The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 25 October 1967 — Page 3

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Wednesday, October 25, t967

The DaHy Benner, Breeneeetfe, Indiana

Page S

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Hospital Association sets annual meeting

The Indiana Hospital Associ-. pital, St. Louis, Missouri, will ation is holding its 46th Annu- discuss “Administration and al Meeting at the French Lick- Hospital Economics.” Robert Sheraton Hotel, French Lick, Stonehill, M.D., Project Direcon November 1, 2, and 3. tor of the Regional Medical Speakers on this year’s pro- Program for Heart Disease, gram include: Ray E. Brown, Cancer and Stroke, of IndianExecutive Vice-President of apolis, will discuss the “IndiAffiliated Hospitals Center, ana Regional Health Program.”

Boston, Massachusetts, who

Economy starts at home

Senators could learn savings

CONTRACT BRIDGE By B. Jay Becker (Top KocorJ-Holdor In Mostois' individual Championship May)

WASHINGTON UPI — If, as to make aure antipoverty and Rep. Charles S. Joelson, D-N.J., i foreign aid were not slighted contends, home is where econ- i when the cuts were passed out omy starts, the House won’t —was that the president be diqualify as a home any time rected tq hold this year’s spendsoon. And as for the Senate, no- j ing to last year’s levels, and in body ever suggested that sen-1 no case to exceed 3131.5 billion,

ators know much about saving.

rtUl’Xtabu^emenl' “svlumi ,ive Director of Trt - Statc maker's district, don't look tor "" " d " sent to'the'Sen.t, pital Reimbursement byster AsgemblVi Chicag0i mi- a lot to come of the current,".^.., , „ !<t

Alfred Van Horn, HI, Execu-

With appropriate exemptions,

So, except for the antipoverty of course. And they grew more war and foreign aid, neither of numerous in the course of the which can muster much voter day.

enthusiasm in the average law-

The economy bill then was

nois, will give a presentation of Tri-State Activities. Robin C. Buerki, M. D., of Henry ? Ford

■- —- Hospital, Detroit, Michigan,

Planning and Hospital ^

and Capital Formulation.” Eugene D. Sibery, Executive Director of the Greater Detroit Area Hospital Council, will dis-

cuss

Economics.” Paul Gordon, Ph.D., Professor of Management at Indiana University, will discuss “Management Theory and Hospital Economics.”

Congressional economy drive.

will be moderator at a general assembly on the afternoon of

November 2nd.

where Appropriations Committee members found that, with

If President Johnson's record so many functions excluded budget is cut in any big way — from the economy order, items and nothing but billions means left might be hit pretty hard,

anything here anymore—it begins to look like Johnson will have to cut it. And if he does,

South dealer. Neither side vulnerable. NORTH 4 AQJ107

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Nolan R. Lackey, President of Welbom Memorial Baptist

Robert Evans, M.D., Director Hospital, Evansville, completes of Medical Education, York his term as President of the

he then will have to listen to affected Congressmen scream.

Like the 312 billion budget of i the Department of Health, Edu-

cation A Welfare.

"It Just means a little more

Meantime, the House stands cancer, a little more heart dispat on a dandy economy plan' ease - a little more cystic fi-

Hospital, York Pennsylvania, Association, and President- that ena bi e d members last week brosis," said Sen. Lester Hill,

will talk about "Medical Prac- Elect Walter G. Ebert, Adminitice and Hospital Economics.” strator of Ball Memorial HosJohn R. Eckrich, who is Ad- pital, Muncie, will be installed ministrator of Lutheran Hos- as the new President.

LADIES NIGHT Wednesday, Oct. 25th AMERICAN LEGION POST No. 58

Promptly at 8:00 p.m. Guests Invited Prizes - Prizes

LARGE JACKPOTS

to get on record for cutting D-Ala., when advised that HEW spending by $10 billion or so. would be cut 31 billion, without, as far as members ‘ Naturally the Senate commitcould see, hurting a soul except tee voted against the House

a few bureaucrats, and certainly pi a n. not at the expense of anybody’s

Congressional district. But in the view of the econRep. George H. Mahon, D .! omy bloc al! still isnot lost. The

Tex., chairman of the Appropri-

ations Committee, was moved

House budget-cutting scheme was tied to an emergency money

Opening lead—ten of hearts. It would be wonderful to be able to see the defenders’ hands every time you became declarer. Presumably, you would seldom err in the play and would enjoy getting every possible trick

out of each hand.

But, alas, bridge is not played that way and you have to do the best you can without seeing the adverse hands. This doesn’t mean that you should necessarily suffer because of your restricted vision; on the contrary, your results on most hands should exactly parallel what you would accomplish if you actual-

ly saw all the cards.

For example, take this case

where West leads a heart which East wins with the ace. East returns a heart, which you take with the king, and you can now count eleven sure winners, come what may. There are only two suits where you can score the all* important twelfth trick. One is clubs, where cashing the A-K might drop the queen and make dummy's jack & trick. The other is diamonds, where youjnay catch the queen by either leading the A-K or taking a finesse in the hope that East has the queen. Note that in the actual hand, both methods fail. But note, also, that correct play makes the slam. What you should do is try to get a reading of the distribution so that you will know how to deal with the diamonds. Accordingly, you cash the third round of hearts, the A-K of clubs, the ace of diamonds, and five spade tricks. This reduces you to the K-J of diamonds alone. As you cash these tricks, you learn that West started with one spade, two hearts, seven clubs, and hence three diamonds. When you cash the last spade, West must discard from the Q-7 of diamonds and queen of clubs. Since he cannot afford a club discard, he parts with a diamond. You thereupon cash the king of diamonds, knowing beyond the shadow of a doubt that the queen will fall.

