Judge, 1928-05-05 · page 23 of 36
Judge — May 5, 1928 — page 23: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1928-05-05. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
WOW EOD Ie SO We You may boast—very gently, of course—if you win a Le prize. He has held, t times, the National and Inte national Bridge and Whist Championship. His is the greatest name in Auction Bridge. HIS is the thirteenth of a series of Lenz problems pub- lished in Jupce. Prizes weekly for the best three solu- tions. Sterling silver trophies by Gorham for the best three scores in the series. Mr. Lenz personally conducts this de- partment. His decisions will be final. If two or more con- testants tie, both or all will receive like prizes. Problems will grow more difficult as the series progresses. The series will run for sixteen weeks. Contestants should give as directly and clearly as possible all essential variations of attack and defense in playing the cards, Address solutions to Sidney S. Lenz, His Desk, Jupce, 627 West 43rd Street, New York City. Problem No. 13 The number of the problem must be clearly indicated by the contestant at the top of each solution. Only one side of each sheet of paper used should be written on. All solutions must be re First Prize ceived not later than May Twelve packs Russell's Aristoc lth. I solution will be daring Cards: ihe cards published in June 2nd issue. tablished favorite of card Names of winners will be published in June 9th issue. AAT84 (1) Set iles, \/ aoe of cards, Ideal for working at Bridge prob i > Ko2 lems. ee (2) A year’s subscription to & Q JUDGE Third Prize & Schuster. Contains all his popular problems from New York theater programs fo) G (2) A year’s subscription to Auction Bridge Magazine Hearts are Trumps. South has the lead. North and South must win all eight tricks against any defense by East and West (See next page for Lenz solution to Problem No. 9) —to let EVER READY Bridge Score Pad referee your game. Perched judi- cially on the sidelines... scanning North's leads and East's counters . . . mark- ing South's teamwork and West's generalship under barrage. Thirty-six square inches of almighty con- venience de luxe, hailed by Wilbur Whitehead (himself) as ‘ta grand slam in practicability’'! The 14th trick... and smartest trick ofall...indubitably. “Ever Ready’ has a dull brass frame plate, em- bossed in black and gold. Its tricky little pencil is also a trump marker. Its base, covered with red cloth, will not scratch your pet table, and the price is only one dollar, to protect your pocketbook. Loose-leaf, and of course it refills—refills are 40 cents. A more patrician “Ever Ready’? with a brass base is $3.00. You can get the ‘Ever Ready” at stationers, gift shops, and department stores. Or, you might use this little coupon. comicbooks.com