Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 263, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 March 1930 — Page 20
PAGE 20
RULES ARE SET FOR CITY-WIDE MARBLES MEET School Champions Will Be Chosen in Tournament Starting March 24. "Knuckle down," you marbleshooters. to a study of the rules j printed here for conduct of the; city-wide marble tournament, under ; auspices of the city recreation department and The Indianapolis Times. Clip out these rules right now, fellows, and start practicing for the : chool matches, which will be run ; off the week of March 24, under i direction of Boy Scouts. School champions will be grouped ; in contests in city parks, with semi- j finals at Fall creek and Thirtieth Ireet April 5. Finals will be : taged at the same place Saturday, j ADril 12. David Kilgore, city recreational director. Is the "Big Shooter" of he tournament. Thousands of ;chool boys under 15 will partici- 1 pate. A handsome loving cup will j be awarded the school attended by : the lad who wins the city-wide , championship. Private or parochial ! schools interested in participating j are asked to communicate with j Kilgore at Room 303, city halL Rules Are Given Here are the rules. Clip and keep them. Watch The Times for further tourney announcements. j 1— shall provide their own j shooters, which may be of any material j except metal. Shooters shall be spherical, j not less than one-half inch nor more | than seven-eighths Inch In diemfter. 2 Marbles shall be made of baked clay j as the ordinary commercial article, of j any color and spherical, five-eighths inch \ in diameter. They shall be furnished by i the committee. 3 The ring shall be 10 feet In diameter < tlnslde measurements) and marked by a I groove at least one-half Inch deep and j one-half inch wide. The 13 marble., shall be placed on two crossed lines, ; painted white, five-eighths inch wide and 18 Inches long centered In the ring. Mar- j bles to be placed three inches apart on ! each crocs line, with one at crossing of j lines. 4 Pl3y shall be by one pair to each J circle, who shall lag or pink for turns. , Players will lag for a line marked on tiio , ground from a distance of ten feet for j th* order of their turns In each game. Player to-slng shooter nearest the line j gets first choice. Each Knuckles Down s_gf-.ling the game, each player In turn knuckles down on the ring line and shoots by letting if possible, aiming to ; knock one or more of the marbles out , o. the ring. C—one or more marbles knocked out of • ■ mocking them out and the player continues to j Shoot from the spot where shooter comes j to rest. Marbles knocked only part wav j out of the ring will be permitted to be j shot at. A pli.er whose shooter goes; Ide of th< S -1 i be • Uowed o V.eep ir. roles knockes out, but must avail his ne.\ turn. 7 —On knocking marble from ring and shooter coming to rs" with n the , ircic player shall continue to shoot from where j shooter cam" to res' II afior a miss j ih shooter comes to rest inside the *h* shooter .-hall be. left In ring aid if j successfully hit by another plaser an. knocked from the ring. al. marbics have been won by the player t who e shooter ts kr.oclrd out) shall be given to the player who knocked him out. If j a placer hits another player’s shooter j that has been left within the ring, but ; does not knock him out. he will be al- j lowed to pics up one marble from the ring at the conri ision of his shot. 8 - A marble or shooter coming to rest ■ exactly on the ring line shall be con- j yidered as cut. bat a marble with its j point of contact resting on the ground in- . side the rim ■ considered still In the How Scoring Is Done g When e marble Is knocked from cross lin and eomes to rest nearer the ring line, it mav be shot at from any *t!le ul 10_The :core: shall count all marbles each pi aver .-cores and the plat cr fir: - , obtaining seven (7) marbles shall be ceclsred the winner of the came. 11— Players shall knuckle doom on a.l -hots and when called by the referee, •he shot, shall come as a turn and the -eferee sha respot all marbles moved 12— Hunching -hall not be permitted i and. when called by the referee, shall respot all marbles moied. 13 Players shall not pick up a marble. -ryiooth or otherwise rearranre the ground. The referee mav provide clearances ou requesv Penalty for voir. tier, of this rule shall be the loss Os the next shot or turn 14—Coaching 1; forbidden. A contender who Is gpen ccarhtng trom tee siae lines will be warned Mid It repeated the coarn be removed front among spectators nr the contender will be barred from t..c tournament Each contestant shall be allowed one retrle’er. who may rot signal. Kefrree To He Named 13 The t 0... nar.ient committee sh-11 select a referee who shall have entire oha-g> of the game. The referee's decision shall be final In all cases of disagr. smen.. Iff fi tty one is eligible who will not yet be 15 Tears of age on June 1. The game of marbles is played by two or more plavers who in turn snap a large shooter from the hand by a quick extension of the thumb aiming at a group of thirteen marbles placed at three inch intervals tn ix) formation near the center of a ten-foot circle. This circle may be deep scratch in any level dirt or clay surface. The first player who knocks seven marbles from the ring wins the game. A tournament is any definite series of games. In the semi-finals and finals the contestants are paired; the winner of two games out of three in preliminary matches stays In. the loser dropping out. The winner in semi-final matches must win three out of five games and the final winner must win four cut of seven games. Farmer Killed in Fall Tty United rrcs* ROSEDALE. Ind., March 14. William Shadley. 74. farmer near here, was killed when he fell from a hayloft tn a barn on his farm. He suffered a fractured skulk
