Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 August 1952 — Page 33

. 922, 1052 , Bushmiller

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FRIDAY, AUG. 22, 1052 ER ) |

| PRISCILLA'S POP i] Double-Take

-— ] By BOB BARNES

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

®

BOUGHT THIS SUMMER

By Al Capp

YOU'RE RIGHT, DEAR!

. . — , _ PAGE 33: —By Al Vermeer | OUR BOARDING HOUSE -with Major Hoople LOOK ATT THAT. BETTERIGET Y IF HE"

I COULD USE A —1 NEW HAT!

PT (8) UN 1M : wl 4 : I I, . 1 x "* - oh te Lg y fo BR d®[s

—By Charles Kuh

70 V/IS/7T~

i iles down “Pottsville? . four mi DE fo first road to your left il Rosh — you can’t miss it 7- TH JOKES

YOU MISSED A COUPLE O' STEPS THERE, JOE =

THIS -A-WAY

YOU SHOULD O' DONE IT - OUCH

EASY, GRANDMA ---THERE'S A DOCTOR'S OFFICE JUST AROUND TH CORNER = //

~ The Regist - 1, or 8-20 Lr Tribune Syndicate

| | | {

KEEP IN TOUCH WITH HOMETOWN HAPPENINGS, WHILE ON VACATION. Order!

The TIMES. Phone PL aza 5551. i

/E SLATS , HORRIBLE MUST FIND

- ~

FERD'NAND

Copr. 1952 by United Feoture Syndicate, Inc.

Blackwood on Bridge—

A Fine Hand, Good Spade Fit Pays Off in This Game

ITH a fine hand and an excellent spade fit, Mr. South dealer Dale correctly jumped his part- Both sides vulnerable

ner’s spade opening rather than NORTH show his diamond suit. Mr. Dale Mr. Abel wanted to test slard S—A 10 3 2 : possibilities but H—K 6 5 'S TIME T( - the hand was — T EASY S PLAGE! ; not ideally Ded a 3 suited to the . # use of Black- WEST EAST : wood conven- Mrs. Keen Mr. Champion 4 tion. In other S—17 S—9 6 4 words. Mr. H—J 8 2 H—Q 9 3 2 Abel was inter- D—98752 D—K 4 8 y ested. in more C—KQJ6 -C—108752 than just the SOUTH 4 number of aces Mr. Abel E hig partner 3 S—-KQJ854 3 oa Me par gp abe H—A 10 7 4 ticularly D—86 wished to find out if Mr. Dale C—A 4

had the king of clubs or the king of hearts or, possibly, a The bidding: singleton in either one of those South West North East suits. 18 Pass 3S Pass 2 8 = 4 © Pass 4D Pass

SINCE SPADES had heen 4H Pass 5H Pass established as the suit where 6S All Pass

<2 TM Reg US Per OFF .

the hand would be played, he showed his cheapest ace with a bid of four clubs. Mr. Dale co-operated by showing the ace of diamonds, Mr. Abel now showed first round control of hearts and Mr. Dale's bid of five hearts said he had a second round control—either the king or a singleton.

With this information, Mr. Abel felt the slam was an oddson chance. The king of clubs was opened and Mr. Abel won with the ace. He took two rounds of trumps and then went into a trance concerning the play of diamonds. If Mrs. Keen had the king, he could finesse the queen and pitch his club laser on the ace. If Mr. Champion had the king, it could be ruffed out and again the club loser could be discarded.

lt

AFTER LONG thought, Mr.

Abel finessed the queen and | Mr. Champion won with the |

king and led a club for the setting trick.

Actually, the slam could .

have been made no matter who

had the king of diamonds. Mr. Abel should have led the ace of diamonds first, then the queen. If Mr. Champion covered with the king, obvi-

ously his troubles would have |

been over. If the queen was not covered, the right play was to drop the four of clubs on the ‘trick. Again, the hand would

have been cold for six-odd as |

two hearts from the closed hand could now be discarded on the two good diamonds remaining on the board.

Crossword Puzzle

RE a

HORIZONTAL $56 Cape 1 Japanese coin 37 Female rabbit

4 Mexican coin VERTICAL’ 8 You spend 1 Peruvian * francs in a coins French —= 2 Paradise 12 Poem 3 Denials 13 Persian coln 4 support 14 Hebrew 5 Ireland measure 6 Sorrier 15 Limb 70il (suffix) 16 Hospital 8 Common attendants ailments /18 Cracked 9 Among 20 Confuse \ 10 Touch 21 Tropical 11 Gaelic plants d @2 Goddess of J) Ra ad discord tablets 24 Salute

«Answer 10 Previous Puzzle AlT

\ AlN Lo

23 Send 38 Calm 24 Demigod "*™ 40 Danish coin 25 Sour 41 Donkeys 26 Item of 42 Stuff property 43 Half (prefix) 27 Broke 44 Unclosed 28 Carry (coll.) 46 Curves 29 Fruit drinks 47 Nevada city 31 Weirder 48 Lateral part 33 Instruct 50 Unit of weight

26 War god []

27 Musical direction 30 French - ' schools 32 System 34 Washes lightly 35 Fancy 86 Hypothetical forces 87 Repose 29 Chemical suffixes 40 Child's toy 41 Deed 42 Task €5 Slices of bacon 49 Newspaper “men $1 Former Brazilian coin $2 Prayer 83 Formerly

itr - -— GX TT LNLLAAT TN APO Ar par iam Ar 1 pp bn

or AL a

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Cope. 1952 by NEA Service Ine.» ua

"Just a minute there, George!"

this area list many pieces . . .

