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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 16, 1919)
THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN. PORTLAND. NOVEMBER 16, 1J1U. pliah the object: in the other .the de clarer must needs win eig-ht tricks. Placed at "two spades," Y being the declarer, the play was as follows: WEARING OF FLOWERS IN. ' HAIR AGAIN BECOMING FAD RIBBON-COVERED HOOP MAKES NEAT CLOTHES RACK FOR BABY Trick. I 1 3- 8 Q A 2 9 J' 10 7 3 S " Q 7 4 4 2" 9 2 5 -. A 9 2 10 6 K 34 B 7 7 8 A 6 2 g 8 K ? S 9 4 K 104 44 10 6 5 10 54 11.... 6 J 6 74 12 A 8 J 94 13 Q K Q4 J4 Greek Fashion With Knot at Back of Head Is Followed in Smart Coiffure for Opera. Dainty Arrangement Is Great Convenience at Bath, or Bedtime Puff Jar With Spring Top Is Handy Toilet Article. -Powder ii and be sure you send Carnation." a V ft juW w zjwv m m tmjwwi . twin nirm"J l'"w"u"""-'0 - rvS--- ' X i y Vim; mmmmmilmmmmm Ienotes winner of trick. Trick 1 B led the highest of her club sequence, queen, which dummy won with ace, and led at Trick 2 a spade through As de clared strength. A put up 9 and T won with jack, this being one advan- J tage gained. Trick 3 Y led a heart, hoping eventually to make her high hearts good. B won with queen, and at Trick 4 had another round of clubs, leading the lowest of her sequence. Y trumped the tripk, and at Trick 5 took another heart round, bringing down the acc and making both king and jack good. Trick 6 There are few situations more difficult to cope with than where, as in this case; two adver saries are about equally strong in trumps and each is striving to gain an advantage over the other. East sees his best chance, however to force the declarer, so comes out at this trick with the best club. Y trumps, and at T,rick 7 leads the ace of diamonds. Then, from the number of diamonds in her own and her dummy hand, suspecting that one of the adversaries is short and that more than likely It ier right-hand adversary, she con- iders. Many players suspecting this to be the situation would unhesitat ingly come out with the king of dia monds for the express purpose of forcing the strong adversary, but Y was a player who was able to look beyond and realize that this could be done more effectively later on. More over, seeing that she has just six ards remaining in her hand, she re calls to mind the maxim, "Even num ber, stay In ; odd number, keep ou t," and so at Trick 8 leads trie heart as insuring the betterchance of being able to re tain the lead. Then, having an un even number of cards in her hand and having won six tricks, at TricR she unnesiiatingiy rorces A by leading the king of diamonds. with the result that A trumps, and then, no matter how he may lead, Y makes good her contract. A's Dest lead, of course, is the club, which Y trumps, and at Trick 11 comes out with the last heart, forcing A in the lead at the critical trick, and compelling him at Trick 12 to lead from his major tenace, ace-queen, in spade, to i s minor tenace. Y thus makes her kinff of spades and her eight tricks. We will now go back to trick 8 and have Y lead king of diamonds rather than the heart king. The play would go thus: THERE is a fancy for wearing flowers in the hair again, but the new coiffure garland is ex tremely conventional in style. Here is a very smart coiffure for the opera. The hair is dressed in Greek fashion with a knot at the back, and the wreath is made of silver leaves with flat flower motifs. A soft bow of tulle in exactly the shade of the wear er's hair is caught at oneside of the head, near the back. The huge pink ostrich fan with its soft lines gives graceful contrast to the loosely coiffed, conventionally garlanded head. She must have a fan to keep her cool. And a scarf to keep her warm, And both will be used at the same time in the opera box. Of course the fan is of feathers this year and the model pictured is a dainty affair of shaded pink ostrich with carved ivory. sticks. The scarf is of black silk net delicately embroidered with beads and silk threads. Long gloves are demand ed by fashion this season with sleeve less gowns on all formal occasions. and the opera calls for utmost formal ity in dress, if one attends in evening costume at all. Trick. A Y B Z 8 44 K 10 3 9 ".. 8 J 3 4 10 6 K 6 11 6 6 10 7 12 Q 8 J 13 A K Q J Denotes winner of trick. MfiliiilMii Q-lffi IjfllMMp Witt THE following hand has recently been brought to my notice. It affords a valuable lesson on the importance of throwing the lead at the critical moment, and offers a number of other useful suggestions: VQ632 Q J 10 9 5 y ios 10 It is the first deal on the rubber game and both sides are anxious for a game-going declaration. Z, the dealer, however, sees her hand is hopeless, so passes. A bids "one spade," which with five spades to the ace, queen, an outside ace and a guarded outside king, her hand fully justifies. Y finds herself in some thing of a dilemma. She herself would have bid a spade had not A done so. and now whether to pass, double, bid no trumps or "two spades" is