Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 276, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 March 1934 — Page 23

MARCH 29, 1931.

HORIZONTAL Anrwer to Prevlmiw Pur.xle 15 The French 1 Who wa* the r started the American P* F C t A W'A-L. SSHI lU canal under canal builder i l l i'B|l II I I i', I i/jB I . I / I leaderin the picture? L .A/qM^E*O.ON ship. Id Balker. A,NI WBSE 0 T AMW.Q.I M 17 Metal string. 11 Man. NA M E QJ|l |iSjHC§E]u£ 20 An army. 1.1 Japanese fish. [dBBiD'Q Li G MPQ 5 EMDI 22 Hub. H Age. lAMS~£ AS I D El| 22 One who sue*. 15 Northwest ff.UTjBRU)NjH£ STELLA P 25 To relate. 1* Myself. O DQ-OMDE ALT] m . e ,, £ 27 Death notice 19 Within. btESMt LLj| mLDh £ 30 Sun god. fO Masculine ST AR ££©■§£]___. I 31 Mangle. prnnoiiß. 03TE A L Aft e'D 32 Form of “he." 21 Cott'.n tSriQ'L'VMP I C G AM/eREI 35 Deep pnrple machine. color. 23 Sun. 4 i Old wagon the project. .37 Financial. 2i Angry. track. VkRTKAI 39 Bulb flower. 25 Rodent. 45 Meals. 413.1415. 23 Field of 49 Energy. 2 Exclamation 42 Pair tabbr.). granular snow. 50 To slant. of inquiry. 43 To renovate. 29 Experiment 52 Snaky fish. 3 Opposite of tn. 45 Precept. 33'Wagers. 53 Plant shores. 4 To countersink 47 Northeast. 34 Tree , gonna 55 Goddess of STo mourn. 48 Deity. Ulmus. peace. 5 Relief in GodL 49 Game played 35 Rranch. 57 Hall. 7 Cornucopia. on horseback. 37 Evergreen tree 58 He buflt the 8 Wine vessel. 51 Writing 38 And Canal. 9 Behold. implement 40 To cut off. 59 fever was 12 He was a U. S. 54 Sick. 42 Cavity. the chief army —— 56 Type standard. 43 Second note. handicap on (pi.). 57 Southeast.

I 1 ri*r rli ii ir r t inn o '' 1 kxv'j .AV\ ~ k iYj ‘iS \V\rtO <SN ? 2 ripTZ^l_ll' 1" 5e H so - I

Contract Bridge

Today’s Contract Problem South is dealer. How should the bidding proceed between North and South, East and West always passing? A 10 8 4 2 V 10 .1 ♦K S U AK 8 5 V N V (Blind) E (Blind) ♦ s ♦ A Bonier ] A A A K VAKQ J 7 2 ♦ A 9 AA Q 7 Solution in next issue. 22

Solution to Previous Contract Problem BY \V. K. M’KENNEY Secrrt.irv American Bridge Beacuft JUST because you have bid for a small slam, don't be content with just making your contract. Get into the habit of playing every hand for the maximum number of tricks —that is, after the safety of your contract is assured. It will aid you if you ever play tournament bridge. A good example is given in today's hand, which helped Jefferson B. Glick of Cleveland and his partner win the Akron contract pair city championship recently. Os course, if West leads the ace of diamonds, the contract will be ho]d to six odd. but you seldom will fin|[ a good player opening an ace against a slam contract. West, in this case, elected to lead the three of clubs. Mr. Glick went up with the jack in dummy. a an HE now started to run his hearts. He played six straight heart

