Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 46, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 July 1934 — Page 7

TtTLY 4, 1934.

World War Aftermath Continues Youth Today Suffers as Result of Conditions Conflict Created. BY GRETTA PAI.MER Tim WriUr Tk r EW YORK July 4—Twenty years ago Sarajevo crept, out of the more obscure geography book* and became a pari of histwv. Twenty years ago the spark that flamed into the World war wa.' ignited. The textbooks of today tell our p o r e and hiefi

top Cl

school students that the war lasted four years and that Its major engagements were fought m France and Belgium. These boys and girls try to twist their tongues around such names as Chateau-Thierry and strive to remember whether Pershing led the British or the American forces.

Miss Palmer

And then they sensibly drop the whole matter and go out for football practice. The World war seems to them as remote from their own live* as the War of the Roses or the Battle of Actium. There are grown-up boys and girls today who do not remember the years when their mothers folded two-by-two dressings in the town s Red Cross. They have no recollection of the ticker tape celebration of the Armistice. Sixteen years is a long, long time especially if you have been alive only eighteen or twenty. And yet these boys and girls of the post-adolescent age were combatants in the World war quite as much as those men who w'ent to the trenches. They do not recognize the fact—they do not think of themselves as the post-war generation but as the mid-depression set. They are hopeless and frightened of a world which seems to bear scant resemblance to the cosy, prosperous place of which they read in the novels required for English 11. But thev fail to associate their difficulties with that remote moment—twenty years ago—when an assassin fired a shot that was. in earnest, heard around the wrorld. Tragedies Incrvase Wars nowadays are not incidents that are closed when peace is signed. Their casualties are not limited to those of the battlefield. Mars has acquired a trailer of tragedies which are grimmer than those which occur under fire. There are, in every European country today, ragged and wild youths who have grown up in a state of economic chaos. They are orphans of the war, and their earliest memories were set to a martial rhv t hm. To them violence is a part of normal life and ruthlessness a doctrine for which nothing in their experience has offered a workable substitute. And they are to be the sculptors of the twenty-first century. They are one element in the aftermath of the World war. There are bankrupt nations today trying by devious and hysteria 1 efforts to restore prosperity to a country’ which has got itself too deeply into debt for an honorable outcome. These countries are headed by young men who are trying to pay for their fathers' extravagance in the matter of cannons and tanks. They never can. They are another element of the post-war hangover. W‘>men Bear Burdens There are women today who will live out their whole lives in bitter solitude because their potential husbands were mowed down in the war and there are not enough men left to co around. There are other women who must bear the stigma of unmarried motherhood because the lovers they send to the front were killed before they could come back and marry them. They are a part of the post-war army. It is hard to be a pacifist in w artime. when the drums are rolling snd the excitement of the moment frakes victory seem a finer thing than peace. But is there an argument which can make anv of us defenders of war after four years of bloodshed followed by sixteen years of war's grewsome aftermath? Twenty years after Sarajevo you have to be a pacifist. for you have had a fifth of a century to study what modern warfare means. Sororitif Program Set Miss Martha Pittenger will have charge of an educational program at a meeting of Epsilon chapter. Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority, at 6:30 tomorrow night at the Washington. Miss Lucile Alexander will preside.

19x12 Lino-Tex _ Felt Rise Rurs $ M .95 Guiranteed Perfect MM Quality. Special ■■I"*””” color* tor anv room •n the houie ™ \ United Rug & Linoleum Cos. \ 139 W. Wash.

Office Supplies and Equipment STEWART S, INC. Formerly W. K. Stewart Cos. 44 E. Washington SC LI. 4571

Contract Bridge

Today’* Contract Problem If South were to arrive at a six-heart contract, and you held the West hand, what opening would you make and why? A A * V 10 5 4 ♦ K 10 6 3 A 10 6 3 2 AT654 , * AJ 1Q 3 2 V 7 |W EV32 ♦ A Q " 5 i S 4JO * KJ | DmV ,*?S7S 4 A KQ 0 VAKQ J S 3 ♦ 8 2 A AQ fojntlon in next issue. 27 Solution to Previous Contract Problem BY W. E. M'KENNEY srrlir Am*rirn Brtdjf Uuup DO you remember, in the days of auction, that we were afraid of a four-card suit, because of the fact that we never really knew whether we had a proper fit with our partner. or whether it was the proper declaration? Take, for example, today's hand. South has a perfect four-card suit bid in spades, and his partner has normal support. However. North also has a five-card suit, and South has a perfect fit there. Asa result, in auction, we might find ourselves playing the hand at hearts, instead of spades. Even today at contract, some players will make the mistake of getting into the wrong declaration. When your partner opens with a four-card suit, and you believe you Jiave all the cards necessary to fill in that suit, although you have a five-card major of your own. don’t be too sure that the hand must be played in your major. Remember that contract is a partnership game, and it is up to you and your partner to try to arrive at the proper contract. nun OVER West's double. North's bid of two hearts is highly constructive. I think East's bid of

