Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 156, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 November 1932 — Page 9

KOV. 9, 1932

ij ■—Bi lG B B~ m **' M From 8:30 to 10 A. and Frldoj ll A. Thurv anil § _-bB a 1 zz:rmm I p tfc G SOAP I LIFEBUOY and LUX I 4 -4 A 1 4 b /o r r s l6‘ n —JB ~-~" ' ;JPW BSB 111 nil? ft fiIMST L&dX H ’*■' jw v '" > SK ■ WWi "■■ ■■ l "'"jSbß From II A. M to 12 Noon Thorn, and Friday From 12 Noon to IP. M. Thur. and Friday —= ~---pfl ■■ HOPE MUSLIN ■ SINGLE BLANKETS R Bleached, •!6 inches Double bed size, as- 4NJB \ ■ ■ wide, from full H sorted | pr iRHBR \l I holts I i,y fleeced - each -- £t§Sr jgjF || ■ • H BE ( Limit ( Second Floor) HtL R 2 mmmmg R2A■ K tUL ]m* IS VaV MAA VVMM 31 From 2to Sl\iLThurdn]^aiu^KrldHy unaVn-nVVAIfUKU, ILLINOIS B I I GALVANIZED PAILS I Octagon Soap Powder it SOcon the Dollar* =~B 14 ™ s s 'BH B (Limit) (Second Floor) BI (Limit) (Second Floor) to' l7 * our ou;n Tremendous Stocks at Unheard of Low Price for This 1 MMWBBBWBBBWy BBMBMMWr M aß|k a SS BP Ofß MSMSM AKm A a,. H B trom s *° 4 p - M Thursday and Friday M From 4 > s ’ M. Thursday and Friday | ■& g| |pV ts Jjfc If I&J* II TOILET PAPEP 1 SEWING thread Si " • Mm ML ISBM A Bs*a | | Japanese, superfine cB I Black or white, full fl[| ■ ■ crepe (Limit). Per ■ Q ■ size sdool. (Limit) If £ | sday Morning Promptly at 8:30 Sharp f mmmnmmmn' tttt m .. _ * 1 UNION SUITS I PO * K BEANS 6 B 10-Oi.CAXSUP-Cholce B BI Notions ' La es Y ■ Winter weight B suits, long: sleeves, |BJB llv Jelly fH ■ R 9 Grape lellv t% I—>lnr1 —>lnr Peroxide Cream n 1 S^gi!K3 idV&'„ .w ITt ■’ *" B fTTT Tl*®* AO c fl J'' Bi BI ">*■*- I I ■•" " r ‘ 4F M „S„ T y ::::* rtW “ B ,^;;' f B fll i.., d^>.i,M M, (Main Floor) second Floor. PICCCS All EOF iBiB choice(Main Floor) Second Floor. A p Boys’ lined Coats I Sale of SB. Waterproof leatherette coats with full pelt sheepskin lining, Sfflfflff 8 OOItS OX V UPIOP SUItS 1 and knifeuffin S ’ wombatine collar I ToUt GOOdS I Values to $1 s N-4>n * tl r* ii r I “Sealpax” and other brands, soiled from Mm BOYS 5 79C —“^"“"BOYS 5 59C I f/e rollowing Items: S handling, broken sizes. While they last yA £ ar . t 'y r °° i swea 8 t c I press IoW aaJ JPV ICc Ji —SHIRTS iSHIRTsj |B • C *J C B Sire*. Hen ■ Fancy I Mmgm Bvtl 0 t J (M' I^^^ UK 2r9 e I PLAN! _ EACH ■ BT" RAT AD 'NBI 111 ■iM lIMIIg—IIUMJIIJU-. wwnrillll— 111 WII WMM—MWm—— -Colgate’s shaving H Ww fife $5 leather HoTSGllidG COATS, $2*951 :S“,,rzr | BLADES Y| T TT W mM Almond Cream. S Tooth I TO FIT NEW OR OLD STYLE $1.95 MOLESKIN PANTS —__ ___ —Kan l)e Quinine. |uwQß B& MMf J l ** Mettzs Corduroy Slacks c m & A I % m *oV*J c Wide waist band, 22-inch bottoms, Crompton's best grade HR eorduroy. While they last-Bankrupw price Jfc j j||| ■ )f ■irninTlT—r- IMIM (Main Floor) | Mens' lsC %A I I" suede Cloth I l| GLOVES 4| C MEN’S '^BB Flaimdette ij -e Soiled lot, only while they last. m| Novelty FootwearP D<, lf^ , slss 0,,, i1 STRAPS - OXFORDS - gUMPS AND TIES . I „ . #,, OSE lftc [ Suede, Black and Brown Kid, Satin, Patent MM MM K JACKETS I] Men’s iSe Heather M price. All sizes, 3toß, in the lot. Low, medium and HOSE Q. W—~ Isl M ns a P*4 v ' A* V A ?xr:~ * goh iiose OXFORDS AND-STRAPS! j IrTup washable%l ""■ f ?• 2< c &cAc I H f®"^ l 1 c b CHARACTER i sac # S ih,r u,t J s.?'-" 1 """ *IR DOLLS '■ ' msmmmmmtmmsmsmmmmmmamsmtmmsmm 8i Bunnies, Kitty-Cats, ciown and others. R IJM c& CA e . SHOES jn |r:.- ,, '->V C A J| C EA " V m patent; sizes 2. 5. s’i and M % ! „ • v 'I | Bl “*' w or hrown rlo,h 0m 0m I RSF fgtl A W ORB IBf While they last 25c JM w I I f * l<> ‘ l,< ‘’ r a.uo ■jM A | Br V JL \JB and ’soc. <■ • >F ' ,I I mafic sue, 3 gv IM| We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■O | I nil—WMiffrj iiimi—Trr nr ~m wm GUARANTEED Hammer Plated Up to 50c I FOOTBALLS C r*M I mm ALARM CLOCKS SILVERWARE Novelty Jewelry I 1 Regulation size, only while they last. MM B Loud alarm. B movement dBK Guaranteed IS Tear, Bead,, ear- Jp^Sk M Mk a. VB . - j Jfcs. dinner MOtM neck- RHX MS p a.'Vn ir -1 Qc lias. CEa * A

