Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 119, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 September 1930 — Page 13
SEPT. 26,1930.
GREAT ESTATE DRIVES HEIRESS TO KILL SELF Nervous Breakdown Laid to Constant Attention to Guarding Fortune. Bu United press WESTCHESTER, Pa., Sept 26. The body of Miss Grace Deiancey Newlin, daughter of wealthy and socially prominent parents, was found lying In a clump of bushes m the woods of Delcheste/ farms, near Suvartown, Thursday, and an empty glass gave evidence that she had committed suicide Her mouth and lips were burned with poison. The Bym Mawr heiress had been missing since Tuesday morning. Grief stricken relatives, men and | women high in the social registers j of Philadelphia, New York and Palm Beach, revealed the back- ' ground of the tragedy. It is a story of a 30-year-old woman driven to nervous breakdown and weariness of life by the c6nstant. cares and worries of administering a great estate and caring for an invalid mother. Her life in recent years virtually had been cut off from society by attention to household affairs, and < directing the many activities of the j estate left by her father, the late j Deiancey Newlin, prominent Philadelphia banker. A reward of $2,500 for finding the heiress, dead or alive, had been posted. __ Storm Dead May Reach 30 Bu United Preen BREST, France. Sept. 26. Twenty fishing boats of the fleet, broken up during the recent storm, still are missing today. At least twelve are thought to have been lost and it is believed thirty sailors have gone down. The known drowned from this town already total twenty.
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Blot* *r# TBl*lnd In th following I article. *be fourth In a aerie* on “Today a i Backgammon,” which baa been written for The Time* and NEA Sera lee by Ellta- ; betb Clark Boyden. She ia the author of ' "The New Backgammon” and co-anthor : of “Contraet Bridge for lMt” and “Con- { tract Brtdge for 1931.” BY ELIZABETH CLARK BOYDEN Written for NEA Service THE diagram with today’s article shows yesterday's two plays j completed, with a man left alone on point 11 in black's outer table. A single man resting upon a point is called a “blot.’' If an opponent makes the proper throw he may, if he wishes, play a man to this point. The blot then must be removed from the point and placed upon the bar. This is called “hitting” in blot. The man thus hit must be re-en-tered in the opponent’s home table, in accordance with the numbers thrown on the dice, before any other man can be moved by that player. If his throw does not permit the player to enter his man on account of blocked points he loses his throw. This continues unti ! the man is finally entered. When entering, a man can be placed only on a point which exactly corresponds to the number thrown. For this purpose the points are numbered on each side of the board from one to twelve, starting on the outside edge of the players’ inner tables and going straight across the board to the outside edge of the players’ outer tables. This is shown clearly in today’s illustration. u a a IF the points corresponding to both numbers thrown are vacant, the player may enter on either playing any man he chooses for the other number. If tlie opponent has a blot in his inner table, the player may enter and hit the blot at the same time provided he makes the necessary throw to do so. It can be seen easily that care
ESTABLISHED 1879
must be exercised In leaving blots which can be hit by the opponent. Resuming the play where we left off yesterday: It is now white's turn and he throws his two dice from his dice box into the right hand 1 table. The dice must be left face up on
€—WHITE MOVES THIS WAY. BLACK MOVES THIS WAY-* Black's Outer Black's Inner Table Table M 1* 5432 l it 111098 7 32 I White’s Outer - White’s Inner Table Table *—BLACK MOVES THIS WAY. WHITE MOVES THIS WAY k
the board until the play is completed. White throws a Tour and six. He has a choice of two moves He can play a man from point 8 in his own outer table to point 2 in his inner table, and can cover this blot by playing his four with a man from point 6 in his own inner table. This blocks point 2. He can, however, play one man from point 1 in black’s inner table first, the six to point 7 and then the four to point 11 in black's outer table, thus hitting black's blot at this point. a a a HE decides to make this move and removes the blot from point 11, placing it on the bar. Black is now obliged to enter this
