Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 163, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 November 1932 — Page 13

NOV. 17, 1932

LEISURE CLUB IS INVITED TD MOVIE PARTY Belmont Theater to Throw t Doors Open on Dec. 2 for City Unit. LCISVftE Hor* CALENDAR NOV. 1* . Ft. W*,ne ud Walnut Club, In On- , tr *> -4 .hurrh (rranaaiam. Marram Chrutlan snr\, at 4700 Enjliah avenue. School 22 at ItH South Illinois street. Crtspus Vttucks hith school. School 2* at 1301 East Sixteenth street. Aehool 34, Kelly and Boyd streets. NOV. 21 Delasrare-Ohio Club. 210*4 East Ohio street, upstairs. NOV. 22 La a ter Memorial 3ova' Oub. 1306 West Market. * NOV. 2S Municipal Gardens. School It. It'll be “One and One-Half Hours” with movies to amuse Instead of the song’s time limit of “One Hour With •You” for 1,000 members of Leisure Hour clubs of the Hawthorne social center and their friends Dec. 2. The Belmont theater, through the co-operation of its manager, Harry Markum, is providing the 1,000 tickets for a free movie which he will give the afternoon of Dec. 2. The tickets will be issued at the Hawthorne center to Leisure Hour families. Markum assures that the bill will be worthwhile. The Belmont is the first city theater to co operate with the Leisure Hour clubs in providing amusement during spare hours, declares Dwight 8. Ritter, director of the clubs, with headquarters at 911 Majestic building.

Six Places to Go There are six places to go Friday night that don’t cost one cent and still provide amusement for city families. The places are the six Leisure Hour clubs with programs scheduled in the above calendar. Games for young and old, plays and .skits, and plenty of music interspersed, is the bill-o’-fare. Get up a neighborhood party and go! You’ll spend a pleasant evening. Hear the ‘Boy Wonder’ It's just a guitar that he strums, but when he strums it and sings, you’ll know you’ve heard something. The guitarist is Clarence Harding and he’s billed as the “Boy Wonder and His Guitar" by the program committee of School 34, which will hold its program Friday night at Kelly and Boyd streets. Others on the program are: Butler, the magician; songs led by Sam Raborn; pupils of Olive Kiler in violin selections; charades in charge of Butler university students, and an accordion player. Play to Be Given Hawaiian music, coupled with the play, “Adventures of Grandpa,” will be highlights at the program Friday night of school 22 club under auspices of the South ‘Side Meridian Civic Club. The play will be given by the Garfield Players. It was scheduled to make its debut Wednesday night at the Garfield park community house, but was postponed because of weather conditions. It will be given in the Garfield Center next Wednesday night. Others on the school 22 program are: Songs led by George White,man; Lenore Wilson, pianist; the Hilo Hawaiian trio, and Olive Kiler’s pupils in violin selections. 250 Attend Program Braving cold and icy streets, 250 persons attended the opening program of the J. T. V. Hill community center, 1801 Columbia avenue, Wednesday night. "And they gave cheers for more of the same thing during ensuing weeks,” declared Ritter. That Old German Band! “Oh! that German band; ain’t it grand!” , , These expressions, regardless of rhetoric, may be made Tuesday night when the Lauter Memorial Club holds its Leisure Hour program. A five-piece German band from the Washington high school is scheduled to purvey sharps and flats. Community singing led by Will Wertz, movies and novelty songs by Estil V. Van Dorn are other acts on the bill. The committee in charge of the entertainment is composed of L. E. Hall, Miss Daisy Ludwig, Mrs. Swift and Miss Ruth Bell. 21 MORE JOIN CITY’S 20-YEAR ST. CAR CLUB Supervisor Gets Belt for Serving Line for 48 Years. Membership of the Twenty-Year Club of Indianapolis Railways Inc., was increased by twenty-one at the annual dinner of the club Wednesday in the Spink-Arms. The club is composed of more than two hundred employes of the company with service records of twenty years or more. George W. Chapin, <B. was presented a cane as the oldest active employe. Supervisor Joseph C. Hinchman was given a belt for holding the longest service record, forty-eight years. New members inducted include: Lon A. Kremer. Thomis C. Corler Ocorge O. Wells, Marvin A Lively, Georee C. Simon. V. E. Walker, M F Limken Harry Davis. John Kaney. Sylvester Flora. Thomas I. Bradburn. Claude Parris Rov L. Engle. R. B. Isaacs, W. S Dicklson, t A. Sourwine Theodore C. Wiese. Edgar C Young. Robert C. Spencer, Harry B. Whitney and Harry Halter. LISTS CAMPAIGN COSTS Wilson Spent $1,426, Election Expense Statement Shows. First successful candidate to file his election expense statement. Prosecutor Herbert E. Wilson Wednesday revealed his re-election campaign cost totaled $1,426. Wilson received campaign contributions totaling $1,035, most of which was given by a staff of twenty-two deputies. He contributed $950 to the county Democratic central committee. The second to file was Louis Ludlow, successful Democratic candidate for congress, Twelfth district. He gave $835 Democratic central committee and small contributions to other organizations.

