Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 45, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 July 1932 — Page 14

PAGE 14

CONTMCT BRIDGE at the EXPERTS PLAY IT BY W. E. M’KENNEY Scrrctarr American Brldre Uacnf A N important point in the play of the hand is “Watch your entries.” Conserve entries In either hand, so that if one plan of play fails, you will be in position to try another. For example, Jn the following hand, if the declarer were not careful in watching his entries, he would not be able to execute the coup play necessary to pick up East’s ten spot.

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The Ridding What to bid with South’s hand often presents a problem to the beginner. Shall he pre-empt when holding a long suit and no defensive strength? Generally that is a good play, but when you pre-empt you should make It high enough in order to shut out your opponents, and when your long suit is a minor, sometimes a four-bid will not obtain the desired result. Then again pre-emptive bids should be used sparingly—sometimes the only one who is confronted with a problem is the partner. Suppose that South starts with a bid of four clubs. North, with his four quick tricks, can not be asked to pass, especially with a singleton club. He knows that South undoubtedly is afraid of both majors. The most descriptive bid with North’s hand would be a response of four no trump, showing all of the other suits well protected. South would bid five clubs, announcing that he was afraid to play the hand at no trump and that the clubs were solid. Os course North is a little afraid j of the heart suit, but he is justified in going to six clubs. The Play West opens a spade. The dummy would win with the ace and then lead a club, and naturally the finesse should not be taken. West would show out, discarding a spade. South then should cash his ace and king of clubs, discarding a spade and a heart from dummy. Now he must try for a coup play on East, so his next play should be the five of hearts, going right up with the king in dum- \ my. East would win with the ace and ; his best return is a spade, which North would win wdth the king. Now a heart is returned and trumped by South. His next play is a diamond, which is won in dummy with the jack. South must be careful not to lead his king of diamonds, as he needs that to get into dummy. Another heart, and again South trumps. The nine of diamonds is won in dummy with the queen. Declarer cashes his ace of diamonds from dummy and then plays either the spade or a heart, which East is forced to ruff. South can overtrump and then win the last trick. Os course, a slam can be made at no trump if West would open a spade. . A heart opening, however, would hold the contract to four odd at no trump. 78 BUFFALO HIDES SENT TO U. S. PARKS Skins Also Shipped to National Bureau at Capital. By United Press GREAT PALLS, Mont., July 2 Hides of seventy-eight buffaloes tanned here recently have been shipped to fourteen national parks and the national park service at Washington. The hides, the first tanned here in many years were taken from buffalo in the Yellowstone park herd. The hides were distributed as follows: Rocky Mountain national park. 4; Glacier park. 2; Grand Canyon park, 4; Colonial monument, 4; Zion and Bruce park. 1; Hot Springs park, 2; Wind Cave park, 2; Acadia park, 4: Grand Tenton park. 4; Lessenvolcanic park, 1; Mt. McKinley park; 6; Hawaiian park, 1. and Yellowstone park, 27. The rest of the hides were shipped to Washington.

When You Travel Rates are lower for travel than for many years. Hotels, steamship companies, railroads, resort places, are making all kinds of inducements to lure the prospective traveler and vacationists. Are you thinking of YOUR vacation? Our Washington Bureau has anew bulletin on THE ETIQUETTE OF TRAVEL, that will prove very helpful to the intending vacationist. Hints and suggestions of all kind as to the proper thing to do on train, steamship, at the hotel, how to secure information of al kinds, suggestions for dress in travel; registering and leaving a hotel, tips, baggage, tickets, reservations, travel and motoring abroad—all the things you need to know to make your trip easy and comfortable. Fill out the coupon below and send for this bulletin: CLIP COUPON HER.": Dept. 181. Washington Bureau, The Indianapolis Times, 1322 New York Avenue, Washington, D. C. I want a copy of the bulletin ETIQUETTE FOR TRAVELERS, and inclose herewith 5 cents in coin, or loose, uncancelled United States postage stamps to cover return postage and handling costs: Name Stem and No Cf % State 1 mb a reader of The Indianapolis Times (Code No.)

