DONALD DUCK
LOUIE SLAMMED IT
Chany "troductions
CONTRACT How to Play BRIDGE How to Win
JOSEPHIN
"Courtesy" Raise
onc
The single raise of partner's suit South, of course, opens with one is more of a courtesy response than heart and West passes. Now if the announcement of real strength, North takes it upon himself to "cut yet there are distinct its beyond.corners" over so slightly in order to which even this sort of courtesy give his partner another chance" should not be extended. The new
new in other words, it Nerth shinder the Culbertson System, in keeping with requirements from to 1⁄2-plus ita determined policy of reducing honour-tricks, he will come out with hopeless and especially dangerous a loss instead of a profit on this deal. contracts, has alightly raised all For, after eve single raise from requirements for huling single would bid ler than four hearts. no South player worth his salt the North, no original tall, whether with a ruine, a negative notrump, or even a Unfortunately, he would have Fuit
We have established play for this game contract other the DISE.
for single than the exceedingly remote chance raises: With four of partner's sul, that both the ace and queen of dia- a sinsic rake requires one honour-monds lay in front of the K-J and trick in the hand as whole. With that the the minimum
opponent failed to collect in adequate trump their tricks in the black before Support (3 10 2. or xx) oue-plus they lost control of diamonds. In Jonour-trick is required for a single short, It is absurd for North-South to raise. For example, South having abandon a fure part-score for the bid one heart and the next opponent infinitesimal chance at game. North's having passed, North Is justined in raising to two hearts with:
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sulis
no
proper artion with the hand in ques- tion is a simple pass to his partner's opening heart bid.
Note the vast difference if North's hand happens to be either of the minintura holdings .I mentioned.
In the first hand, the singleton Now there is an excellent play for spade, it must be remembered, pro game, since no spade or heart trick vides une plus-value and the K- of red be lost and since it requires diamonds -plus, making up the only a little els to hold the minor necessary total of one honour-trick suit losers to three tricks.
with four trumps. In the
second
band there is adequate trump support|
and one-plus honour-trick.
The logic of holding to these ali- mums is well exemplified in 1he fot-!
Jowing deal;
South dealer.
Neither side vulnerable.
To-morrow's Hand
Match-point dupliente. North-South vulnerable.
South dealer.
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Tuesday,
THAT TIME, UNCA DONALD!
I DON'T CARE WHO DID IT THIS TIME, BUT THE NEXT ONE
GOES ACROSS MY
KNEE, SEE... NO MATTER WHO IT IS!
"HONGKONG TELEGRAPH
SLAM!
August 5, 1941.
By Walt Disney
WELL!
| WILT DISNEY
FAILED TO RETURN TO SURFACE AFTER DIVE
The ill-fated U.S. submarine 0-9, which sank 24 miles off Portsmouth, New Hamp- shire, in 102 feet of water, is shown above moored at the dock in Charlestown, Mass., Navy Yard, alongside her sister ship. Below is an air view of sul marines combing the waters in an effort to locate the lost craft. The plane from which the picture was taken was also engaged in the search. The tremendous pressure probably crushed the submarine like an eggshell.
Library,
ANCHOR
Butter
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New Zealand
Zealand Airman Wins Victoria Cross
LONDON, Aug. 4 (Router).-The Victoria Cross has been conferred on Sergeant James Allen Ward, of the local New Zealand Air Force No. 75 Squadron, in recognition of "most conspicuous bravery."
Journty back into the aircraft.
On the night of July 7, Ward was second pilot of a Wellington bomber returning from an at-in due course it burned itself cut. tack on Munster. When flying over the Zuider Zee, the aircraft was attacked from beneath by a Messerschmitt. Fire broke out near the starboard, engine, and, fed by petrol from a split pipe, quickly gained an alarming hold, and threatened to spread to the entire wing.
There was no danger of, the fire there was no fabric left nearby, and spreading from the petrol pipe as
When the aircraft reached home a safe landing was made despite the damage sustained by the aircraft.
The crew made a hole in the fuselage and made strenuous efforts to reduce the fire with extinguishers and even coffee from their vacuum Basks without success,
As a last resort, Ward volunteered to make an attempt to smother the Bre with an engine cover.
Made Holds
With the help of the navigator, hé climbed through the narrow hatch,
Exciting Four Months tain only four months, he had taken Although Ward had been in Bri- part in nearly a dozen raids. Since joining his present quadron, Ward, to use his own words, has done "two Kiels, one Dusseldorf, one Cologne, one Munster and one Mannerheim.
In July
Before joining the R.A.F.
last year, he was a schoolmaster and was trained a New Zealand under the Empire training scheme.
This in the seventh Victoria Cross of the war to go to British airmen and the first to be goined by a New Zealander,
Roosevelt At Sea
SPECIAL TO THE "TELEGRAPH"
4
| Breaking the fabrle to make hand and foot holds where necessary, and siso taking advantage of the existing NEW LONDON, Conn. Aug. holes in the fabric, Ward succeeded | (UP).--President Roosevelt left here descending to the wing, and pro- this morning for the seas off the ceeding 10 a position behind the Southern New England coast on a engine, despite the slipstream from vacation cruise aboard the Presiden- the ah'screw which nearly blew him tial Yacht Potomac. Poff the wing.