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

coNTMer BRIDGE This is the seventeenth and last of a series of articles br William E McKennev eiDlain'.ng the one over one system of bidding in contract bridge. BY W. E. MKENNEY Secretary American Bridge League ALL bids in contract bridge come under the heading of one of the following four general classes: 1. Constructive bids. 2. Forcing bids. 3. Sign-off bids. 4. Defensive bids. A player's skill at contract bidding depends largely upon his ability to classify these bids correctly. Constructive bids show additional strength and always invite partner to continue. As there are so many low forcißg bids and constructive bids in the one over one system, the average beginner may find it difficult at first properly to sign-off his partner, and prevent the bidding from continuing when it looks as though the combined hands will not produce a game or a slam. j nun EXAMPLES of the most common of the sign-off bids are as follows: Original bidder bids one spade, partner one no trump. This bid of one no trump shows a very weak hand and is not classed as a constructive bid—it is definitely a signoff bid. If the original bidder now were to bid two hearts, showing a second suit, partner would have a right to pass.. If partner, however, responded with two spades, he would be simply showing a preference of the original bidder’s two suits and commanding partner to sign off, as he now had given a double sign-off. With strength and a preference for spades, partner's constructive response would have been three spades. Another example: Original bidder opens with one spade, partner bids two clubs—a constructive bid but not forcing. Original bidder now bids two no trump—this is also a constructive bid. If partner now bids three clubs, this is a definite sign-off—it shows the original bidder that the club suit can not be established for no trump play and that the hand can play nothing but clubs. u u u HERE is an example of a sign-off bid at the higher stages when an attempt is being made to reach a slam. Original bidder opens with one heart, partner jumps to four hearts—this isl a mild slam try. Let us say that the original bidder’s hand does not have quite enough strength to go to six hearts, but does have some re-bid strength, and he now bids five diamonds. If partner responds with five hearts, this would be a definite signoff bid, advising against the slam, and the original bidder should not go to six hearts, because in making his bid of five diamonds he has: asked partner if he held additional strength, clearly stating that his own hand is not strong enough to jump to six hearts immediately. When partner gives the sign-off response of five hearts, he makes the decision against the slam. There are many different types of sign-off bids that come up during a game, and a little playing experience soon will make you thoroughly familiar with all of them. This is the final article on the one over one system of contract bidding. In my following articles I will again give you some of the hands from the most important tournaments throughout the country, and examples of the one over one bidding system will be given in these hands. iCopyriirht. 1932. NEA Service. (Inc.) Don’t Trifle With Coughs Don’t let them get a strangle hold. Fight germs quickly. Creomulsion combines the 7 best helps known to modem science. Powerful but harmless. Pleasant to take. No narcotics. Your druggist will refund your money if any cough or cold no matter how long standing is not relieved by Creomulsion. (adv.)

