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CULBERTSON WINS BY 10300 POINTS Gredits Victory Over British to More Precise Slam Bidding. By the Associated Press. LONDON, July 22.—Ely Oulbertson and his three associates of the Amer- ican team won the Charles M. Schwab Cup tonight by defeating the British combination in the international con- fract bridge match with a lead of 10,900 points in 300 boards. The American _quartet—Culbertson, Mrs. Culbertson, Theodore A. Lightner and Michael T. Gottlieb—came from be- hind shortly befare the mid point of the six days’ play and scored heavily with ageressive yet precise g. The playmg was il twe sound-proof, lass-walled Jooms and was witnessed y & tho or more int spec: tators who were assisted by a large elec- trical scoreboard. The total scores as the maich was concluded late tonight were: Americans, 104,080; British, 93,180. Culberigon Analyzes Besults. Col. H. M. Beasley captained the British players who were, besides him- self, Sir Guy Domville, George Morris, T. V. Tabbush and several occasional substitutes. “The Americans won not because they were more intelligent or scientific, but because they had the luckier swings and more experience in teamwork,” Culbert- son said after the finish. “The largest part of our lead came from more precise slam bidding due to our four and five no-trump method and the better psychological adaptation of our_team “We had the most thrilling and hard- est battle of our experience.” Impetus From Hand. ‘The hand which gave the Culbefl.s(m] team its impetus toward a commanding lead vas as follows: NORTH. S—KQT42 H-K J 6. D—8 6 c—85 2. ‘WEST (Dealer). 5—A J 10963 H—Q. D AK4L &— H—108 74 3. D—J 9 7. C—AKJ93 Both sides were vulnerable. In room one the bidding was Culbertson, one ic: Beasley, pass; Lightner, cne no- ; Domville, two clubs; Culbert- on. three spades; Beasley, double; all pass. Quibertson Picks Up 680 Points. After losing two tricks on the ace, king of clubs, Culbertson itely forced Beasley to take two trump tricks with the king and queen, after which he captured the remainder for 680 points ‘The bidding in room two was as fol- lows: Morris, two spades; Mrs. Cul- bertson . Tabbush, two no-trump; G three clubs; Morris and Mrs. Culbertson, pass; Tabbush, three spades; Gottlieb, pass; Morris, four spades; Mrs. Culbertson, double; all pass. Besides capturing the ace, king of clubs and the king and queen of spades, the Americans ‘were able to trump in once and gain anothef outside trick. Morris thus was set three and lost 900 ints, rA’ga.ns in the two rooms of 1,680 points. NAVY ORDERS Line Officers. Wisiam F., jr. Off. in Navy Rctg. New York, , about 7 July; to in- str. Army War College, Washington, 5 Keppler, Capt. Chester H. J. Relieved addl. duty at The Hague, The Nether- lands. Continue other duties. MCcElduff, Comdr. Daniel A. Addl. duty as Retg. Insptr, Central Retg. Div., Chicago, Tl Abercrombie, Lieut. Laurence A. Det. Bu. Nay., Navy Dept. in August; to c. {. 0. USS New Orleans & on board en commissioned. Lieut. Alfred J. Det. staff. Cdr. Div. 4; to aide-& flag It. on R. Adm. H-nry E. Lackey, Cdr. er Div. 4, Sctg. Force. n, Lieut. Tho B. Det. staff, Subm. Force, US Flt; to stafl,| Adm John W. Greenslade, Cdr. #ubm. Force, US Flt., as aide & flag 1t. & addl. duty as force communi- cation, radio and sound officer. Bowley, Lt. Clarence M. Det. USS Swan in August; to USS Mallard. Gaines, Lt. Richard K. Det. VP Sqdn. 1B (USS Saratoga) in June; to USS Arkansas aviation unis. Hdgtrs, 5th Gerth, Lt. William A. Det. Dist, in July; to Navy Yard, Nav. Norfolk, Va. Gill, Lt. Graham C. Det. Hdgérs. 