Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 125, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 October 1933 — Page 22

PAGE 22

BLAST THETKT THAT JOBLESS REFUSE WORK Claim of Some Is Branded Unfounded by State Road Chairman. Experience of the state highway department with the ‘made work program has proven that the contention that unemployed don't want to work" is absolutely unfounded, it was asserted today by Chairman James D. Adams of the state highway commission. “We had a unique experience in testing this theory in the northern Indiana districts last week." Mr. Adams declared. ‘lt rained there constantly for two days. "Our foreman announced that any of the men who didn’t want to work would not jeopardize their job by remaining away until the rain ceased. "Not a man fell out. ‘On the second day the group assembled, as usual, at 5:30 a. m. It was pouring so hard that the foreman suggested taking the day off. "The men protested. They wanted to work and get paid. One of them told the foreman that he hadn’t had a job with pay for more than two and one-half years and weather meant nothing to him in comparison with working again and getting paid for it.” More than 6,000 men are working in all parts of the state now and more will be added daily, the chairman said. About 300 are working out of Indianapolis. Many more could be working here, if it were not for failure of farmers to cooperate in obtaining right-of-way, Mr. Adams explained. In many sections of the state, they are co-operating 100 per cent he said. Fourteen survey crews now are working on city paving projects to be federally financed ai in plans are expected to be completed by Nov. 1, according to Mr. Adams. Three of the crews are working on Indianapolis streets, seven miles of which have been included in the program which has received federal approval.

Tobacco to grow, to ripen and m 1 mk 'IBB I become mellow , /#rrs so take in or .jf * m \absorb something ,.. not Vitamin D, ■\v. Jr of course* but something that it gets m % / from the right amount of Sunshine jj|y % It** the Southern sunshine you read about, ■k v eomhinerl with the right sort of climate and A-'pk H| moisture, that make? the Karolinas. Georgia, p jBBj Kentucky. Maryland, and \ irginia the best mL v Mm tobacco country in the world. ",A WL \You can stand down there in that Southrayfl ern sunshine and almost see it grow. I fA • * qflßfc. * >A\*^ p f ir v ' This ripe, mellow tobacco is skillfully ;■ ' ‘ cured by the farmer. Then, for 30 months, * '# Y it's a ged-just like fine wine. |g|pEk' Jr., ;; these tobaccos, blended and cross-blended —then seasoned with Turkish, to make a ' % \(' j milder cigarette. Sunshine helps. Just try it! Chesterfield JjtMTT A MvEU \ | t/ie cigarette t/iatb milder • t/ie- cigarette t/tat tastes better Tobacco Cos. y -Js&&&!sr J 1 < .\ •'-.. y- • * * fi I I *1 M M

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Orchestra Officers Named Robert Taylor has been chosen president of the Technical high school concert orchestra for the present term. La Verne Wischelmer,

vice-president; James Reed, sec-retary-treasurer, Oscar Kirsch and John Donahue, librarians, and Robert Kuerst, sergeant-at-arms hold the other offices in the organization.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PALESTINE NOT JEWISH HAVEN, EXPERTJJLAIMS Far From Being Promised Land, Assertion of Dr. Duncan. Vy Science Screice WASHINGTON, Oct. 4—" Palestine is not necessarily the Promised Land for the Jews. The Promised Land for which the Jews must look today is the land that offers the most promise to them. From this standpoint the most promising lands today are the United States and British dominions." This is the view expressed today by Dr. George S. Duncan, specialist in oriental studies at the American university in Washington. Dr. Duncan just has returned from Palestine where he checked up on the results of ten years under British mandate, and the signposts towards Palestine’s future. So far. Palestine has not proved a place that can absorb Jewish people in great quantities. There are about 175,000 Jew's in the land, and 760,000 Moslems. One hundred seventy-five thousand Jews are a tenth of the Jews in New' York City. As for the future, Dr. Duncan points out that the population of Palestine is nearing its saturation point so rapidly that within thirty years the country will be unable to support more people, judging by the present normal rate of increase. “The relation of Moslem and Jew in Palestine is extcpmely strained.” added Dr. Durfcan. "It is indeed said that if British should withdraw from Palestine there would not be a Jew there in twenty-four hours.”

