Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 294, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 April 1933 — Page 14
PAGE 14
—Dietz on Science — • SAVANT AVERS TOT UNIVPWE IS EXPANDING Theory Is Advanced by Leading Authority on Relativity. BY DAVID DIETZ Srrlpp.-Hoxard Science Editor No reader may pride himself upon 8. knowledge of the latest trends in astronmy. cosmogony and relativity, until he has read Sir Arthur Eddington's “The Expanding Universe." You must read it, if you would be up to date in the latest scientific theories and their philosophical implications. The task is not as difficult as the reader might at first suppose. The book is a small one of 180 pages and Sir Arthur, who is past master in the art of popularizing science, bears in mind at all times that he is addressing the layman. Even so, you can’t read the book in an evening as you would the latest mystery thriller. But you can read it in two or three evenings. Given in Lecture At times, you will have to give it pretty close concentration. It isn’t one of those books you can read while the radio is going. But in the end, you will agree that it has been more fascinating thap a great many mystery thrillers, and certainly far more instructive. The book represents an amplified veision of a public lecture which Sir Arthur delivered at Cambridge, Mass.', in September. 1932, during the meeting of the International Astronomical Union. He also spoke upon the same subject in three radio addresses during the weeks following the meeting of the union. Friend of Einstein Sir Arthur is a close friend of Professor Albert Einstein, and one of the world's leading authorities upon relativity. In 1919, he headed one of the expeditions which certified the displacement of star images during an eclipse of the sun, and thus helped bring the Einstein theory its first world-wide attention. As the title of the book indicates, Ectu.ngton believes that the universe is g.o.wng larger and larger, that tn_ component par„s of the universe aie scattering through space so as to occupy an ever-increasing volume of space. Turns to Atom This notion of a.i expanding uni- j first grew out of certain consicio.ations of the Einstein equations ! by tne Dutch astronomer, De Sitter, i and the Belgian mathematician, Lema.tre. That all the distant spiral nebu- I lae actually were receding from the ; ear.h, as required by the theory, i was verified by the American as- | troaomers, Slipher, Hubble and Humason. Eddington undertakes to arrive at! the dimensions and rate of expan- I sion of the universe. To do this, ! he .urns, not to the distant spiral ! nebu.ae, out to the atom and its ! yet timer component, the electron. | Provides New Theory The theory of the expanding uni- i ve.ee first came into existence as an a.tempt to explain a term in one of tae Einstein equations. This was represented by the Greek letter, “lambda,” and came to be known as tne "cosmical constant.” To Eddington, the cosmical con- ' stan: is one of the most fundamen- j tal things in the universe. It de- J termines the size of the universe and the size of the atom. T' us, he provides a common mr ting around for astronomy, rela- 1 ti\:.y. and the newest theory of at'- e structure, namely, wave mec Expanding Universe” is publb by the MacMillan Company at ". £\AKT ip" - E ; A chop house in New York C:: - has twelve buxom barmaids that can juggle foaming suds like veterans of l' -'or den Linden or the pubs of London’s limehouse. ana Monument Lodge *s putting on a big minstrel show and dance Friday and Saturday evenings, April 28 and 29, at the Murat Temple. On Saturday night, fallowing the show, ticket holders of either performance will be guests at a dance in the beautiful Egyptian Ball Room of the Shrine Temple. The purpose is an extremely worthy one. The proceeds will be used so'eiy for the Indiana Masonic Home at Franklin which houses approximately six hundred aged men and women, and orphaned children. The public is invi.ed to attend. Tickets are 75 cents per person which entitles admirvion to both the show and the dance. The show alone is well worth the price. Tickets are obtainable at the station or will be mailed on receipt of admission. State date desired. a a a They’re insuring everything these days but the hereafter unless one can call fire insurance coverage of that risk. a a a News item: Stray dog bites councilman in Richmond. And being bitten in Richmond is no laughable matter, according to the irate city elder. a a a CHIEF TIRE CHANGER Mil ii ii lml Hl' lRlBt li'li'
Let’s Explore Your Mind BY DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM, D. Sc.
