Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 268, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 March 1934 — Page 17
MARCH 20, 1931
HORIZONTAL Anwfr to Previous Puzzle 12 To result. 1 :rv.L ::si — ’ Sgi& H®6tfiT g ; !|S •-- dram.. y,E;S£S G. OfiEgß ..* Lh.tV EiVitße XUCMS UAP.| Jl Performs. i F ACMI WtLLO | c g T f 5 22 And 16 Ingenuous. I sMpt jNi&U I iSHIAPT 2 4 Observed 1? Horse food. 18 Reverence. TiDQE VTWrjRE TIN 26 Courtesy titles 1! Old-womanish. ST EjE[DJPKE'PMe QQ.OEI 27 Untwisted silk 2n Part of a ~Tr-tA I iE)HPD.OL 28 Opposite of hoi stamp battery. |SOIJ(MI i©AC l-*Ej|(S 29 To lubricate. 21 Era. |q u'T;U : I iiffm 5 * OP VI 31 Hodgepodge. 22 Paradise. 32 Custom. 23 Northeast. 38 Hastened. work. _35 Serene. 25 Paid publicity. 59 To affirm. . N. Y. 38 Kingdom. 26 She is one of 41 Exclamation VERTICAL 40 Kish of the our best used to carp family, feminine s frighten. ITo depart. 42 Escort. 27 Eye tumor. 42 Girdle. 2 High priests 44 Three. 28 To quote. 43 Southeast. rol>e. 45 Mineral spring 29 Adhesive 44 Baseball nine. 3 Genuine. 46 Brooch, substance. 45 Extra part. 4 To attempt. 47 Social insect. 30 Portals. 49 Minor note. 5 Sun god. 48 Second note. 33 To peruse. 50 Pertaining to 6 Wooden pin. 49 Ingredient of 34 Measures of the lore. 7 Female sheep. lacquer, cloth. 52 To deem. 8 You and I. 51 Either. 35 Company. 53 Moccasin. 9 Interior. 52 Exclamation 36 To dine. 54.55 Famous 10 Thin tin foil. of surprise 37 To free. piece of her 11 Nothing. J3 Pair (abbr.). BT""" i4 <5 'g i'i je. 1 p jio ih he Jl3 I czdptzisiibifc^ tfFtSgPl- - it 34 35 ■"> r™"™ ” Bmk M" IMI ~PTIT rnTrl 111 rrrr
Contract Bridge
BY W. E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League IN my opinion, duplicate fast is replacing money bridge. Especially during the recent depression, players have desired a pleasant medium for whiling away idle time, and bridge is just as enjoyable a game whether or not it is played for a stake. Attending the Niagara Frontier tournament at Buffalo recently, I was surprised at the great interest shown in duplicate bridge in that city. I congratulated H. A. Merris and J. R. Conley on winning the open pair championship event against a very good field. Mr. Conley gave me today's hand, which he had played in Chicago. It was the last hand of the evening —the crowd had gathered around his table, and he felt called upon to provide some entertainment, which accounts for his original psychic bid of one diamond. It turned out that the deuces produced
AJ 3 2 VKG 5 3 4 A J 10 *9 13 AlO9 6 4 £ 1AK875 VJ9B \v E VQIO7 4 K Q 9 S 6 g 47543 A 5 Dealer A Q • A AQ VA 4 2 ♦ 2 * AKJIO S 6 2 Duplicate bridge-—None vul. Opening lead—4 K. South West North East 1 4 Pass 2N. T. Pass 6 A Double 6 4 Double 7 A Double Pass Pass 13
THE LAS: f-S OeO RYWH
This Curious World Ferguson
m f ' " " ' ~ ' ..hi.... . 1 :• j| l '. * i ~ ~7~ -• *• S^**^ ANCIENT CITV 1 was built on top of E/GHT 07TVEQ C/7VES/ EXCAVATIONS SHOWED THE NINE OTIES, EACH BUILT ON THE RUINS OF ITS PREDECESSOR, THE. FIRST DATING BACK TO THE LATE STONE AGE.. /)0 IT IS f/A/ THEORETICALLY ILM possible jfp% /H A FOR ONE PAIR OF n'/j&) V'A SK| P AUSTRALIAN 4) ffran rabbits i#H**hl!ZJc KH 10 HAVE twenty mmT% DES C£M&wrs tW IN FIYE YEARS. W 7 f PtANTS WOULD USE UP ALL 1 THE CARBON D/OXIDE IN THE vM>\ ■ f/f AIR IN 37 YEARS, IF THEY DID | ' / Kjf "C v * ' NOT RETURN ANY THROUGH DECAY ; jil\ j’ ( v HEINRICH SCHLIEMANN was the discoverer of the buried cities In the great mound of Troy. The mound itself was about 125 feet high, but all nine cities were found after digging only fifty feet, the first settlement having been fouaded on a hilltop seventy-five feet high. NEXT—Does a submarine meet with more water resistance below the water, or on the surface?
