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Judge, 1928-12-22 · page 28 of 36

Judge — December 22, 1928 — page 28: what you’re looking at

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Judge — December 22, 1928 — page 28: Judge, 1928-12-22

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Lenz Solution to Bridge Prob. 26, Series 2 As it appeared in the November 24th issue of Judge Clubs are Trumps. South has the lead. North and South must win four of the hs against ony defense by East The Queen of Hearts is opened and if West refuses to trump. North dis cards the Diamond. On a second Heart lead, North If East leads the high Diame her Sp rth trick East is hel and at gives up anc The Diamond lead will be over: trumped by North and two rounds of trumps compels East to lose a Diamond trick the end, The Queen of trumps, at the fourth trick, will be won by the Ace, and the Spade is North's card of exit At the third trick, a low Di. t will be ove rth, on the opening leads ard the Spade before the Dia and South, on the second trick lead the high Diamond instead of the Heart, with the same result Variation: S| Queen of He and leads two rounds of trumps discarding the Heart. If E the high Heart, N the Diamond, or East's low Diamond lead will defeat the problem. At the fourth trick a low Diamond by East will permit North to make a Spade for the fourth trick. wuld West trump North overtru th ast makes orth must discard Correction: In solution to Bridge Problem 24, Sth issue of shi d in the December Judge, the sixth line id have read “West's high Dia- mond” tead of “North's high Diamond. Prize Winners, Prob. 25, Series 2 As it appeared in the Nov. 17th issue Ist Prize: David Bernstein, New York, N. Y. 2nd Prize: C! rles B. Dwyer, New York, N.Y. Srd Prize: J. L. Herlihy, Portsmouth, N. H. Special J. H. Cordes, Prise: West Point, Ga. see if the road’s clear! High Hat (Continued from page 11) | center snaps the ball. Bad pass from center. Misses mail box. Cagle falls on the ball for Army. Army goes into huddle and wishes rh other = Mer Christm Cagle broadcasts signals over na- tionwide hookup of 147 stations, courtesy Scripps-Howard News- papers. Army center snaps ball. Referee blows whistle. I. C. S. offside. A tackle in Middletoot, Maryland, was licking a stamp too soon. I. C. S, penalized again. Whistle for the first quarter. Not much excitement in the second quarter. Army made two first downs. I, C. S. made three first downs as a result of a tricky f An I. C. S. forward pass, mailed from Fullback Oomy, Zatwizz, Ontario, was wrapped in a box marked FIRST CLASS FRAGILE, I. C. S, used this play three times before Army saw through it. The third quarter was a com- plete deadlock. I. C. S. had a chance to score, but lost it when one of their star mail planes was — 26 Friexp—IWhat on carth is your husband doing up that pole? Wirr—My dear, he’s @ most careful driver—he’s gone up to —Passinc Snow foreed down in a Wyoming snow- storm, Neither team was able to score until the last minute of the last quarter. It was old I. C. S.’s ball on their own two-yard line. The amplifier barked signals. The center grinned. It was the one play which could win. He snapped the ball into the mail box perfectly. Quarterback Fud- dygillstein mailed a forward pass stamped SPECIAL DELIVERY from Atlanta to the I. C. S. center behind the Army goal posts. Army was dumfounded. Cagle tried to stop the postman, but was warned not to by the Postmaster General, who told Cagle that it meant twenty rs in Atlanta if he interfered with the United States mails. Cagle looked glum for a moment and then he brightened perceptibly and asked, “Is there a football team there?” This certainly should convince you of the feasibility of the International Correspondence Schools in so far as an Al Amer- ican Football ‘Team is concerned. Jupce, Jr. comicbooks.com