Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 192, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 December 1933 — Page 9
DEC. 21, 1933
FORMER COUNTY OFFICIAL'S AGED WIDOW IS DEAD Mrs. Nora Corbett Moved to City From Marion Two Years Ago. Mr*. Nora Corbett, 71, former resident of Marion, who had been living here the last two years, died last night at the home of her son-in-law, Dr. D. J McCarthy, 5033 Washington boulevard. Mrs. Corbett was the widow of the late James Corbett, former Grant county official, and a daughter of John Kiley, former mayor of Marion. Funeral services will be held at St. Pauls church, Marion, at 8:30 Saturday morning. Burial will be in Marion. Surviving Mrs. Corbett are her daughter. Mrs. D. J. McCarthy, Indianapolis; two sisters, Mrs. Thomas Mahaffey, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Gus S. Condo, Marion, and a brother, George P. Kelly, Marion. Burch Funeral Set The funeral of Ervin L. Burch, 54, Maywood, will be held at 2 tomorrow in the William P. Beanblossom funeral home. Burial will be in Memorial Park cemetery. Mr. Burch died Tuesday of heart disease. He was a veteran of the Spanish-American war and an employe of Duesenberg, Inc. Surviving him are a daughter, Miss Leota Burch, and a son, Lawrence Burch. Dies of Pneumonia Pneumonia caused the death yesterday of Mrs. Catharine McAloon, 74, at the home of her daughter, Mrs. John C. Consodine, 5560 Washington boulevard. Funeral services will be held in the Sacred Heart Catholic church at Ottumwa, la., Saturday morhing. Mrs. McAloon had been a resident of Indianapolis for twenty-two years. She was a member of St. Joan of Arc Catholic church. Mrs. Consodine is her only survivor. Former Resident Dies News of the death of Casper W. Losey. 80. former resident of Indianapolis, on Tuesday at the home of his daughter Mrs. Ethel Easter, Macon. Mo., has been received. Mr. Losey moved from Indianapolis to Macon last May. Funeral services were to be held at 2 this afternoon in the Friends church in Westfield, with the Rev. David M. Edwards, pastor of the First Friends church in Indianapolis officiating. Surviving Mr. Losey are two daughters, Mrs. Easter and Mrs. H. C. Griffin, 1718 North Illinois street and a son, Orville Losey, Los Angeles. Long Illness Ends Life George Baker, 63, of 403 Douglas street, died last night following a long illness. His body was taken to the city morgue. Former City Man Is Dead Word has been received of the death of G. C. Lighthiser, 38, assistant fire chief of Sebring, Fla., since 1926 and former Indianapolis resident. He had been ill for some time and had visited in Indianapolis last summer in an attempt to regain his health. His parents. Mr. and Mrs. James Lighthiser, Indianapolis, were with him whne death came. Funeral services will be held in Sebring tomorrow. Surviving him are the parents; the widow, Mrs. Kathryn Lighthiser; a daughter, Betty Lighthiser; a sister, Mrs. W. G. Crass, Indianapolis, and a brother, Jaseph J. Lighthiser. Sebring. Injured by Hit-and-Kun Driver Miss Myrtle Burns. 50, of 1203 Brookside avenue, was struck by a hit-and-run driver as she was about to board a street car at Pennsylvania and Washington streets late last night. She suffered injuries of the right leg and body bruises. Radio Stolen From Home Using a pass key. a thief late yesterday broke into the home of Paul Knoop, 228 North Senate avenue, and stole a radio valued at sls. he reported to police.
,__ __ _ - v\ Values That MILLER-WOHL S % T s r kf r W 1 Themselves CREATEST%• •* DRESS\|S s E-V-E-N-TiW| A m ?i ze i fHr ' MM the Miss or Matron 14 to 50 nartest Styles for Every • A jralaxy of the newest casion, street wear and shades and colors. Also e dance! blacks. lines that can not be •Our convenient LAY-A-iplicated at a much WAY plan at your disffher price. posal. WE SAY IT WITH VALUES' AT v 45 E. WASHINGTON ST.
Contract Bridge
Today’s Contract Problem While the natural contract, here, is three no trump by South, which can be made easily, one pair bid four spades and made it—an interesting play. Can you make four spades against the best defense? AKQJ6 V K 10 49 6 5 *A7 4 3 A !* 7 4 2 A 10 * V J 9 3 * _ V Q 8 7 4 4J 2 " K 4A QlO AQilO 9 \ 7 4 A 6 2 AA 5 3 VA6 5 2 4K 8 3 AK 8 5 Solution in next issue. IS
Solution to Previous Contract Problem BY W. E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League rvON'T think, just because you have a winning trick in your hand, that always it is safe to cash it. In today’s hand the declarer throws West in the lead, granting him a good trick and leaving him with another good trick. Before cashing that good trick,
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West should stop to reason why South has let him in to make those tw'o tricks. Os course, the answer is that South, the declarer, wishes to get a squeeze on the East player and has no squeeze card of his own; so he deliberately throws West in the lead, in an endeavor to get him to squeeze his own partner. The bidding is normal and West’s natural lead is the eight of spades. A small spade is played from the dummy and East wins the trick with the king. He returns the deuce of spades, West wins with the ace and returns the ten of spades. A club is discarded from dummy, East discards a club, and South wins the trick with the jack. South cashes the ace of hearts and then leads the eight of hearts, West’s queen dropping. Dummy wins the trick with the king. A small diamond is led, East playing the ten, and declarer finessing the queen which holds the trick. a it a THE drop of the queen of hearts by West marks East with four hearts. The fact that he went up on the diamond marks him with probably the king and jack of diamonds. , It looks as though it is impossible to make the contract. But South, the declarer, decides to try to squeeze East, so he leads the seven of spades, which West wins w r ith the nine, a small club being discarded from dummy. East has to drop the eight of diamonds If West makes the mistake of cashing his six of spades, which, cf course, is a good card, a small diamond will be discarded from dummy and East will be squeezed. If he lets go a heart, both hearts in dummy will be good, while if he lets go a diamond or a club, those cards will be good in the declarer's hand. Whichever cards East releases, the declarer will squeeze him in that suit, and the contract of three no trump will be made. This play is known as the suicide squeeze. (Copyright. 1933, by NEA Service. Inc.} A grown-up man breathes about fifteen to sixteen times a minute; a woman breathes about eighteen times, while children breathe faster.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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