5th Nav. Dist, in July; %o Navy Yard, Norfolk, Va. Hardwick, Lt. Harry 3. Det. UBSS ‘Wyoming prior to 4 August; to temp duty Naval Academy. King, Lt. George J. Det. Hdqtrs, 5th Nav. Dist, in July; to Navy Yard, Norfolk, Va. Oliver, Lt. William. Det. VF Sqdn. 6B (USS Saratoga) in June; to USS Ar- kansas aviation unit. Dodson, Ensign Joseph E. Det. USS Sa’rtatagn: to USS Arkansas a unit, Helsey, (Capt. r E Medical Corps. Smith, Lt. Cdr. John G. Det. Navy Yard, Norfolk, Va.; to Norfolk Nav. Hosp, Portsmouth, Va. Smith, Lieut. Gerald W. Addl. duty Navy Yard, Portsmouth, NH. ‘Wickstrom, Lt. Otto W. Det. USS Ne- vada; to instr. Nav. Hosp, San Diego, Calif, Supply Corps. Wmhlhm, 1;:) Isd;s'l;mmu A. Det. USS aho abou t.; to Ne Depot, Norfolk, Va. DU Hullfish, Lt. Cdr. Wilson 8. Det. Nav. Supply Depot, San Diego, Calif, about 25 August; to USS Tennessee. McKenzie, Lt. Cdr. Edward R. Det. Bu. g.sg A Navy Du:nhzm Sept.; to c.1.0, Minnea on board e o ppolee, Lt. Cdr. Charles L. L fi:vid mgu?mr:epot. hmwthalx?ne:, vada, abou = 3 Tj“’ San l';r‘tlncc\sco. o FosehD mmons, . Cdr. Charles C. USS Tennessee about 30 Benm; Nav. Supply Depot, San Diego. Conrad, Lieut. Willam G. Relieved addl. duty as supply officer, Rec.|Oox, Ship, Sen Francisco; continue other duties Rec. Ship at San Francisco. Kilroy, Lieut. Benjamin O. Det. Navy Yard, Norfolk, Va, on 1 Aug.; to . Sta., Norfolk, Va. Deaths. Roth, Lieut. David Elbert, USN. Died 18 July, 1933, at Stoughton, Mass. 5 Pharm. James, USN. Died 15 July, 1933, at US Nav. Hosp., Wash., D. C. Asiatic Despateh Ordess, 17 July, 1933, dango. . Uss Office of Judge Adv. N. Det. USS . . USS John D. Ford; to Yangtse Patrol. . John T. Det. USS Whip- aih. Nav. Dist. B Snee B, New Yot '| him—and also that he has not forgot- a net gain for the Amer- | gljy viation | persuade one friend to donate & needed Hoover Puts Aside, Cares, Makes No And “Lives Ex-President Willing and Ready to Fish on Moment’s Notice. DOES MUCH DRIVING Former Chief Executive Kept Busy Answering Heavy Correspondence. Many persons have been wonder- ing what Herbert Hoover has been doing since he left the presidency to vanish into a seclusion which dispaich from a writ Mr. Hoover intimately, and who re- ocently spent two days with him in the Hoover home. Soecial Dispatch to The Star. LOS ANGELES, July 22 (NANA)— When a private citizen becomes Prest- dent of the United States he has tra- versed certain familiar and well traveled paths of destiny. His progress has been accomj under the searching scru- tiny of millions of his fellow citizens and has been attended by a.constant furore of public discussion. An entire Nation has kept an atten-| tive—even a prying—eye upon him anc everything that has concerned him. All he has said or done or failed to say or| do has been of foremost interest and importance in the public mind. Once in office he finds himself com- pelled to accept as a very Decessary | part of his daily experience the con- | tinued and increasing intrusions of a people frankly curious about the every-| day incidents and episodes connected with White House occupancy. But when a President becomes a pri- { vate citizen, all this amazing process is | abruptly reversed. The clamor dies | away and for a time there is an illusion of utter remoteness from the world and | its affairs. Hours and days that had | been so jealously conserved and grudg- | ingly doled out only to those entitled to some portion of the precious time of one of the world's busiest and most endlessly ahead. The future for the endelessly ahead. The future for the moment presents a drab prospect. Adjustment Period Short. A former President soon learns, how- ever, that the world has not forgotten ten the world. The adjustment period is short-lived. |~ Herbert Hoover, out of the presidency | less than half a year. has not found the | role of private citizen difficult to re- sume. Perhaps to his own astonish- ment he has found even less difficulty in enjoying hugely