comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1930-11-29 · page 25 of 36

Judge — November 29, 1930 — page 25: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — November 29, 1930 — page 25: Judge, 1930-11-29

A restored page from Judge, 1930-11-29. 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.

SOUTH AND WEST HOLD WHAT? For solutions of this and eleven other problems in Auction Bridge I will award prizes valued at more than $22,000.00 It doesn’t cost a penny to enter the contest. buy. Nothing to sell. No service to be problem appeared September 27th. week. Problem No. 10 CARD READING AND RECONSTRUCTION AQ1095 10 6 K 1063 Nothing to rendered. First One will appear each 5 @DNEY @ LENZ = PRINCIPAL PRIZES INCLUDE French Line Trip Round trip from New York to France for two people on one of the palatial steamers of the French Line. Includes a week in’ Fri under direction of Thomas Cook & trip across the Mediterranean and a three-we motor tour of Northern Africa cities. Peerless Automobile r Custom Sedan. One of the fin- Jer cars made in America, Five Passeng est eight-cyli The Bidding: French Line Trip SOUTH Round trip for one, first class, from New York to France or England on the He de France, the Paris, or the France. udes a land trip of twenty-six days (England, France, Holland, Belgium, Switzerland) under direction of Franco-Belgique Tours Co., Inc. WEST NORTH 1 Spade First Trick: West opens the four of Clubs, North plays the three, : . ar Bayt the: Jacks aadiSouth Whe ved: . Kungsholm West Indies Cruise Eighteen-« cruise for two people by the Swedish An an Line from New York to the West Indies and South America, Outside stateroom with two beds and private bath. HOW MANY ORIGINALLY IN THE W H SUIT WER SOUTH HAND, AND NAME AS CLOSELY AS POSSIBLE THE CARDS ORIGINALLY HELD BY SOUTH, AND BY WEST. See November 22nd and December 6th issues of Juvce for additional prizes, Conditions of Contest—Please Read Carefully. The contest will consist of twelve prob- lems set up by Mr. Lenz, The problems will include: Bidding at Auction. (Not Contract.) End Plays. (Winning a specified number of tricks against any defense, with all cards exposed and the first lead shown.) Card Reading and Reconstruction, (Giving on disclosed bidding. in each suit in each hand and locat- ing certain cards, indicated by dis closed bidding, leads and plays.) lutions must not be written on two sides of a sheet of paper. Contesta urged to confine each solution to a single sheet. Not more than one solution to any one problem may be submitted by one contest. ant. Contestants are urged not to vitiate this rule by sending solutions in the ‘s of other members of their families or friends. Solutions to more than one problem must not be submitted on the same sheet. Not more than one contestant may sub- mit solutions on a single sheet. No solutions submitted may be with- drawn, Name and address of contestant and the number of the problem must be clearly written or printed on each sheet. Name must be exactly the same on all solutions. Solutions must not be submitted on the printed fo or pages from Judge or on other printed forms in which the prob- lems will be published. Contestants are requested not to write letters, set down the problems, or attach copies of the problems to their solutions. Solutions to any or all problems may be submitted at any ie up to the clore of the contest on December 31st. Any solu- tion received by December 31st will count in the cont but contestants are urged to send in their solutions week by week as the problems appear in Judge. The prize winners will be the contest- ants in order whose solutions most nearly correspond to solutions by Mr. Lenz which have been written and sealed. Not only correct play, correct bidding, correct read- ing and correct reconstruction, but the directness with which solutions are ar- rived at and the clarity with which they are stated will be considered in awarding pri: Contestants in order of most nearly cor- rect solutions will be awarded the prizes in order of value. If two or more contestants tie they will receive like prizes. Each problem will have a scoring value in points, making it po: le for a con- testant to win any prize, no matter when 23 contestant starts and even if solutions to all problems are not submitted; but those who submit solutions to all problems are most likely to secure the winning scores. Mr. Lenz will be the impartial judge of all awards, Prizes will be delivered to winners only. In a January issue of Judge we will be- gin publication of solutions to the prob- in succeeding issues will publish ns of all problems, In the earliest le issues of Judge thereafter we will publish the names of all prize winners; and all prizes will then be awarded imme- diately. rst prize, the trip for two to France, including motor tour in Northern ica, must be accepted by May Ist, 1931. of this prize will be based upon ion that winner and companion are to start on trip from York not later than May Ist. For ice of this awar telegraph two weeks in advance of publi- cation of award in Judge. . No employee of Judge or member of an employee's family or hou this contest. Address all solutions to: Lenz Bridge Contest Judge Publishing Co., Inc. 18 East 48th St., New York City comicbooks.com