the most thrills, as Mr. Conley and his partner held all of them. Os course, the psychic diamond fooled no one but Mr. Conley’s partner, in the North, as was demonstrated by the fact that he took Conley to six diamonds over six clubs. a a a TYTEST'S opening lead was the ’ * king of diamonds, which was won in dummy with the ace—and deuce No. 1 was saved. Mr. Conley, now realized that to make his contract, the spade finesse must work, so he immediately led the second deuce —the deuce of spades—from dummy and played the queen, which held. The club suit was started, the ace and king picking up the oustanding clubs. West discarding the six of diamonds. Four more rounds of clubs were taken. West let go three spades-and a diamond. Two hearts and a diamond were discarded from dummy East dropped three diamonds and a spade. The ace of spades was cashed next, and West was forced to let go the nine of diamonds. The declarer now led the deuce of cluhs, which put the squeeze on both East and West. West could not release the queen of diamonds, so he dropped a heart. The jack of diamonds was discarded from dummy and now East was squeezed. He could not let go a spade, so he was forced to drop a heart. Os course, both East and West had been forced to bear down to two hearts, so all the declarer had to do was to lead the four of hearts, win in dummy with the king, return a small heart to win with the ace, and the deuce of hearts won the thirteenth trick. (Copyright, 1934, by NEA Service, Inc.)
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
W\ THAI COLLAR BUTTON Ilf TOWARD YOU WITH f H, tGKD j§} WHAT YOU LOSI, MR JA * SHILLING ! IVE if Z ■ROOTH’BY * IT WAS { / WORN THAT COLLAR II WITH ThE TRENCH =1 ) button BOR 32 A £<£; ®* iff HALL STAIRS CARPET f \ YEARS, AND I Vfc Y 3L • VOL) SA,D YOU ") LAST ] A BtABU WH n SO UDNG/t THOUGHT i WITHOUT IT-LAST Urom fa-ring, mS IT WAS GONNA "BE / f NIGHT I ) AN”D 1 Mm GOLD, WITH A UDST s><R, K -pouND VT~ DIAMOND IN IT- J | l OVil if "PLAYING j | BUT ITS ONLY /f AT L IHAI SAHARA #r>WT ! J> ( WMV\ YOUR • S sand--V/ m _ . T_J /aim 10 \\ HUNCLES . Tu , MK 3-20 a j
FRECKLES AiSL) HIS FRIENDS
Hl| ffilPMtC 1 VJHY MRS. COOR-. )IF YOU WON'T PAY THAT I . SSF EXCUSE ME A— NOW, JUST v _ \ 1 I—l WASNT J FIGURE, TUEU TJE OMLY I M'■ MOMEWT, MR. SCUTTLE,,. ' WHAT Do YOU v \ TEN THOUSAND \ ( . PREPARED TO \ PART CP THIS PLACE ■ ELL IT ■lt MUST SEE How THE I A C 3 a ) \* / B OFPEQ YOU THAT ) ~ rua YOU LU OET IS -i Looks As , F || BREAD TM bar,NO 1 1 T /VI MUCH MONEY. / HANCINC ON THE FENCE, 1 "THE PARRCfT u.o^-w.c 6
WASHINGTON TUBBS II
f( WOT'S SHE A A WHAT'S WHO LIKE? ) / THE GIRL* THE YOUNG MAN, I CAN'T SEE HlfS\ ( LIKE, APACHE? J V ' ——j V— ' SNAPPY BOW BOW ( ANY OP YORE DAD r~ N ~K V Vou JUST BIN / SURN BUSINESS. J S \ (. V RiPlN’ WITH* / J —7
ALLEY OOP
''out IN TH 1 PATH of TH’ MONSTERS I RACED, f\ SMILED TO lAYSF.LF AM 1 SCREAMED A COMMAND KNOWING FULL WELL NO DANGER 1 FACED/ AN' LO AN' BEHOLD, DIN NY SUD TO A STAND// BUT TH' BLOOD OF TH' PEOPLE WHO WATCHED, WAS CHILLER HE GAVE ME A LOOK OF REPROACH - K\NDA SADBECAUSE 1 KNEW, THEY THOUGHT VO BE KILLED t AN' HUNG HIS HEAD LIKE HE THOUGHT l WAS /HAD/
BuOiS AIN JJ R..,K BUIJJJiLS
TARZAN THE INVINCIBLE
' ’ ■ ;. . . .~.'j * '
Seeing failure once again imminent by the refusal of the blacks to advance, and obsessed by the belief that the treasures of Opar would make him fabulously wealthy, Peter Zveri determined to follow Romero and Colt into Opar. together with Dorsky, Ivitch and the Opar, with Dorsky, Ivitch and the Filipino.