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
man in white's inner table before making another move. Black now throws double sixes. As white has point 6 in his inner table blocked, black can not enter and loses his throw. White throws in turn a one and three. He can play his one from point 11 to point 12 in black’s outer table. This takes his blot to safety, but white still has a three to play, which forces him to leave a blot on some other point. He decides instead to play his one from point 6 to point 5 in his inner table and covers it with a man from point .8 in his own outer table. This blocks point 5 and leaves one less point on which black can enter the man on the bar in his next throw. White therefore makes this play. a a a WHEN the two numbers on the dice thrown exactly correspond, as two ones, two twos, two threes, etc., they are called doublets. When doublets are thrown, double the number of moves are made. All four of these moves may be made by the same man, or by four different men, or in any combination the player wishes, provided none of the moves bring a man to a blocked point. If it is impossible to play all or any of the numbers thrown because of blocked points, the player loses that part of the move which he can not make. Next: We will deal with the problem of bearing the men from the board, which is the final climax of the game. Fall in Barn Fatal KENDALLVILLE, Ind., Sept. 26. —A fall from the second floor of the barn at his home caused the death of August Rendel, 62. Rendel had gone to the loft of the barn to remove a kettle. He lost his balance and fell backwards from the top of a twenty-foot ladder. His head struck a w’heelbarrow and his neck was broken. He was active in northern Indiana Masonic circles.
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HE HEADS OFF IN NEBRASKA,’ IS GHAROEOF NYE Perjury Charges Will Be Faced, Senator Asserts; Adjourns Hearing. Bn United Press LINCOLN. Neb, Sept. 26.—Witnesses who testified in the Nye in--1 vestigalion of the tangled Nebraska senatorial primary election faced ; today the possibility of being ! charged with perjury. Senator Gerald P. Nye, investigat- | ing committee chairman, abruptly ! adjourned the hearing Thursday | declaring that he was “sick and ! tired” of hearing witnesses tell I conflicting stories. I He intimated perjury charges j would be filed against several who i testified concerning the short-lived | senatorial campaign of George W. ■ Norris, Broken Bow grocer. Charles | Sandall, United States district at- ! torney, said next week he will begin an investigation of testimony to determine if and against whom such charges should be filed. Adjournment came after the committee had tried for a week to discover who backed Grocer Norris in his attempted campaign against the veteran incumbent, Senator George W. Norris. “Asa result of this hearing,” Senator Nye said, “there is going to be a demonstration that this committee is no longer to be played with. Some of the witnesses lied their heads off.” Ethiopia or Abyssinia is the only I independent nation on the continent of Africa.
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23 INDICTED WILL BE ARRAIGNED ON OCT. 6 Eight Suspects Freed by Grand Jury; 21 True Bills Voted. Arraignment of twenty-three per- | sons named in twenty-one indict- ! mer.ts returned Thursday in criminal court by the county grand jury |is scheduled for Oct. 6. The grand i jury discharged eight suspects. Bills named ten defendants on ! burglary charges, three for robbery, | four for forgery, four for larceny | and two for issuing fraudulent I checks.
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‘BAD BOY' TO BE GLAND-TREATED School Terrorizer Put in Physician's Hands. Bu United Press EDGEWATER, N. J, Sept. 26 The local board of education has authorized Dr. James Buckley, school physician to cure Edgwater's alleged "bad boy.” Harold Arnold. 12. Harold at various times has
threatened hi* teicher with violence, nibbed poison kv on classmates' faces and threatened to stab others, it is claimed The school board passed a resolution authorising Dr. Buckley to make Harold normal by means of treatment of the pituitary gland The board will pay for the treatments. to extend over a period of six months. Panama Recognizes Argentina Bu United Press PANAMA, Sept. 26.—The government of Panama formally has recognized the new government of Argentina under General Jose Uriburu, provisional president.
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