a question. She soon eliminates the pass and the double, however, and the question became narrowed down io a choice- between a no-trump and a K J 9 4 8 A K 4 KJ853! ass y K ti 4 S A B A Q 9 6 4 1 10 7 A 7 2 J975432 7 Difficult to Keep Your Hair Wavy? Read This If you have not yet tried the new way, the silmerine way, by all means no so. ou li never again use the ruinous heated iron. The curliness will appear so perfectly natural and the hair will be eo beautiful! v lus trous. instead of dried and roarched. Thus liquid silmerine serves also as a beneficial dressing for the hair. It is neither sticky nor greasy, but quite pleasant to use. It ehould be applied at nisrnt wun a clean tooth brush drawing the latter through the hair ifom root to up. The hair will have the loveliest curls and waves imaginable in the morning, and it will be easy to man age, no maiier now you ao it ud. few ounces of the liquid from your druggist will last a Ions time. Adv. "two-sjade" bid. The double, she real izes, would be misleading and induce her partner to call no trumps if hav ing protection in spades (the suit the adversary has called) or two of her longest suits. It would say that she herself had no protection in spades and would give wrong inferences throughout. The no-trump bid does not seem particularly promising, so, all things considered, she concludes it best to call "two spades," which she does. Mad she doubled or called no trumps it would have been imperative upon Z in each case to bid "two dia monds" in the first case as the proper response to a one-trick double; In the second case as a warning bid to the partner's no trump. Had this been the development and Z's bid been allowed to stand, she would have made four by cards, or 28 (just missing game), which, with a 14 point honor score, would have totaled 42. At no trumps, had Y so bid, and the bid been allowed to stand, Y would have fallen down to the extent of two tricks, A-B scoring 100, honors easy. B, inferring 1 to have protec tion in spades, the suit her partner had bid, would lead her own suit, clubs, and dummy's only re-entry, the ace of clubs, would be taken out be- ! fore his suit was established. The fact that X blocks the suit by holding j the two commanding cards only is: unfortunate. i ! At the bid of "two spades" Y needs to have her wits fully about her In order to make good. This she fully realizes and more than ever after her partner's hand is exposed, and she sees its extreme poverty. To defeat an adverse bid of two tricks and to make good one's own bid of two tricks at one and the same bid are entirely different propositions, and whereas in the one case the accom plishment is often easy, in the other it generally calls for unusual keen ness and the ability not only to take advantage of opportunities as they occur, but to make opportunities, to let nothing pass which would conduce ! to one's advantage. In the one case 1 but 'eix Ulclia 'fire-needed to accom- A would of courseUrump the trick and it would then depend upon his lead as to whether he could turn the situation to his advantage. If he should lead the club, Y would still have it in his power to force A, in the lead at trick li, the critical trick, and Y would still pull off his contract. If, however, A lead the heart and if he have whist acumen enough to look ahead, he will un doubtedly do so, he forces Y in the lead at trick 11 and thus loses both his two remaining trumps and his contract. The heart lead will be taken by Y with jack and at the next trick he will follow with the heart king which A will trump. Then is A s op portunity; he leads the club which compels Y to trump and at trick 12 to lead from his minor tenace In spades, trumps, to A's major tenace. A thus makes both his two remaining trumps and Y loses both his two re maining trumps. The situation is just the reverse of what it was in the hand as previously played when A rather than Y was forced 4n the lead at the critical trick and compelled to lead from his major tenace to Y's minor tenace, Y thus being enabled to make one of his two trumps and the contract. It is a pretty hand and illustrates in an effective way the importance of placing the lead at the critical mo ment. a correspondent asks how many tricks a player who doubles ha3 rignt to expect from his partner; Simply one, sot more. If it turns out he is good for more, so much the better, and so much greater your penalties if you pull off the double successfully. Do not, however, count upon him for more than one trick or you will generally find yourself grievously disappointed, and wish vainly you had less of optimism and j I ' I1 A JaX Liiiiiiii Sit powder puff which, set in place in - I the glass receptacle, forms a dainty I i . - ASCIXATINO new conceits for the beautifying of baby's domain appear every week and the very newest sort of clothes rack for tiny garments Is pictured here a big hoop covered with shirred ribbon and suspended by a ribbon hoop. The dainty rack may be hung from the post of baby's crib, or from a chair knob within convenient