Colds Start therouch bowel action and riJjwa „mtmm of poisOEOUS W*tß a# SOOn aS yOO notice the first sign of a cold. Just take NATURE'S REMEDY— N? Tabltu—and bis sure of prompt, easy and pleasant re•ahs. It is more thorough in actionana far batter than ordinary laxatives.. Try it. bAakc th* tcsttotiigju
A FISHING ROD GETS BARRY IN TROUBLE Most Innocent of Childhood Pleasures Lands a Youth Into a Terrible Mess of Trouble. BY WALTER D. HICKMAN A LAD by the name of Barry Cabot in New England went a fishing on his ninth birthday with a well dressed gentleman from New York. And that experience with a fishing rod, one of the most innocent pleasures of childhood, caused the life of Barry when as a young man he became involved in a fight to death with underworld gangsters and gamblers who do not blink at the loss of ten thousand a throw. You will meet Barry Connor, see his ninth birthday celebration with the entertaining stranger and witness a murder of a gambler which sounds like a front page one we had in New York some time ago in real
life, in Elizabeth Jordan's, “The Night Club Mystery.” This novel is published today by The Century Company and sells for ! $2. I am reviewing this novel on j its publication date because it might j be based upon similar characters | depicted in the movie, "Street of Chance,” which has caused so much talk here this week. “The Night Club Mystery” Is' much better written than the aver- ; age so-called mystery story. It has prologue which has the same charm that one expects from Milne. It is in the prologue that you meet Barry on his ninth birthday. His stern but very reasonable New j England aunt feared for the boy to j use his prized present, a fine fishing ; rod and tackle, because he had no j older person to go with. Then J. C. Bleecker, a man, arrives and gets into the heart and soul of the boy. This man dwelt -fi the heart of that boy. J. C. was , Barry’s idol. Then we get Barry as a young man, fine, good and strong, starting I as a clerk in a great New York i bank. Then suddenly when Barry’s life , was as well ordered as a fine clock, in steps J. C. Bleecher and this man’s friendship became a curse and the greatest thing in Barry's life. , Barry and an Innocent girl who j was starting on a wild career wer| the unwilling witnesses to the mur- 1 der of a notorious gambler in a 1 smart night club. The fishing rod became a vise which held Barry and his girl friend, j dragging them both down into the black lives of gangsters. All because Barry went fishing with a man and all because the man accused of the murder was this same J. C. Bleecker, but under another name. Here is a story finely written and one mystery story that is not solved by the all-wise defectives. The background wiork of the author is accurate and done with j amazing skill. All characters become living personalities, they step j out of the pages, talk and act right ; before you. And that is the test of mighty t good writing. Here is corking good j theater in fiction. Read “The Night Club Mystery.” , an tt Eddie Dowling in person opens an engagement ted - !" at the Indiana as well as on the screen in "Blaze of ‘ Glory.” ; Billie Dove in “The Other Tomorrow" is now the chief feature oil the new bill at the Circle. tt n a Other Indianapolis theaters today ; offer ‘Journey’s End” at English's, 1 General Crack" at, the Apollo, Corey and Mann Revue at the Lyric, Her Unborn Child” at the Ohio, ' Hit the Deck" at the Pa,ace, George 1 Fares at the Colonial, and burlesque , at the Mutual. Mexico Names New Envoy Bu Unfit J Pro* -MEXICO CITY. March 14.—R0- I dolfo Nervo, Mexican minister to Paraguay, has bee., appointed minister to both Poland and Czechoslovakia. He will reside in Warsaw.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
BITTER ATTACK FAILS TO SHAKE BRITjSHREGIME Labor Triumphant, 308 to 35, in Effort to Unseat Government. BY CLIFFORD L. DAY r United Press Staff Correspondent LONDON, March 14.—The British labor government emerged triumphant from one of the bitterest
Third Printing Houghton Mifflin Company have just put through a third large printing of Gamaliel Bradford s “Daughters of Eve,” a series of psychographic portraits of such charming and enigmatic women as Ninon de Lenclos, Madame de Maintenon, Madame Guyon, Mademoiselle de Lespinasse, Catherine the Great, George Sand and Sarah Bernhardt.
debates in its history when, with the aid of the Liberals, it defeated the conservative attempt to censure
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! and overthrow the MacDonald cabi inet Thursday night by a vote of , 308 to 35. The Liberal party decided, at the | eleventh hour, not to support the i conservative motion of censure on the government’s tariff policy. Philip Snowden, chancellor of the exchequer, furthermore, to whom was intrusted the principal defense of the government, was in one of the characteristic brilliantly aggressive moods that earned for him the name of the “Iron Chancellor” at The Hague conference. | The chancellor charged there was
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afoot organized conspiracy against the labor government. He damned the conservative policies, which h°
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.MARCH 14, 103f?
blamed to a greater degree titan t flj Wall Street collapse, for preset fji unemployment.
