you indicate 11 or 12 points, holding midway between a single raise and a forcing jump raise. Partner may then go on to game or not, depending upon whether his values exceed a minimum opening bid. 2. Two notrump. With a hand so well suited for notrump play, there is no particularly good reason for responding two clubs. Ordinarily, a five-card suit is

not suppressed, but where it to a minor and an 11-trick contract is only a distant hope, while a nine-trick game is very promising, the minor suit may be profitably concealed. The jump to two notrump is forcing to game. 3. Three clubs. You can’t very well settle for less than a slam with a holding of 18 high-card points, excellent trump support, and controls in every suit. Usually, when this is the case, you make a jump shift in a side suit in order to alert partner to the possibility of not only a small slam but a grand slam. However, here you have no genuine side suit, there being only three-card suits to choose from. So, at the risk of deceiving partner, you manufacture a suit because that is the only way you can apprise him of the potentialities of the hand. You choose clubs instead of spades because it is dangerous to make a cuebid in a suit higher in rank than the one you plan as the ultimate trump suit. 4. Two clubs. This is a fins hand to have opposite an opening bid, but it loses much of its luster when partner starts with a diamond. A jump-shift would be decidedly out of order. The best approach is to respond two clubs, planning to bid spades and heart* later and thus identity the 4-4-0-5 distribution.

(Q 1967, King Features Syndicate, Inc.)

weekend in St. Louis, where they visited the zoo and other

interesting places.

Mr. and Mrs. Archie Pingleton, Mrs. Carolyn Frazier and son and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Flngleton, attended the wedding of the former’s granddaughter. Miss Sheri Monnett at Dallas,

MEADOWBROOK DRIVE-IN THEATRE Jet. 36 a 43 Tonight, Sat. and Sun. Welter Matthau, Infer Stevens A Guido For Tho Married Man (COLOR) Oeerge Segal, Alec OuineM Tho Quillor Memorandum (COLOR)

sophomores; Vicki Judy, Earl Coffman and Gary Martin, freshmen; Carolyn Smith goes to Earlham; Carolyn Roth and Sally Scobee to IU at Bloomington and Janet Scobee goes to Hanover; Steve Sutherlln, Purdue, sophomore; Dick McFarland, Mary Rayfield, DePauw, freshmen; Danny Webber, Indiana State, senior; Larry Nichols, Indiana State; Jim Albin, Indiana State, sophomore; Larry Steele, Kentucky; Bill Judy, Vincennes, sophomore; Larry Canada, to a new Junior College in West Baden; Ronnie Rossok, Lindsey-Wilson, Kentucky, freshman; Marla Bilbruck, Ball State, freshman; Tom Reynolds, Butler, sophomore; Hal Hendrich, Purdue, and Dick Evans Wabash, sophomore. Mrs. Wm. Buzzard was sur-

NATIONAL WEATHER OUTLOOK

INDIANA WEATHER: Partly cloudy today, mostly cloudy tonight and Saturday. Mild today and a little cooler Saturday. Chance of some rain tonight and Saturday but likely south Saturday. High today lower 80s. Low tonight 57 to 62. High Saturday upper 70s. Precipitation probability: 10 per cent north and 20 south today, 40 north and 60 south tonight, and 40 north and 50 south Saturday. Outlook for Sunday: Cooler with rain ending Saturday night or early Sunday.

GREENCASTLE Drive-In Theatre Jet. 40 & 43 THUR., FRI„ SAT., SUN. Kirk Douglas—Robert Mitchum Richard Widmark in "THE WAY WEST" PLUS Robert Morse—Michele Lea Rudy Valleo in "How To Succeed In Business Without Really Trying"

MAPLECROFT AUTO THEATRE 10 Minuta Drive West •f Plainfield an U. S. 40 FRI. SAT. SUN. Sept. 8-9-10 -DOUBLE FEATURE. Sidney Poitier—Rod Steiser in "In The Heat of Tho Night" and Clint Eastwood in A Fistfull of Dollars