reach when baby has his evening bath, and his little garments may be hung tidily over the hoop instead of tossed on the floor to be picked up later. Or small bed garments may be hung across the hoop and warmed near a stove or radiator on coo; nights. Very convenient is this port able hoop which will act as a clothes rack at the morning or evening bath ing hour in the nursery. For baby, also, is the luxurious powder puff jar which is made of an ordinary wine-glass covered with shirred ribbon. An elastic is set the casing that edges the ribbon around the bowl part of the glass, so that the powder puff may be thrust in or drawn out easily. Shirred rib bon also decorates the top of the This is how millions of the shrewdest buyers in the world American Housewives insist on pure milk for their homes. The want milk that is wholesomely good and abso lutely pure. They realize the importance of milk as a food they know they must have milk, the quality and purity of which is beyond question that's why thay demand Carnation. And, once used Carnation Milk is its own best recommendation. In millions of American homes it is used dally "for every milk purpose." Made in Oregon E vap oratories at Forest Grove and Illllsboro, O r e g o n . Thovaad aff Oreicon nwi produr, milk sreall In exceas aff tfca local dmaad Tala vaat aurptuBi an Oreiron product aold In alhop atatca. ia helping to bring prosperity to Ore iron and lla datrirlaa; romnaunltlra Today dairying la ana mt Oreiron'a leading Induatrlea. Carnation Milk Products Co., 622 Railway Exchange Bldg. PORTLAND, OREGON. Made in Oregon From Contented Cows powder puff which, set in place the glass receptacle, forms a dainty cover for the ribbon-covered glass. who score the highest in the long run are the players who bring the same degree of judgment to bear upon the double that they do upon other phases and conditions of the game. It were better to lose three chances of making a double that would have been successful, and be satisfied with 50 rather than 100 points per trick, than to make one double which is not warrantable and turns to the ad vantage of the side doubled. Two or three such doubles can easily give the adversaries a score sufficient to coun teract the value of the rubber should It finally develop in your favor. Another reason why one should not indulge too freely in the dou bling habit is that ones propensity in this regard soon becomes known, and the adversaries when playing against such will be strictly on their guard In regard to making a bid which their hand does not fully justify. Repeated and risky doubling there fore tends to make sounder bidders of the adversaries and to this extent the practice is not without some beneficial results, albeit it works in inverse ratio and the benefit is to the opposite Bide rather than to the side doubling. Much remains to say on this sub ject which I will reserve until an other time, hoping sultlcient has al ready been said to warn players to be on your guard. Fresh Flowers Add Much to Attractiveness of Home. At Small Expenae Any Woman Can Make Kooma Both I banning and Cosy Looking. Sllppera (or the Boudoir. Between the homely but "comfy felt slipper and the fascinating but impracticable satin " mule, sans ma terial exceDt for a pointed toe and with a French heel as tall as the neei of a dancing slipper, there are many kinds of bedroom footwear. The woman who slips into a chiffon and laci nesrlieee for breakfast would dis more of prudence and practical com- I dain an ugly gray felt slipper. And mon sense. I she who has to get up early and make If vour oartner has hirl or I rnffee and frv bacon for a commuting your bid previous to your announce- I husband would find little use for the ment of a double, he may have done high-heeled satin "mule." But each so on a shortage of the verv suit vou kind of slipper has its merits and THE day company is coming you put flowers in the living room and in the guest room and on the lunch table and are so impressed by the brightness and charm the few posies add to your house that you plan to keep fresh flowers about all the time. Then, in the press of more important matters, the flowers are forgotten until there is again spe cial occasion for them. Fresh flowers are part of the fur nishing of every English drawing room and orders are left with the florist to supply poxes of fresh bloB soms for the house every other day or so. And the arrangement of the flowers is rarely left to a servant. The mistress of the house or one of her daughters, sort, cut aid arrange the posies and select proper vases for them. This loving care about flowers is one of the things that help to make an English living room or morning room so homelike.