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FAIR BUILDINGS TOSS TRADITION TO THEJNINDS Distinctive Architecture for Chicago Exposition Is Evolved. Following Is the flnsi article In a series describing the "wonder city” of the shore of Lake Michigan. Today’# storv tells how the architects threw tradition to the winds to evolve a style as new as tomorrow. BY FREDERICK C. OTHMAN United Press Staff Correspondent CHICAGO, Nov. 9.—You know what ‘’bobby pins” ar. those little, crinkled clips of wire which women use to confine their shortest tresses. You know what cornstalks are: and old newspapers. The ‘ bobby pins,” the com stalks and the newspapers all have been combined with generous additions of paint—and genius—to make Chicago's Century of Progress Exposition a thing of such unique beauty that architects from the four ends of the earth already are coming to view it. The fair builders noticed that the ‘'bobby pins” held their wives’ with 'nary a strand out of place. So they ordered jumbo-size “bobby pins” to clip the walls of the fair buldings together. Windows Are Omitted The walls they made out of compressed cornstalks. For insulation they used a pulp-plaster made principally of newspapers. * Some of the walls they painted silver; others they left a natural cream. Nowhere did they cut afiy windows. They would have been expensive, would have ruined spectacular lighting effects, ana would have been out of harmony with the super-modernistic architectural style. The buildings themselves ara long, for the most part, and low, with sweeping vistas broken only occasionally with protuberances. Advance in Architecture Nothing is added to the buildings that Isn't necessary for practical purposes. That, say the architects, is the essence of modernism. These architects claim that th fair will have its effect on international architecture for years to come; that it already has influenced the night lighting of skyscrapers. Panels of colored fabric, glass and reflecting metal, treated with radioactive substance, embellish great holls, rotundas and galleries. Pin prick holes in walls and ceilings floodlight whole rooms. ‘‘lt is astonishing how much light you can get through a pin hole—if you only know how to do it,” commented Illuminating Engineer Edwin D. Tillson. Fair Opens June 1 He has devised columns of realistic red fire for entrances; he has built gigantic color-organs, and he has conceived for the first time the effects of ultra violet rays in outdoor illumination. The fair opens on June 1, 1933, and will close 150 days later on Nov. 1. Sponsors hope that 50,000,000 persons will enter the gates, counting “repeats.” The customers will pay a general admission price of 50 cents each. (The End.) AUTO AND BUS CRASH Two Are Injured in Accident at Fifty-Second and Broadway. A bus passenger was injured and a motorist was cut and bruised when an automobile crashed into the rear of an Indianapolis Railway motor coach today at Fiftysecond street and Broadway. Miss Leah Horner, 30, of 5126 Schofield avenue, the bus passenger, incurred a wrenched back, and is in city hospital. Her condition is not serious, according to physicians. Otho Duerson, 18, Negro, 1016 North Missouri street, driver of the auto, suffered cuts on the face and chin from flying windshield glass. The accident occurred as the bus drew to the curb to halt for a passenger. Duerson was not arrested.

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