Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 145, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 October 1932 — Page 5

OCT. 27, 1032

R.F.C, NEEDY LOAN APPROVED BY GOVERNOR Leslie Will Name Group to > Supervise Spending in St. Joseph County. Committees appointed by Governor Harry G. Leslie will supervise spending o 4 funds Indiana counties obtain from the federal Reconstruction Finance Corporation lor poor relief, it was revealed today after he approved the first loan application, that of St. Joseph county, for $250,000. Leslie approved the application which was presented by a delegation of South Bend citizens, only after they agreed that a committee of his choosing should supervise expenditure of any funds obtained. Reverses His Opinion He reversed his opinion that no county's loan application would be approved unless it had reached the limit in issuing bonds. It was explained in the St. Joseph county case that although its limit is $4,500,000, with only $1,500,000 outstanding bonds, that its issues for poor relief can not be marketed.

The state, however, does not repay the loan. The St. Joseph county taxpayers do that, although Leslie has named the committee to distribute it. n Under the Indiana statutes, poor relief funds are to be handled by the township trustees. Leslie asserts this does not apply when the money comes from the federal government. The South Bend delegation scored the federal government for surrounding the funds with “so much red tape that they practically are Impossible to obtain." Make It Test Case Leslie sided with the citizens against Rowland Haynes, Hoover representative at the meeting. “We will make this a test case and see if we can get the money," •Leslie declared. Dr. John H. Hewitt, Leslie'* unemployment relief director, went to Washington, D. C., with the committee to see if the funds can be procured. Papers were duly signed by the Governor, as the federal law provides.

MRS. PHENE LEE DEAD; LIVED HERE 25 YEARS Funeral Services for Aged Widow to Be Held Friday at Home. % Funeral services for Mrs. Phene *Lee ( 75, a resident of Indiana all her life, will be held at 2 Friday in the home, 4042 Park avenue. Mrs. Lee died Wednesday after an illness of a month. She was born in Newberry, and came to Indianapolis thirty-five years ago. She was a member of Broadway M. E. church thirty-three years. She was the widow of George P. Lee. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. HOSPITAL WORK GAINS Increase of 190 Patients Is Reported by I. U. Department. „ Increase of 190 in number of patients treated during September by Indiana university hospitals over the same period last year, was announced today. Os the month's total of 2,301 patients, 1,502 were out-patients and 799 were bed patients. James Whitcomb Riley hospital served 1,163 children. Coleman hospital for women served 509 patients.

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CONTMCT BRIDGE Thi* It the ixth of a eerie* of article*' by William E. McKenney explaining tha one over one cyitem for contract bridfa. BY W. E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridxe Lean* CONTRARY to the general practice used at auction bridge, third or fourth hand, under the one over one system in contract, may open on much less strength than is required for either first or second hand. The third or fourth hand bidder is confronted with an entirely different situation from that of the first or second hand bidder. Partner has passed and he may have passed a very good hand, bus one that could not meet the heavy requirements to make a first or sec ond hand bid. Therefore, third or fourth hand should make what is known as a protective or defensive bid. Requirements for an original suit bid for one, third or fourth hand, are 2 to 24 high card tricks and a biddable suit, and it is not necessary to have a rebid. All that the third or fourth hand bidder is attempting to do is protect partner’s hand and to work for a partal score. Reviewing original suit bids of one, we find that the requirements for first and second hand bids are very strong, while third and fourth hand may open with an apparently weak hand.

The aucton player taking up contract frequently will make the mistake of opening the bidding with what he believes to be a fair hand, Instead of adhering strictly to the requirements as outlined in this system. It will be found after playing contract a few times that no trouble will be experienced in passing fairly strong first and second hands while being prepared to enter the bidding on the second round, and bidding rather weak third and fourth hands either for protective bids or for defensive purposes. nun IN the one over one system, only hands of exceptional strength are opened with anything more than an original bid of one. Therefore, it naturally follows that, due to the strong requirements especially for first and second hand bids, partner may keep the bidding open holding very little strength. Partner should give the orignal bidder what we term a chance by replying to a suit bid of one with a bid of at least one no trump holding as little as two queens or a king and a jack.

It is true that there are types of hands that may be passed, but these are in the minority and at the start it is far better to keep all original first or second hand bids open with one no trump with as little as two queens. Third or fourth hand vulnerable bids may be passed unless partner's hand contains a king and a queen, when a bid of one, no trump should be made. In the one over one system, the original bidder may have opened the bidding with a very strong hand. The next hand passing shows a certain amount of weakness; and while there are a few hands where partner may get into trouble by keeping the bidding open with one no trump, they are in the minority and more is to be gained by giving partner another opportunity to bid. Next we will take up the proper responses to original suit bids of one.