- Any woman can have the charm and grace of flowers In her home if she makes up her mind to do so. Some trouble may have to be taken If one has not the wherewithal to pay for regular floral supplies from a city florist but somehow or otner, 11 one is intent on It. a few flowers may double. So, too, the adversary whose bid you double may be entirely void of the suit which you or your partner has bid, and so In position to trump the suit from the start. It may de- its appointed place. Warm and cosy tor Douaoir wear are quilted Japanese suppers, aim some of these have a trimming or iur around the top which makes them velop that you will not take a single extra cosy on cold mornings. Lux trick in a suit of which you hold ace, urious indeed are the embroidered king and queen. When considering Chinese slippers of silk, but they are a double be pretty sure that your own rather more expensive than any other nana insures tne needed number of I kind of boudoir footwear except tne tricks to make your book this var- j frivolous and fascinating French ies of course in the different deals ac- I "mules." Bath slippers without heels cording to the number of tricks de-I and with material across the toes only clarer names in his contract. Then. I rami' in the Japanese style, with if your partner gives you one trick rounded toes and in the Chinese style you, will score, if more, you will score with pointed toes and are made of silk the more. This to be sure is conservative ad vice and there are many players who double on considerably less strength and at times come off successfully. This, however, does not prove the worth or soundness of the double, but rather that the bid was unsound or that the fates were on their side. The players who present their adversaries with the fewest penalty points -and embroidered in soft colors. always be achieved. There are florists on side streets who will let you have a quarter's worth of cosmos or marl- golds or button chrysanthemums u you are a regular patron and will tuck in a sprig or two of laurel or box which will last for weeks In a tiny pot of earth. The big city florists, these days, sen flowers d "bunches." so much a bunch, and refuse to break a bunch in half. Pass them by, for only four or five dios soms with a little green, arranged in a pierced glass flower receptacle will brighten your room amazingly. Pat ronize the little flower shop on the side street and go there regularly. You will find it pays. If You Do Mending, Be Economical Elsewhere As Well. Why Buy Reirly-to-Wear Blouaea When They Can Be - Made Cheaply t THERE are women -who spend hours upon hours darning stockings and table linen, and then buy blouses ready-made at high prices "because they have absolutely no time to do any sewing any more." In these days when everybody is talking about economy and efficiency, and budget systems are being established in the home as Canadian Liberal Like Wilson. (Boston Post.) W. L.- Mckenzie K-lnff. xne new . well as in the office it win pay to sit down and tnink over conservation of time a little. Every woman's time is worth some- t vtfl Canadian liberal party resembles President Woodrow Wil son. He has held a fellowship in the University of Chicago and is a lec turer of Harvard university. He was a newspaper reporter in his youth. He was beloved by Laurier, 'who named him his godson, and is the best-informed man in all Canada upon industrial relations. He is the author of "Industry and Humanity,." He is a bacheclor. Consul for Alaska Named. ANCHORAGE, Alaska. William Britt, territorial senator, has been commissioned Norwegian consul for the first and third division of Alaska. thing, even If she is a housekeeper and home-maker and receives no reg ular salary for her job. And one has all the time there Is no more, no less. Is the afternoon of painstaking darn ing worth while, when the same after noon might be given to making a blouse or a skirt that would cost $20 in the shops and when new" stockings could be bought for a dollar or less the pair? And is it worth while to put beautiful darns in table napkins when the napkins are thin and old and will soon go to pieces anyhow; now that linens are again available in quan tity, since the government released them for private use after the war? Every woman will have to decide the mending and darning question for herself, but if she sits down with pencil and paper and does a little fig uring, counting up hours on the one side and costs on the other, it will usually be found that more time and in the end more money are saved by reasonable investment in new things, with a conservation of hours that may be used in other economy making efforts. Atchison Globe Sights. Laws of health are so simple people pay no attention to them. All. his life a certain man had an option on something or other. What has become of the old-fashioned man who was shocked because girls now and then wore bloomers. A salaried man trying to support a wife and an automobile is about as bad off as a man trying to support a wife and an affinity. It's easy to forget the dead, because one has to devote all of his mental powers to the task of keeping living people from running over him. ASIan Like aVeivus? It's Really Easy" A. Simple Formnla That Worka Won. dera on Any Skin. Alao a TVew Way to Remove Wrlnklea That Rarely Falls. I)r Valeaka Surtt. T is really Immaterial how muddy. or blemished the sKin