his new status. After 20 ardous years in the public service, of which the last four were most exacting and confining, and with no real vaca- tion or from the stress and | miliar to him since his early youth. He | has revisited the mm‘ly l‘y!tlom of strain_of official life, Mr. Hoover is Atrongly disposed to conclude that idle- ness—his own peculiar and individual conception of idleness—is a splendid thing and well worth cultivating to a | considerable degree. | It might almost be said that the Na- | tion's only living former President is working at it. Back in his Palo Alto home on a hill overlooking Stanford University, surrounded by trees and flowers, attended by his dogs and visited by his friends and an occasional official or dignitary, Mr. Hoover is discovering s new sest in the mere fact of being ve. The lines of care and worry and the ‘haggard look of the tired man who rode somberly away from Washington March 4 have disappeared. Mr. Hoover's cheeks now are ruddy from California’s sun and wind and from his excursions into the desert; he walks with a brisk- ness that would amaze any who saw him during the last two or three years in Washington, and although he has gained four or five pounds he has lost in girth. - Has No Plans at All Essentially simple,in his testes, 8 is Mrs. Hoover, whose joy at being again in her home is almost ecstatic, Mr. Hoover admits with & grin that he gets “g kick” out of doing what he pleases ‘when he pleases; in going to bed when he is sl ; eating when he 1s hungry; going and coming without fuss or flur- ry; seeing those whom he wants most to see and getting up in the morning | with nothing more important on his mind than the pleasant duty of doing only that which the inspiration of the moment, suggests. is not writing & book; he is not planning to write a book. man who is not planning ahead, either, for the days, the months or the years, and what seems to be even more 8ig- nmuntindh\s oy:gleyuheknol planning to do anything. He does not expect to go abroad nor does he intend becoming president of a university. Mr. Hoover no incli- nation to enter upon any business undertaking and has no such step under consideration. Some time, inevitably, but not soon. He is not planning either to become active politically or to refrain from participation in politics. His one active and it may be said regular interest at this time, aside from his voluminous eorrespondence, is Stan- ford University. It will be surprising if some of his friends from time to time do not find themselves hard pressed to_explain able to contri university’s financial n it seems, Mr. Hoover has eeds. ready, been able to $15,000 to Stanford’s library. ‘The one inseparable link between the former President and his public serv- ice is the veritable flood of letters that daily pours into Palo Alto—letters from men and women in all sections of the United States and Europe. These com- munications are predominant! sonal in character. letters, expressing good information. counsel. Prefers to Go Fishing. Characteristically, after the first few weeks of wondering what to do about Copp, Cdr. Charles C. Ors. modi. To , ¢ Patrol. Patrol; to 16th Nav. Dist. Bcott, Lt. Walter E. Det. Navy Yard, Cavite; to USS Tulsa. Manley, Lt. Frank J. Det. USS Tulea; 16th Nav. Dist. Lt. Det. Navy Lt. John E. 14; to USS_ Houston. A jgn Marshall H. Det USS Houston; to 16th Nav. Dist. White, Bosn. Willlam E. Det. USS us; to 12th Nav. Dist. Joyce, Ch. Pay Clk. Walter A. Det. vag Yard, Cavite; to 12th Nav. Disf Pope, Ch. Pay CIk. Vans R. Det. Nav. Sta., Olongapo; to USS Tulsa. Clark. Det. Dunn, . Pay Clk. ; to 16th Nav. Dist. Ac USS Tulss, Warrant Officers. at San Francisco after § Au- ; to USS Nachee. Ch. Gunner Jacob 8. Det. Augusta about 15 August; to Detroit. Savelle, Ch. Mach. Mark A. Det. Nav. Ajr Sta., Sunnyvale, Calif.; continue trtmt. Ni losp., San Diego, Calif. Smith, Ch. Pay Clk. Allen C. Det. Rec. Sta., Puget Sound, Wash., about 25 August; to USS Augusta. Kick Kills Mad Dog. PORT WORTH, Tex. (#).