(Coovright. 1932. NFA Service. (Inc.) ' Students Pick Difficult Plays By Times Special GREENCASTLE, Ind., Oct. 27. Duzer Du, De Pauw university's dramatic society, has chosen three difficult plays for its annual drama season: George Bernard Shaw’s “Candida” will be given Nov. 18 and 19; Karel Kapek's “R. U. R.” will be presented Feb. 24 and 25, and Martinez Sierra’s “Cradle Song” is scheduled for March 31 and April 1.

CENTENNIAL OF WABASH WILL BE CELEBRATED Three-Day Program to Honor Founders of College; Notables to Speak. By Tim ft Special CRAWFORDSVILLE. Ind., Oct. 27.—With addresses fcy presidents of Miami, Yale, Dartmouth and Union Theological seminary, a symphony concert, a football game between the Little Giants and Mami university, and a reunion of all former students, Wabash college will celebrate the one hundredth anniversary of its founding Oct. 29, 30 and 31. Beginning Saturday with a meeting of the board of trustees, the first day’s celebration will include a noon luncheon for returning alumni; the gridiron battle with Miami, alma mater of two Wabash founders; an informal reception by trustees, administration and faculty for all former students; and a play, a revival of a nineteenth centry melodrama, given by the Scarlet Masque, student dramatic organization.

Concert on Program President Henry Sloane Coffin of Union Theological seminary will deliver the centennial sermon Sunday morning. A concert by the/Cincinnati Little Symphony orchestra, assisted by the Wabash college orchestra and directed by Reuben Lawson, will be given Sunday evening. In the chapel building a memorial to pioneers of Indiana, the history of Wabash will pass in review during the academic assembly on Monday morning. How nine Prebyterian missionaries and elders dreamed of a small liberal arts college, how they knelt in the snow-covered wilderness near the ten-year-old village of Orawfordsville to consecrate its founding, the battles of the college through a century to maintain the high cultural, liberal arts and noncoeducational ideals of the foundeers—all this will be retold.

Hopkins to Give Welcome President Louis B. Hopkins of Wabash will deliver his address of welcome, and President Ernest Martin Hopkins of Dartmouth and President*.Alfred H. Upham of Miami will deliver greetings of their colleges. Dr. James Rowland Angell, president of Yale university, the institution of the first president of Wabash, will give the centennial address. More than a thousand former Wabash students are expected to return for the centennial celebration. They will come from all sections of the country—from New York, Detroit and Philadelphia, from Los Angeles, from Honolulu, where Frank Crawford, class of 1893, boarded a liner centenhial bound more thar* a week ago, and from Chicago, where Wabash men plan ’an automobile caravan to Crawfordsville.

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. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

TWEE GUECTS pant. AND SIZE OF TEE US. ARMY A LEAGUE THIS SHOULDER. BASEBALL ? STRAP INDICATE ?

(Answer* on Comic Page) POOR RELIEF CHARGE IS BRANDED CANARD Galloway Declares He Has Lost Instead of Profited. Assailing Republican campaign statements that he is profiting by selling groceries on Center township poor relief orders, Fred S. Galloway, Democratic nominee for state representative, declared Wednesday that instead of a profit, he had suffered a loss of $245.96 on the transaction. Submitting records of the county auditor’s office and invoices, Galloway said that from June 1 to Oct. 15 this year he had filled a total of $2,221.78 in poor relief orders, while invoices show he owes $2,467.74 for the goods delivered on orders. “If I wanted to make money dishonestly,” Galloway declared, “I could have made it when offers were floating around halls of the state legislature last year.” Foundry Head Is Dead By United Brest FT. WAYNE, Ind., Oct. 27.—Artemus W. Pickard, 63, prominent Ft. Wayne business man and vicepresident of the Bass Foundry and Machine Company, died her today, after a prolonged illness.

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HOOVER REVOLT MENAGE, SAYS CANADAEDITDR Vote for Roosevelt as Liberal Protest Seen as U. S. Salvation. By Serippn-TJoward XeKipaper Alliance VANCOUVER, B. C.. Oct. 27. President Herbert Hoover is “leading the American public directly towards revolution,”' says the Vancouver Sun, in an editorial arguing that in self-defense capital should support the candidacy of Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt. The Canadian newspaper suggests that the United States well could emulate England by a liberal protest at the polls, such as “have saved England from revolution, not once, but many times.” “Will the liberalism of the American people, finding articulation through popular Indorsement of Franklin Roosevelt, save United States from a situation which if permitted to continue could only be righted by revolution?” it asks. “Just as in every other section of the world, the American masses seem determined to tolerate no longer the big manipulators of money. But will they vote to make their desire effective? “Insullism and Kreugerism, pyramiding synthetic* wealth upon fictitious values, are recognized today

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