Do ALL Your Shopping Downstairs at AYRES . . . Where Correct Fashions Are LESS Expensive!
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
By the time the four men had passed through the outer wall, Romero and Colt were already out of sight beyond the inner wall. Once again the warning scream broke menacingly upon the brooding silence of the ruined city. “What do you suppose it could be?” ejaculated Ivitch.
—By Ahem
OUT OUR WAY
J lllillf 14 i ! L'SSEN here. \ ( I hafta \ ' J ' , 1 , i: / WORM WART! I OIT it high, j - I ■ •: WHY DO YOU so I KIN , mlMm ia Ij always pile / see whut J / \ yri SO MUCH MORE \\ I’M EAT’N*. r—- / \ U ,\ onto vour Plate iV J l \ VI 1 \ THAN YOU CAN 7 L- JM*' j 3^ ARE MADE - MOT BORN■ ,
/AW,COME ONI, APACHE, A SUTTIWLYA AND, EVEN IF I WAS, I GOT N LON&LV \'X YOU AiNT SWEET ON HEF?J NOT.I GOT ENOUGH SENSE WOT TO GO COURTin’ ' HEIBESS* ) ARE YOU ? j j A WIFE AN' NO BEAUTIFUL HEIRESS TO MILLIONS,] U* ' p l FAMILY. LIKE MISS LANE-EVEN IF SHE 7 T~7 y * —
WHILE TH' POPULACE STOOD WITH THEIR MOUTHS AGAPE, ’V'XK / NOW, MV LITTLE STUNT AWONDERING HOW THIS AFFAIR WOULD SHADE, / WOULD HAVE GOME \ GLARED AT OE DINNV AN’ ASKED HIM,REAL TOUGH, ( OVER BIG - EXCEPT WHAT HE MEANT BY PULLIN’ THAT KINDA STUFF/ —... FO R KING TUNK j pi! , HE WRECKED Ha aM<i /.whats TH* £TjWf Hi 1 His f VEAH?\ MV jig - f / leaning°f™s.\ ? JMiUkr 1 # > 1 _/•
r. —iW ir r—ri i \ f • (Bp Wy. VOUKKS MAU,\F VOG DOUT OH ,COME, \\ WSS, SOT HE 15LT 11 ==s=® Ills STOP THAT IWERNM VOO STEPHEN \ CANT Voo TEU. IfT" UOO-ING, AT THIS TIME EET THE if THAT HE'S HO \\ 'S OF WIGHT, GEORV , l'u_ Voon THING H SJLjJ MORTAL. AGONY ? :: !i— -A COME DOWN THERE.
“Shut up!” exclaimed Zveri irritably. “Stop thinking about it, or you’ll go yellow too!” Slowly they crossed the court, nor was there much enthusiasm manifest among the other than an evident desire in the breast of each to permit another the glory of leading.
—By Bcigar Bice Burro ugns
Tony, the Filipino, had reached the opening when a bedlam of noise from the opposite side of the wall burst upon their ears—a hideous chorus of war cries mingled with the sound of rushing feet. There was a shot, and then another and another 4
PAGE 17
—By Williams
—By Blosser
—By Crane
—By Hamlin
Bv 1\ :?i't ill