JAPANESE SNUB LEAGUE GROUP IN MANCHURIA Treatment of Commission Borders on Insulting in New State. BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Scrlppu-Howard Foreign Editor WASHINGTON, July 2.—The rebuff given the League of Nations’ commission of inquiry in Manchuria bordered dangerously on insult, a report from a Mukden observer received by the writer revealed today. Manchukuo officials openly made the amazing Insinuation that the commission, charged with getting at the bottom of the Chinese-Japanese war, was siding with the “rebels” and encouraging revolt against the Japanese-inspired • state. The situation already had been given a decidedly unpleasant turn before the commission arrived, thanks to Manchukuo’s stupid but determined opposition to Dr. Wellington Koo, China’s assessor, accompanying the party. But when Earl Lytton, head of the mission, asked to be allowed to talk with General Ma Chan-Shan, leader of a pro-Chinese faction, a storm broke about his head. Ma Interview Banned Earl Lytton, representing Britain; General Frank McCoy, American member; General Claudel of France, Count Aldrovani of Italy and Dr. Schnee, Germany’s delegate, were given to understand they were not to try to see or get in touch with Ma in any way, shape or form, not even through a third party. “It should be plain to any rational mind,” Foreign Minister Hsieh Chieh-shih of the Manchu state, publicily stated, “that a meeting with Ma would encourage rebels and abet tieason.” He strongly intimated that the commission’s stand “cast ridicule on Manchukuo, ignored its existence, and could not be complied with under any circumstances.” Some members of the commission, he went on to suggest, appeared determined to remain in Harbin until they saw Ma, whether it affected the stand of the “rebels” or not. If that was so, he warned, with something that almost sounded like a threat, “the Manchukuo government would be compelled to consider some course of action to meet the occasion.” Wild Rumors Spread Harbin is notoriously the wildest rumor center in all Asia, if not in the world. And while the commission was there, the city simply outdid itself. It was rumored that the commission intended to meet Ma at a small place north of Harbin, and that Ma palnned to seize upon the occasion to rally wavering troops to his sideAnother report was that Ma planned a big battle in the very presence of the commission, to convice it that the country was not united behind the Japanese-con-trolled regime. Dr. Wellington Koo, the rumormongers said, was behind these “plots.” Accordingly, his every move was watched, day and night. Spies reported even on alleged conversations they said took place in his rooms at the hotel. Taken in Good Humor While seriously handicapped by the attitude of the authorities, Earl Lytton and his party accepted the hamstringing with patience and good humor. Before they left, however, it became necessary to issue a formal statement to clear the air of misunderstandings. “We came,” the statement said in effect, “at the behest of the League of Nations, to investigate the true I state of affairs in this country. To 1 do so, we naturally felt we should j talk with all sides, General Ma j among others. “In view of the position taken by 1 the Manchukuo authorities, however, we will not press the matter. We had expected some difficulty in carrying out our wishes at Harbin, but we certainly never looked for our intentions to be misunderstood." The commission arrived in Tokio the first of July for a second visit, coming from Pieping. It expects to begin drafting the long-awaited report to the league in August. FAMILY RULES CHURCH ; Three Brothers Are Priests; All Attached to One Parish. I By United Press ERIE, Pa., July 2.—Three brothI ers, priests of the Roman Catholic | church, administer to the spiritual welfare of the congregation of St. Patrick’s church here. The Rt. Rev. Mgr. Peter Cauley, rector of the parish since 1898, is head of the church. He is assisted by his brothers, the Rev. Stephen H. Cauley and the Rev. Charles L. Cauley. A fourth brother, the Rev. Joseph Cauley, was also attached to 1 the parish. He died in 1919. St. Patrick’s was established in 1837 and now has a membership of 1,700 communicants.