IT'S FUN TO ‘HUNT

ANTIQUES IN THE COUNTRY

Consult the “Antique Col®mn” in The Indianapolis Times Society Section each Sunday , . . the dealers of authentic and distinctive antiques in

« + « both decorative and useful. These same dealers will offer helpful suggestions in the use of antiques for the decor of your home.

Hand painted Bavarian choc. set, 1 doz Haviland 712" plates, 2 German Regimental stines, 8 all different Haviland red butter plates; 12 odd glass punch cups. Pr. walnut shelf-end tables, 6 wal. chairs, Old Boston rocker, rose backed love seat, crinoline settee, small carved sofa, wal. and cherry chests, ash desk, old kitchen cabinet with zinc top and stuff-in-ruff in barn. WE WELCOME YOU! RD. 37 8S. TO STOP 11 RD. 1; MI. EAST. GA-5132, OPEN DAILY 1 TO 5. WED. 4-8.

The ‘above dealer is one of the group to be found under the heading of “Antique Collectors’ Corner” next Sunday in The Indianapolis Times

china, glass, silver and furniture

3h

W HOOPER { FOR Je PRESIDENT

am TENT 1 A ‘I Rl il Sor)

BOARD ~«#72.60\ THE MATOR {CAN

7AM 16 THATS THE TAZ 10 AY Z\' ODDS 'BATTLE=/) ~ WHEN HE {RACES : x PAID, OR\[~ [Sees THaT// WITH! SOMEBODY'S 7d [PRICE HE. Ik ‘COLLAPSE /{. BEETLE;

WGOCIAL tf security * NUMBER 2 ® IN

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Figiene or rE. > : Old Doc Smithers says his boy is doing a lot Uncle Ef—ruiter with medical practice than he could do. The young Doc can think up more fancy names for common ailments than old Doc would bother about.

SOFA

WINES

THAT

'Z LIKE A A WHYS HE A YWET 2 MU WANTA

Kite! BE (~ fy i PRESIDENT / | A +s! :

: / 7, —_—

¢ SP)

ON AB

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; 7 4 : y a ¥ 1

AIN'T THAT © SKIP PLAYMORE'S BIG CAR PARKED ‘DOWN THE

TIM O'THEE HAS FOUND MR. LARK A GOOD FARM ‘HAND TO TAKE

IT SURE. 18!... AN' SKIPS READING A SIGN ON THAT TELEPHONE POLE!

.« ONLM TWENTY FIVE DOLLARS! SKIP WOULDN'T BE IN'RESTED IN THAT!

‘were outlaws, yet every boy and- girl gets a thrill from (reading stories of their adventures. It is even fun to hold a Pirate's Party and ask everyone to come in costume.

; Why not ask your neighborhood group to come over and J spend- a day preparing for the party? Make swords, eye

patches, and black flags. The Pirates’ ships often flew a black flag with a human skull and cross bones on it. You can make a flag like this by painting it, ripping the edges, and tying it to a broom stick. Milk bottle caps can be painted yellow to represent gold coins and can be made into necklaces and earrings. Paint a milk cap black to make an eye patch.

‘ahoy. TOMORROW—A Bobby Pin Box From a Soap Box. |

DON'T BUY TELEVISION—WITHOUT ASSURANCE OF SERVICE

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Don’t Live with the DRIP family,they'll cost you plenty!

77

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For the 10¢ coupon

Insicle OLD JUDGE

o COUPo,, Vi

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Z a > oa = — RS haa NW NN NR NA

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They ore constantly trying to enter ht ar through masonry : Te ——

Ils t by ny Sel Ww T R PLU G above ground. STOPS LEAKS , SEALS SURFACE QUICKSEAL i BEAUTIFUL FINISH | ! NATIONALLY 2 ADVERTISED

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R BLOCK

in

CARNIVAL

_ Pirates who roamed the seas capturing treasure ships

For ‘costumes take old clothes and rip the edges, tie| ,... : a bandana on your head for a hat, and cut out cardboard| First thin buckles for shoes and belts. Paint up a box with early dates and pirates’ names to hold your “treasures.” Ship

—hN2— ( ——— 7 NN Lem CH Ce

. There isn't any shortage of

| leadership if you don't care where | you are being led ON |

Private 2 Hour oY 50

Accordions Loaned to Beginner,

115 E. OHIO IM. 4436

g | want to do after all these years is sink my teeth inte a big, juicy thirty-five-cent steak!"

ACCORDION

Free Band Training

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IMMEDIATE INSTALLATION SIDING, ROOFING AND GUTTERING

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Public spirited local merchants, as an expression of goodwill, want you to receive this lovely basket of gifts, if you have just moved to the city, are a New Mother or have just moved to a new address within the city. There's nothing to buy. No obligation, Phene your Welcome Wagon Hostess whose phone is listed below and arrange to receive these gifts.

Welcome Wagon

&MATERIAL CO... "Wm sr

Do Mstesimisi, Phone=MArket 1432 |

Toronto PHONE TA. 2796

THE WORKINGMAN'S STORE

Simon Baruch

428 W, WASHINGTON ST,

otT MORE work pont

HAVE ExTRA SUM

h . $0 crassa’

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