Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 34, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 June 1933 — Page 9
JUNE 20, 1033.
DOUBLE BURIAL ARRANGED FOR FATHER, SON War Veteran Dies 24 Hours After 2-Day-Old Boy Passes at Hospital. Double funeral services for McKinley H. Arnold, 3fl. of 35 North Temple avenue and his two-day-old son, Thomas Duncan Arnold, will be held at 2 Wednesday in the Wald funeral home, 1819 North Illinois street. Burial will be in Washington Park cemetery. Mr Arnold died Monday night in the U. 8. Veterans hospital, after an illness of a month. The baby died Sunday night at the William H. Coleman hospital. Mr. Arnold had lived in Indianapolis eleven years. Hf* was born in Shelby county. He was a member of Morristown lodge, No. 193. F. and A, M., and the Sahara Grotto. Surviving Mr. Arnold are the widow, a daughter, Mary Alice Arnold; three brothers, James D. Arnold, Fountaintown, and Charles T Arnold and Ralph Arnold, both of Greenfield, and a sister, Mrs. Frank Walker, also of Greenfield. Clancy Funeral Held Funeral services for Sumner Clancy, former state senator from Marion county, who died Saturday, were held at 10:30 today in the North wood Christian church. Burial was in Crown Hill cemetery. rhilputt Rites Thursday Last rites for Mrs. Anna B. Philputt, 77. who died Sunday in her apartment, at 3173 Central avenue, will be held at 10:30 Thursday in the Central Christian church, where her husband had been pastor twenty-seven years, until his death a few years ago. Burial will be in Rose Hill cemetery at Bloomington. Richard B. Keep Taken Following a short illness, Richard B Keep, 59, died Monday at the home of his daughters, Mrs. Edna Venable and Miss Catherine Keep, 1113 Harlan street. Mr. Keep had lived with his daughters four months, following the death of Mrs. Keep in Terre Haute. He had lived thirty years in Terre Haute prior to coming here. Funeral services will be held at 9 Wednesday in the daughters home. Burial will be in Terre Haute. Survivors, besides the daughters, are three brothers, Samuel Keep, Indianapolis; Bonsel Keep, Terre Haute, and James Keep, Sand Springs. Okla. Aged County Resident Dead Funeral services for Mrs. Virginia Bartlett, 75, were to held at 1 today in the home of her daughter, Mrs. Rosella Hayworth, 926 St. Peter street, and at 2:30 in the Acton M. E. church of which she was a member. Burial wall be in Acton cemetery. Mrs. Bartlett had been a resident of Acton fifty-six years. She moved here to live with her daughter, following the death of her husband, Fred Bartlett, a year ago. Survivors are the daughter, four sons, Sewell. Harry, Charles and Otis Bartlett, all of Acton; four sisters, Mrs. Susie Means. Julietta; Mrs. Rhoda Barlow and Mrs. Mary Weber, both of Shelbyville, and Mrs. Fillie Raus, Purdy, Mo.; three brothers, William Lands, Columbus; Ben Lands, Pleasant View, and Elijah Lands, Indianapolis, and three half-brothers, Harry Lands, Elizabethtown; Homer Lands, Landon, end Jack Lands, Oklahoma. City Girl Wins Scholarship Miss Martha Adams, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gibson Adams, 3417 Park avenue, has received a senior scholarship 8t the University of Wisconsin. In her junior year she was feature editor of the Wisconsin Daily Cardinal. Miss Adams attended Butler university tw r o years. She is a member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority.
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Contract Bridge
BY W. E. M’KENNEY RurreUry American Bridge Pint SEVERAL years ago we were Jed to believe that there was little or no similarity between any of the bidding systems at contract, but today, with the principles of constructive bidding being adopted by practically every system, the confusion of systems practically has been eliminated. This is well proved by the fact that experts throughout the country are today getting a great deal of enjoyment out of the individual duplicate tournaments. This is a movement wherein every player in a section plays with every other player as a partner once and as an opponent twice. At the end of the tournament, there is only one winner. To those who enjoy squeeze plays and can recognize them in actual competition, the following hand proved a real thrill in the recent Ohio state Individual contract tournament. Frank H. Grace of Cleveland, sitting in the South, opened the bidding with one heart. This was very gratifying to West, who passed. North, feeling that his diamond suit was a little too weak to bid on the first, round, responded with two clubs. Grace made a slam Lv bid of three no trump. North bid four diamonds, and Grace lost no time in getting into six no trump. nun THE queen of spades was opened by West, South winning with the ace and leading a club, which was won in dummy with the queen.
