Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 60, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 July 1933 — Page 7
;TT7LY 20, 1933
CHARGES CODE TO COST 1,500 CITY MILL JOBS Rea! Silk Officials Send Protest to Recovery Program Chief. Adoption of a rode under national recovery art provisions for the fullfashioned hosiery Industry will cause 1.500 employes of Real Silk Hosiery Mills to lose their Jobs. O E Efroymson. president, said today. He notified General Hush S. Johnson. Washington administrator of the art protesting against restriction of footing machines in fullfashioned mills to forty hours a week. Real Silk officials feel this section of the code is discriminatory. •'Marhinerv set-up of Real Silk Mills,” Efroymson explained. is composed of one footing machine to three legging machines, and the only way we can keep our employes working is bv operating every group of four machines on two shifts ” Some eastern mills, he said, have two footing machines to three legging machines, and, thus, ran operate to whatever capacity they desire on one shift It would be impractical for the company to install additional footing machines, he pointed out. •Wp respectfully protest against the restriction and must insist for the protection of our workers and our mil! that footing machines be allowed to operate on two shifts,” a telegram to Johnson stated. Recently, 300 workers have been added to Real Silk pay rolls Wages of 2.500 employes will be increased 10 per cent Monday. CHILD HIT BY TRUCK Girl, I. Suffers Fractured Arm and Is Treated at City Hospital. Struck by a truck as she was running across the 500 block of South State avenue Wednesday. Patricia Hedges. 4, of 1609 Fletcher avenue, suffered a fractured left arm and was treated at city hospital. Charles Dunbar, 20, of 840 Bates street, drove the truck.
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Contract Bridge
BY WM. E. MKENNEY S*trtin Anfrkm Bride* Uuor DON'T become possessed with the idea that you must have a preemptive bid or jump to game immediately just because you have a long, strong trump suit. Pre-emptive bidding almost Is a thing of the past at contract today —about the only thing a preemptive bid does is to shut your partner out of the bidding. When you haven't game in your own hand, open with a one bid. If you need entry cards in your partners hand to go game, remember that in the constructive one over one system of bidding he will show those entry cards, if he has them, by at least a bid of one no trump. Look over the following hand. Declarer has seven spades and a side ace. Partner has two kings. Yet, in order for the declarer to go game, he must execute a neat end play. South should open the bidding with one spade—not a pre-emptive bid of three or four. West will pass. The North player, playing the constructive one over one. would bid two hearts on this hand, while others, considering the weakness of the heart suit, will bid one no trump I have no quarrel with either bid so long as North makes a bid of some Kind, giving his partner a chance South now can Jump to three spades if he wishes—this is a forcing bid and North's proper response would be three no trump. However. South would take the contract to four spades. a a a WEST'S opening lead would be a small diamond which East would 'win with the ten. East's best defense Is to return the jack of spades. Declarer will win with the ace, and should immediately i swing another round of trump. Declarer should now try to establish a club entry in dummy so as to be able to take the heart finesse. His proper play is the queen of clubs, but East will refuse to win the first club trick and will play ! the eight. In order to get a reading on the hand, thp declarer now' should swing > three rounds of spades, discarding three hearts from dummy. East will drop tw'o clubs and the jack of diamonds—this will practically mark i him with the king of hearts! as he
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has refused to make a heart discard. Declarer's next play should be the five of clubs, finessing the ten. East i will win with the ace and then return the ace of diamonds, which the , declarer will trump with the deuce of spades. The only chance the declarer now has to make his contract is to find both the king and jack of hearts in the East hand, so his proper play is a small heart, away from his acequeen. East will win with the jack. 1 and now must return a heart and the declarer can take the finesse. While he has made his contract, it ; w’as a hard struggle. | < Copyright. 1933 bv NEA Service. Inc.) BURGLARS GET LOOT Small Amount of Booty Taken From Two City Homes. Burglars broke into the home of Earl King of 1102 North Pershing avenue. Wednesday and stole home furnishings and personal belonging'! valued at more than s2l. Miss Ella Erwin of 412 East Twenty-third street, reported to police that burglars who tore a screen from a kitchen window of her home, stole a mantle clock and a small bank containing an undetermined amount of money. Injured in 15-Foot Fall Frank Brown, 54. of 5113 Burgess avenue, was recovering today from head, shoulder and foot injuries suffered Wednesday when he fell fifteen feet from a ladder on which he was standing while paint- ! ing a house at 528 North Gray street.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
SOVIET STAFF OF RAILROAD CHIEFS FIRED Drastic Efforts Will Be Made for Improving Transport Service. By Vnit" f Prrm MOSCOW, July 20.—The entire staff of vice-commissars in charge of Russian railways was dismissed today as one of a series of drastic efforts to improve transport. A new transport committee was formed of ten prominent Communists. Viacheslav Molotov, chairman of the council of people s commissars, in an effort to stimulate workers, signed an order to improve food supplies of railway workers. Vladimir (Bill! Shatoff. widely known in the United States, where he once lived, was one of the commissars dismissed. TRIO ROBS MOTORISTS Hold Up Couple and Take Auto; Phone Later Where to Find Car. Three bandits held up Mr. and Mrs. John Kutch, Meeker hotel, on Northwestern avenue near Seventeenth street. The Kutchs were forced out o! their automobile and one of the bandit trio drove it away. Kutch later was called at his hotel and told the car was in front of St. Francis hospital. Beech Grove, where police found it. HEALTH BOARD NAMED Three-Member Group Replaces Old Bipartisan Organization. A three-member state health board has been appointed by Governor Paul V. McNutt to take the place of the old four-member, bipartisan board abolished under the reorganization act. All new appointees are Democrats. They are Drs. Ernest R.ipel, 5716 North Pennsylvania street; J. C. Glackman. Rockport, and Edmund Van Buskirk. Ft. Wayne. '
ANGLERS FIND ‘FISHERMAN'S PARADISE'
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Left to right. B. T. Chiles. R. Rasmussen and A. 1,. Daugherty, with their catches of pike.
Returned from a vacation trip to Big Boy lake, seventy miles north of Brainerd. Minn., three employes of Eli Lilly & Cos., declared today the lake is their idea of a fisherman's paradise. Those who made the trip were B. T. Chiles. 5442 College avenue: R Rasmussen, 2030 Caroline avenue. and A. L. Daughertv, Mars Hill.
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They reported that catching enough fish for meals was easy.
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FLOOD PROJECT 'SLAVE' CAMPS QUIZ MAY DROP Contractors’ Code Drafted to Correct Conditions as Charged. BY MARSHALL M NEIL Time. Special Writer WASHINGTON. July 20—The senatorial investigation of alleged j "slavery" conditions among workers on the Mississippi river flood control project may be called off. if the contractors' code, as now draft- ■ ed. is approved by the national recovery administration. Fred Beneke, representing the Mississippi valley branch of the Associated General Contractors, said today that the code will remedy all the conditions complained of. The code, which embraces about 85 per cent of thp contractors now doing work in the valley, or some 1 sixty-five in number, is about to be
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