1111 mi 111111IIHjb-L / x ) IiLL it >■ it nir i u r 1 At> * ,T IHAVE I Trn II I 11| n 1\ j dvr J STUDIED ECONOMICS, ! I I MUI llilLllltv' M POGEIGN-IgADE ETC,BUT SdjS /f i know -mis depression iWmB lk. WOULD END in THIRTY S j ~ i TT' mmmm ------- “ H Sfea OPINIONS CONCERNING THING€ ABOUT n WHICH THEY KNOW LITTLE, THEY ARE lfe THE END op 9 CONCERNING THINGS ABOUT WHICH <&R™OMANcf I THEY KNOW A GREAT DEAL? IwonOK wwetherJ tPY rt " kfiFt ARE VERY BRILLIANT CHILDREN 1 -l/ll LIKELY TO BE NERVOU&, UNSTABLE 3 - 16 lT TRUE, AG TENNVGON SAID. IN THEIR EMOTIONS. GENERALLY u V fn uYvp VES OR. NO VEG OR. NO
1. Yes. Some scientists of lowa university had a large group of people write down their convictions on numerous questions, ranging from marriage to politics and religion. There was not the slightest relationship between the amount of their information and the strength of their convictions. People trained in scientific analysis are much less likely to be this way than other people, although sometimes they forget their training when they step outside their own specialties. As a rule, the more ignorant a man is the more positive he is in his opinions. 2. Just the opposite. Professor Lewis M. Terman of Stanford, has studied more than one thousand exceptionally gifted children, some of them genuine p-odigies. They proved to be stronger, more vital, less
Contract Bridge
BY WM. E. M’KENNEY Secretar Ante: ban BKdee League IT has been rightfully said that good false-carding is an art. It differs from many other phases of the game in that it can not be covered by general rules. The element of psychology is predominant, for each false-card must be carefully lanned with regard to the mental caliber of the ; opponent it is intended to deceive. ! The purpose of the play is to give j an opponent false inferences as to the location of certain high cards or the distribution of a certain suit. Care must be taken that the falsecard is not too obvious, for in that case the opponent will not be deceived. Furthermore, the false inferences presented must be logical, and must be adapted to his ability to grasp them. Many a brilliant false-card has failed because the incorrect inferences were too abstruse for the player at whom they were directed. Against a poor player who does not understand the fine points of card-reading only the most obvious false-cards will : ’cceed. Against an expert, the same plays would be utterly transparent and would fail of all deception. a a a TODAY’S hand illustrates a false card which was perfectely adjusted to the situation and the declarer's ability. AQ-10-9 VK-J-4 1 ♦ A-'v-J-3-2 A.'-2 S7 . < JRT n A A-K----VA- g > 5-3-2 9-3 CD 2 V Q-7- ♦ 9-8-5 H 6-2 A lO-9- Dealer 44 7.5-3 SOUTH *A-8-6 AJ-8-6-4 V 8-5 ♦ Q-10-7-6 *K-Q-4 17
East and West were vulnerable, North and South were not. South and West passed, but.North opened the bidding in third position with one diamond. East overcalled with one spade and South raised to two diamonds. That closed the bidding for East feared a penalty if he rebid. East opened the king of spades, following with the ace. On the second lead West discarded the seven of clubs. He reasoned that his partner's vulnerable overcall showed some : strength outside of the spade suit. That strength might consist of ! the ace of clubs, intermediate heart honors, or both. West also knew ! that the declarer was reasoning the hand out in a similar manner, and was mentally placing an ace in the i East hand. 000 DECLARER also knew from East’s failure to re-bid that he j did not hold two outside aces, and lit was a question whether he j held the ace of hearts or the ace of clubs. West's seven of clubs discard was intended to mark the ace of clubs in his hand so declarer would place the ace of hearts with East. To the third trick, East led another spade which West ruffed and [returned a small heart. Declarer, ; having placed the ace of hearts to ; his left, finessed the jack and East I won with the queen. ' The opponents then cashed their ; tw o aces and defeated the contract one trick, taking two spades and a ruff, two hearts and a club. A more astute declarer would have realized that West had no rea- „<>'* NOTICE: "W '* 1° „ W Turn nur litx '*idH jcwrlrj. \ V\ old Millies, den\\VV lal bridges, etc.. w into cash. WOLF SUSSMAN. Inc.
nervous, better adjusted to others and had better health than average children, not to mention dull ones. They were even slightly larger, and weighed a little above average when born. They slept on the average nearly an hour more per day than other children. Os course there were exceptions, but this was the general rule. 3. Certainly, because both love and disappointment expand the human soul and personality as nothing else in the world does. Love vitalizes one’s entire psychology, gives one new insights into himself, and extends the whole area of one’s life. If the particular object of one’s affections be lost, this brings new tests of the strength of one’s nature, the steadiness of his faith, the soundness of his whole philosophy of life.