IS THE LARGEST SELLING ICE CREAM vybect-d-oea ’oua mexvn! . . . More than half a century ago FURNAS established a high quality standard for Ice Creams . . . Keeping the qualify up, trough the continued choice of wholesome ingredienfs, FURNAS ICE CREAM ha* won exceptional favor. If I* Indiana's largess-selling ice cream. Ifs purify and heaffh value are assured by daily fesfs in our modern equipped laboraforie*. You'll find she fempfing flavor and mellow goodness of FURNAS ICE CREAM unsurpassed ... Why not call your neighborhood FURMAS dealer to deliver the quantity you desire? .... Let your ordinary meals be important with Hu> > I' 1 thi. new dclich'. H wHB V HBBr gjß. Vnu I thrill -hm t o ii mi BMu HHBHH bPShL '^S (.Kin 111 ‘lltKllir tin. nr r dHRS IBB! "I. I.nry dvinr: Md<- (corn Ettj k BKI MBI cd Hmj w n wjfl| SL Je rt • -'d "and Th milk. A HHi BMSk wb IIIPP Mm fjwß rr> . - ,K\rr r , "cm yo,,r HH> 4 - HLVHHBBk 7 W M hJLj KU| UMI

three diamonds rather optimistic. South shows a fit in his partner's suit by a bid of three hearts. North's bid of three spades is then made to show partner a fit in the original spade suit. This is all the information that South needs. If his partner holds four hearts and four spades, undoubtedly the same trirks will be made in either suit. However, it is safer to have the diamond suit led up to rather than through. While North happened to hold five hearts, the fifth heart can be used for a valuable discard, as you will see in the play. However, against a four-spade contract. West will cash his king and queen of clubs, and will now probably shift to a heart, which will be won in dummy with the king. Now the spade suit its started, three rounds of spades being taken. Then the declarer runs off the heart suit and discards the losing diamond on the fifth heart. The

A Q 10 8 2 V K Q 10 5 4 8 2 A J 7 A#43 A 1 5 VJ32 w N r VS ♦A 8 3 w - k ♦QJ .9 7 AAKQ S * 5 4 - I A 10 6 5 2 AAK 9 7 VA9 7 6 ♦ K 10 A3 4 3 Duplicate—N. and S. vul. Opening lead —A K - South West North Fast 1 a Double 2 V 3 ♦ 3 V Pass 3 A Pass 4 A Pass Pass Pass 27

losing club, of course, can be ruffed ; in dummy with the spade. All the declarer has to lose is a diamond and two clubs. Chib Meeting Slated Mrs. Howard Armstrong, 3324 Brookside parkway, will entertain members of the Brookside Friendly Club at her home tomorrow night.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Ruth Bryan Owen to Open Town Hall Series at Columbia Club Oct. 6 Dr. Louis Berg, Harry A. Overstreet Arthur Kallet, Gareth Jones, Viola lima and Charles Batchelder Also on Program. THE appearance of Ruth Bryan Owen, minister to Denmark, on Oct. 6 in the ballroom of the Columbia Club will inaugurate another series of Indianapolis Town Hall lectures. World personalities in international affairs, current events, literature, science, philosophy, education and drama will give lectures twelve Saturday mornings at 11.

The sponsor committee includes Mesdames Thomas D. Sheerin, Sylvester Johnson Jr., Paul V. McNutt, Kate Milner Rabb, L. A. Ensminger, J. A. Goodman, Hubert Hickam. Frank B. Shields, Oscar Baur, John W. Kern, W. Richardson Sinclair, Robert A. Milliken. R. Hartley Sherwood. Kurt F. Pantzer, George T. Parry. Robert B. Failey and Misses Mary Louise Shipp, Mary Orvis, I. Hilda Stewart, Sara Ewing and Rachel Baker. Among the town hall speakers; this year are Dr. Louis Berg, prison doctor at Welfare island; Harry A. Overstreet, head of the department of philosophy at the College of the City of New’ York and lecturer ip the new school for social research, New York. Arthur Kallet, author of “100.000,000 Guinea Pigs,” which has led the nonfiction list of best sellers for over a year, is on the list of speakers. as is Gareth Jones, correspondent for the London Times and formerly on the staff of Lloyd George. Mr. Jones, making his first American tour, will give “A Glimpse of Troubled Europe.” Viola lima, editor and publisher of Modern Youth, will lecture on “What Youth Is Thinking,” and Alexander Afinogenov. Russian; dramatist, will talk on “Drama and the Theater in Russia.” “European Dictatorships” will be the subject of Lieutenant-Colonel Stewart Roddie, author of “Peace Patrol.” and Konrad Bercovici, Rumanian gypsy musician, author and w’orld traveler, will entertain

Town Kali audiences with an illustrated lecture on gypsy music. Another lecturer to be heard in the series will be Richard Washburn Child, formerly American ambassador to Italy, and recently special envoy to Europe sent by the present administration. Mr. Child will talk on "International Affairs.” Charles C. Batcheldor will talk on current events. He has been United States trade commissioner in India, secretary of the interior for the Philippines, special expert on economics at the Washington conference, special expert to the limitation of armament in 1922 and chief of far eastern division of foreign and domestic commerce. Literature will be the topic of the lecture by Houston Peterson who received his A. M. and Ph. D. degrees in philosophy at Columbia and Rutgers university. Circle Sponsors Event P. W. Bennett Circle, Ladies of the G. A. R., will sponsor a covered dish luncheon at noon tomorrow before a Fourth of July program and business meeting at 512 North Illinois street.