—With a well-gimed Lee Kldd.'?&hm | aloof, the ran amok downtown. problem, and finding '"mmw sflmduy g . loover tablished an of his home, installed e and other necessary ‘\ng en:bmer.; juipment, _an llosophical ts gladly— <o tating replies . or acknowledgments as these are indicated. This entalls » disbursement of more than a thousand dollars a month for clerical hire, stamps and stationery; for Uncle Sam, who is so prodigal in ex- tending franking privileges to Congress- men, Government heads and innumer- able bureaus, commissions and boards, does not concern himself with the ordi- nary or extraordinary expense of a for- mer President. Mr. Hoover sees no eason for complaint. He is glad to get the letters; appreciates the spirit that | prompts them. “Some day I shall go back to the business of earning a& living,” he said. | “Right now that is unnecessary.” Right now, in fact, Mr. Hoover pre- fers to go fishing. He will go fishing at the drop of a hat, anywhere within Teason and at any time. Sometimes it is unnecessary to drop the hat. He knows where the best trout streams are, the most likely pools, the kind bait best suited to the occasion. On the whole his greatest relaxation is in motoring- any hour, no particular goal and winding up at night in the home of some friend who has been notified by long-distance tele- phone only an hour or two before that, if too much bother is not involved, he may lay an extra plate for dinner. Travels 8,000 Miles. Mr. Hoover has traveled more than 8,000 miles by automobile'since his re- turn to California. Most of his jour- neys have been through territory fa- California, Arizona and Nevada, meet- ing accidentally and incidentally many 33;11 con‘n‘panx:on.s and associates with om he has prospected arious pn;lu ‘;1 the world. il Bl le_has inspected the great dam in Boulder Canyon which, Secretary Ickes to the contrary notwithstanding, still is known in the West and sou?.hwestl as Fl:gove{hnlm. m the cxplosive State politics of Cnhlorn‘;n. ?Illr. H;‘)ovzr l‘!mlm wholl;’ lespite the importuniti | {riends and the mnchimpuom ol‘:ml;t‘f | ical foes. On this subject as on na- tional affairs, it is doubtful that he has entered into a discussion with the more mfinnmfi half dosen of his close inti- When at home and following own theories of relaxation, Nr. o h: keeps in touch with national and world affaairs through the medium of more ;t;l:iu ggj;;wipape{s, whose front pages | al sections -] | toTll;imfidauy. are air-mailed e first order of the day is before breakfast. There g ‘sor“m-‘su;;l-l gument between Mr. and Mrs. Hoover as to the length of these walks. The | former President believes he covers | about 3 miles; Mrs. Hoover feels that three blocks would come nearer the actuality. However, without taking | an unusual amount of exercise, mnot| even the medicine ball which he managed to keep in trim in Washing'on. Mr. Hoover seems re- markably well and vigorous. Maintain Open House. ‘The Hoovers hold open house at all | times. Old friends and neighbors drop in and stay for lunch or dinner. There | is no formality in the Hoover house- hold. Mrs. Hoover has worked out a system for her kitchen that seems ade- quate for any emergency, and if a dozen chance to be present when six were expected, the change in plans is no‘L‘distilenuble to dt:he guests. e r. Hoover reads prodigiously, bi- ography for the most part. This is Former President Hoover, shown indulging in one of his favorite ., home. — a view of his Palo Alto, Calif. the sort of “idieness™ he and ts, occupations and which umw :mmnficm!henm the