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Judge, 1936-01 · page 30 of 36

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Judge — January 1936 — page 30: Judge, 1936-01

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4 | Suffered” An affliction I had to bear in silence, it was so embarrassing! JS THERE anything more painful than Hem- orthoids, or, more frankly , Piles? The suffering is well nigh inexpressible and the sad part of it is that, on account of the delicacy of the subject, many hesitate to seek relief. Yet there is nothing more crushing or more liable to serious outcome than a bad case of Piles. Yet blessed relief from Piles of all forms is found today in the treatment supplied in Pazo Ointment. Three-fold in effect, Bizo does the things necessary. 3 Effects First of all, it is soothing, which relieves sore- ness and inflammation. Second, it is /ubricateng, which makes passage easy and painless. Third, it is astringent, which tends to reduce the swol- len blood vessels which are Piles. Results! Pazo comes in Collapsible Tube with Detach- able Pile Pipe which permits application high up in rectum where it reaches and thoroughly covers affected parts. Pazo also now comes in suppository form. Pazo Suppositories are Pazo Ointment, simply in suppository form. Those who prefer suppositories will find Pazo the most satisfactory as well as the most economical. Try it! All drug stores sell Pazo-in-Tubes and Pazo Suppositories, but a trial tube is free for the ask- ing. Just mail the coupon or a penny postcard. 1 ' ' H Gentlemen: Please send me, in PLAIN WRAP- { PER, your liberal free «rial size of PAZO Ointment ' 1 1 1 Grove Laboratories, Inc. Dept. 18-J, St. Louis, Mo. I * THERE is one thing that would improve the game of the average bridge pl it would be to repeal the law giving players the right to bidd No alert player can have possibly bid times in the | course of a round of bidding without and what her three have declared. But, of course, few players are alert and it is my observation that (will you hand me th slide rule, please, Miss Trockbottom?) 87.64% of all bridge players will pick up their cards and then | stare at them in a sort of trance until a contract has been arrived at. At which time they request review of the bid- | ding.” Why they will sit hypnotized prairie d 1 Mystery to me | going to change it Is and if they would take their eves ¢ em for | a few moments they might know what | the other players had said. And what makes it even harder to understand is that once the play of the cards has begun. they will stop looking 1 play their cards with the speed of a magician have the ng reviewed remembering each there like so many gs has always been ir cards are not at their hands a HESE, of players wi mit that “give ‘em a few of the aces and kings and they'll play ’em as well as They are keen at remember- - high cards that have been played, are right on the job at setting up a long the usual and wure out a squeeze or course, the are quite willing to ad- are same anybody finesses suit, take oc- casionally even an end One thing they will confess however, if pre call “card reading they insist, is an accomplishment ed, is a weakness at what they For card reading. f the f practice experts, the result of years and requires more concentration than they care to give to game. Asa matter of fact, and all card players know, any phase of | that can be called card re: be called reasoning or alertness. is nothing difficult about it. A good player merely watches the cards ey fall and uses common sense to tell him what cards are left and | where they are. Situation after situation comes up at | the card table where the use of a little simple logic to locate cards in the op- ponents’ hands would make the big dif- ference between being set one or two tricks and making game on the hand. The following hand does not require any brilliant plays or master minding, aR rod Contraet By Hans Katzenellenbogen yet few ciently ¢ 1 be sufi- lert to make the most out of it. verage players we @754 9603 AS54 eKO3 @kKO32 [Nn @ 1098 cs | 1072 © KjJ763 kr 0102 $02 LHS J @ysss @ Aso A\QJ84 9 HA1IN7T6 All vulnerable. East dealt and passed. South opened the bidding with one heart West bid two diamonds. North, two no trumps, and East again. ps South then bid three hearts which West passed and North carried to four. HE opening lead of the king of sades was allowed to hold. East played the eight and South, of course, dropped his six. West then shifted to diamonds, playing the six, his fourth best, which declarer won in dummy with the East playing his ten, Declarer then led the three of hearts finessing the jack to West's king. W returned another low diamond. East played the queen and South trumped Declarer then cashed his ac and did a little thinking. spade lead East had played the eight yet West had shifted to diamonds. West must have not of hearts On the first Hence, nown his partner was », and to know it he must hold both the deuce and the trey of spades as well as the queen. Further- more, if East was not echoing he must have three spades, the ten, nine and eight, and West must have four. Also, West must have at least five diamonds to justify his bid, especially, since he did not have the queen of that it, and as he already played two earts, declarer can be reasonably trying to ect sure he does not hold more than two clubs. So declarer cashed dummy’s king and queen of clubs and finessed the ten. Cashed his ace of spades, discarded dumm losing spade on the ace of clubs and trumped the jack of spades. He then trumped a low diamond return from the dummy, and laid down his queen of hearts for eleven tricks. Game, rubber and an extra trick just by being alert and using a little common sense. comicbooks.com