son to call for a club lead even though he held the ace. His signal with the seven of clubs must therefore have been for a different purpose, and that purpose could only be to deceive the declarer, t Copy rip;:'t. 1933. bv NEA Service. Inc.l OBERLIN HEAD TO TALK College President to Be Speaker at Butler's Honor Day. Dr. Earnest Hatch Wilkins, president of Oberlin college, Oberlin, 0., will be the principal speaker for Butler university Honor Day ceremonies May 4. “The Scholar and World Peace” will be his topic. Phi Kappa Phi, national scholastic society, sponsors the exercises. License Campaign Pressed Campaign of Captain Otto Ray, city license inspector, to force taking out of city licenses was continued today, with thirteen arrests having been made Tur day. WHEN SHES hE iUFF / S Constipation Drove Lin,, % A/; |-J made her feel cross, headlli v 1 Vl 11 Cl achy, half-alive. Now she has a lovable disposition, new pep and vitality. Heed Nature’s warning: Sluggish bowels invariably result in poisonous wastes ravagingyour system—often the direct cause of headaches, dizziness, colds, complexion troubles. NATURE’S REMEDY—the miid, all-vegetable laxative — safely stimulates the entire eliminative tract — strengthens, regulates the' bowels for normal "TUfiAS" / > All work Kimrant e e (I l TV for 0,18 T-r! Watch —Watch Cleaning for -Main Spring for I* I In -Jewels for UW ** Hound Crystal* from I4<* Chicago Jewelry Cos. 203 e. wash. sT. c a:::t, ALL \\ DDL MADE-TO-MEASURE PANTS fS $5.00 FROM SB, SlO, sl2 WOOLENS LEON CREDIT l— k. V/ IM TAILOR 131 E. NEW YORK STREET Drs. HOLLOWAY & KLEIN 800 Test Bldg, Phone LI. 1952 FREE Consultation and’ Examination BACKACHE? Diurex will help you if ! it comes from kidneys. O. E. Pottorff, 217’j N. Illinois St., says: “Diurex PUis are a real help when one has a bad backache 1 from kidney trouble, and I recommend them.” A continuous backache acj companicd by irregular urinai tion and a tired, nervous feeling may point to kidney or bladder trouble. Diurex Pills act while you sleep, and stimulate your kidneys, and are sold under a guarantee. ■ *3?®®
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
125 ARE GUESTS AT HIM SHOW Pre-Opening Dinner Held at Fairground Scene of Exposition. Approximately 125 exhibitors and representatives of local garden clubs attended a pre-opening dinner of the Indianapolis home show Tuesday night in the Manufacturers’ building of the state fairground. The mo&el home of 1933, a low,
The Man Mho Knows How DR.FORSHEE MTUE4L EXPRESSION PLATE HEREITIS.FOLKS! Never Before O.fered at This Price I pper or Q M Cft Upper or Lower | Lon(r Special This Week! i Regular $35 Value Astonishing Low Price! Not cheap Dentistry, but Dentistry of Character, Quality and Comfort —and MUST Satisfy! Natural as nature gave you! / * PAINLESS \ /extraction t n n, Piww.-PHo.M.sTfwjA OPEN EVENINGS JR EXAMINATION FREE North Penn. Rl. 5708—“ Open Evenings Until 8” / - Prepare For Your Place Strong courses in Stenography Bookkeeping. Accounting and Secretarial Training. Bulletin sent on request. Fred W. Case. Prin. Central Business College Architects at ttiiilriers 151 tie.. In dp Is. —— -irxmrmm ■WrannWWMNMMMMMN II nil !■— ■ NOW Klley 7373 A FAMILY WASHING As Low As 51c DDHPDree lhe Soft water rnUuKLOO LAUNDRY NOW , 259 E. Washington St. 3 t 203 W. Washington St. STOKES ' 109-111 s Illinois St. GUARANTEED paint* Inside and outside 9 HjSfl \ All Colors Jg|||f|[, ARROW PAINT < O. 7-9 N. Alabama St. NOTICE: During 1993 the following low prices will prevail on Slaver’s tine WATCH REPAIRING MAINSPRINGS . _ .. CI.F.WING ) AA jewki.s / A STAFFS ) J WATCH HANDS, 15c All Matches Taken Apart When Cleaned. Not nipped. We do only first-class work! •"•Mawieii^ ii 42 W. WASHINGTON ALADDIN KEROSENE LAMPS $6.95 Complete Stocks of Supplies for Aladdin Lamps VONNEGUT’S Downtown Irv. Ftn. Square W. Side V.—... 1.1.1 IR EN T A PIANO Low as SI Month! PEARSON I’IXNO CO P*B X, PENS Real PAINLESS EXTRACTION HANNING BROS. O ffnh. A Penn.—lo 4 Kreggc Bldg.
