Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 283, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 April 1933 — Page 9
APRIL 6, 1033
Bride-Elect ’ Honored at Bridge Fete Helen Weyl Is Guest At Party Given by Mrs. Fisher. Mrs. Thomas Fisher. 809 East Thirty-fourth stret, was hostess this' afternoon for a bridge party, honoring Miss Helen Weyl, whose marriage to Edward Gallagher will 1 take place April 27. Appointments of pwik and green vfre used at the serving hour, with the hostess’ mother, Mrs. Dorothy M. Dartrie, assisting. Guests with tne bride-elect’s mother, Mrs. Carl Weyl, were Mesdames William Forsyth, Charles B. Tichcnor. Frank Moore, Ruth Eitel,lorg and Robert Stephenson of Crawfordsville, and Misses Mary Caswell. Mary Lynn Weyl, Eleanor Moran, Juanita Miller and Virginia Elliott. Miss Bertha Mueller will entertain with a luncheon-bridge party tor Miss Wovl on Saturday after- j noon. Mrs. Theodore Marborough j will be hostess for a luncheon Tues- \ day. April 18, and Misses Marjorie | Ann Lilly and Eleanor Moran will ! entertain Friday night, April 21. j 'ALTRUSA CLUB TO HEAR JUDGE KIPER\ Judge Rn'coo Kiper. chairman of ! the state industrial board, will talk 1 on ‘The Old Order Changeth” at the meeting of the Altrusa Club at j the Columbia Club Friday night. Miss Mabel I Glittery, program j chairman. will introduce the ; speaker, and Mrs. Elizabeth R. Boyle, president, will preside. Alumnae Will Meet St. Mary’s Alumnae will hold their monthly meeting at 8 tonight in the academy auditor- j ium. All members are urged to be ] present as the International Frder- 1 at ion of Catholic Alumnae will be discussed. /nspeefion Scheduled Job’s Daughters, Bethel 9, will have inspection at 7:30 Friday night i at the Veritas Terrple, Roosevelt: avenue and Adams street. Miss' fiarabelle Wells will be honor queen. Auxiliary to Dine Prospect auxiliary, 452, O. E. S., will hold an all-day meeting Friday at the Prospect Masonic hall.! Prospect and State streets. A dinner at noon will be followed by a I business meeting at 2. Pupils to Appear Mrs. Mic Schon, chairman of the April committee of Little Flower church, in charge of the dinner, to he given at 6:30 tonight at the church auditorium. Miss Florence McShane’s dancing pupils will present a program.
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Real Horrible War Is to Be Seen in ‘Big Drive’ Saily Eilers and James Dunn Are Teamed Together Once More in ‘Sailor’s Luck,’ Due at Apollo Friday, THE BIG DRIVE,” which is the official, authentic story of the World war. Is being brought to the Indiana theater for a week's engagement starting Friday. Tills picture is not made up of the scenes made by one man or one nation but from the hundreds of thousands of feet of film made under actual combat conditions by army photographers of eight different nations which were embroiled in the war. Not a single scene in this epic has been filmed on a studio set but every scene is authentic from across the seas and the actors are the thousands of soldiers, some of whom may be from here in Indianapolis.
The picture was produced by Albert L. Rule, who spent fourteen years in getting together this collection of official war films from the military archives of every nation j concerned.
