Sulphur Springs News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 102, No. 157, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 2, 1980 Page: 6 of 16
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ARROW HARDWOOD
CHARCOAL BRIQUETS,
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CHEF'S
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’APER PLATES
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4—THE.NEWS-TELEGRAM, Sulphur Springs, Texas, Wednesday, July 2,1980. — ■?
Ask Ann Lander$
% \
Daily Crossword J
ACROSS
• •
1 Mountain
pass in India
5 Express
8 Battery plate
12 Lessen
13 Fuss
14 One (Gar)
15 Indian
16 Egypt (abbr)
17 Home of
Scarlett
O'Hara
18 Crew
20 Pottery clay
2 Wild rabbit
3 Huge
continent
4 Swarmed
5 Finnish steam
bath
6 Oklahoma
town
7 City in
Virginia
8 Proceed (2
wds)
9 Com of Iran
10 Cross
inscription •
11 College head
Answer to Previous Puzzie
HCHJBC'IUEJLJ
oo non
P u
A c
o'*
o u
N E
T O A_ R
22 Actress Gabor 19 Paradise
23 Decimal unit
24 Pilot ■
27 Canal system
in northern /
Michigan
28 Detected
3.1 As well
■42 Dress
33 Year (Sp)
34 Female saint
(abbr.)
35 Cereal
36 Acquired
37 Author of
'The Raven'
38 Over (poetic)
39 Levis
4 1 Southern
constellation
42 Band'instru
ment (abbr)
43 Stir up
46 Short dash i
50 Ages
5 1 Pitcher handle
53 Cornice
54 Starch
55 Automotive so
ciety (abbr)
56 Chemical
(abbr ^
67 Crinoline
58 Kind of
marble
59 Aroid •
DOWN
1 Horse
directives
dweller
21 Vast period of
' time
24 Breathe hard
25 Biblical
preposition
26 Thought (Fr)
27 Float in the
air
28 Norse legend
29 Presently
30 Points
32 Best
35 Brought into
life
39 Bird type
40 Await
41 Fabulist
42 Termagant
43 Actor Parker
44 College
examination
45 The three
wise men
47 Hearty laugh
(comp wd)
48 Always
49 Verne hero
52 Motoring
association
1
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3
4
5
6'
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9
10
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15*
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1
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3;
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XI
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y
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i
■ Nf WJfcPAPfH INTfRPHlSf ASSNj
Jocobys on Bridge]
Rules don’t always apply
NORTH 7-2-80
♦ .110 3
f KJ
♦ K8
♦ K (j 10 96 2
WEST
♦ O 8 7 4 2
Y A 6 5
♦ 632
♦ A 4
EAST
♦ K 9 6 5 ■
♦8742 :
♦ .15
♦ 873
SOUTH
♦ A
♦ Q 10 9 3
♦ AQ 10 9 7 4
♦ J 5
Vulnerable: Both
•Dealer: South
West ' North
East
South
1 ♦ 2 ♦
24
1 ♦
3 ♦
Pass 3 ♦
Pass
3 NT
Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead:4 4
♦
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontyg
Second hand low, third hand
high, cover an honor with an
honor are general rules that
all bridge players learn when
they start the' game. Like all
rules, however, they don't
always apply. Before one
makes the book play, thought
should precede the action.
Today’s hand illustrates the
time to deviate from a rule.
The auction needs some
explanation. The first three
bids are routine. East’s two-
spade call, while not generally
made orrsuch skimpy values,
had good thinking behind it.
After the opening, overcall
and free bid, East reasoned,
how many points could his
partner expect him to have9
His two-spade call, while not
recommended by most
experts, took up valuable bid-
ding space. He was not likely
to be penalized because his
trump length afforded some
measure of protection
South persevered with three
diamonds and North had quite
a problem Although with both
hands in view it is obvious
that five of either minor is the
optimum contract, at the
table this was not easy to
recognize.
North’s three-spade bid was
a Western cue bid, popular in
California, which asks the cue
bidder’s partner to bid
notrump with a full stopper in
the enemy’s suit. South duti-
fully bid three notrump and
the wrong contract was
played
9 The opening lead was the
four of spades and declarer
played dummy's jack. It was
up to East. If he played his
king, declarer woujd have a
double spade stopper and
make four notrump East
realized South had to nave the
ace of spades for his three-
notrump call, and if it were
singleton, as the auction indi-
cated, the nine of spades
wouW suffice. East played the
nine and South had no chance.