Garfield Park Is Pride and Joy of South Siders

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CHURCH URGES JOB INSURANCE Disciples of Christ Board Backs Relief Moves. People must be considered before profits in any Christian social order, and in America unemployment insurance and old age pensions a • among the means recommended to bring this protection to the masses, resolutions adopted by the board of temperance and social welfare of the Disciples of Christ set out. The resolutions were passed at a meeting of the board Friday afternoon at the Columbia Club. Retention of the prohibition laws and active participation of the United States in the League of Nations also was urged. Commentng on the current unemployment, the resolutons continue : “America stands today in a world economic situation in which millions of human beings, through no fault of their own, lack sufficient food and shelter for the maintenance of a minimum standard of physical health and efficiency. “The tragedy of this condition lies in the fact thta it falls most heavily on the childhood of the world. “Undernourished childhood never can hope fully to recover mentally, physically or spiritually from the stunting effects of a long period of undernourishment. Later advantages never can atone fully for the handicaps under which the race of life is begun.” The &ev. E. L. Day, Martinsville, is president of the board. CHILD’S RITES TODAY Girl, 3, Is Kiiled When Hit by Automobile. Funeral services for Betty Brower, 3, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Shielie Brower, 109 North Elder avenue, who was injured fatally Friday when struck by an auto in the 1200 block on West New York street, were to be held at 4 today at the Kirby & Dinn undertaking establishment. Burial will be in Memorial Park cemetery. 1 The tragedy occurred near the | home of a relative of Mrs. Brower, as the mother and three small children were visiting Mrs. Frank Sharp, j 1219 West New York street, mother of an infant son born Thursday night. Betty ran into the front yard to play tag with her small brother Leonard, 5, an ddashed into the path of a car driven by Herbert Adkins, 19, of 1410 North Warman 1 avenue. Adkins was held blameless after an investigation by police and deputy coroners. CIGAR BOXES MAKE MODEL OF CATHEDRAL Mechanical Equipment Is Feature of Three-Foot Tower. By United Press GENEVA', N. Y., July 2.—A threefoot model of a cathedral tower, made of nothing but cigar boxes, has been constructed by Russell R. Isenhour. Five spires surmount the strucj ture, which is complete with ai--1 covets, porticos and entrances. The exterior is arrayed in numerous metallic colors, including gold, bronae, aluminum and purple. One of the most remarkable features of the model is its mechanical equipment. The tower contains an old German clock. In a miniature street in front of the building stands a lamp post, surmounted by a little electric clock. As the clock prepares to strike the hour, a tiny mechanical man emerges from the building. He holds an electric light in his hand. Going into the street, he turns about, glances at the face of the clock, and disappears into the doorway.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Bald Eagle, Emblem of America, Lazy, Thieving

U : 4-: • • •* •*' —Photograph bv Science Service. The bald eagle, unfortunately chosen as America’s emblem, gets his food by preying on those who honestly make their living. He is reproduced here from Audubon’s famous Birds of America, clutching a catfish robbed from some hard-working fish hawk.

Audubon in Agreement With ' Benjamin Franklin in His Disapproval of Bird. P.y Science Service WASHINGTON, July 2.—America’s emblem, the bald or whiteheaded eagle, that has screamed its proud way through five long generations of Independence day orations, was looked upon with vast disapproval by one of the very fathers of the republic, no less a man than Benjamin Franklin himself. Franklin was one of the most scientifically minded and best-in-formed men of his time, and he had more first-hand knowledge of the bald eagle and its ways than did most of his fellow statesmen, who overrode his views and selected the bird as symbolical of American ideals. Franklin’s low opinion of the bald eagle was shared by America's first great student of birds, John James Audubon, born ten years before Franklin died. In his classic work on American birds, magnificently illustrated with his own paintings and published a hundred years ago, Audubon quoted with approval Franklin’s condemnation. And as if to give further point to his opinion and Franklin’s, he painted the bald eagle with its talons clutching not the noble beast of the field which it had overcome, but nothing more thrilling than a huge dead catfish! The quotation made by Audubon from Franklin is introduced as follows: i “In concluding this account of i the whiteheaded eagle, suffer me, kind reader, to say how much I grieve that it should have been sej lected as the emblem of my country. The opinion of our great Franklin j on this subject, as it perfecty coinj cides with my own, I shall here present to you. “ ’For my part,’ he says, In one j of his letters, ‘I wish the bald eagle

