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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1932-04-07, Page 3•,ARTICLE No: 16It is ,an 1... ,.est"lug suhject•and so.f !i still in open one. -There are- er " c stain hands --onetwifieer 'tbe best of players Will always differ, and it la a 1 cky thing for Auction and d Contract that this is so: ft is this very variety of opinion that makes the genres .liiterestieg. No doubt' it is .a fine 'thing to. agree about some things, hist life wood soon lose its savor tif we all were .of. the . same opinion about everything.. Arguments are etimulat- lag and keep the interest alive. This is particularly, true of Auction and Con- -a" • tiatctry end the 'very fact that some llanaia cause endless :,df@cussion and a wide • Variety., ot. ,opinion shows 'why • the genies are •do' fascinating. - The 'fol- lowing hand le instead example. it was• recently oubmitted to the writer ae a ----iaand-t nierhieh-neighed-piagers-seemeii tee agree se" teethe, proper bid. What dui • yen think? Hand No. 1 • A B ' ;2, aearta=A Clnbe--, 7, 6, 6. 3,`2 ,Diamonds=A, 8, 7, 2 SPedee--A 2 Jo -score, rubber -game. Ni hat skould: Z. ass dealer. bid . g ith the :foregoing band at either Auction or Contract?, • writer will give his opinion in the next article. There is one type of: hand on which the well-known writers and players of the game Still disagree. When :partner' bad bid' one no trump and second hand Me passed, what type Oland justifies to . take-out at either Auction or Con- tract? -I1-you:' want toget into an ar-- g ument,.jnst start a discussion of this subject, and you will probably. and as seamy opinions as .there .are •players. ft is the came thing with the writers en Auction and Contract. They all disagree and the result is a wide di- versity of . opinion. The following hands illustrate the• principles Of the take-out, both. at Auction and Contract, and the writer will give his opinions in the next article. In the meantibnethink •it over' and • cUse your„opiniou with your friends. Hand No • 2 Hearts -J, 10, 8, 3, 2 Clubs -•J, 7, 3 'Diamonds -9 5 Spades -1C, 6;5 : A • B•, ar No score, first game. Z dealt, bid one no trump and _- passed. What should, Y •now bid with the foregoing hand at either Auction or Contract? Hand"'No.: 3: Hearts --8, '2 8, 2 Diamonds 10, 2 , A' No score, -rubber game. Z' dealt,. bid Pae. no .trump, and A. passed. What Should Y now bid with the foregoing hand at either Auction or Contract? The • follow ing hand has recently, been brought tothe writer's attention and the proper play Is sato interesting •and-instruct-iye-- that -it -ie-given=as-a- problem:" • , Hand No..4 Hear; is --t, K, Q, 4 . Clubs -J, 10, 9,4,•3, 2 • Diamonds -7 Sesdes-A,' 4 Hearts'' -1o;' 9, 5,"2 Clubs—A; K Q, i-. Diamonds -,9, 6, 3 Spades=Q, 6 No score rubber game. Clubs are trumps and Z is playingthe hand. A opens the king of diamonds and all follow suit.; He then leade the trey of spades. How should Z play the hand so thathe can make game no matter how the remaining cards are distri- Nee? " ,Archive Will, Be o y: l yes:, So reads due Rheums is o :Bad It in Dfoscow•, f'osting 'Two .and a Balt billion Rob headline, And here is a typical:. news item. The housing assgcia tion of the Kzasania4'ressnia quar- ter complains bitterly .that its mem- bers keep tasking about progress yet neve accomplish anything. Work- re -Community __House No.., 7' has. only one light, a single petroleum lamp. In -Leontierelel Street a com- munity house Where 22 people live has , only one teakettle. The men in charge of • these houses are to blame and must take ethe responsi_ busty, ` Some concrete instancesof the daily misfortune of standing in line He Had to 9uit Work nod Barter Not • Bothered Skies Relieved by: Dr. Wiy l' Pink Pili. "I was. tear ,tbYy bothered with a weak back anal rheauii inn in my . shhoerruldersBerger," wntesA.. ,, Wingle, Ont. "It got so bad I-had-to-stop-working".antt-stay in the_ house. I was,two weeks in bed, when a v► iliiams friend'advised me to try .Dr. !W Pink Pills, 1 gave the Pills, a'fair trial, for necessities. are given. At Shop and they relieved me right away. •My No. 1,9-35 of the Moskva River Co- operative Society people had to stand :for . Metre in the early . morning wit=' ing. for ' Vegetable • oil and- seinen. Why? The goods had been deliver- ed the, ,previous evening, but there was no pump for' the Oil • and not enough roon. on thecounterfor the. deer. "Why should we hurry?" the eters manager .asked ` the , reporter wine was investigating 'the incident.. "Wealways get rid of,h11 our -'goods." At Shop; No,. 