I DAILY cross word puzzle
0* I' t I 9
iz
IS
22
1— 25 26 in
L-—" Fir®
r. 1 l—p_,_
tj L_i H
___ I—l—l—l—Li 47
across
24_Ferocious
28 —Post
30—Diving bird
33—It is (con
tracted)
35 Turn to the
right
36 To clip
38 —Electrified
particle
40— Egyptian
god
41— Uselesr
42 Spoken
44 —Great bodies,
of land on
the globe
I uProdd ces
I again
111-Son of Lot
IJQuthor of
r -st. Joan'
13-In case that
measures
Lt-Comfort
[ j;—Beak of a
! tortoise
10—mflamma
tion on the
eyelid
20—A cereal
grass
2!_A university
officer
DOWN
5 A difficulty
6 Employ
7 Scorch
8 — Lenient
9 Brush off
10 —Discover
14 —Measures
of length
2—Shortened
form of
Emma
' j-Author of
•■The Pit
and the
Pendulum”
(-Butts
BARCLAY ON BRIDGE
WRITTEN FOB CENTRAL PRESS
By Shepard Barclay
“The Authority on Authorities'*
SO REASON TO PASS
WEAKNESS IS never an excuse
for passing an informative or take
out double. In fact, it is the con
trary. The Weaker the hand, the
more important it is to bid some
suit of four or more cards, unless
tie only such suit is one called by
the opponents, in which event the
player with a weak hand can take
a chance on a shorter suit, prefer
ably a minor. To pass the double
with a weak hand means simply
presenting the opponents a gift of
some hundreds of points.
♦K Q 3
¥Q9 7 5 3
♦9 - 9
*Q 8 3 2
♦no 4 2 77! 495
¥AK J v kJ ¥lO 8 642
♦ K JlO 5 5 AQB32
*K4 LS. J 9 6
♦AB 7 6
¥ None
♦A7 6 4
♦ A J 10 7 5
(Dealer: South. Both sides vul
nerable.)
With bo k v > sides vulnerable in a
Ntter game-, South bid 1-Club
here, West doubled, North passed
40(1 so _ did East. South redoubled
and West passed to see what ac
tion East would now take when the
oidcing got around to him, but
•hst still passed.
Every Home With Children
Has its Feeding Problems
Bv L °GAN clendening, m. d.
young Parents think their
' n problems with the food habits
cmlc!ren never have troubled
• >or.e else before. But no house-
hold hac ever
sailed the sea of
life without fac
ing these trou
bles. The child
who never eats
between meals,
who never
spoils his appe
tite with candy,
who never re
fuses to eat,
who has no food
dislikes—if you
have that kind
of a child in
your home, then
you really ought
fir - Clendening
to
That° rry because that child is sick,
chin 1S the an ®el child, and angel
Jrea are hateful little objects.
oA!? ave heard many discussions
t or ne sub J ec t from parents, doc-
Trr- i home hygiene instructors,
mr.n, ast name^ —the lecturers at
vpr ‘ ers . cl ubs—solve the question
olp7;t e^ Sily * The y get off a lot of
'4eh U e d r eS t , that sound all r*h
othpr6r th ? y work or n °t is an
frori w*u estion ' B y and large, the
nirrh u Jits of children do not do
Wavi,v! arm ' The y grow up some
Tbpv /tlether they eat candy or not.
bar i ay . worr y their future hus
dist-^f F Wife to deat h because of a
othct 6 for cabbage which the
it an „° ne ' s fa ther liked a lot, but
So «° mes out ia the wash.
c oncern r^ as the candy question is
candt d ’ children do not need
they ha vo Ure SUgar * S 0 long aS
tioneri 6 the w ell chosen diet men
the I ye , ster day. And if they have
Yegetahi" S . We named - milk ' eggs '
Wes, fruits and cereals—the
18—Block
22 A crank
(slang)
23 Any jewel
25 A horse
26 A layer
27 Funda
mental
29—Dregs
31—Unfasten
32—A brick-bak
ing oven
34 —Injury on
the skin
37—A cherished
animal r
39 —Diminutive
of Anne
43—Lieutenant
(abbr.),
Answer to previous puzzle
■ cl/ He
u 77®*/
7FiT_££|
j_Zi H £_
a 8 a/ o a
i!" iT|(fT V
'-I'kpMsU \£\u\t\h
West led the spade 2, which de
clarer won with the Q. He now
played the diamond 9, which he
won with the A. A diamond was
ruffed in dummy and a heart in the
South hand. Diamonds and hearts
were ruffed for three rounds and
the declarer ended by making five.
When West remonstrated with
his partner for taking no action in
response to his double, East’s re
tort was that he held nothing and
that 1-Club, redoubled, would not
give them game. He failed to
reckon what the vulnerabCe over
tricks amounted to.
• * •
Tomorrow’s Problem
4AKJ765
¥7
♦ J
*9 8 7 6 4
♦ 4 - * Q 10 9 3
¥KJ9 5 M 2
♦AIO 4 4j ¥ None
*AKQJ ¥8763 2
Z —^— * 10 3 2
¥AQ 10 86432
¥KQ 9 5
«*» None
(Dealer: West. North-South vul
nerable.)