EEDDK ADAT SY BRUCE CATTON
“nnHE White Armies of Russia,” A by George Stewart, tells what surely must be one of the most confused and tragic tales in the world's history—the story of the various abortive counter-revilutions which followed the Bolshevik revolution in Russia. The losses involved in these civil wars stagger the imagination. One million men, women and children are known to have died in one campaign alone—the retreat of Kolchak's army across Siberia. England admitted pouring 200,000.000 pounds sterling into the Kolchak and Denikin revolts. America dropped more millions than an income taxpayer cares to think about in the Archangel adventure and in Siberia. And the net result of all of it was simply to prove that the Bolshevik regime was a hardier growth than world diplomats suspected. Mr. Stewart describes all of the “white” invasions; Kornilof, Denikin and Wrangel in the south. Kolchak in the east. Petlura in the Ultraine, Yudenitch in the north, and lesser ones elsewhere, and he makes the reason for their unvarying failure perfectly clear. They made about every mistake possible. They alienated the sympathy of the Russian masses from the start, their strategy was faulty, they quarreled among themselves, they believed their own lies and they failed to shake off the crooks, grafters and incompetents who flocked to their banners. They added immeasurably to the world s misery and they accomplished nothing whatever. Their story is horrifying—and enlightening. Published by MacMillan, the book sells for $4.
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A small diamond was played and the queen finessed. When it held, the ace was played, followed by the deuce, West discarding a heart and East winning the trick with the king. East returned the eight of spades, West played the ten, forcing North to win with the king. Dummy’s two good diamond were cashed, East discarding two clubs, declarer discarding two hearts and West discarding two spades. The ace of clubs then was cashed, West discarding a neart. The declarer was down to the ace, king and nine of hearts and a small spade. West held the jack of spades and three hearts to the queen. The king of clubs was led from dummy, declarer discarding the four of spades, and West was squeezed. If he dropped the jack of spades, dummy’s nine would be good, which if he discarded a heart, the declarer won the last three tricks in his own hand with the ace, king and nine of hearts. (Coovrieht. 1933. bv NEA Service. Inc.)
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
MURDER CHARGE FILED AGAINST BANDIT SUSPECT Lafayette Officer’s Slaying Laid to Man Held in City Jail. By United Prett LAFAYETTE, Ind., June 20 —An i affidavit charging first degree i murder was on file today against Dudley Richardson, alias Frank Byrd, one of two bandits wounded in a gun fight with Lafayette police I last week. The affidavit blames Richardson for the death of patrolman J. Wes- j ley Wilson, wounded with two brother officers during the exchange of shots. Almost at the same time Prosecutor Raymond M. Robertson was filing the murder affidavit, a petition for a writ of habeas corpus was filed in behalf of John R. Richardson, ! uncle of Dudley, by his attorney, j Frank S. Pryor, Frankfort. James ; Richardson, another uncle, died of \ his wounds. The petition was dismissed on Pryor’s motion after he had an opportunity to talk with his client, j The Richardsons were identified Monday as members of the gang | which held up two banks at Cul- j lom, 111., June 3, after terrorizing the town. Bids Received on Street Job Works board Monday received bids I for improvement cf South Meridian j street from South to Adler streets, i Improvements call for removal of j street car tracks for use of track- ! less trolleys. '
Four Girls at Lyric Are Splendid Tap Dancers BY WALTER D. HICKMAN THE cool deliberate fact is that the Four Queens are marvelous tap dancers. These four young women by their difficult stepping lift up the finale of the current vaudeville show at the Lyric, putting the ending at least in the hit class. The ensemble or team work of the Four Queens is perfectly timed. They work rapidly both as a dancing unit and as individual tap specialty dancers. To me the routine of these dancers Is magnificent. In the number which introduces the Four Queens, the Carla Torney Girls, permanent dancing unit, have a good black and white dress number.
Their waltz number is also gracefully and beautifully done. Ted Claire is a vast improvement over most of the mas-
ter of ceremonies we have had lately. I do contend that he calls upon the audience to applaud too much. He overdoes that but the fact remains he does sell the applause idea to the audience. Claire puts over songs in nice fashion. Personally I did. not care for one second of his burlesque on a dope fiend. Tome
i Tt li
Ralph Morgan
it was mighty crude and often of bad taste. The way the audience responded proves that I am in the small minority. Claire introduces an usher of the theater who turns out to be rather pleasing as a singer. No highly developed voice as yet but a pleasing personality. Polk and Dot are well known over the radio, especially to children. They have a pleasing way about them. It takes Rube Demarest, a corking good pianist, a long time to go through some rather pointless hokum with Miss Olive
I*f awMpg-. w%f: Ki& fi HE / I
Sibley, a woman who can sing when she stops clowning. She certainly goes in for Theda Bara poses. Rodney and Gould have a lot of
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hokum in their dance routine. They get the laughs easily. The movie is "Trick for Trick” and features Ralph Morgan, Sally Blane and Victor Jory. Now at the Lyric. Other theaters today offer: “The Nuisance” at the Palace. "Melody Cruise." at the Apollo, "Ann Carver's Profession," at the Circle, burlesque at the Colonial. "The Big Cage,” at the Mecca. “Christopher Strong.” at the Belmont, and, "Officer 13,” at the Talbott. Noted Astronomer Succumbs By l ni ted Brett DANVILLE. 111., June 20—W. R. Jewell, nationally known astronomer, died of cancer here Monday. Jewell, also a lawyer, gave a telescope to Wabash college a year ago. Funeral services were to be held today.
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Baby Scalded to Death ' By T'nited Prrtt PERU. Ind.. June 20.—Bums received when she fell into a tub of scalding water resulted Monday in the death of Hazel Darien* Manning. ?.
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