232 long . lines • stand` waiting every ":day. •• The cashier ' is industrious bmf :dant-cash ��-register' does not work. , ' • A .brilliantly written article deg- " eribes how a member of the 'new generation Was walking along a street lit by bright "arc .lights. He . war}: gazing in wonder on a now theatre, when he saw: the.l6th century emerge from s basement window in the form. ,of a • rat. There are. 2,500,000 rate in Moscow "today,'almost as many es there are human' beings, " according. to scientific estimates: It is true -that-Moscow-does not -hold there -- cord for rats;, it has less than Paris,. London, and Hamburg; but. it has plenty just .,the lam, e.. . People have; begun to,' fight bedbugs, though with resolutions. more than with chemical formulae. " The articles goes • on to ask: "Why don't we talk" more about. the rats, about these relics of yes- terday•that we inheritedfroin Tsarism and that still make their way into the life of today along with the most modern bread factories, ; .community houses. and educational parks?"- Another arks?"TAnother headline reale:'' "The Par .cel Did. Plot Arrive." . Here . are AUM.- irons instances of packages arriv'ing•, : late or not at all. . It took 19 days, for one package to: get from Smp1-, ensk to Moscow-, and in 1931 alone 110 packages were lost in the Moscow Central Post Office. • The .advertising columns begin with the announcements. of theatres, Uuted? concerts, and • circuses. • Then there --Solutionen_n.eit-a.rtrrlp lf-ea colment-oi:offer reon6 Every pay" ;. New. back isgood and strong now, and I am working every day. I have ever been bothered with rheumatism since. I recommend them : for,'anyone suffering hem-Rhewbatism, Lame Back, Sciatica,' Rheumatism and Idndred ailments thin the blood very .rapidly. Dr. 'Williams' Pink Palls enrich- the blood stream and • create new red blood cells, 'which is the reason they see so successful in combat- ting such ailments. Equally good for all rundoen.or nervotislyy�exhausted people-, Try'.them. At your druggist's, Sec.• 713 What New olrk • Illustrated • Dressmaking Lesson Famished with Every Pattern iY :4RNEBnLLE r,^.-.'li':GTON Tile Daily News In Soviet Russia By GCJNTBER STEIN Bierman journalist., 'writing in the "Berliner Tadeblett." Berlin Dally Every country shows its true •face in its newspapers. They reveal its eiaracter and its circumstances. What• tfbey' contain and what they leek, ,what they emphasize and what limey eenceel, their prohibitions' and liberties, their style and form, of creating the news -all these •,things are not chance' creations. They re - 'resent, consciously er'•unconscious- dy, a portrait of an entire country..s. geapahot of - a given people at - t gh'en. time. ' I quote here the contents of a pop• tides Moscow evening newspaper, one that is less serious; less scientific; Few factual and dry , than the big eawspapen that sell' by the millions RESTFUL SLEEP for FRETFUL, FEVERISH CHiLD .—With- Casfofia`s regulation en yot3T child "tosses and cries 'mg iiia sleep, it means hole not comfortable.. Very often the trouble le teat poisonous waste matter is not bring carried off as it should be: Bowels need help -mild, geniis belp-but effective. Just this kind Carlto -1e ghas es.. Ctoria is a pure xegetabl yreparation made special- ly fee ebtldron'a, ailments. lit' Doli- tabu no harsh, harmful drugs; no` serooti . Dotal let your child's is t -.tom pear own be interrupt- ed. ♦ atoi t dote of Castoria will tags sibb tra little bowels to asci. 