During the picture is heard the voice of Rule in an informative explanation of all scenes. One is transported behind the German lines and witnesses the action of batteries whose siege guns crumbled the forts of Liege and Namur into dust. There are pictures of desperate hand to hand combat in trenches and beleaguered towns. Another musical offering by Ed Resener and the Indiana Concert orchestra and selected short subjects will complete the program. nan SALLY AND JAMES ARE TEAMED TOGETHER Sally Eilers and James Dunn, remembered for their performances in "Bad Girl,” and “Dance Team,” have the co-starring roles of “Sailor’s Luck,” Fox photoplay heading the Apollo bill starting Friday next. The new film will continue through Thursday next. Besides Dunn and Eilers, the cast includes Victor Jory, who appeared in “State Fair,” Sammy Cohen. Esther Muir, Will Stanton, Frank Moran, Lucien Littlefield, Buster Phelps, Curley Wright, Jerry Mandy, Germaine de Neel, Phil Tead, Frank Atkinson, Eddie Dillon and Mat McHugh. “Sailor Luck” is said to lean more to comedy than any other previous team picture of the well known screen pair. The story is described as concerning a bunch of “gobs” on shore-leave and their romantic adventures while dame-chasing. Comedy for the most part, is supplied by Sammy Cohen, Will Stanton and Frank Moran. All are cast as sea-faring pals of Dunn. The action of the picture takes the sailors everywhere from a hilarious comedy scene in a swimming pool to a battering gang fight in a marathon dance hall. Entwined throughout is the tender romance of Eilers and Dunn. Raoul Walsh directed from the story and screen play by Marguerite Roberts and Charlotte Miller. Short subjects supplementing the featured attraction on the program are Movietone News, a cartoon entitled “Pickaninny Blues,” “Strange As It Seems,” and an Organlogue novelty.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
CONTRACT BRIDGE By W. E. M’KENNEY Sferetarv American Bridge League THIS is the third of a series of four hands played by the famous Bidrite Club team in winning the eastern championships at New' York this year. Today, I want you to meet the other two members of the Bidrite team—Mr. Howard Schenken and Mr. Charles Lochridge. Mr. Schenken is the one player who has had the unusual distinction of having his name engraved as winner on both of the national masters gold cups of the American Bridge League. Mr. Lochridge is a young player from Atlanta, Ga., and is recognized as one of the leading contract players of the country. a a a AT their table. South passed. Mr. Lockridge in the West passed, and North did not elect to put in the psychic third hand bid, but passed. Mr. Schenken in the East opened
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the contracting with one club. Mr. Lockridge put in a one over one force of one spade. North now stepped in with a bid of two hearts, but it was too late as East and West had been able to convey the needed information to each other. Mr. Schenken jumped to three spades and Mr. Lockridge in the West boldly bid four spades, which South doubled. Mr. Shcenken in the East redoubled. BUB NORTH'S opening lead was the queen of hearts, which was won with dummy’s are. A small spade was led, South winning with the queen, and returning his singleton club. Dummy's jack won the trick. Mr. Lochridge led another small spade from dummy, South winning the trick with the ace, and returning a small diamond. Here, Mr. Lockridge made a very fine play—he refused to finesse the diamonds, as he knew South was endeavoring to get a club ruff, so he went right up with his ace of diamonds, capturing North’s king. Pie then trumped his eight cf hearts in dummy with the king of spades, led his nine of spades, picked up the outstanding trump, and then took the club finesse. On the ace of clubs he discarded his losing diamond and scored five edd on the hand for a plus score of 920 points. Remember that his teammates—playing the hand in the opposite direction—had scored a total of 820 points on the same board, giving their team a plus score of 1,740 points on this one board alone. (Copyright 1933. by NEA Service. Inc.)
Care Needed in Choosing Varieties of Vegetables
This is the ninth of a series of articles on vegetable gardening. BY W. R. BEATTIE. Bureau of Plant Industry. U. S. Department of Agriculture. TTARITIES of vegetables that are ’ grown for the market are not always the most desirable for planting in the home garden. The t’Century” beet is a good example. Its
fine quality and winter keeping makes it one of the best as an all-round home garden beet, but its naif-long tapering shape is against it on the market. Truckers who grow beans for shipment to distant markets plant the Black Valentine variety because of its fine appearance on the market
Beattie
after it is shipped. This character is due to its inherent toughness of pod. which makes it one of the most undesirable for planting in home gardens. Home gardeners complained about the poor quality of the Black Valentine, then the seed people brought out Stringless Black Valentine, which has most of the desirable qualities of the old Black Valentine but is stringless and of fine table quality. Another snap bean for planting in the home garden is “Tendegreen,” and it is especially fine for canning because it retains its deep green color. Peas give us one of the best examples of differences in quality. The Alaska pea is one of the earliest varieties, but its quality is poor as
