Se ctetee © .V- tad { EASY LESSONS IN | ; AUCTION BRIDGE ¢ a By PAUL H. SEYMOUR \ Author of “Highlights on Auction Bridge” i Qe lh lint aul lis by Hoyle, Jr.) BE a a at a (Copyright, Article One. Introductory LTHOUGH the game of Auction Bridge and its predecessors, ridge and Whist, have been played for many years, a wonderful increase in its popularity Is just at the present time sweeping over the country. Thou- sands of people who a few years ago refused to learn the game because it was too much like work are today giving up the simpler games of Euchre and Five Hundred and seeking instruc- tion in Auction. Its are fascinated by It principally because there is something solid and substantial about it and be- sause It does require sound and care- ful thought. A recreation Is some- thing which diverts a person's mind and activity from its customary chan- nels, and it has been found that this does not mean inactivity, and that It need not be a frivolous, worthless! activity. Even those whose dally work Is largely mental find that they gain rest and refreshment in a totally dif- ferent kind of mental exercise such as they find in Auction. While some card games are agreeable for a soclal hour and serve satisfactorily as time killers, anyone who spends leisure hours in playing and studying Auction has the added feeling that he been doing something well worth while, He has exercised and thus strengthened his observation, memory and reasoning faculties. As most peo- ple need to use faculties in their daily work, they find that their study of Auction fits thém better for their duties in office, factory or draw- ng room. There is also a steadily increasing demand among the players for a bet- ter understanding of the game. Many who have played it in a haphazard way simply as a time killer are com- ing to appreciate its worth and are devoting some time to its real study. No matter how well a person plays, there always is room for improvement because the possibilities of the game are such that they can never be fully mastered, Among the many thou- sands of players In the world, only shout 2 per cent play well enough to be called experts, and for the other PS per cent and for those who have never played at all, these articles have been prepared. There will be 36 arti cles In the series, and while the first two deal with fundamentals of the game with which all players are fa- miliar and while the aim has been to use such simple language that all may understand them, still the treatment of the subject will be so systematic and thorough that following them should greatly every player Their will depend not upon how many rules are given or how meny isolated cases are explained, but upon and simplicity of the statements and the comprehensive ness with which the cover the in the bidding and playing of the game. In order to become proficient in any grime, two things are Jearn- ing the rules so thoroughly that they may instantly put info practice, and then learning when to break these rules. In teaching Auction one should not use the words “always” or “never” because there is no rule which should not be broken at times. Any person who always plays according to rule will be a “wooden” player and never can hope to rise to the level of the expert, devotees has these value the clearness system will countless possibilities arising needed be To break rules wisely, must know them however, one thoroughly, and to do this will require study and real work upon the part of the student. If anything is worth doing at all it is worth doing well. Therefore it Is arged that all who wish to profit by these articles should make up their minds to do their share of the work. In order to learn rules of a game thoroughly, studying them is not suffi clent. One must actually play at the game time and, therefore, it is recom- mended that students studying these articles do so In groups of four. In this way the illustrations can be placed on the table and actually played. This not only will make them ensier to understand, but will help materially in remembering them, After studying each article it would be well to play a regular game and discuss the points which come up to fllustrate the teaching. As the series progress, more and more points will be covered, and the ouly way to master such teaching is to review the previous articles fre- quently, Each article may possibly make it easier to understand a pre- ceding one, so that every time an ar- ticle is reviewed some statement in it is sure to shine with a new light and give the student a meaning which he had formerly missed. Therefore, those who wish to get the most out of these articles would do well to save them and reread fre. quently from the beginning. Precautionary Hergelf—John, 1 really’ think you ought to go sed the doctor. Himself—All right; dig out one of my old sults. Herself—DBut you dop’t want to pre gent a shaddy appearance at the doc. tor's office, to go broke paying him. i EH Martha M Martin LIFE OF HERRING GULLS 6s IRST,” sald Harry Herring Gull to Billie Brownie, who had come to call on him and wio was sitting by the edge of a great river, “lI was a little olive-gray