The Presklent may meet Admiral Lying in this precarious position Ernest King, Commander-in-Chief of he smothered the fire in the wing the Atlantic Fleet at sea for a con- fabric. Tired as he was; he was ference regarding the Atlantic patrol. able, with the navigator's assistance, is movements tre -being kept to make successfully the perilous secret.
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How should this hand be bid?
Crossword Puzzle
By LARS MORRIS
ANSWER TO
PREVIOUS PUZZLK
ACRONE
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167
COUNT THE TELEGRAPHS"
EVERYWHERE
34 160
DE
GAULLE AS
AS A LEADER
In March 1916, in the glorious inferno of Dounu- mont, a young Captain, grave- ly wounded for the third time since the beginning of the war, was captured on the battle- Geld. On five occasions he attempted to escape and five times he was recaptured. But neither reprisals nor persccu- tions could get the better of him. And when the victory of our armies liberated. him, the man was well tempered who gave himself entirely to the service of France.
In his book, "The Army of the Future", published in 1934 one reads:
a
"In order to bring into being the professional army, and in order that that army should be provided with the material and with the new spirit with- out which it will never be more than a will-o'-the-wisp, lender will have to appear whose judgment is indepen- dent, whose orders are irresia- tible, and who is well thought of by public opinion. He must be in the service of only the state, free from prejudices, disdaining patronage. He must be firmly committed to his task, absorbed in far- reaching plans, well-informed about the men and things to be dealt with. He must be a leader who is at one with the army, devoted to those de cominande, eager for respon.. siblity; a man strong, enough to compel, clever enough to porsundo and great enough to earry through a great task. Such will be, the minister, soldier or politician, to whom tha nation will owe the next reconstruction of its forces."
The man above described in da Gaulle himself, and he
a
seems to have foreseen then that the time would come for him to be a leader. Never in the long history of France, neither at the height of her power nor at the lowest mark of her weakness, has Frenchman held this astonish- ing and simple title: "Leader of all free Frenchmen". Onè must know well a man who has this title to understand how much he is worthy of it. Worthy to be a Leader and— what is rarer still-worthy to command free men. For such is the spirit of France that these two words-which would conflict in the tongue of her invaders-blend admir- ably in hers.
Charles de Gaulle was a Leader during the last war, at the head of his company of înfantry in Belgium, in Cham- pagne, at Douaumont, He was a Leader again during the first phase of this war-of this war which continues for him- when, as a young general, he ordered his tanks against enemy positions and reaped, under the walls of Abbeville, one of the rare successes of an army always brave, but to whom an incapablo Generni Staff had refused the means to conquer.
And what is more, his now strategy which would have provented disaster, de Gaulle,- Indefatigably, year after year, had never ceased in his books, to preach to empty bonches,
It is a Frenchman, who as carly as 1034 demonstrated that a war of movement would In future have the advantage
over the strategy of massed men; it is a Frenchman who assigned to mechanised armies and motorised units an essen- tial and decisive role. But, unfortunately for France, it is a German General Staff who put into practice what a French mind had conceived. General Guderian, creator of the German mechanised army, acknowledges in his books that General do Gaulle is a precursor and a master. Thus the army that the Reich has built up against France, it is Franco who first could have organised it against the Reich and reduced Hitler to defeat or, better still, to pesce
· through fear of defeat,
Even during this war, when de Gaulle, practically In extremis, renowed his warn- ings, once again the General Staff would not listen. Was one afraid of the truth? Was
one
scared of A French victory? It is now time for Frenchmen to comparo this man with those who have made their nest in defeat!
*
not
But to command free men, It in not sufficient to be leader., One must also find himself incapable of slaves. General de commanding Qualle does
resemble the European dictators, these centauri who add a bust of man to the animal mass of their peoples. lle need not make lafamed specchen, but when he must explain what The Free French are, he s a quiet and simple. voice: ways were open. My companions and myself have chosen that of honour. They They are notre Bot "is men,"
{D
Whils soldiers." They
are la companions," The men who follow da Gaulio, will follow him to the end, but if they fall in battle, it is not his name that they of France. will pronounco, Inst, it in the name
WAR OF NERVES
"There goes the warbling note,
would be over before you could say
Sir. Will you wear the grey pin- | Messerschmitt,” stripe or the brown tweed? ***What -- wha~- ?**
"The warbling note, Sir. Igather, Sir, that there is hostile aircraft in the vicinity."
1
"Tell it to go away. Tell it I'm busy with a Blitzhangoverkrieg." "Very good, Sir, I take it you are feeling the effects of→er the little celebration last night?" "Hawkins. If the R.A.F. could | unly drop hangovers-like mine. behind the enemy linet the tear
"No doubt, Sir. But on the other harth, the enemy would probably discover Rose's Lime Juice, Sir. Ahem as I have mentioned before, Sir the restoration of the metabolic balance by Rose's Lime Juice"
"Don't stand there mumbling, man ***-get some Rose's at once. Ohi there goes that awful din again," .. "That, Sir, is the sustained notc or All Clear. There is a bottle of Rose's at your elbow, Sir."
ROSE'S - THE WISE MAN'S NIGHTCAP
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