Help Kidneys If poorly functioning: Kidneys ano a Bladder make you sudor from Get- ~ ting Up Nifthts. Nervousness, Rheuma*’jc Pams, .Stiffness, Burning, Smarting, Itching, or Acidity try the • guaranteed Doctor’s Prescription Cystex (Siss-tex). —Must fix you up or money back. Only 75c at drug its.

lilli mg • 1 T• 1 i I I Women’s Softies & Turbans lIC Former 39c. to $1.19 values!! Straws, poplins, crepes, piques and JB C linens in white, red, tan, beige, navy and maize. All headsizes. Jgr MILLINERY DEPARTMENT—SECOND FLOOR - ioc super suds Women s $3*95 to $6.95 rs P' AM Hi wf K* 0 LIGHTHOUSE CLEANSER < C‘- Ensemble DRESSES— .VJ .U",?." M *| _ VyW •Chiffons MUSA ' '-'-"S'""' * A m ,AJk * Washable Silks VlnA 5c POT CLEANERS 9 Georgettes J§§ O 3 I Metal mesh pot Sand Crepes 3) B cleaners. dßr' or sfe® iIP W*Silk Prints B • 1 M ' ' ! ' WOMEN’S AND MISSES’ Wm - I SUITS— B Rayon Undies i • Jacket Styles B sw**. vests Siam • Sunday Ixites mM m ne Sh ,t Mg nfg 1 •Suntan Styles SUA rTi S I H| | •Sizes 16 to 52 ffiTTIA’V. H 10c to 19c COTTON J 10c TO 19c STATIONERY I g REMNANTS • Percales WBtk HOUSE BROOMS •Ginghams KSV • Broadcloths ha r"no r i c • Voiles j Muslins women s • Sheer Goods Broadcloth Slips * Firsts and Irregs. S§ • 1 to 5-Yd. Lengths B •YARD-ONLY- Vf! 6 MEN'S NEW SUMMER WASH TIES 19c to 2 Sc Qualities Jp jW as Washable materials. New attractive summer colors and patterns. Fast colors. Well made. main floor HKn CLOTHESPINS Wash TROUSERS =H,:6O'-S; 111 JQD C* RAY and ICE TEA^GLASSES A Air*i^p- U i v J ■BrT JmEsSlk. Rose colored. # / | * an stripe h |". n (l • h| C fw. li Vi tailored. An WASH CLOTHS I trouser M ' 1 J" or j C at h o m e. ANKLETS iT. M.'n Fl-nr !7n17 ”A !i C yl Men’s & Boys’ 100% riT,., ALL-WOOL Marquisette Panels — French marquisette. V II % Swim Suits iy Mmmm % Toweling Remnants mmm Tfk Our Reg. Price $1.44 to 1 ® ieng. h v. WW'- k Mr>N S—All-wool speed Each— Y'C':mk m models in black, blue ft : I— =— V . M and maroon. Sizes 31 l|Uy BED SHEETS Bn \ : M to 44. CkH Double bedrize. 72x ... m boys—ioo r ; ail- Jmm • 90, Bimchod sheets /m yg wool speed models. 4 ' v,am flnor ot: sl " I . Boys’ Longies j Clearance Price — I feri 7 e and ii hit e m prchrnnU JV lip A women’s novelty 3!;;: u /\\ FOOTWEAR —**** 1 ( Regular $1.95 Qualities V "'A/l *r l Ir- * I JSKSA Sk. covert - chamV.ra's \\ •¥ \ / W 9 Blond hid "•'' l v ' rll /i/ifi \\ ‘if \ / v. I sB&StSm Su tailored a-oi MaaM \ V t 9 Greg Kids jms 111 O PUffipfl *•.?\t KIK. UMI fI P ' r.u.e chamhray. co|J l A / ics u n . Z c 3 to Fun fcftyC T’fj f\V \ll Si~CB cut and well made. to 9 8 g M BOYS’ PANTS Main Vi m p AIR *JU %Cc I loor j * AAAMA MWBSy ~, Pair- -nd Floor WOMEN S FELT Boys' and Girls' CHILDREN'S ~ and corduroy TENNIS STRAPS O UNUJN SUITS ..house shoes oxfords RP SLIPPERS 9 Reg. 69c Value Reg. 97c Values snmi.iixhtir C • Padded Soles tsroun iR . s *" 40 - tiammedsF and Heels 9 White • I • Many Colors • Sizes 10 to ,AUL..Uwr MEN’S SWEATERS 9bizes 3 to O. rr. Only , PR. — # sizes *> to 6 Pair. Values o *1 VI. Sleeveless wearer*. poln ihirU, etc. M Jh Jh Affix m dSA S.*". ARC *1 fie "jOc /SQc -T— 5 — %M c M%M c # u c bathing shoes ■i B jdr m B HB m PS with BBS ' lo ™ Main Floor

PAGE 7