'rh" Felated comfort and rrstful rP UUsnnine Casioria tsar a• r Bak the name sell. Naturally, . more. people , want to and that are read by the intellectual .buy., There are demands for side= elect • "Moscow in the Evening" ie boards, typewriters, pianos, chairs published by the City Soviet. It cameras, and phonographs -.The ob- bas four large pages, each of which jects for sale include men's coats, is divided into seven columns. , It telescopes, . writs • watches, bear rugs. contains about one page of advertise- and an old hotel. AS Leningrad co ments. • . - operative r_dvertises for an unlimited" It begins with- foreign politics; and. quantity of tnrnipe, and cabbage, and the world revolution . is "aonatantly the state meat trust wants to buy •- featured. -Here is •a three -column twomotorcycles. headline: ''Today 'the Geneva, Gan- . Then come the most urgent de bags' Go into Conference. Geneva mends of all, the demands for dwell - Lackeys Preiiare to Serve Japan but ing places. • "The occupant of a room in Leningrad containing 183 square feet is looking for a room in Moscow," "Will exchange a corridor room for tiro (rooms, paying all bests:' "Wanted,a room- Will pay 100 rubles a month." '-`Will exchange room containing, 43 square feet for larger room, paying all • costs.' "We need rooms and houses for foreign specialists," announces a trust. "Will exchange five -room country hour$ for one room in Moscow." • "Will ,rentF oorner of room to student who will educate' a boy." There is also a labor -exchange column whose few Items confirm the fact that no -real unemployment exists in Russia. "Looking for work as a dog trainer." • "Old cook seeks em- ployment in state institution or hos- pital." "English, German, and French, seven rubles "a month." There are jobs offered to stenographers with their own typewriters and jobs Express • Every Sympathy •for China." The dispatch itself consists of " a telegram from Paris. Then follow. brief, more '•or • less tactual reports on the RussceGermaa economic negotiations, • the • end of 'the Indian Round -Table Conference, .bhe crisis In Morocco, secret Fascist organiza- tions in Stockholm. The news columns are broken by an almost un- recognizable picture of the unem- ployed in New York_ The Russians emphasize with, in- sacred}bl credible cleverness and e euecess the efforts of separate nits and of the whole economic system to put through.' the Five -Year Plan-• An article with two pictures On the three column •head - • ASTORI 'aFti CRY Fo • .,.• tint ---- r=•-•-it-telae-" stomach distress. It 1s deed e l nosier. John and I were sitting at the place places potatoe's are freezing. • vice. "Really, I was delighted!' by "tho>rsanas of stomach sufferers the world over The coat is about se tier nee. John WAS reading his newspaper 'allot measuriee, ,is a cap', "we was all waiting to see you tlisap suffer longer with stomach distress; said said. al .J .13' wn ms • •te. , necessities. n2 life." In one "What anin#e-e intelligent lot ofr peep e. 13isuratt a " be use we o ow sof it was like this," replied the old era vide the positita e ca are rnit'tts;• in ether he said to the verger, after tile. se �° Is. carrots firstpage bears" a line: "The Iron .Baker. Bread Fac- tory No: 5 'a Brilliant AcbieVement of the Soviet Union. Engineer Mar - 'ahoy Is the Organizer of the Triumph.' The dispatch is 'written in a good, sharp style: it relates that German' and English manufaot- nrers of machinery had asserted that their methods were the mbst high- Iy rationalized, but Russia has com- pletely outstripped them by building a bread factory without foreign aid. Gold of Ancients • ►1 8 Editor -"Did you ever write any- thing before e" , liuthArr,ss-'Oh ,yes I wrote -a con- _feseion story once. - Editor -"Did the editor send it back?" . Authores ', "No, he name all the way from New York to Louisville to meet me_ A simple conservative day .dress of buck canton_faille crepe cuts its bodice on slightly fitted Wrapped ,lines. It is • given.smart �� contrast through soft white crepe silk collar and -cuffs with pleated frilled edge, always so charming. The' novelty' black shiny buttons add a • decor- ative note: • • - This captivating little • model, Style No. 3481, comes in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 36 and 38 inches bust. Size 16 requires 2% yards 54- inch, with 'yard 39 -inch contrast- ing. Persian greewoolen with brown woolen .and brown leather belt is a striking color `.combination much favored by youth. Almond green crepe .silk with. self -fabric trim is still another ilei lightful idea. in 'the Caucasus for engineers; me- ' HOW TO, ORDER PATTERNS. chanies, and so forth. • Write your name end, ;address •Snclt ere' the 'contents of • a typi- • • plainly, giving number and size of osl lnnmber of a popular Moscow • such patterns as ;amu want. Enclose 20c in stamps or coin (coin pre- • ferred; wrap it carefully) for each - • nuncb.r, and address your order to newspaper. Not one foreign nail was used. The Found In St. Ives Wilson Pattern : ervice, 73 West factory is .ready. Nine persons In ( Adelaide St., Tortnto. sight corking hours can make 10,- St. Ives, Eng. -A glitter of gold t . 