When West gained the lead
with the ace of clubs, it was
an easy matter to take four
spades and two aces.
Don't routinely cover an
honor- with an honor, as many
players might, without giving
it proper consideration
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I
POLLY S POINTERS
Polly Cramer
Shades have faded
4
By Polly Cramer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
•'V.
DEAR POLLY — The roll-up, bamboo-type shades at
the end of my patio are faded from the sun and I am
afraid to paint them. They are good otherwise so I
would like to know if there is anything I can do to
improve their looks
Also, is there anything 1 could use on my white
cement steps to make them look white again9 - THEL-
MA . ^
DEAR THELMA — I have not been able to learn of
any set formula for treating such shades, so you might
do a bit of experimenting on your own.
Try a varnish stain on one of the slats and see what
that does. Be sure the shade Is clean and dry first. Do
not roll up until shade is perfectly dry. How about this,
readers? Have any of you successfully renewed such
shades?
Scrub your cement steps with a mixture of one-half
cup tri-sodlum phosphate, one-half cup detergent and a
gallon of water. Use a stiff brush and rinse thoroughly.
This should lighten the cement. I am presuming it is not
« painted, that the white you refer to Is the original color,,
POLLY
DEAR POLLY — Peel onions from the root end and they
will never make you cry. - I.M.P.
Polly will send you one of her signed thank-you newspaper
coupon clippers if she uses your favorite Pointer, Peeve or
Problem in her column. Write POLLY’S POINTERS in cam nf
this newspaper.
column. Write POLLY’S POINTERS in care of
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
Junk mail always goes through
|ovi
Mtioi
Dear Ann Landers: Please
stop telling people who are sick
of junk mail to write to Direct
MaiLMarketing Association for
a preference application and
theif worries will be over. I did
it and received more jun,k mail
than before! •
Once a junk mailer gets your
name, you are a victim of the
computers. You will get mail
not only from the first jerk but
from all his .fellow junk
mailers. I mean six or seven
duplications per day. One each
to “Mr. and Mrs.,” “Mr.,”
“Ms.,” one with your' name
spelled with an “i," another
with your name spelled with an
“e,” one to your box;number
and one to your street number.
The zip code can be right or
wrong. Doesn’t matter. Junk
mail has no trouble getting
through. Only first-class mail is
held up for days — sometimes
weeks.
'Who gets hit the minute the
post office department needs
more money? We do. They are
— it will be destroyed and the
senders will never get the
message.
Dear Ann Landers: Nine loud
cheers for you — actually,
three cheers for you; three
talking about charging 20 cents c^eheers for that wonderful man
for a letter an$l stopping whose wife was dying of cancer
Saturday delivery
Did our cpuntry initiate the
mail service to provide us with
junk9 How about it, fellow
Americans? If every single
person who is fed up will write
"Refused” on all junk mail and
drop it in the postal box, the
sender will have to pay for it
and they will take you off their
list. — Fed Up In Macon
Dear Fed: From your mouth
to God’s ears. The problem is
that unless an. envelope reads
“Return Postage Guaranteed,"'
the post office will not return it
and who didn’t want to impose
/ on her — nor could he feel right
about seeing another woman —
and three - cheers for that
angelic doctor who recom-
mended masturbation. That
man’s love for his wife came
through in every line he wrote.
Sexual problems are an area
few medical people are com-
fortable with — even in this age
of supposed enlightenment.
How good it is to know thefe are
professionals willing to give
common-sense, practical
advice to patients and partners
^caught in such a cruel bind.
As for you, Ann, you -will
probably receive many letters
from Bible-thumping, outraged
readers. Just toss them into the
circular file. Rest assured that
many of us applaud your
courage for printing a letter
dealing with such a sensitive
issue. It touched tousands of
lives in a most' helpful and
compassionate way..— A Nurse
In Schenectady ,>
Dear Nurse: How about
another three cheers for my
readers? I confess I was sur-
prised and overwhelmed by the
outpouring of support. Hun-
dreds of fnen and women wrote
to thank me for printing that
letter and my response.
' ■ . ' 'I
(ripyritfht 1980
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Keys, Clarke. Sulphur Springs News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 102, No. 157, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 2, 1980, newspaper, July 2, 1980; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth824105/m1/6/: accessed July 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.