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had not been chosen as the representative of our country. He is a bird of bad moral character; he does not get his living honestly; you may have seen him perched on seme dead tree, where, too lazy to fish for himself, he watches the labor of the fishing hawk. “ ‘And when that diligent bird at length has taken a fish, and is bearing it to his nest for the support of his mate and young ones, the bald eagle pursues him and takes it from him. With all this injustice, he never is in good case, but, like those among men who live by sharping and robbing, he is generally poor, and often very lousy.’ ” WREN LIVES IN AUTO Small Bird Builds Nest Between Rear Spring and Axle of Car. By United Press SAN ANTONIO, Tex., July 2.—A small wren, twice deprived of its home by workmen, built its nest between the rear spring and axel of Mrs. Ellen S. Quillin’s automobile. The car has been driven 300 miles since the nest was built, Mrs. Quillin estimates. The bird first built its home in a pile of wood. It was spoiled when workmen used the wood for building a fence. The wren then | settled beneath a house, but was shut out when a brick foundation j was constructed. A bird house, suitable for wrens, has been placed near where Mrs. Quillin parks her car in hopes the bird will move to a permanent home.

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FIREWORKS OFF PARKPROGRAM Money for July 4 Display Going to Charity. Believing money can best be diverted to charity causes, officials of Irvington Post No. 38 of the American Legion, announced today that no fireworks display will be given at the annual July 4 celebration in Ellenberger park. Hundreds of east side families are expected to witness festivities beginning at 3 in the afternoon with a band concert and an address by Frederick E. Schortemeier, former secretary of state. A flag ceremony will be presented by Boy Scouts of troops 3, 9 and 10. In announcing the post’s plan to eliminate fireworks, Commander Frank R. Lutz said: “In the past the post has given the public an extensive fireworks display cotsing hundreds of dollars, but it has been decided that the money can be used to better purpose in supplying food and fuel for relief next winter. “It is believed the public will accept this viewpoint, and the post therfore desires the public to know that it has no auhorized representatives soliciting funds as has been the past custom. No collections will be taken in the park.” GIRL GIVEN WARNING Told to Quit Calling on Young Men in Early Morning Hours. By United Pres* NANTUCKET, Mass., July 2. The vigilance committee at Madaket, situated at the west end of this island, inserted the following request in the advertising columns of the Nantucket Inquirer and Mirror: “Notice—Will the young lady driving a convertible sedan, who insists on calling on certain young men (and one in particular) at 6:30 a. m., please refrain from so doing? It is very disturbing.”

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Upper Left—View of the beautiful sunken garden, for which Garfield park is famous. Upper Right—Closeup of the fountain forming the centerpiece of the gardens. Lower Left—The park’s swimming pool is popular with young and old from morning until night. Lower Right—Mrs. Aaron Bloom, 1010 South Meridian street, and members of her family, one of many family groups enjoying the park’s picnic facilities. Pride of the south side is Garfield park, one of the most beautiful and most widely-patronized parks in the city. Its recreational facilities are enjoyed daily by thousands of youthful and adult south siders. One of the park’s most popular centers is the splendid pool, which is crowded all day long by children and grownups seeking surcease from the summer heat. Hundreds of persons attend meetings each week in the magnificent community house. Tennis courts, playground equipment, winding drives, picnic grounds, many acres of noble shade trees and the beautiful sunken garden are among other attractive features of the park. QUEEN FINE~HOUSEWIFE Mary Is Called Wise Shopper and a Careful Spender. By United Press LONDON, July 2.—Recognition is a model housewife. She is a wise shopper and a careful spender, and, best of all, she never makes mistakes in her accounts. The authority for these compliments is not King George, but Sir Edward Wallington who, at 78, has just retired as treasurer to the queen after thirteen years of office. “I have paid all the queen's private bill since my appointment,” Sir Edward told an interviewer, “and I have been on hundreds of shopping expeditions with her. I have always been amazed by her grasp of current prices and the discrimination she showed in buying the right article. I never found a flaw in her bills.”