000 loaves of bread entirely- byme, in the earth of a bank on which he i chinere. was at work caughtthe eye of a Wal! y®e. P�y c To The "second page contains' deacrip laborer on Amalceor farm, not far sal tions of daily Soviet affairs. Ever from St. Ives. Search revealed two B� , p other word is relentless self-criticism_ long twisted ribbons gold and- i Bid of Yo I. f f nearly complete circlets, a so o gold. • n hate. as armlets • candid self-criticism in nubile. , One must admit ithat it ta a ■ W o Thane latter are thought to strength that this expanding, anlbi" • been used " Boris system permits itself so much • old ndigestion Daughter -"Do fishes really go about - in .schools, mummy?" Mother -"Yes, dear." • Daughter -- "Well , "That happens when the teacher gets Caughtht on a hook?" Customer -"You made a mistake." Bank Thller--" 5Ve never make mis- takes here, air."' • Customer -"Then I'm much obliged for the extra $20." ' There is just one thing that can beat a god wife -and that ,is a bad hus- baegld. Our idea of a self • centered r •in- dlvidual is onewho ie.,always thinking Of nothing worth: while, Then: there is' the lazy one Who waits until some one, sontes'along ''to push the :revolving" door for him. • Lithe Jackie was Visiting friendie and his 'hostess noticed that he was not eating his spinach; Hostess -= "That's good for Jackie Fou ought to eat it:"' Jackie -"No, ma'am. At our house we ..don't eat 'ferns." , Farmer John -"How are yoti getting on keeping bees?" Farmer . Henry -"Very' Well, We have not had much honey bat- the beees- ave stung—mv-mother=in=law seseral.times:' Classified Advertissug Lawyer --"Where were you. on the afternoon of the 13th?" ' Defenant-"With a ,, 2ouple Zit my friends." Lawyer -"Scoundrels, probably." . alaar' .cffic=s. Defendant -"Yes, sir, both of them A-1 BABY CRICKS ARE CSN- aDIAN ripprored chicks. �}1 . 1, "PAINS L OVER:ME Rheulnat: ale.:' And .once., again. lit was the " Ishii daily dose " of I1ir lichen that a nr quered .it, In fact,. ;it made thin sufferer " feel ever sei well;" •• I have iieeu isku►g }CruseJien $alai because "•of hat*iog pains in the baclr, head and joints'; 'pains.all over me. ,< felt tired going to bed, tired getting up. I weelea very 'bad •vray. I was - laid up for over a. month," and the doctor who attended me said T. was •--suffering from acute-r-heumatism,-and-_- •advised me to take Krinehen. Salts. In less than 3"nion the T fel ever t so well. I can't thank y=ou enough` for Krusehen Salts." --G. 0. The principle is this : Kruschen• . ' Salts drive from your body the ludo. acid t crystals which cause your pain. Your. painsf ease ; ;knotted joints' become loose. Afterwards the `�` little daily dose ". of Kruschen so stimu- lates" the liver and kidneys,' thatyour, inside is kept•elean.,' Mieebievous`urie acid does.not get the =chance to • aocumulete. " FREE TRJAL OFFE1� ' If y' have never tried Kruactim-ts9it now . at our expense. We have dist ibuted a greatman' y,S9ecial' GIANT'.' packages which, made fit easy foryon. to prove our claim for yoSG. Ask your druge st for ti a ne<e 'GI.PiNT__ � of Rt ?e6elar_tSc bottle'togefboe '•; •. 'Tackaaa- h1a";conga R , rle�s�sfnciaitforsb.out.. .•`, rctthaeapardte bAtr • ore week- Open r'he' b Olde S st. Dut it to _.._ the test, and then. if not. entirely convinced that �„-xtschendceseversthin¢we'clatmlttodo the regadar. bottle is stirs as, Sid °°• .TairiE V, back. 'Your drneeist is authorised to return ur 75c. immediately end without question- • on have teed fairer? Vie, at os. cs d b - t ..could be faixerT Map E.r Griffiths Hughes. Ltd-, Manchester, Ens- , ($utab. 1756). Importers: McGillivray Bros., Ltd.. Toronto. i ."Is , 'it true that.Margaret has a secret sorrow?" "Yes;' hasn't she told you about it?" N OFFER,TO EVERY I;NVENTt't:_• -List of wanted inventions and .fait information sent free- The iaamsay com- pany:World Patent Attorneys. 273 Bink Street.. Ottawa. Canada_ were.lawyers." ;