What Street Is This?

PICTURE No. 18 THIS BLANK MAY BE USED FOR ANSWERS Name the Street Contest Editor. N O . 18 The Indianapolis Times, 214-220 W. Maryland St. Indianapolis, Indiana. I consider the best name is My name Is Addres Town State Hold all answers until close of series.

Contract Bridge

This is the third of a series of articles by William E. McKenney explaining the new laws for rubber contract bridge. The American Bridge League, as yet, has announced no change in the laws for duplicate play, and tournaments will continue to play under the present American Bridge League rules until such announcement is made. BY W. F. M’KF.NNEY * Secretary American Bridge League THE first important change that we find in the laws is law No. 24, Ispecting Quitted Tricks, which is as follows: “After a trick has been turned and quitted, the cards in it may be counted face down, but it may not be again turned and inspected before the end of the hand unless—(a) There is a difference of opinion as to which hand won it; (b) It is found to contain an incorrect number of cards; (c) It is necessary to turn it to substitute a corrected card; or: , (and) A player who fears that he has revoked in it obtains permission to examine it before he or his partner has led or played to the next trick. An opponent may refuse such permission, but in that case his side can not claim the penalty for an established revoke in that trick.” The penalty for she above laws is handled in law No. 53—Looking at a Quitted Trick —which is as follows: "If a player turns and inspects a quitted trick when not authorized by these laws so to do, declarer or the opponent on his left, as the case may be, may select the suit from which the offending side is to lead when first it is the turn of that side to lead.” This particular law undoubtedly will work a hardship on a jgreat many players who were in the habit of inspecting the last quitted trick, which right was granted under the old laws. • The game now demands closer attention. A player carefully must watch and remember each card as It is played. The next major change is law No. 30—Trick Points. Here we find the old trick count for no trump has been changed, minor and major suits remaining unchanged: namely, spades and hearts 30, clubs and diamonds 20. Odd tricks at no trump now count 30 points each for the first, third, fifth and seventh trick, and 40 points each for the second, fourth and sixth trick. Law No. 31 —Overtrick Points— Now conforms to the practice used in duplicate tournaments; that is,

;; ii!P i .i ‘ is p; WEEKS How to rid any boy or girl of | sluggishness or constipation and I build a big appetite. f The trouble with children who will not ]§!*> I;. I eat is usually stasis. The symptoms are | / a tongue that’s always coated, bad breath, poor color, dull eyes that are ; ' I ! often a bilious yellow. No appetite, no Wm ( I I ; ambition —even for play. Hard to get to sleep, hard to wake in the morning. ■ ■ ' There’s an absolute remedy for this sp \ condition. It gives listless youngsters the mil " appetite and energies of a young animal! \ They eat! They gain I They keep well! I I The California Treatment conquers Sluggishness It’s not the stomach, but the bowel Hri|: i i | condition that keeps children from eating. But the trouble is in the lower bowel —the colon. California syrup of figs is wk| -U t the only “medicine” that is needed to w I- | stimulate the colon muscles. The very ■ V , ' \ j next day. your child is eating better % | ; and feeling belter. Keep on *with the J|; | syrup of figs a few’ days and you will see ' amazing improvement in appetite, y? : j 5 color, weight and spirits. Any drugstore has the real California syrup of figs, all bottled, with directions. ■ -p-' / Nature never made a nicer acting or ft' i R, + | nicer tasting -laxative. (It is purely ■' ok % j|' vegetable.) Remember California syrup * I / .of tigs when sickness, a cold or any i pset * has clogged a child’s bowels. ft':.-.# mhjpjj WARNING . M. ||P Eren when it's somethinq to give children, -ysShs. some stores will try to substitute. So be sure the bottle says CALIFORNIA Syrup of Figs.

