1941-09-26 — Page 11

Hongkong Telegraph 港電新報 士蔑新聞 All

DONALD DUCK

Friday,

HONGKONG TELEGRAPH

September 26, 1941

By Walt Disney

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THE problem of whether or not to marked in his hand by the lead of return partner's lend cun'usual-the jack. (West would not have led

queen

ly be solved by a close scrutiny of the jack from any combination in- the actual card led and a implien-, cluding the

Having established the fact that it tions, and by an analyals of declarer's

spade play to that card. Note to-day's would be futile to look for hand:

South dealer.

Neither side vulnerable.

AK 74

VK 84

OKJ 1074

Q7

AJ 1003

N

ARGE

905

by E

O AQ

S

Ó 803

4AJDR

AAQ0

VAQJO

0962

КОА

10 732

* 10 632-

West opened the spade jack, and

tricks, Eust was able to search for more fertile fields, le returned his

fourth best club. Declarer du fors

and West did likewise, merely

ing dummy's queen. Declarer could not hope for nine tricks without es- tablishing the diamond sult, but on the next diamond lead East won and returned

clnrer's other club, trapping de-

Obviously, decorer's carelessness in playing dummy's spade king at the first trick had made matters much easier for the defense. The corrcet. technique was to duck in dummy and win with the queen (not the ace), thereby giving Eust reason to think that the lead had been from A-J-10 hove

etc. Whether East would declarer, for reasons known only to "fallen" and continued with spades himself, put up dummy's king. He will never be known, but at least entered his hand with a heart and declarer would have bettered his own let the diamond nine ride. East chancen.

ww

The

won with the queen and then gave careful thought to his return. play of the spade king on the first trick had been highly informative, although, of course declarer had not meant T to be. West's opening lead of the spade jack could have been from only two combinations the top

a sequence, or terlor sequence A-J-10 ́etc.

of

of these it was

To-morrow's Hand

South dealer.

Both sides vulnerable.

VADRIA OA 1083

8732

of the

Which

J 10 4 V32 OQ0704 AQU

N WE S

or the

top of could be determined only by considering declarer's

play. the queen with

If declarer hud belly would not i

out the ace, he

have played dummy's king; he would have allowed the lead to ride to his own queen as an elementary precau- tlon toward winning two spadē tricks.

Thus, the actual play of the spade

A973 VK Q206 062

J 10 04

AAKQ8652 ♡ 37. SKJ

KD

How should South play a six no-

king was proof that declarer had the trump contract? Opening lead spade ace, and of course the queen was also|jack.

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WALT DISNELPY

WORLD'S BEST KNOWN

PRISON MAN RETIRES

Lewis E. Lawos

Eagles Strike

The Eagle Squadron have drawn their first blood over France. The news was cabled, but there is more in the tale than that: almost a year of training, quietly, for the vic- torles which are now falling to these frat United Stateś pilots to Join in our battle.

For British people, the forming of the Eagle Squadron was a romantle affair. At a time when we were rather melancholy about the war news, this company of young pilots arrived, from Jersey City, California, New York and Texas, impelled by some unselfish courage which we did not wholly understand.

It seemed as incredible as it was gallant for Kolendorski to give up |—his career in Jersey City, to-come-

here; for Red Tobin to leave his job in Hollywood, and "Shorty" the professional parachute jumper, to give up his barn-storming to cross the Atlantic to fight for us.

They were all good pilots- good civilian pilots, when they landed. They fondly imagined that the moment they arrived on our shore, they would be able to fly up and "have a crack at the wicked onemy."

Bul this was not passible. Fly- In a civil alreraft over Arizona

and flying a heavily armed Spit- fire, in formation, are two different

had problems. They

to begin gain They had to learn Service discipline and how to respect their appointed place when flying in formation. They had to learn to be soldiers as well as pilots.

diron.

Some of them were killed during those months of training. Shorty Keough, who had to sit on two cushions when he flew, was the first to be lost in the Eagle Squa-

He crashed during his train. ing. Shorty was one of the

of the small- est heroes of this war. He had been professional parachute jumper for many years and it was adventure that brought him here, In the early days, when France wus still free from the enemy. His escape to England was an epic.