CARD PARTY ARRANGED Social Event to B* Held Thursday by Pocahontas Council. The Belle Queena Council No. 425, Degree of Pocahontas, will sponsor a card party at 8:30 Thursday, in Odd Fellow's hall, East Tenth and Rural streets. Sponsors for the party include Mrs. Otto Hofman, Mrs. Nelson R Benner. Mrs. Roy Lambert and Mrs Wilbur Hale.

Contract Bridge

BY W. E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League WHEN playing the constructive one over one system of bidding. after first and second hand have passed and it comes to you third hand, you naturally do not wish to pass. Without tricks or a good biddable suit, we generally bid a club or a diamond, This bid simply is made to give partner a chance and quite often it is nothing more or less than a psychic bid. Asa result, some interesting situations develop.

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Take for example the following hand: South and West passed, and North bid one club. This was East's best suit, and he passed. South I bid two clubs. This was a rather risky bid in face of the fact that his partner had opened with a third hand club and might hold only a l doubleton. West passed. North, w'hen he had bid the club, had hoped that his partner would respond with a spade j or a heart, but now that South had | bid two clubs the best thing for | North to do was to pass so as not to get any further into trouble. East passed and opened the ten i of hearts. The king was played j from dummy, and West w'on with the ace, returning the queen of hearts. He then led the jack of J spades which declarer w’on with the ace, leading the jack of hearts and discarding a spade. an HE then led the eight of hearts. East made the mistake of discarding a spade instead of trumping, so the declarer discarded the other losing spade from dummy and

f then led the jack of diamonds which East won with the ace. East returned a small club, and i declarer let it ride to his ten spot, j He then led the seven of diamonds : and took the finesse. The king of diamonds was played, follow'ed by the ten of diamonds, which West trumped, North discarding a spade and East discarding the queen of spades. West returned the king of spades, and East trumped with the queen. The declarer undertrumped in dummy with the eight, allowing East to hold the trick, so as to make both his ace and jack of clubs. If he had gone right up with the ace. East would have won the last | tw'o club tricks. iCoDvrieht. 1933. bv NEA Service. Inc.)

LEGION AUXILIARY LEADERS SELECTED Five New Vice-Presidents Assume Duties. By United Pret* CHICAGO, Oct. 4—Five new national vice-presidents of the American Legion Auxiliary took office today. Elected at the convention of the legion and associated organizations, they are: Western division, Mrs. Elizabeth Brendell. San Francisco; northwestern division, Mrs. O. W. Hahn, Freemont, Neb.; eastern division, Miss Anna Manion, Waltham, Mass.; central division, Mrs. J. F. Duffendack. North Kansas City, Mo.; southern division, Mrs. Charles Miller, Little Rock, Ark. Out of every hundred men sentenced in English courts, only 15 are guilty of crimes serious enough to draw sentences of more than three months in prison.

it -6494 For Good Dry Cleaning I DYEING S French STEAM dye works I _2fiS Jitter* I Main Plant. 317 West Maryland St. I RUGS, DRAPERIES, CARPETS HATS Cleaned and Dyed FURS

VANDERBURGH LEADS IN NEW OIL WELLS Production of 265 Barrels Daily Is Reported. More producing oil wells were completed in Vanderburgh county than in any other section of Indiana during September, according to the monthly report of Paul F. Simpson, state gas supervisor. Six wells completed in the county had an initial daily output of 265 barrels. The largest was a 100-bar-rel well. Other oil production was reported from Gibson county, where four wells were completed, one of 150 barrels daily output. Perry county reports a well of twenty-five barrels and Pike one of five barrels. Only county reporting: completed gas wells was Pike, with two of 700.000 and 800.000 cubic feet daily output, respetively. Hearing, as a rule, is more acute with the right ear than with the left.

COLDS Go Overnight When You Take The Right Thing! A cold doesn't have to run its course and expose ou to serious complications. A cola can be routed overnight if you go about it the right way. First of ah, a cold being an internal infection, calls for internal treatment. Secondly, a cold calls for a COLD remedy and not for a “cure-all.” Grove’s Laxative Bromo Quinine is what a cold requires. It is expressly a cold remedy. It is internal and direct —and it does the four things necessary. It opens the bowels, combats tl. cold germs and fever in the system, relieves the headache and grippy feeling and tones and fortifies the entire system. Anything less than that is taking chances w'ith a cold. Get Grove's Laxative Bromo Quinine at any druggist, 30c and 50c. Ask for it by the full name and beware of dealers who offer substitutes.—Advertisement.

OCT. 4, 1933

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