counting undoubted overtricks at the regular bid trick values. The overtrick premium remains the same for doubled and redoubled contracts, which is as follows; Doubled and Not Vulnerable— Overtrick premium is 100 points a trick. Doubled and Vulnerable —Overtrick premium is 200 points a trick. Both these points are doubled in case of a redoubled contract. The writer is a little afraid that these changes—and particularly the no trump change—will prove a little confusing to the contract player. However, a few moments’ study of the law will clear up the situation, and in my next article I will explain thoroughly to yru the working of this change in scoring. (Coovright. 1932. NEA Service. (Inc.)

Cash Weddings Credit Plan Is Out, So Far as County Clerk Is Concerned.

INSTALLMENT plan buying does not apply to marriage licenses, County Clerk Glenn B. Ralston ruled Wednesday when a woman sought a license “on credit.” Appearing alone at the marriage license bureau, a middleaged woman inquired if it was the place to get a marriage lisense. “This is the proper place,” Miss Margaret Snyder, deputy clerk, informed the applicant. Learning the price of a certificate was $3, the woman asked if she could pay $1 down, and the rest 50 cents a week. “I am sorry. Marriage licenses can not be sold on the installment plan,” Miss Snyder answered, after obtaining instructions from Ralston. The applicant did not return with either her prospective husband or the additional $2. Baby Found Dead in Bed Dorothy Wesling, 7-weeks-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl H. Wesling, deaf mutes, was found dead in her bed at the family home. 325 Fleming street, early today. There are two other children, Eddie Wesling, 8, and Marietta, 18 months old.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

AUTO MAKERS GONVINGEO OF BUYINGTREND Last-Minute Details Rushed on Models to Dazzle Public in 1533. BY JOHN OWEN United Pres* Staff Correspondent DETROIT, Nov. 17. —Automobile manufacturers, convinced there are buyers for their products, are rushing last-minute details on the cars they hope will dazzle the American public in 1933. Detroit, lean from depression years, hums with more enthusiasm than in many months. Test models with dummy radiators dash along outlying roads, clocked by scouts of opposition companies. Intriguing new models are shown secretly, and to a favored few, behind locked doors. Factory gates are crowded again, as some of the pobless are called back to work. Chrysler Announcement Walter P. Chrysler was the first to announce plans for the new year. His corporation is producing new Plymouth six models, while Dodge ■ Brothers, a subsidiary, is re-employ-ing 30,000 men to work part time on anew Dodge six-cylinder line. Anew De Soto will be announced in December. General Motors, meanwhile, will introduce anew Chevrolet which, according to reports, will v feature a longer wheelbase and radical changes in body design. Thousands of workers have been recalled at the Chevrolet plants to produce 50,000 units for distribution to dealers by Jan. 1. The company has promised a price range in keeping with reduced incomes. Ford Man of Mystery Henry Ford is, as usual, the man of mystery in the industry. It is quite probable, however, that he will not make changes for the new year presentations. His present V-eights and fours have been on the market only five months. Austin Motor Car Company probably will be the only manufacturer to present a four-cylinder car. Renewed activity is reported at the Austin plants, Butler, Pa. Willys-Overland, Hudson-Essex and Continental automobile companies probably will introduce sixcylinder cars featuring radical changes in body design. Price reductions slightly under the present range are considered by all three companies. Pontiac is building a new’ straight eight in the medium-priced field; Franklin is producing anew line to be called “The Olympic,” and Nash is manufacturing anew streamlined model. Graham-Paige engineers, like the Ford master mechanics, are reported concentrating on present models. Streamlining on the GrahamPaige already is well developed. High-priced car manufacturers i are making few changes. 1 EASIEST WAY TO BREAK UP COLDS Feel Like a New Person Almost Before You Know It If you want quick relief from a cold, go back to first principles and use something you know does the business—don’t start “trying” a lot of fancy ideas or remedies. Get Hill’s Cascara Quinine. A scientific formula made to do ONE THING WELL; to knock a cold in a jiffy, not to cure a hundred different things. Take two tablets every three hours. Drink lots of water between times—that’s all. Soon these mean, aching pains in head and body begin to go; the cold breaks up, poisons leave your system and you feel like anew person. If it doesn’t do that, your money back. Get a box now for a few cents. You’ll be surprised at the speed with which it works. Iff I I Cascara-Quinine TULL O Compound Never before . •. (perhaps never again) •. . fares so low! In modern First Class coaches of world’s largest bus system. Straight-through schedules, healthful Tropic-Aire heat. Week-end rates good from Friday morning until 3:00 a. m. CHICAGO *A 75 Week End Round Trip ■ ’ One Way *4. 15-Day Round Trip. $5.4* LOUISVILLE SO.OO Week End Round Trip tJ* One Way *2.50. 15-Day Rd. Trip. $3.15 CINCINNATI SO.OO Week End Round Trip w One Way *2.75. Re ff n!ar Rd. Trio $4.15 Traction Terminal Bus Depot Illinois & Market Sts., Tel. Riley 4561. Denison Hotel, Tel. Lincoln 3222. Cor. Ohio & Pennsylvania Sts. Other offices: Fletcher Savinas ft Trust Cos.. Bankers Trust Cos.