egg. 1 was spotted with black. “I mean, of course, as doubtless you understand, that the which later became me, was spotted with black That is not the way, perhaps, | should talk,” but it's Harry Herring Gull's way. “And If I'm knowledge and 2 oy ¥ Uh not smart book ir schooling and In talking and In all such ways, I'm smart as a gull, and gulls are smart, “Oh, yes,” Harry Herring Gull con- in fry “indeed | Do” Billie Brownie An. swered, “But Do Tell Me More” tinued, “for years have been gulls. “Some of my ancestors were when the Indians owned the country “Oh, yes, we have always been about, making our ways fit in with the ways of others, which is Riways wise, “I am here now for the winter, was born in an ugly little home. “But that didn't make any differ. ence, We fly about rather than stay much in our homes, “For those who care homes It is weil to make beautiful, but not for us “We are quite satisfied with a shab- and years there here their homes for the by nest of weeds and kind of nest-buliding trash, “Our homes are In ground. I had one brother who came out at the same time I did. “We were covered with down and we could swim and run and were considered pretty smart little herring gulls, “Of course all herring way are alike. They're all smart, but the mothers say the same thing over and over us each new group of downy gulls begins to swim and ron: “‘Aran't they smart little gulls “I am here for the winter, as | sald You will notice that my head and neck are grayish brown in color. In the summer I wear a white suit with a gray clonk and 1 have touches of black and white for style, “My summer costume is gayer and brighter than my winter costume, which I think Is right. “It is nice to see creatures put on their light clothes in the summer. Don't you think so, Billie Brownle?” “Indeed 1 do,” Bllille Brownlie an- swored, jut tell me more about yourself.” “AS beak mark. “And my are a pretty pink color, “When 1 was a little fellow 1 had a pink beak, too, with a biack spot. “But of have show ring gull, any hollows In the and one thelr eges, sister of gulls in that do soe, 1 red you « nn have a yellow with a spot for a beguty eves are yellow, feet My course the that 1 am a colors 1 now grown-up her. “For we do not get these colors at first. The iy from the “When north, of my family they are the about summer of any sort. dress different. ones, older ones i Younger comes | a few stay around ones who homes or summer if go further course members but care homes here do not little “They're not the home lovers among | the herring For to | bulld our nests and have homes even though we don't care to make them beautiful, We don’t care make them beautiful because we like to fiy away from them a great and have adventures, “But we like to have them just jhe game. Yes we and have summer homes ‘ack, cack. cack, truth.” And Harry Herring now for Billie Brownie him and had bidden good afternoon’ gulls, we love our to deal like to build our nests that 1s the Gull flew off had thanked him 8 most polite (Copyright) How It Started By JEAN NEWTON 0000 TOTOTOOOVOO0000 “CAT O’ NINE TAILS” IE whole idea of corporal punish- Tc is faust going into the discard, Yet we still hear children threatened, on occasions, with the “cat o' nine tails,” for centuries the accepted medium of punishment wherever whipping was the order of the day. As late as the first half of the Nine- teenth century, we are told, in our own navy, delinquent sailors were lashed to a gun and whipped with the cat o nine tails. In the parlance of the sea, this form of chastisement was jocularly known as “Marrying the gunner's daughter,” It was only ‘in 1850, when congress abolished cor- poral punishment, that this practice cease’, For the origin of the form of the “cat o nine tails” itself, we must go back further to the days of the In- quisition, that prolific progenitor of methods of torture and abuse. In those days it was the conventional weapon of the jailer and the execu. tioner, its strands numbering nine, because the number nine was credited with having supernatural powers in bringing about confessions and re pentence of offenders! (Copyright) Parsi Did Without Music The choir at the Swedish mission at Muskegon, Mich., did not sing during u revival campaign. Because the mem- bers were dressed in fashion, with short skirts, rouge and bobbed hair, they were forbidden by the evangelist to take part In his services. Indian- apolis News, (® by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) CTHE WHY of SUPERSTITIONS By H. IRVING KING DIVINING BY BOOKS RATHER who with is to common practice “seek for a sign” the Bible at random find answer in the upon which their thumb resis as they part the leaves. In pagan times this divi nation accomplished by placing the finger at randoms on a passage of Homer, Virgil or some other great au- thor. Virgil was an especial favorite in this connection and the practice of consulting him continued down to modern times, though the Bible is the book generally used. During the Middle ages the historic Yirgil became =o enveloped In a mist of tradition and superstition that he was alluded to by the uneducated as “Virgil