one-story structure, will form the centerpiece of the show. The home, as Leslie F. Ayres, de- ! signer states, is the latest thing, and a special feature, as he exi plained, will be a “round living ! room.” A feature which none of the 125 ! who attended Tuesday night missed was the "barroom.’’ Another feature of the show will 1 be a display of anew low-priced log ; cabin which w ill house six or eight i persons when they make trips to 'state parks for a week-end or short vacations during the summer. | J. Frank Cantwell, director of the I home show, stated that theree will be approximately five houses of the same design as the model home at the world's fair in Chicago this
ANNOUNCING THE OPENING of the _ BEAUTIFUL \ V Choice American and Italian Dinners . . . Day and Night FREE WITH NO COVER CHARGE Tomorrow Beautiful Roses # DELICIOUS LUNCHEONS To All Lady Guests Prepared by Our Famous French 0 and Italian Culinary Experts BEER : POPULAR PRICES All Popular Brands Ifj j for Sale at All Times JLOC j FOUNTAIN SERVICE Dinners from 5 P. M. to 2 P. M.—3sc and 45c
PABST CHEESE AMERICAN LIMBURGER BRICK PABSTETT PIMENTO SWISS at the GARDEN OF ITALY
Adults, 25c STARTING Children, 10 cflfC3^l 3 l fi |6pl§ TODAY VISIT THE * Dialogue OHIO THEATRE Before or After You Stop at the New A GARDEN OF “The Home of T^anUnusual Films ” *["" a T d °L st c°h ] X\ MOSJOUKINE Murat." V •’<>' 111 DAOOVER
COMPLIMENTS of J. B. FLOWERS SHOP 43 W. Ohio St.
Quality • BEER • Furnished by the Pittsford Dist. Corp. RI. 1505 Delicious • PIES • Baked by the Pittsford Purity Pie Corp. 1420 N. Senate Ave. An Old Est. Inst.
The GARDEN of ITALY WILL USE KINGAN’S High Grade Meats • Mr. lozzo Intends to Serve Only Best in Meats, and for This Reason Has Chosen KINGAN’S
summer, and that a group of fair leaders will visit the exposition here Sunday. Vacant House Is Looted Theft of bathroom fixtures valued at SIOO from a vacant house at 135 North Miley avenue, owned by Mrs j Mary Wright. 129 North Miley avenue, was reported to police today. Jack Slips. Pinioned By Car Lonnie Brazell. 38. of 2529 Wood street, suffered chest and neck injuries Tuesday night when an automobile on which he was working | slipped from a jack and pionioned j him to the ground. He was treated ! at city hospital.
Congratulations ON YOUR NEW OPENING OF The Garden of Italy S Ostermyer Paper Cos. 148 Virginia Ave.
Serving Delicious WEBER MILK CREAM, BUTTERMILK FOR FOUNTAIN SERVICE AND CEREALS 11 WEBER MILK CO. 1125 Cruft St. DR. 4550
AUTO SMASHES INTO TRAIN; THREE HURT Two Men and Woman Face Intoxication Charges. Two men and a woman were under arrest on intoxication charges today following an accident in which a car driven by one of the men struck the side of a Big Four freight train on West Washington street, derailing five freight cars. Edgar Johnson. 47. Shelbyville,
ALL BEVERAGES COOLED With Sparkling POLAR ICE at the Beautiful Garden of Italy POLAR ICE AND FUEL CO. 2000 Northwestern Ave. TA. 0689
The GARDEN of ITALY Serves Milk—Cream—Creamed Buttermilk Sold and Served in Your Neighborhood FROM A Growing Indianapolis-Owned Concern
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We Modernized The Garden of Italy Let Us Modernize Your Home . . . at Lowest Prices Special “ n o T ut, $45.00 F Wall Lavatory . . TTCI= Complete KITCHEN SINKS Green, Double Drain Board, With 7C Chromium Combination Faucet vwd, l 0 White, 52 Inches Long. Complete With H C Chromium* Combination Faucet / J INDIANAPOLIS PLUMBING AND SUPPLY CO. 115 N. Alabama St. LI. 5788
That Delicious Maxwell House Coffee In Every Cup Being Served Daily at the m GARDEN OF ITALY Good to the Last Drop
-APRIL 19, 1933
who was driving, was held on a charge of driving while intoxicated. Kenneth Gordon. 23, of 1001 North Alabama street, who suffered facial injuries, and his wife, Mrs. Loretta Gordon. 25. passengers, were slated on intoxication charges. Appendicitis is unknown among some Arab tribes. COLE’S USED BOOK & MAGAZINE STORE Where vou can buv most of the popular magazines such as “Good Fousekeeping,” “Cosmopolitan." "Red Book" 1%. r. and practicallv all motion aJC to. picture magazines for onlv — "Geographic" and "Mentors". 3 for 2.V Ilf N. PENNSYLVANIA -ST.
Best of Success on t Your New Beautiful Garden of Italy • INDIANAPOLIS ELECTRIC SIGN CO. 512 N. Alabama St. LI-5674
Zimmerman Laundry Service Keeps Things Cleaned at the GARDEN OF ITALY Zimmerman Laundry 421 E. Wabash LI. 8671