Meteors Again Fail to Stage Sky Spectacle

Few Leonids Are Seen by Astronomer; Jupiter Is Blamed. Ey Science Service PHILADELPHIA. Nov. 17.—Fears of astronomers that the expected display of Leonids again might fail to appear, as it did in 1899, have been justified. Observing from the Flower observatory of the University of Pennsylvania, of which he is director, Dr. Charles P. Olivier, president of the meteor commission of the International Astronomical Union, observed these shooting stars at the rate of thirteen an hour during the early morning hours of Wednesday, Nov. 16. Correcting for the proximity of the bright moon, this would mean that about thirty might have been seen every hour after midnight had the sky been dark. This is far interior to the display of last year. It seems probable that the damage done to the meteor swarm by Jupiter before 1899, in pulling aside the center part so much that it missed the earth, though the beginning and end reached us in 1898 and 1901, has not been repaired yet. It had been thought that Jupiter since might have pulled the swarm into line again. Woman Fails in Suicide Attempt Condition of Mrs. Walter Boone, 38, of 1233 West New York street, said by police to have attempted

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New Court Aid

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Miss Marjorie Wilcox Miss Marjorie Wilcox, secretary in the office of the Democratic state committee, has been appointed an assistant to Miss Emma May, Terre Haute, who assumes the office of reporter of the supreme and appellate courts, Jan. 9. Miss Wilcox is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Wilcox, 402 East Twenty-eighth street. suicide with poison Wednesday night, was reported not serious today. Motive for the act was not learned.

OWEN 0, YOUNG SAVED INSULL FORGMONTHS Used Influence to Block Crash; Feared National Financial Crisis. By United Freer CHICAGO. Non'. 17. Testimony that Owen D. Young saved the Insult companies from bankruptcy for six months before they actually collapsed was on file today in the records of Federal Judge Walter C. Lindley’s hearing to disclose assets of Insull Utility Investments, Inc. The testimony was given by Edward Eagle Brown, vice-president

of the First National bank. Brown followed Insull Jr. on the witness stand, and dis clo s e and how Young and Melvin D. Traylor, president of the First National bank, delayed the Insull collapse from December, 1931, until April of this year. Young, who had been a friend of Samuel Insull Sr. for twenty years, of the companies, cause he believed

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Young , acted in behalf , Brown said, bethat if the giant

PAGE 13

utilities concern collapsed before the Reconstruction Finance Corporation bill was passed it would bring about a national financial crisis. The hearing was continued indefinitely et the close of Wednesday's session. Like a Hash pain stops 9 then out comes the Corn Drop FJtEEZONE on that aching corn. Instantly* it stops hurting; then shortly you lift the com right off with the fingers. You'll laugh, really! It is so easy and doesn’t hurt one bit. Works like a charm, every time. A tiny bottle of FREEZONE costs only a few cents at any drug store, and is sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, and calluses. Try it! FREEZONE