the Wizard”; and In the un- popular estimation the chief value of the Aeneid was as an oracle, As late as the time of Charles 1 the Bible had not entirely supplanted the Aeneld for purposes of divination, as is evidenced by the well-known story of how that monarch learned his fates by the “Sortes Virgilianae,” as it was called. This practice of divination by books is said to have “originated in the re- spect and veneration of certain books arising from their wisdom and repu- tation”; and it is easy to comprehend the psychology which induced the peo- ple of the Middle ages to consult “Vir- gil the Wizard” and leads men of a superstitious trend of mind today to turn the Bible into an oracle. But the incipiency of the idea dates back to the first introduction of letters when, to the common mind, there was some thing supernatural in the power of a few marks made in a certain way to convey from one person to another not merely ideas but whole speeches, word for word; a feeling which Is displayed today by remote tribes of savages when they see, for the first time, the use of the printed or written word in communications. {@ by MeClure Newspaper Syndicate.) wisn Jerson - those open their and passage was a — Court Backs Satan Protection to Satan is now legally given In Poland. A priest was tried in a Bromberg court for preaching an irreligious sermon, in which he “dented the existence of the devil." He was sent to prison for 80 days. It is be. lieved to be the first occasion for many centuries on which the devil has been recognized by a European law court and protected ngainst scoffers, O000OBO000000000000CI00 Bob Steele Cob Steele, the "movie" star, has been trained since childhood in out. door activities which go to make a star worthy of the name. Both his father and mother were well known on the legitimate stage when he was a youngster. Now, just twenty.one years of age, Bob will play his first starring role in “The Mojave Kid.” aif Proms For Meditation O00000 By LEONARD A. BARRETT GOOG S00000000000000000000 NOT BREAD ALONE OHN RUSKIN, in the fifth of his “Modern Painters,” chapter on Peace, writes: “No amount of pay made a good soldier, & good artist or a good workman Ex- amine writers and artists; for ten pounds you shall have a ‘Paradise Lost. and for a plate of figs, 3 Durer drawing. For love of country, or their duty, men will fight steadily ; but for massacre and plunder, feebly Three motives may contro! one's ac- tions life, Pleasure, power and “let us drink and be for tomorrow we the of first The of of who have this motive Is The peril of the sel f-preservation ably OOOO volume in the ever your in service, ent, erry, die” Is spirit many their the testimony those made life's hat there Is Ry first, is sae ond that CORs motive, failure in inspired by a motive which subjects higher spiritual The deepest enduring fnevit ends In life it cannot be material needs and realized in ends to satisfactions are ourselves tnost only qe CERRes an sacrificial and aitruistic we give rs, Altruism, he A person oa He must give away fail give of his poverty before he eo of serv swever, alone will nnot first possess can The moti that that will be ¢ pre supposes We DOSKEesESs something of help to others. Service requires possession Bread acquired fi “Being merry today ww the purpose of { ‘ for tomorrow we an epicurean philosophy of life. which, It has been demonstrated brings tragedy and Bread scquired for the mere of solitary possession, which is also ends In failure, John Hol land in his little volume, “Katherina,™ writes: "Of all dead, dull bore, sure none the soul with discontent of power unused™ Rerv. means that we acquire that may give—succeed that we may help others to sucreed-—make such an in. vestment of character that the world shail be enriched by the contribution which we shall have made. (ES. 1927, many times, only fallure sake power, ever can haunt like the con. we Western Newspaper Union) £ “Too Bad Restaurant Owner— Doesn't it seem too bad that this little lamb had die for us. Customer-—Yeah ; Nighty tough! sil Pression to HE YOUNG LADY ACROSS THE WAY I'he young lady across the way says eugenic marriages are undoubtedly the wisest, though some young people get married without a cent and get along all right. (6 by MoeClurs Newspaper Syndicate, vv Buildin Repairs Program Needs Most Careful Attention Close jnspection will disclose what. ever Is necessary to put a building io good shape. In the first place, there gare the plaster walls and ceilings to repair before doing any decorating Unsightly eracks should be carefully cut deeper with a8 putty knife so as to provide grooves for receiving the plas ter of paris filler, which then be applied. Inside need paint should woodwork will be varnish, of over with Course 10 or may be whatever gone enamel, or wax, as the case 1 For touching up old varnish, the color of the may now of any des the original orig ginal wood, one purchase colored varnish ired tone to match named lent for going over old painted wood work. It can be applied directly to the old material, but a better finis! is obtained by spplying an undercos! of flat paint of the desired color. Buch