Fri., Sat., Sun., 7:15-9:30

SAT.-SUN. MATINEE 2:15

nt'MI FCJWiS. to hsouxm MTKNAlfE)CR*FRaRC7G&K iwo ATANDEM PRODUCTION DKKMN DYKE'DEBBIE REYNOLDS JASON ROBARDS * JEAN SIMMONS VAN JOHNSON ItBXMCOlOR*

prised and pleased to receive a telephone call Tuesday afternoon from her husband in Cam Rhan Bay, Vietnam. Frank Peterson of DeKalb, Illinois, has suffered a light stroke and he and his wife were unable to come for the funeral of her niece, Mrs. James Skelton. Richard Branham is now home at Greencastle from the Robert Long Hospital. They were unable to perform surgery on his leg, as planned, due to the bone not being healed. He is wearing a new cast, heavier than the other. His new Surveyor 5 on way to moon CAPE KENNEDY UPI — Surveyor 5, a robot chemist bound for the moon, raced into space early today to make a historic chemical analysis of the lunar soil on which man some day may walk. The three-legged spacecraft, scheduled to land softly on the moon's Sea of Tranquility Sunday night, also carries a rotating television camera tq scan the surrounding landscape and a small magnet to see if bits of iron litter the lunar surface. The 2,216-lb. moon robot departed earth at 3:57 a.m. EDT on the nose of an Atlas Centaur rocket that cast an eerie glow over the spaceport as it raced into the sky. Surveyor 5 followed by about 9^ hours the launch of a space zoo named Biosatellite 2 that is carrying thousands of tiny bugs! and plants around earth for three days in an orbit ranging from 187 to 202 miles high. Biosatellite 2 is designed to see how weightlessness alone in orbit and the lack of gravity combined with space radiation affect the growth, form and heredity of animal and plant life. The $50 million mission’s results should answer a number of questions about basic processes of life and help scientists predict what biological hazards man may face on spaceflights of much longer duration. 1

Minimum 55* 6 A.M 57* 7 A.M 59* 8 A.M 60* 9 A.M 66* 10 A.M 67* 11 A.M 70* 12 Noon 81* 1 P.M 80*

DAILY CROSSWORD

44. Hardy

novel

heroine DOWN 1. Grooved 2. Latin 3. Warp-

yam

4. Also 5. Table utensil 6. Bumpkin 7. Girl’s

name

8. Nuts 11. Burlap 13. Iroquoian 15. Restrained

(with “up”)

18. Seasoning 19. Putumayo River 20. Breeze 23. Mourning band 24. A play

on

words 25. Bind 26. Mop 27. Shakespearian tragedy 29. Shillyshallies 30. States further

Aaiwar

32. Memos 33. Narrow roadways 35. Flourish 38. Grape 39. Obese

40. Malt

beverage

ACROSS 1. College group 5. Strike 9. Timber wolf 10. Com bread 11. Barnum's elephant 12. Unit of weight 14. Genua of lizard 15. Larva of fly 16. Land measure 17. Stress 20. Cuckoo 21. Man’s nickname 22. Perform 23. Sagacious 24. Serving dish 26. Close 28. Falsehood 29. Exclamation 31. Pale 32. Heckled 34. Exist 35. Deity 36. Subjoin 37. Utter suddenly (with “out”) 39. Long teeth 41. Bacchanals’

cry

42. Toward

the

sheltered side 43. Marbles

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DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE — Here’s how to work it: AXYDLBAAXB Is LONGFELLOW One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L’s, X for the two O’s, etc. Single letters, apostrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hint*. Each day the code letters are different. A Cryptogram Quotation IKEOB DL TF OFR DF DHLOZQ TFR HSO OLLOFWO KQ W K F H O XIKBTBU W K X X V F D L X. —X D Z K M T F R G D Z T L Yesterday’s Cryptoquote: THE GREATEST SERVICE WE CAN DO THE COMMON MAN IS TO ABOLISH HIM.— ANGELL kft iflfiT JTe&tureg 5yttdi£fti€»

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45“

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Blondie

By Chic Young

Johnny Hnznrd ® By Frank Robbins

Beetle Bailey

By Mort Walker

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ynj Ua I M3U COTTA ADMIRE EVEsJ A ^ £ l TVl6 WAV THEY OOMDUCT T&Z,K/&[u\ THEMSELVES INI AN ©^aroiment >

Archie ® By Bob Montana

Buz Sawyer

By Roy Crane

Walt Disney's SCAMP

BARNEY GOOGLE and SNUFFY SMITH ® By Fred Lasswell

HOWDY, LOWEEZYWHAT CAN I DO FERVE TODAY?

I DON'T NEED NO GROCERIES, SILASI COME TO SEE IF YE HAD A BI6 OUSOUP BONE YE COULD SPARE

I T

I RECKON SO

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