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NIPPON AUTHOR FLAYS LEAGUE IN NEW BOOK Japan Has Taken Up ‘White Man’s Burden in Asia,’ Says Writer. K. K Kawakami widely is regarded as Japan's chief unofficial spokesman on this side of the Pacific. Being unofficial. he can. and does, call a spade a spade. His new story, lampooning the League of Nations, therefore is far from being "just another book" about Manchuria. It is as though Nippon herself were telling us and the rest of the world what she thinks, and what she I itends to do from now on in China. I By Scripps-Hotcard Xet espaprr Alliance WASHINGTON, April 5. That Japan has taken up the white mans burden in Asia and will stick to it, sink or swim., is the scheme of a sensational book released for publication today. Its author is K. K. Kawakami, in-ternationally-known Japanese writer of Washington and Tckio. “Manchoukuo, Child of Conflict,” is its title, and it is a sequel to the same author’s “Japan Speaks,” published shortly after the invasion of Manchuria. Lampooning the League of Nations for its verdict against Japan, it accused the assembly of prejudice and unfairness. “For the first time in history,” Kawakami declares in his preface, "a non-white race has undertaken to shoulder the white man’s burden, and the white man, long accustomed to think the burden exclusively his own, is reluctant to commit it to the young shoulders of Japan, yellow and and an upstart at that.” Hits at Stimson Doctrine Hitting back at the Stimson doctrine of non-recognition and Geneva’s adoption thereof, Kawakami warns that “if the league thinks that its refusal to recognize Manchaukuo would force Japan to recede from her present stand, it likely is to be disappointed.” ■ In fact, he asserts, Japan would prefer it so. Recognition would mean a lot of foreign eyes prying about Manchoukuo, whereas nonrecognition means the new “state” will have time to “carry out its program in its own way. But, the author charges, Japan also blundered at Geneva, as well as the league. Japan's blunder was not to press her case at the start instead of waiting, as she did, until sentiment froze against her. Yosuke Matsuoka, “unquestionably one of Japan’s ablest spokesmen,” arrived too late on the scene, “for Geneva already had been swayed by the preconceived opinion formed in the months when Japan was singularly reticent,” the book says. When Matsuoka finally arrived in Geneva, he faced “a packed jury.” Kawakami holds that the Lytton report, to the league, on the whole, “is a commendable document, with observations and suggestions which Japan could have used to her advantage.” Key to Whole Froblem He intimates that Japan would have done well to accept the report in principle, then base her case on the fifth recommendation of the report itself. This declares: “Since the conditions enumerated above can not be fulfilled without a strong central government in China, the final requisite for a satisfactory solution is temporary international co-operation in the internal reconstruction of China.” These thirty-two •words, in Kawakami’s opinion, are the key to the whole report. “Until the condition expressed in these thirty-two words is fulfilled,” he states, “the rest of the hundreds of thousands of words contained in that document are of no practical value.” Until fulfilled, none of the other recommendations could be fulfilled, and as China would never permit outside powers to perform this "grand scheme of overhauling,” Japan might have gone ahead in Manchuria at will.
compared with the better varieties of ■wrinkled peas. Many home gardeners plant a row or two of the Alaska variety on account of its earliness, but their main plantings are of Gradus, Thomas Laxton, Little Marvel, and perhaps a few of the old-fashioned Telephone. Location and climatic conditions have a lot to do with varieties of vegetables to plant. For example, it is difficult to grow head lettuce iti the sections of the country where weather becomes warm quite early. Lettuce is a cold ( weather crop, and it is almost impossible to get the heads to form in hot weather. The only way to grow head lettuce like the Iceberg or Improved Big Boston in sections where warm weather conies early in the season is to start the plants in a coldframe and have large plants ready to set in the garden as scon as the soil is in condition to work. There are two or three varieties of the semi-heading and loose leaf lettuce that can be grown to advantage even though the weather does turn reasonabfy warm. Next—Pest and dise ise control.
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Fear Attempt to Block !INDORSE GITY'S Second Trial of Mooney JOB AID DRIVE
District Attorney Lashed for Alleged Move to Prevent Hearing. By United Press SAN FRANCISCO, April 6. Mooney supporters released a lashing attack on District Attorney Matthew Brady Wednesday night for his refusal to prosecute Tom Mooney on a 16-year-old firstdegree murder indictment. Mooney supporters fear Brady will attempt to obtain dismissal of the indictment, blocking a trial. Brady himself remained silent. “You state the new trial would be a farce, as no legal case remains
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against Mooney,” a letter to Brady, signed by Benjamin Ellisberg, chairman of the United Front-Free Tom Mooney conference said. “We agree there is no case against Mooney, but anew trial, instead of being a farce, is a concrete attempt to secure legal and moral vindica--1 tion for Mooney. “It iS not the new trial which is ; a farce. Your attempt to prevent a trial is a judicial farce—a travesty on justice which is not concealed by your oft-stated belief in the innocence of the defendant. "If you persist in your attempts-to block this new trial, we shall be forced to conclude you have aligned yourself with the framers and jail--1 ers of Mooney.”
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Civic Organizations Throw Support to Campaign for Modernization. City-wide modernization campaign. to be staged April 22 to May 15, today had indorsements from numerous civic and professional organizations. including the central committee of the South Side Civic League and the Kiwanis Club Five thousand volunteer workers are enlisting support of citizens m the movement to provide jobs for several thousand unemployed. The campaign is designed to aid jobless by getting property owners to repair and modernize while material prices are low.
