Judge, 1929-03-02 · page 28 of 36
Judge — March 2, 1929 — page 28: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1929-03-02. 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.
Hi} thy a tl ih 1H This Spring .. . a Garden beckons you to England er, Violet and wallflow- making a floral rainbow against whitened walls... form- al gardens with shaped bedsand box hedges definingthe of a stately man: 1... Sussex glades redolent with laugh blue-bell and sunny daffodils. For your trip—board the Mauretania, Pacemaker of the Seven Seas... relax ami the reposeful atmosphere of her superbly panelled lo smoking room, verandah, her che ry English - Garden chintzes . njoy food that is carefully selected and skillfully prepared under the vigilant of the great Bertrand, THE MAURETANIN SAILS TO FRANCE AND ENGLAND April 10+ ML CUNARD LINE &) See Your Local Agent THE SHORTEST BRIDGE TO EUROPE Lenz Solution to Bridge Prob. 36, Series 2 As it appeared in the February 2nd issue of Judge Tramp the A. th and South six of the nine tricks ugainst any defense by East und West Ir s East in with t the third tri 1 Hearts ain, South he third trick. We cen, North playing low. ts with the I nd, North wir defeated by which must A second Dia by North, $ he Ace of Clubs is f trick, East will ¢ g upa Club, The ed by the Spade anda Club. but should diseard the nine of Hearts and P ‘oblem will a Heart, but if South up a Heart, West must throw the King of Clubs. “If the King of Dia nds is then led, the Queen must be dis- Should card a Club, West s the nin Hearts, 26 Prize Winners, Prob. 35, Series 2 As it appeared in the Jan. 26th isswe Marvin Segal, Ist Prize New York, N.Y. tnd Prise: BE, Fe Reed Whittemore, 1G Torreon, Mexico Harry Wells Charlotte, N.C. 3rd Prize Lilian N Special re (Continued from page 2+) ith: With less than one trick, the partner makes a denial bid « two No Trumps. Of course, the high card strength of the two- trick bidder must) be powerful enough to stand these responses. On the illustrative hand South would bid two Hearts, North, holding normal support in Hearts and one trick, would assist to three Hearts. South now has the choice of bidding four Hearts or three No-Trumps, to show that the original bid was one of but four cards. If the No Trumps re bid, North should bid either four Clubs or four Hearts. It is a close question whether South's best try for game would be four Hearts or five Clubs. At Clubs, as the cards lic, cleven tricks are easy. Playing at Hearts, the Dia- mond opening by West would be rect, be that hand con tains four trumps. East would win with the Ace and return a Diamond. The Declarant should discard a Spade and permit the King of Diamonds to win and from then on nothing would m: ould Declarant make the mistake of trumping the second round of Hearts—well, figure it out yourself, us Crerx—Sir, my wife wants me to take the afternoon off for shopping. Maxacen—Im possible. Curnk—Thank you, sir. —Evervnopy's ANrepores 1 comicbooks.com