JULY 2, 1932

ROAD OILING \ WONT HINDER 4THTRAFFIC Highway Conditions Are Reported Favorable in Bulletin. Surface condition of many miles of unpaved roads, oiled during the last few days, will not inconvenience July 4 traffic, according to the weekly bulletin of the state highway department which lists road, conditions as follows: Road 9—Prom Fountaintown to Greenfield. completed July 2; detour is flvg miles. Road 26—Prom Road 31 to four miles east of Road 13. completed July 15; detour is twenty-one miles. Prom Road J to Junction Road 67. completed detour Is twenty and one-half miles. Road 44—From Franklin to completed July 20; detour is seventeen and one-half miles. From Connersville to Union-Fayette county line; completed July 5: detour is twelve miles. Road 59—Prom Brazil to Clav-Park* county line; open July 2; detour is six miles Length and surface conditions ut detours account of paving and bridge construction, are listed in the bulletin as follows: Road 15—Detour from one and one-half miles south of Warsaw to west citv limits a of North Manchester. Is sixteen miles, two | miles concrete, remainder good gravel. Road 18—Detour from Junction of Roads 3 5 and 18 to one mile north of Marlon account paving, is seventeen miles, good gravel and stone. Road 21—Detour froth Richmond to Muncie account paving, is thirtv-flve miles good gravel. Road 28 —Detour from four miles serf of Road 9 to 6 miles west account grad-” mg. is two miles, good gravel. U. S. Road 30—Detour from two miles northwest of Ft. Wavne account paving 2.5 miles, good gravel. Road 32—Detour at two miles west nt Anderson account paving, is thirteen miles over fair gravel. U. S. Road 36—Detour from one-half mile east of Montezuma to Rockville, account paving, is 9.5 miles, fair gravel, narrow bridges, four miles winding road. Detour from Bainbridge to junction Road 43 account paving, is seven miles over fair gravel. Road 43—Detour at south edge of Westville account construction is 6.5 miles one ile stone surfacej. remainder dustless type Detour at north city limits of Greencastle account paving, is one-half mile. Road 44—Detour from Glenwood to Connersville account paving is sixteen miles 2.5 miles concrete and 13.5 miles good gravel. * Road 47—Detour from Crawfordsville to one mile west of Montgomery-Parke county line is twenty-four miles, mostly over state Roads 43 and 234. GAS TAX RECEIPTS OFF Decrease for Fiscal Year Is Put at $263,362.42. Slump in gas tax receipts to the lowest level since the 4-cent state tax went into effect in 1929, was reported for the fiscal year today by Joseph M. Tracy Sr., gas tax 1 collector. Decrease for the fiscal year ending in June was $262,362.42, with a gallonage consumption drop of 6,595,662, Tracy said in his report to Floyd Williamson, state auditor.' Total receipts for the year were $1,467,467.61, as compared to receipts in 1931, the peak year, of $1,729,830. Tracy reported at the same time that refunds to farmers were increased by 140, with the year’s total being $125,525.94. Total collection in 1929, first year of the tax, was $1,511,187, with receipts reported at $1,638,640. % Natives of Tristan da Cunah, a tiny island in the South Atlantic, never have owned toothbrushes, but 84 per cent of them have perfect teeth.

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