language of the cousse, and defi- does | States now is living the life of for the best, has complete confidence in the American people, and entertains the best of good cess of the new administration’s re- covery plans. When all has been said on the sub- ject of Mr. Hoover's present state of mind and condition of health, Infurmaetion & rescrvations for all airline destinations EASTERN AIR TRANSPORT SYSTEM (Nutionnt 8922 ) (National it WASHINGTON-NEW YORK EVERY HOUR ON THE HOUR REFRIGERATION SALE USED AND EXCHANGED MONDAY, JULY 24th ONLY MAJESTIC WILLIAMS LEONARD Eleciric Refrigerators SPECIAL MAJESTIC Buy on Our Budget Plan Trade in Your Old Ice Box for the sue- || his || for Future, the Life of Riley” at His Home in California / Produce of Tracts Operated Ct.)lumn' t Sad at Being ‘Beat’ Under Charity Groups Will on Joison Row Story. -Be Preserved. Versions Vary. Wife Leads at School. ‘The highest ranking student at the Boston University School of Business Administration was sent to achool by her husband. 8he is Mrs. Marjorie Auctioneer Paid High. hours, Conroy was paid at the rate of $117.12; per hour. 8t and squarely in venting his anger over an understanding that the columnist, reparing & scenario for the screen, written disparagingly of Jolson and the black-face comedian’s wife, Ruby Keeler. Miss Keeler, said Jolson, had reported 0. Lupe Veles Disgusted. And was Lupe Velez disgusted. “I see nothing. Shucks!” Mae West, Mary Brian, Janet Gay- nor, Nancy Carroll, Johnny W ler, Bert eeler and Robert Woolsey | were there, but like the man with the = top hat, who had it jammed down over | == ST e 1o EISEMAN’S show. SEVENTH AND F bi Winchell derieq it was a publicity gag for the scenario, and said “scal- $15, $16.50, $18 lions” to such shouters, but he admitted that the exploitation was “priceless.” 11 ,| John Gilbert has Hollywood had so CHARGE IT much fistic excitement. The impromptu main event got under way about the No Deposit Is Necessary Just Pay $4.00 IN AUG. $4.00 IN SEPT. $3.95 IN OCT. Mrs. Winchell walked toward their seats. Miss Keeler began to cry and Jolson, turning around, saw Winchell. xplained. Take your choice of any Sum- mer suit in the store at $11.95, regardless of its former price. “I just saw red,” Al e : A All fine suits, tailored and Winchell Down Twice. He popped Winchell. A police de- trimmed in the best possible manner. All colors, sizes and tective, Lefty James, said a left foored models. AWAIT TOBACCO SALES Millions of Pounds of Weed Near Final Stage for Auctions. ity. Department of Agriculture offi- have received notification from at 42 warehouses in 16 cities that compared with the writer and when he got up & it bounced him down to the':eme‘x’lt llfll‘: EXCUR From Washington snd Between All SOUT Southbou! st 4th and 5th FARES T "iND Fuu FRINCITAL FOrNTE fnanmne Au L ae ONE oictanee Traveled Between | i 25% Reduction CENT All Points | | Round Trip Pullman Tickets Henored on 3 ».m., 6:30 sports, and A. P. Photos. = Reular a1 .m. 1 of S _EARLY 8637 or Union ‘Sia. SEABOARD i5° AIR LINE RAILWAY 1 PARE FULLMAN BESERVATION City Tieket Office, 714 14th B¢, N.W. NAL. BAGGAGE * CHECKED man on the street President of the United e e e O — S R S S right, 1933, by North American News- — paper AHiance. Inc.) - 1| Il | President of ‘the United States and the People of the District of Columbia... In compliance with the wishes of the President, and in order to speed the economic recovery, we are taking steps to 'put into effect the terms of the President’s proclamation. . In a large store, such as this one, with varying schedules of hours and pay, certain reorganization plans must be drawn up to insure complete co-operation with the N. R. A. These plans will be drawn and our entire organization placed under the terms of the agreement. N