How should the bidding proceed
on this deal after West’s 1-Club
bid?
candy won’t hurt them. Candy has
no minerals, nor vitamins and
blunts their appetites. But they
all eat some candy, and no one
would want a child that didn’t like
■ candy.
' Family Attitude Important
The family attitude toward chil
dren’s food habits is the most im
portant element in the problem, and
i young parents may have to re-edu
cate themselves to like simple
■ dishes during the formative years
of their children. For many years
the food an individual eats is con
! ditioned by what the parents eat, so
they should broaden their tastes
Dr. Clendening will answer
J questions of general interest
only, and then only through
his column.
and have a wide variety on the ta
ble. From observation of those
who grew up under such a system,
I advocate the “eat what is put be
fore you and learn to like it” rule.
The parents who give out those in
junctions are doing far more for
their children than the “Oh! let the
poor dear eat what he wants to”
school.
Children refuse food because it is
monotonous, or poorly prepared or
unappetizing, or because they have
been pampered. Rarely the reason
they refuse it is because they are
sick or below par. So the real re
sponsibility of food habits, good or
bad, is on the parents —on the way
the food is cooked or the example
of a finicky appetite in one of the
grownups at the table.
A sudden lack of appetite in a
healthy child is usually the sign of
an approaching illness. The
healthy, active child, who has the
advantage of good home surround
ings, always has an appetite at the
i proper time,
THIMBLE THEATRE Starring POPEYE He Loves Me Not—He Loves Me, By E. C. Seg*>
: i^*y**>
BIG SISTER . By LES FQRGRAN
RVED FEg OE \AHKTTEh? . BUT X\IB GOT TOGO EASY AMD VJATCH SMS. T’OOGHT I PLAWorF - ) JOST eMOOCR TO FOOL VOm-A
WHAT T AM. WELL \MHAT GOOD A— MV STEP. OAT BETR \<=» AVNU-OCAT BOT X OVD ROOT D\S AMVCLE A Put kaw <onr a.<=i t .Otorr * .
ARE RELATWIS iw YOU CAM'T / \NWEKi SWE GETS “STIRBED OPI J UTTLEB\T. NJOT TtX) BAD. \ AS SME VIHKS CR\PP\.ED' F
-7' vjse'emt*. A — J J • J . JZ
THE OLD HOME TOWN Registered U. S. Patent Office By STANLEY
THH RADIO i
(GOING ALL DAY-“TWO ' g M /}
( CANARIES AND VMILLIEL / , C
\ SAXOPHONEY LHSSONS )(' i W
f DANGEDIF ILL STAND A
' V-// V FORA SILLY VsIKISTLJMOy ~J}
Igranppaw MEEK blew up) 5” ®
lasaim topat J
DPVRICHT, 193S—LE( W STANLEY —KING FEATURFS SYNDICATE. Inc 1 ~ V
TA KETT f a By PAUL ROBINSON
Bill Tf2N ENEI2V DOOI2/ I ( )| f CHICK/THIS fIF SUES IN THEI2E WE'LL
NOBODN IN MERE/ f RAX ) ) SOON FIND OUT/NOW** THE OLD FOOTBALL STUFF"
/ .
THE GUMPS—THE OLD PHONEY ;
I / lady luck is \ / oh,mama-»nY I that’s too eao,of = 7 =B YQU
J WITH us! A WHOLE \ /J T A SHAME? COURSE-BUT DON'T 'Y ® F EBL^Yp^ l RE* Wk
fir WEEK HAS PASSet> \ \Jf ©IMOO CANT OVERLOOK THE FACT \HE COMES JJU Mm \ SOMETH!NG I mm
J SIMCE BIM PUT W HMD THE LITTLE THAT IF HE EVER \ \ MOW— BE 1 COULOBO TO HGL
W THAT AO IM THE 1 PARENTS. DOES AOOPT THE OAOV, \ V —ii HI I V COULU OC TO M
■ PAPERS-AND HE HE CAN|V AOOPT OUR INHERITANCE WILL\ V |H 3 HI I 'WJllflit
m STILL HASN'T FOUMO HIM-ITS BREAKING BE CUT (M HALF / Mi * I Hi H | Hff / WWi
HENDERSON, (N.C.) DAILY DISPATCH FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 1938
SCOTT'S SCRAP BOOK
/rls -me enaush football l I Sm/alif Y
A./ ASSOCIATION ASSUMES THE il ZY&l‘L‘ /Yylu,i
j pooiTlCN MRUUN& |
Ml mTo yuAeco RUE O'
| WILL, YfrE- \\V'^A
H 4 feast's I|||
telsi-s'Ti** pm’uaus perform MLgggtg i
j MAM'/ S'IAW.PS ARE- A. CE.R.E.MOMIAX
-YtfESE. DAYS —'<rtV> ONE. WOMEH AHD
(was ISSUED By FIKLANiP <»RLS CARRyiMg/'
h=6P- A SKI
j COPYRIGHT. 1933. KING FEATURES SYNDICATE, inc. OF YHEIR. A.MCE.S'jOR.S IN SMALL BASKET?
PAGE SEVEN