treatment an efficient and economical aid In the up keeping of the building. Hardwood should permitted to wear out or wax with which they color is excel of woodwork will prove floors hie vurnist neyer The were origina; ly covered should be kept with and wax in condition purpose ish he bie after floor oil this need it varn finish should Should the made for fis soon as floors or other floor used liberally in bad eondit to removed, old for the floors oft. however, it is 3 better have the old finish £ the Of the entirely fining one this « GIpreunds and then good purpose, as red ish surface #8 new Loss From Moving Those of sou who your rent, complnin about ahout having to move every two or three land lord it “out fact: never years becn the fix up the from under yon” The NOEs ise “won't place” rent the home Owner pays up Whet her youn vour home free of debit or are acquir ing it under coniract cha definitely payments rges you must pas fixed per month are through the period of your possession No one ean compel You to pay pelled wer It oftentimes fail to this mare, nnr fn rou he oom to move elsewhere to seed rents BOeIniR Bs who rent meidern It Ix ome ivy eovmmit tion importan of the reasons why the fan ted program of hesins to n fo 8 home ownership ake headway from the mo ment I! commits itself to such 8 pro ! through gram, Then the losses oon are regard ns a I statement i1 also rean better than » Pwo Missls dane had fist fen their of These tow ing me for milk their situnt ne a Hitle while were worl ft hind Tie industrionsls They surveyed condenseries hus fon organized ines men and went apital Although pitain their specific something else as their after some outside © failed they they 2) goal, gained or better ergy Is hear good No welldirected on ultimately wasted It wil fruit in one form or sh Neshoba Democrat. god sther «- gr jekers Frequently one hears some fellow kicking on the firm he works for and wonders why he did not quit and get a job more to his liking, If he has » better Sob than he conld get else where then he has no cause to kick More frequently one hears a man kicking on the tosen he lives in It that town furnishes him a better lv ing than any other town he should feel friendly to it and say castle Times, 80, «= Now Mushroom Growth A word of caution for cities engag ing in the scramble for Industries Is sounded by the organization service of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States. It draws the line be tween enlargement hy substantial growth and enlargement by inflation and reiterates the warning that there is no virtue in mere bigness, Color for Roof Don’t forget that the roof must he protected with paint or stain, as well as the siding. In salecting a color for the roof of your house, consider the surroundings. A red roof looks well against high, dark trees. A huff root sults the house surrounded by little follage. Restore Home Life Many writers have deplored what they call the passing of the American home, and the old-fashioned home life. Certainly any welldevise? movement to check It and restore it full meas ure the old home Influence is of bene fit to the community, Well Worth It It costs money to build up your local pride—and it's worth It, ————————————— FARMER WOMAN IN OKLAHOMA Praises Lydia E. Piokhan's V. a Say Gai Because It Cave Health and Strength ————ie In a sunny pasture in Oklahoma, a Berd of sleek cows was grazing, They . made a pretty pic. ture, But the thin woman in the blue checked apron sighed as she looked at them. She was tired of cows, tired of ker tedious work in the dairy. She was tired of cook- ing for a houseful of boarder be. sides caring for her own family The burdens of life secmed too Navy for She bad lost con- fidence in herself, One day she began taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and eral Bealth began to improve, he took it faithfully, Now she can do any trouble, sleeps This woman, 0X writes: Mrs. Cora Short, R. Oklahoma City, Ok “Everybody now says: ‘Mrs, yourself? R. Php o87, I have taken seven of the Vegetable Compound” Other women who have to work hard going may find the road to better health as Mrs. Short did, through the faithful use of Lydia E Compound, Ask your neighbor, America Wins Again A Real Surprise Hon ¢ 6 You Can't Feel Well When Kidneys Act Sluggishly. (OVERWORK. worry and lack of rest, all put extra burdens on the kid- neys. When the kidneys slow up, waste poisons remain in the blood and are apt to make one languid, tired and achy, with dull headaches, dizziness and often a nagging backache. A common waming of imperfect kid- mey action is scanty or burning secre. tions. Doan’s Pills assist the kidneys in their eliminative work. Are endorsed by users everywhere. Ask pour neighbor! DOAN'S "%-° STIMULANT DIURETIC 5, KIDNEYS Keep Stomach aud Bowsls Right giving baby the harmless, purely En eal and children’s regulator, EVES s - ¥ Interested Horoscope send date of Birth of yours, Toor friends, your children to iy, xX LL vr @ EK 2nd Street - 2 New York. -— Sos Detoear=lead Noises RELIEVED BY LEONARD EAR OIL “Reb Back of iN KosTRILS At AR Folder about Ss or mt A © LEONARD, INC. 0 FIFTH AVE, KY