Stanley Kolendorsk! WOS the next victim. He is posted as miss- ing. Kolendorak! was born In Jersey City. He was taught to fly by his Polish uncle who made the journey from Warsaw to Jersey City every two years. When the Germans invaded Poland, Kolen- dorski's uncle flow up over Warsaw to defend it. He was killed. "It was to avenge his death that Kolen- darakl threw up his job to join the Eagles. His friends are carrying on his grim wishes, to-day. -

Now that the Eagles arỡ truly in the battle, they will be top line news. They are fine pilots and

of they are full

was talk- cuts. ing to Red Tobin, We cajoled the barman at the Savoy Hotel to mix us two real dry martinis: not an easy feat now that vermouth is as rare as lemons and onions. It is almost a year since I Arst met Red Tobin and I thought we might celebrate It by dining to-night. Not a bit of it. Red Tabin was on his way back to join his Squadron, "I am due to have a crack at the wicked enemy" he said; so I must* get her saddled up I'm riding at

Hector Bolitho

By Enimett V. Mann

Lewis E. Lawes, who has been warden of Sing, Sing Prison since 1920, retired from his post on July 16. It

is expected that now he will spend his time speaking on radio programmes, writing books and offering technical assistance to directors In gangster movies. He is 57 years old.

rc-

Mr Lawes, generally cognised as not only the most famous but one of the most able penologists in the United States, was the son of an em- ployee at Elmira Reformatory and never departed very far from prison work except for three years of service in the Army, beginning when he was 18.

+

as

He returned to serve a guard at Dannemorn Prison, Clinton and Auburn. After his long service in such rather undistinguished work, New York's Governor Alfred E. Smith called him to Albany one day

and asked him whether he would take the job as warden at Sing Sing.

Mr Lawes knew that the appointment had long been nothing more than a luxuri. ous sentence for the politic- ally faithful.

Greeting of Silence

He took the job, however, appeared at Sing Sing late on one gray December afternoon and got the greeting that all the political wardens' got. It was a greeting of allence from the guards and from the pri- soners, who logically pre- sumed that Al Smith had sent -another-of-his-boya into a lazy

haven.

Mr Lawes immediately be- gan the reforms that people had talked about for a long time. He took the firearms away from most of the guaris within the blockhouses. He established closer discipline. and began offering the prl- soners unusual liberty, getting close to the honour system whenever possible. He even took some of them out on hikes, and once allowed them to carry fire-arms with blank cartridges while appearing as extras in a movie.

Warden Lawes gained quick'-- fame when he opposed capital

punishment in a prison that symbolised the electric chair. He explained his stand on so- ciological grounds-that the background of each prisoner was a case in itself and that society nearly always was as guilty as the convict.

No Born Criminals "To Mr Lawes, there was no such thing as a born criminal or a prisoner who couldn't be rehabilitated. He cited hun- dreds of cases to bolster his contention and passed off the errors made by paroled pri soners with an explanation that they had not readjusted themselves to society, that 'so- 'ciety had not accepted them again and that their disa Tec- tion was a normal result.

. The critics of Lawes went beyond the structure of peno- logy. He was accused of seck- ing publicity on too many oc- casions. He participated in a series of radio dramas written by another. He wrote for. popular magazines, älways on the same subject-misunder- stood prisoners--and always with similar case historics. He wrote popular books on lite inside Sing Sing. He ap- peared at many firat nights of the theatre, and he was often seen in the cafe society night clubs with the fringes of people, who made the gossip column news.

The fame that. Sing Sing long has had as a prison was enhanced by the fame of its warden so aptly named. Mr Lawes was not loath to per- mit any type of publicity to escape from the prison which would support his constant cry for reforms and for abolition of capital punishment.. -

Saw 303 Executions

As each famous case walked into the deathhouse and rolled out, Warden Lawes always aft- peared in the prints with an- other cry that justice was not done as civilised society would see it done,

The irony of Warden Lawes' entire carer is that he. witnessed 303 executions dur- ing the time that he waged such a fight to abolish capital punishment. Probably no other warden ever saw more men and women die 'nt the hand of the stale.

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