LJ|Sg* ' EVE RYWH E Re3^^B*

This Curious World Ferguson

©ECAUSE THE AXIS ggj? Vl OF THE EARTH mf' f w*.TK*V <A' '* W WOBBLES SLIGHTLY 1 v. i ■ m OUR VIEW of the N C I HEAVENS IS CHANGING K& - A WUSifc ■ SLOWLY. STARS 1 C\ jm that once were | §§i||\ \\ 'l , X® VISIBLE ARE NOW V >T / Wi\ . TOO FAR SOUTH TO \\y \ < TVV' e>E SEEN. THUS IT IggMaSfe-AW X R '0 IS,THAT/MANY STAR. iMit- '> I’ lW CONSTELLATIONS gif A jf WHICH ARE NOT mSmSa \ ) 'xlvl / 1 now visible from rwW N // GREECE AND ITALY P 1 HAVE GREEK. V\ I OR > LATIN NAMES/ I ► / ' ■/"%'*%; A WITHIN THE VISION / \ / / OF ANCIENT OBSERVERS V A. \\\ /•/ IN SOUTHERN EUROPE. Vw_^’ • Y\' / / ©134 BY NtA BEBVICC. I*C. G/QOIY I ) _ AFTER. THEY AftE LAIO/ %V>\ 'W^CCCCKStYES \T% \ ARE E SPEC ALLY s A\N*lr f \ FL.ES against tree r CL' V \Y-' / VV TRUNKS BECAUSE ITS fj/rjfej v _ v eves are not \ well placed for.

THE wobble of the earth's axis is called the "precession,” and is caused by an uneven gravitational pull of the sun on the earth. If the earth were exactly globular, this would not occur. The pole wobbles around a circle which it takes 25.800 years to complete. Scxt —How did King James I of England escape whip|)in|of

tricks. From the dummy he discarded three spades and a diamond. West, of course, had to make five discards. He discarded all cf his five diamonds, except the ace, and then the five of spades. It is immaterial what East discarded. Glick then led his last heart—the deuce—and West was helpless. If he discarded the ace of diamonds, dummy's king was good. If he let go a club, then the clubs would break. He finally decided to release the queen of spades. Glick then played his ace of spades, which caught West’s king, and the seven of diamonds was discarded from dummy. The jack of spades was played and again West was squeezed. Os course he had to let go a club, and Mr. Glick discarded the king of diamonds from dummy. The last three tricks then were won with the three good eluhs. Thus seven-odd was made, giving Mr. Glick top score on the board. i Copyright, 1934. by NEA Service, Inc.)

A9B 4 2 V A 9 ♦K 7 4 AAJ 6 2 AKQS x IA 10 7<5 3 V 4 \Y EVJ 10 5 ♦AQJB3s A 10 6 5 2 AQIO 7 3 Denier A0 5 • A A .1 VKQS7632 ♦ 9 AK 8 4 Duplicate—None vul. Opening lead—A 3. South West North East Pass 1 A Double Pass 2 V Pass 2N. T. Pass 4 y Pass 6 V Pass 4> 2

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

YOU SEEM A. E,\T ?(*", 'BASW- ~VT \SNT BY “DEPRESS to TODAY, TH AT/—MY TRAVEYfb, \N MY3OR--SOMETU\NG \ MA>4Y CL\^E3,VAAVEG\VEN \ YOU PO<ocSED / | }ME TWE ‘DIGESTION OF NA OSTWOV IN , ,77 onrrpNpo^o,,B L p / f ITS ABOUT hAY 6CUD YAWIE-f % f t *i f E S V lV& SENT A DRAFT TOR J ( T WA3 TO THE MINING CONTRACTORS,SO V "PIcSS FEET AND V tueViIPROCEED WITH ERECTING \ > "'<'©U AD LAWST MtDNISVVt-| A 7S-ROOT TIMBER TUMNEL / fY QUITE HEADV, V KNOW.*) )NTO THE MINE _ AS i t> x'tA \ —> worried about tvaeea _y jj I H£j I C 'D'S&INkS tKTO A RICH 5 % % F I -Z- ( "//, 193* BY SC* StWVICE INC T M RCC US PT OfT a)

FKECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS

fDO You SUPPOSE ] £ WE'S THE ONLY OWE IN { / i I OFPERED lb PAY O ME WOULD/ 134^7^71® rM MP.SCUTTLE WOULD I TOWt4_ RICH ENOUGH TO ) / I SAW ;j HIM 7% INTEREST AND U, S SO MEAN. ME D BURY A ■ ...HE TOLD ME f B LEND W THE AFFORD JT.' ( WIM ™ ,S V;| f i . P AY H ,NI BACK A LrTTLE I KNIFE IN YOUR BACK AND, . JT THAT fT I N MONEY A V AFTERNOoN /?! IBv A HEIL | THEN HAVE YoU ARRESTED J ' j CM. FCU TO

WASHINGTON TUBBS IJ

/T 6IVE UP.SOH. WC PUT ON A DAN 6 GOOD RODEO PER THATY /COW- V IT'S A LOT OF PUN.WhN MISS LAME, AMD LOOK* SHE UPS AM 1 WALKS OPP WITH A SHOTGUN. PUNCHER i DON'T VOU TRV IT? _ ~~— / — y-y - NAMED /V— - -—si \ ' wv4 ° s THAT throwingX easy. J /Vok. throw up A |

ALLEY OOP

BOOTS ADD HBK BUDDIES

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TAKZAN THE INVINCIBLE

Tarzan. moving along the leafy highway, overtook Zveri's expedition when it mads camp for the night. As he watched them from behind a leafy screen of high-flung foilage, he noticed, though with no surprise, that they were not burdened with any treasure from Opar,

SALE! Krause Bros. Remaining Stocks of Men's Furnishings-Downstairs at Ayres-(See Page 14)

THE INDTAS'APOLIS TIMES

Tarzan noticed that Colt was missing. From past experience he knew what had happened at Opar and the probable fate of Wayne Colt. Years before, his own courageous Waziri had fled before the weird screams from the ruined city. He guessed that Colt had been deserted.

—By Ahern

OUT OUR WAY

__L_j WELL TAKE TWIG / AMP IT V-W 00-H-H! TH* FINEST WHW. THAT'S V HOUSE. IT { BLOWS ALL Vi/ THING IN A HOME.' WHUT TOOK —~ HAS ALL THE THE SMELLS \ TW AROMA OF FRYIM* TH‘ AGOMN LATEST THINGS,! OF COOKING V pooui^c hops C CXIT OF GETTN' SEE? HERE- ] OUT OF THE - ROAST BEEF. J UP iIN THE you press this kitchen. aNotherhome ]J m s °SoJ ! BUTTON AND THAT'S SWELL!/ RUINED' ITS JJ \ HOT CAKES \ IT STARTS THAT A NOT A HOME-V \ V-o I M ITOS U . ~HERQES ARE made,MOT BORN. ~

( BAkj p C HEAVENS ABOVE! WHV, I RECKOM, MAM. V 6OOD BOV*^ . , | NOU USED ONLV A REVOLVER,] THAT'S BECAUSE VOU | 600D BOVf v C2 a H Q\ AMD HIT ITtVERV TIME* J\ DIDN'T THROW IT j HE'S IMPRESSED /2>* jfr 11tiftfV*~ I * Wy/mm V Vn Tm bUlilin M , • O 193 3V WE* SERVICE, INC. T. . RES US. PAT QTT. J

FINGEPS OF INTO TH' jOr ' t [ mmn / p *S 1I I 1 1 I A. ' ■> *tG U S P*T

’F\6V\N\Kb'-*'E'&\DE , o, V YOOGAVN NO W\N j JJ! / 8J m Ar, |~ i3< by wc stßvicQiic.-^

When night fell, Tarzan returned to the tree where he could overlook the activities of the bivouacked expedition. He watched them in silence for a long time, and then suddenly he raised his voice in a long scream that perfectly mimicked the hideous warning cry of Opar.

—By; Edgar Kice Burroughs

The effect upon the eamp was instantaneous For a moment the men sat as in a paralysis of terror. Then, seizing their weapons, they came closer to the Are. With a shadow of a smile on his lips, Tarzan melted away into the Jungle. . . .

PAGE 23

—By Williams

—By Blosscr

—By Crane

—By Hamlin

—By Martin