DONALD DUCK
Friday,
HONGKONG TELEGRAPH
September 26, 1941.
By Walt Disney
WEAR
JOE'S CAPE
JOE'S CAFE
OUR. NEW POLICY
STARTS TODAY ALL YOU CAN EAT
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8-15
Cup 1943, Was Doney Production
Wind Rights Roweved
JOE'S CAFE
JOE'S
CAFE
CONTRACT How to Play
BRIDGE
How
-By JOSEPHINE CULBERTSON
Defense Made Easy
THE problem of whether or not to marked in his hund by the lend of return partner's lead can usual- the jack. (West would not have led
ly be solved by a close scrutiny of the jack from any combination in- the actual card led and its implica- cluding the queen).
tions, and by an analysis of declarer's
Having established the fact that it play to that card. Note to-day's would be futile to look for spade
tricks,
hand:
South dealer.
Neither side vulnerable.
AK 74
VKBJ
KJ174
#Q7
A 3 10 9 3
V95
08.03
À J វា ឱ
N WE S
ARSE
◊ A 12
10532
▲ AQ6
VAQJO.
0952
KOA
V 10-732
East was able to search for mare fertile fields. He returned his fourth best club. Deelnier ducked, and West did Ilkewise, merely ing dummy's queen. Declarer could not hope for nine tricks without es- tablishing the diamond suit, but on the next diamond lead East won and returned another club,, trapping des
Fer's king, Oously.
declarer's Farelessness 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 fnot the acu), | thereby giving.East reason to think that the lead had been from A-J-10
clarer's
tr
To-morrow's Hand
South dealer,
Both sides vulnerable.
West opened the spade jack, and etc. Whether East woulti bave declarer, for reasons known only tofallen" and continue 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. Eastchances. won with the queen and then gave careful thought to his return. The play of the spade-king on the, first irick had been highly informative, although, of course declarer had not meant it to be. West's opening lead) of the spade jack could have been from only two combinations-the top of a sequence, or the top of the in- terior sequence could be determined A-J-10 etc. Which of these it was only by considering declarer's
rer's play. If declarer had held
held the queen
with- have played dummy's king, he would ace, he certainly would not
the
have allowed the lead to ride to his own queen of an elementary precau- tion toward winning two spade tricks. Thus, the actual play of the spade
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VAD551 QA 1083 $8732
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AAKQ8652
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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.
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
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10-es to vis
14-1
I-Allowance for
receptaci
17-Combining form:
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Oriental empire 19--Cow
20-Catrulates,
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26—Mischievou
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30-004dex of dawn
52-Tonded gul 14-Thro
7-pothetical force A-Marine excavalor
40-Quifk «to learn -Exclamation" 41-Queri
43-Climbing plant 44-Men's B
4-strol of
41-Bertages -saten BQ-Aticalculata 52-Welcome
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Country in tow t-lound hill- ca-Thought 69. Continent
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By LARS MORNIS
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE
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1--Br weed
2-character
4-Firemen 5-Rock
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Juro's shield -CleanT to-Went BRITAT 11-1 12-1+1 11-Worthless plast
23-inlog
23 Belal
27-Too old
18-runkard 29--Wealthy American
31-1
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Direret meeting place -37-'10
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Pestsning to name £5-£ Frenchi 47-Cureres with metal 45-112 to tria! 51-815 Cod
42-Prepare.
51-Entics L-Black
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WALT DISNE
WORLD'S BEST KNOWN PRISON MAN RETIRES
Lowls E. Lawes
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 tories which are now falling to these first United States pilots to Join in our battle..
WAN ti
For British people, the forming of the Eagle Squadron romantle affair. At a time when we were rather melancholy about the war neys, this company of young pilats arrived, front Jersey City, Callfornia, New York
and Texas, impelled by some unselfish courage which we did not wholly understand.
It seemed as Incredible as it was gallant-for-Kolendarskl-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 barnestorming 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 ♫ cracic "at the wicked епету."
But this was not possible. Fly- ing a civil aircraft over Arizona and
flying a heavily armed Spit- fire, in formation, are two different
hnd problems. They
to begin again. They had to. lenen Service discipline and how to respect their appointed place when flying in formation. They had to learn to be soldiers as well as pilots.
the
'Some of them were killed during those months of training. Shorty' Keough, who had to sit on two cushions when he flew, was first to be lost in the Eagle Squn- dron.
He crashed during his traine Ing. Shorty was one of the small- est heroes of this war. He had been * professional
parachute
bean
jumper for many years and it was Adventure that brought him here, In the early days, when France was still tree from the enemy. His escape to England was on epic.
the
Stanley Kolendorski was next victim. He is posted as miss- ing. Kolendorski 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
unele flew up over Warsaw
to defend it. He was killed. It was to avengo bis death that Kolen- dorski threw up his job to join the Eagles, His friends are carrying on his grim wishes, to-day...
Now that the Eagles are truly in the battle, they will be top line news. They are fine plicts and they are full of guta. was talk- ing to Red Tobin. We called the barman at the Savoy Hotel to mix -us two real dry martinis; not an easy feat now that vermouth is as rard as lemous and onions. It is almost a
a year since I first met Red Tobin and I thought we might celobrate it by dining to-night. Not a bit of it! Red Tobin was on his wa
way back to join his Squadron. "i am due to have a crack at the wicked endry" he said, “so I must get her saddled up I'm riding at -dawn:
Hector Ralithoz
By Emmett 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 movics. He is 57 years old.
Mr Lawes, generally re- 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 Dannemora 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
punishment in a prison that symbolised the electric chair. He explained his stand on 80- efological grounds that the background of cach 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 Honors with an explanation that they had not readjusted themselves to society, that so- ciety had not accepted them again and that their disaffee- tion was a normal result,
The critics of Lawes went beyond the structure of peno- logy. He was accused of seek- ing publicity on too many oc- .cnsions. He participated in a series of radio dramas written. by another. He wrote for popular magazines, always on the same subject-misunder- stood prisoners-und always with similar case historics. He wrote popular books on life inside Sing Sing. He ap- peared at many first 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 ty warden so aptly named. Mr Lawes was not loath to per- mit any type of publicity to
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 silence from the guards and from the pri- soners, who logically pre- sumed that Al-Smith-had-sent-escape-from-the prison which another of his boys into a lazy haven.
Mr Lawes immediately he- gan the reforms that people had talked about for a long, time. He took the firearms -away-from most of the gua: is within the blockhouses. He established closer discipline and began offering the pri- soners unusual liberty, getting close to the honour system whenever possible. He even took some of them out un 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
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 ap- 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 exécutions dur ing the time that he waged such a fight to abolish capital punishment. Probably 20 other warden ever saw more men and women die at the hand of the state.
GRIN AND BEAR IT
WAYS B 7.5.3, MUCO
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