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Judge, 1936-02 · page 22 of 36

Judge — February 1936 — page 22: what you’re looking at

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Judge — February 1936 — page 22: Judge, 1936-02

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Digit Crypt SHE following depicts n in long division, Letters have been substi- 1 for digits from 0 to 9, in u Whe ed by each letter arrange sive same digit you have found t ts re} the letters in merical order and they Twenty-five m Will spell a word. good solving time for this crypt UNB)EDUES(R EBN HTE ARH “DUS DUS Box Cars NE. aft moat the club Mr Matcher inveigled Mr. Stoop to hazard some of his money on the throw of dice. It is needless to say that Mr, Matcher won some of Mr. Stoop’s money. On looking over what he h: it occurred to Mr. Stoop that if 1 $4.00 instead of would have four times How much did Mr. Stoc i left had losing $5.00 he won much as he has start with ? Pieces of Eight RX? D. HAND, an enthusiastic numismatist, was catalc part is collecti 1 of rare old gold coins dl made One 1 of the were dated in the 1860's, one fourth in the 1870's, one fifth in 1880's, th in the 1890's, 1900's. coins did Mr this set? ne ind 30 coins in the How man: have For Individual Honors HE ladies of the noon Bri After- Club, of hom. there were eight, were vidual tournament to play on seven di casions, with two tables at ion. They wished to arrange it each so that each lady played with every other lady once a 1inst every other lady twice. T! Ny de- led that the problem was too difficult and gave up the whole still ous to hold the tourna- Hy will do lea, although they are a ment and undoubt so if they can be provided with the proper arrangement Can you help them ov Never Say Die (Compos ric Ley) RS. SIMPKINS has lately d veloped a penchant for and Mr, Simpkin: 1, has will brids with his turn of mit ul Simpkins great pain. enough en looking Mrs He was fortunate cause to come across the following problem, which he presented to. Mrs. Simpkins. She at first thought that it would present few difficulties, but after several hours of study led that it was Simpki course, able she de imposs of pleasure from showing her tl It is South's lead, Spades are trumps, and North and South must win six of the seven tricks gainst any defense. a 7 | @#— i | 96 Ww E - QO4s 985 e109 a4 _| @ko 543 84 Jo (Our congratulations to having composed cy for a magnifi bridge / fense.—Editor ) Contraband NSPECTOR WEBBER fc desk the following ciphe me: After decoding it he fel tly suspicious to wa tion, He therefore decided to set a care ful watch on the activities of the re cipient of the cable and will see next) month that his lent was correct. ADRSMNTVs. VSN ZTEG. SRFTQSBV NFHQ KTMN MRPPSMMWRD., RVASDHSYBADS FSMRDNM- BPPTKQDHMESL. SYSFZNEHVC MHC 2 TV LTNNSL DHVS. WHFMN MEHQKSVN- LRS RVMHCVSL. VSON XSSG. A Compliment Returned R. MeINTOSH hac the dimensions of which were 30 feet long, 12 feet wide, and 12 feet high. At one end of the room in the center of the wall and 1 2 living room is, six feet from either side, ¢ foot from the ceiling. there was vnail from which a picture had formerly heen hung. At the other end of the room n the center of the wall 1 irom the fl was a light plug. foot Now Mr. Melntosh’s son, ly. who had been rea about spiders and flies, hese facts father if he show him how to draw the shorte line possible from e light plug, Mr Intosh, who w rt to be led by old tricks, readily honstra be done rail te rd how t should . he didn't the wall but Of cour paper. Now what would be the length of such ? Sandy was then given a sblem which baffled him for some time. His father asked him what the shortest line if, with the other conditions the same, the would be, room were only 20 fe and the nail 2 feet from the ceiling and the light plug feet from the floor. Solutions Next Month comicbooks.com