Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 138, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 October 1932 — Page 19
orr. 19, 1932.
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This is a welcome and an invitation. It is a welcome to Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt of New York to the city of Indianapolis and the state of Indiana. ••••■'■ V \ • 1 *■ I , * It is an invitation to every patriotic, thoughtful, earnest citizen to listen to the message which he brings. ' * # ' • This is more than a campaign. It is a crusade against the control of government by selfish forces, which has resulted in vast misery to our people, misfortune to industry, unjust burdens upon business and the downfall of agriculture. The same influences have dominated the executive and bureaus of our state government. They threaten the county government. The war is raging, in every sector of our common life. * We, who present this welcome and invitation, 'believe that the election of Franklin D. Roosevelt to the presidency of the United States will mean an end to the pillage and plunder of the private citizen for the benefit of the privileged few. We believe that his election means the hastening of prosperity for the worker, more security for the home, more happiness, better conditions upon the farm. We believe that it will light the fires in factories and again open the marts of trade.
We believe that it is just as essential to bring back the principles, policies and administrative intelligence that ruled under Thomas Riley Marshall and Samuel Moffatt Ralston. We believe that the real voice of Indiana should be spoken by Frederick Van Nuys in the senate instead of being misrepresented by James E. Watson. • \ We ask you to join us on Thursday in a welcome to the leader of these causes of righteousness. Join with us in our welcome, to the man who comes with a message of hope, with courage to lead, with a program that means prosperity for the masses.
HIS WELCOME TO GOVERNOR ROOSEVELT
John Walsman Wilfred Bradshaw L. D. Buenting Eugene B. Crowe M. E. Foley, Frank Mayr Jr. M. M. Mahoney Glen Griswold' John F. White Bates & Bates Albert Losche C. R. Meyers Henry J. Richardson Clyde H. Jones William Mooney Evans Woollen E. Kirk McKinney
Louis P. Adams Allan W. Boyd William F. Pudine William H. Flanders A. H. Gisler Dr. Wm. H. Larrabee Michael Fansler Forest W. Littlejohn Oscar G. Hagemeir Phillip Lutz Jr. Luther Shirley Mrs. Frank T. Dowd Mrs. John R. Wilson Miss Harriet Day Miss Julia E. Landers Mrs. Carl E. Wood Benjamin C. Reed
paid political Advertisement
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Mrs. George Werbe Mrs. John Kern Miss Bess Robbins Young Women’s Democratic Club, Inc. Joseph P. McNamara Henry 0. Goett Fred S. Galloway Floyd E. Williamson George Durgan W. E. Clauer John E. Spiegel E. H. Stewart Leo X. Smith Miss Hanna B. Noone Louis C. Brandt .H. F. Backemeyer
PROGRAM for GOVERNOR ROOSEVELT 11 A. M. Arrive in Indianapolis. A 11:15 A. M. Escort through streets. West on Washington to Capitol, north on Capitol to Ohio, east on Ohio to Meridian. 12:15 Speech by Governor Roosevelt from balcony of English hotel.
CONTRACT
BY W. E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League THE problem ot converting lose ing tricks into winners is one of never-ending fascination. Probably the greatest thrill of the bridge table is experienced by the declarer when he succeeds in making a seemingly impossible contract against the best defense the opponents can offer.
♦ A-8-4-3 ¥ A-J-9-2 ♦ 6-3 *Q-8-2 410 ‘ 9 ‘ 5 fiSos™l* J ' 7 - 6 - ¥B-5-4 NORTH 2 ♦ K-8-7 J- ¥ None ♦A-J-7- 2 w ♦J-10-5 £ 9-5-2. IR-nk-r *lO-9- ! | SOUTH 6-4 *K-Q ¥K-Q-10-7-6-3 ♦ A-Q-4 *K-3 130
The Bidding South opened with a bid of one heart. West passed and North overcalled with one spade, a very fine bid. North realized that the hand would be played at hearts eventually, but he knew that South could not pass bis one over one forcing bid, and South’s response might give valuable information. This proved to be the case, for South responded with three hearts, showing not only a very good heart suit, but a hand of general strength. North now bid five hearts, because he had much better than normal heart support, together with some strength on the side. South accepted the slam invitation by bidding six hearts. That closed the contracting. The Play West had a difficult opening, but finally decided on the ten of spades. The South hand in this case was played by Leonard S. Ames, and on first analysis he decided that the fate of his contract depended on the diamond finesse. However, a good declarer will not try a finesse until all other possibilities have been exhausted. Ames saw that be surely had a losing club trick, and also a losing diamond if the king lay on the wrong side. He did not know, as we do, that the finesse would fail, but he decided to avoid that possibility if he could. After taking the first spade trick in his own hand, he led three rounds of hearts and the king of spades. He then led a small club from his own hand, and, whether: West went up with the ace or not, the contract was assured. In actual play, he did not, and when dummy’s queen held the trick, Ames immeditely led the ace of spades and discarded the king of clubs from his own hand. He then led a diamond and finessed the queen. The finesse lost to West’s king, but that was the last trick his side could take, for Ames ruffed his four of diamonds with dummy’s last trump. * If West went up with the ace of clubs when that suit was first led, he no doubt would return a spade. Anjes would win a dummy with the ace and discard a small diamond from his own hand. He then would lead a small club to the king, enter dummy by leading a low trump, and discard the queen of diamonds on the established queen of clubs. One of the two losing tricks seemingly had vanished into thin air and Ames made his six heart contract without taking the diamond finesse. (Coovright. 1932. NF.A Service, (Inc.)