(O 1M7, King Features Syndicate, Inc.)

to observe: “The debate here biU that was su PP osed to have

this afternoon has revealed that it is easy to be for economy in

been passed by Monday midnight. Because of the House-

the abstract but difficult to be Senate dis P ute about econom y’ for economy in specific terms.” , ^ be b * d was no ^ P assed ’ and a Or to put It in a way Mahon number of a^cies were left never would: Economy can be with nothin » to s P end ’ defined in the House as money 1 p re t t y tough on the agencies, not spent in another man s dis- Looking a t the bright side.

Chemical spray case goes to court

trict.

Finally, Reps. Jamie L. Whitten. D-Miss., and Frank T. Bow, R-Ohio, rode to the rescue. What they proposed—and what the House bought, with a couple of precautionary amendments

though, some saving could come out of that. And it could be all we will get.

—Heloise

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some panel ray-type heaters. Being a doctor’s daughter, I have seen too many people burned when this Inexpensive method could have prevented such horror. Betsy Lees

Letter of Laughter Dear Heloise: Don’t worry about being fat until you have to put on a girdle to get into a housecoat . . . Miss K. S.

Dear Heloise: Years ago when I took my child out for Halloween I used a paper bag for the treats. Before she completed her tricks-and-treating, her paper bag was tom and the goodies were dropping out. Since then I made her a bag from leftover pieces of material I had from one of her dresses. This cloth bag will last for years and she loves it. Mrs. Roe Rose

GARDEN CITY, Kan. UPI— A controversy over spraying of chemicals hazardous to human life appeared headed for the courts today with a stricken 5-year-old boy as its focal point. Lelyn Braun, Garden City attorney, said he planned to file a damage suit over what he called the misuse of the insecticide parathion. The insecticide was blamed last month for several deaths in Tijuana, Mexico, where bread was believed poisoned. Braun said the chemical is being sprayed from planes flying over the western Kansas prairie to combat insects in the fall planted wheat crop. Recently land near Shallow Water, Kan., a small farming community north of here in Scott County, was sprayed. Braun is representing Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wing, whose small son, Loren, has been under constant care since he first contacted the poison 15 months ago while visiting his grandparents’

farm. The boy, Braun said, is suffering from headaches and nosebleeds. “I don't think we have any legal basis for a court case based on law violations,” Braun said. “There is no statute regulating th« use of this insecticide.

“So, we’ll try and get a response in a damage suit against the flying service.”

Dr. R. Dale Boles, director of the poison control center at Dodge City, Kan., said parathion “is absorbed through the skin and definitely can be fatal to humans.

"Generally speaking, it affects the blood, liver and bone marrow and causes headaches, j nausea and a generally run-1 down condition,” Boles said.

Two escapees back to prison

Dear Heloise: Did you ever try wearing those rubber gloves with the roughened palms when giving heavily soiled spots in clothing that extra hand-scrubbing before tossing them in the washer? It’s better than a washboard and easy on both the hands and the clothes. Give it a try! Lois L. McGregor * * * *

State trooper rescues twins

Dear Heloise: I love to sew, but making darts is a task I don't find easy. After using a pattern a few times it’s always tom. Just make small holes in the pattern where the darts should be and stick on a reinforcement—the type used to reinforce notebook paper — then mark a dot with chalk through the hole onto the material. Now when I start to sew in the darts it is real easy to see exactly where they should be and my patterns are no longer tom. M. Schupbach

RUSHVILLE, UPI —An offduty state trooper was credited Tuesday with saving 2-year-old twins from their flaming ?iome : here. Trooper John Mull spotted : the blaze while enroute home j from work. He dashed into the smoke-filled house and kicked down the door of a second-floor bedroom which had been blocked by a chest of drawers pushed against it. Mull found Glen Dade Lightner under a bed and his sister Melody Gail, in a closet. He handed them out the window to firemen summoned by a babysitter who had run for help when the fire broke out. Firemen said the blaze appeared to have been started by children playing with matches.

VALPARAISO, UPI — Two life terms convicts who escaped early Monday from an Indiana State Prison honor detail at Norman Beatty Memorial Hospital were to be returned to the prison today. Gary Stull, 26, and Roland Butler, 30, both serving terms for slayings, were captured Tuesday night by a Porter County sheriff’s deputy who spotted them walking along a country raod northeast of here. The two first claimed they were hitchhikers en route from Pennsylvania to Hammond but a prison guard called by suspicious deputies identified them. Stull was sentenced from Lake County in 1957 on a firstdegree murder conviction and Butler was sentenced from Hendricks County in 1958 for second-degree murder. Both only recently became eligible for assignment to honor details as trusties.

That’s what I call a sticky idea, hon. Heloise Dear Heloise: My husband and I write quite a few letters to our boys overseas and we’ve found a way to give each letter a little added zing . . . We cut a few panels of their favorite comic strips and put them in with each letter. The boys not only get joy from our letters but also a few laughs from them as well . .. and they love them! Mrs. E. Raschke

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