Stubborn Coughs Ended by Recipe, Mixed at Home Savaas2. No Cooking! So Easy!
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PAGE 19
FISH POISONING IS CHARGED TO CANNING FIRM ‘Dumping’ Ruins River for Anglers, Allegation of Vallonia Man. Battle over alleged pollution of the Muscatatuck river by ■‘dumping’* from the Morgan Canning Company at Austin, operated by Ivan Morgan. state Republican chairman, was renewed today in charges made to The Times by Arthur M. Beers R. R. 1, Vallonia. Ind. Beers, a hunter and fisherman who says he has lived near the banks of the river for thirteen years, declares emphatically that the canning concern has ruined one of the state’s best streams, once one of the best in the state for fishing. The Muscatatuck is a slow, sluggish stream, from ten to forty feet deep, and full of drift and snags” says Beers. “Each year the fish grow smaller, and if the canning company keeps tft> its practice the ri\er will be barren in five years. Dipped Up Boad Load “The farmers call this polutlon ‘black water.’ At dumping time for the canning company, fish can be gathered by the hundred pounds just ahead of the black water. I myself have dipped out a boatload H nds of fish at this n,oc bOUt *u WO weeks ago - thp river was on the rise and the big fish w?th K ng t 0 get out on thp bank with their noses out of the stream to get away from the black water div 00 **?® th?V died ’ and for three S &2T bants w 1 * ived id a tent on a farm near Weston and I could hardly stay for the stench. Muskrats were plentiful until the black water started every season, but they also are leaving the stream. Charges Huge Slaughter “While I live by hunting and fishing and haye been in trouble with the state game department,” Beers asserted, “the Morgan Packing company has killed more fish than I and fifty others could catch illegally if we lived to be a hundred. “I can prove that tons of fish have been killed in past years. If the sportsman must pay $1 for license, why let 400,000 fisherman be ruled by one politician, who cares only for himself?” Beers, i n concluding his charge and plea, declares: “Surely Morgan is no bigger than Kingan & Cos., and other large corporations. Let any one who can come down here and I will prove this to them, as we are due for another dump in the water, as tomato season is about to close. “Then Morgan can laugh and think of the bread and butter he has taken from the mouths of fishermen and trappers below his plant.” CO-OPERATIVES GAIN DURING DEPRESSION Farm-Owned Organizations More Numerous Now Than Formerly. Depite the depression, farmowned and controlled co-operative marketing and purchasing organizations are more numerous now than in the last four years and their volume of business has increased steadily, according to James R. Moore, official of the Indiana Farm Bureau, Inc. “Although numerous individually conducted enterprises of similar nature haVe been forced to close since the start of the depression, there have been no failures in farmers’ o-operative enterprises,” Moore declared. Volume of business of all organizations exceeds $52,000,000 annually, he said. “Requirements of high classes of consumers are being met under the co-operative plan, which through educational programs stresses standardization and quality as first requirements, Moore stated. CHOLERA TAKES VAST LIFE TOLL IN CHINA More Than 100,000 Cases Fatal During Last Summer. Hy United Press PEIPING, China, Oct. 19.—Cholera took a terrific toll in China last summer, according to the bureau of public health. Dr. J. Heng Liu, the director of the bureau, is authority for the statement that, while official reports from various provinces give notification of 50,000 cholera cases, the correct figure may be accepted as having passed the 100,000 mark. Dr. Liu believes that during the summer more than 30,000 persons died of cholera.