may De, a can I brought about in only a few weeks' time by a method extraordinarily simple. First of all. abandon the use A Simple Way to Remove Dandruff BE PRETTY! TURN GRAY HAIR DARK Try Grandmother's Old Favor ite Recipe of Sage Tea and Sulphur. There is one sure way that has Almost everyone knows that sage tea and sulphur, properly compound never failed to remove dandruff at ed, brings back the natural color and once, and that is to dissolve it. then you destroy it entirely. To do this, Just get about four ounces of plain, common liquid arvon from any drug store (this is all you will need), apply it at night when retiring; use enough moisten the scalp and rub It in gently with the finger tips. By morning most, if not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more applications will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no matter how much dandruff you may have. You will find all itching and dig ging of the scalp will stop instantly, and your hair will be fluffy,- lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and Xeti a, hundred times better. Adv. luster to the hair when faded, streaked or gray. Years ago the only way to get this mixture was to make it at home, which is mussy and trou blesome. Nowadays, by asking at any drug store for 4,Wyeths Sage and Sulphur Compound" you will get a large bottle of this famous old recipe, improved by the addition of other In gredients, at a small cost. Don't stay gray! Try it! No one can possibly tell that you darkened your hair, as it does it so naturally and evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small Btrand at a time; by morning the gray hair disappears, and after an other application or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark, glossy and attractive. Adv. pastes and powders sold for super fluous nairs, ana wmt-ii uutu irritate the Fkln. When the hair is of any of the complexion creams you moistened with a mile suuo soiu may have been using, and make up a tion. the hairs at once dissolve away. ot hnm toriav in a few nnH th. skin is left as smooth and as moments. ty mixing iwo iauirniiou- soit as Deiore i nere win u uu " fuls of Rlycerine and one ounce of ness or spottiness to be seen. The zintone in a pint of water. You can sulfo solution can be bought at any get the zintone at any drug store for drug store for about, a dollar. This about fifty cents. . In a few days you never fails to do the work thorough- will note that the spots, memisnes iy ani delightfully, and muddiness you complain of are , last disappearing. nr.TVR-n f-oi- th ouick removal of wrinkles I would advise you to try ,., lo natations. the following which has demonstrat- """ ' " ed lts Kreat worth in a remarkably thi Hirftis the most powerful i . . mK. .f on i;et two hair forcer you can ever hope to ob- ounces of eptol from year druggist tain, and It really does the work for about fifty cents. Mix the eptol quicKiy ana spienumi. who i v w-th one tanlespooniui 01 Ktytenne OI Ueitt-U U IIIUl IB IMIAtM nii.ii a. a..,. ,n a nail Dint UI WftllT. I Ilia "Hi nint of water and a half pint of bay ,. In a verv fine, rich and satiny rum. or use a full pint of wltchhazel cream. When faithfully used, the instead of the bay rum and water, skin will become of a finer texture, For fiftv cents at any drug store i, -m heromn more Dlump and vitror- v-mi 'i 0-r a nackaa-e of beta- c.rth.pmnr. will n . i T i co thnt quinol. enougn to matte a pint 01 una tne crows feet, lines or age ana wrin- spienaia nair lorcer. iwb is mul h Kles have aisappearea very largeo ouy preparation, qui it ia pimiHiiiL and you will iouk years younger, to use and should be applied every ,i Tniip hiiir will also grow out most luxuriantly and possess great MISS S. P. R. There is no more vlKOr need of fretting for many months. 1 pinching and steaming the face, and xima r- x i Tho formation of a lot of other things In order to get ,?."feS '...,?;nr,,! hCJ Frm.. c?n rid of blackheads. Sprinkle a. little pnis.nm i mm nAnvfn en a u t i nin W n M Ml li Tlll .ro8w?S of hair 1 The only 7av S on the blackheads and you will find you can do easily toy simply using a n lnA Vu will Eave no morS teaspoonful of eggol in a half cup of P nd J e no more water. This makes a luxurious heaa aimh and tr 1 vk the hair a silky lustre which is beautiful, lets the hair breathe and allows it to grow lux uriantly. A package of eggol for twenty-five cents contains enough for many weeks. CORA W. Under no circumstances should iou utQ "X Xe various other kind. Ad v neroxin at any drug -store. MISS T. W. W. A face powder, ex quisitely fine, producing an excep tional, lasting bloom on the skin, is "Fresca Beauty Powder," sold at drug stores at fifty cents a box in any tint. Tou will never want to use any After having bean tried and ' proven successful by hundreds of their customers, leading stores throughout the country are rec ommending "Canute Water" for Gray Hair to those who wish th color of their hair restored. Owl Drug Store, Meier & Frank Co and Stout-Lyons Drug Co. sell it in Portland on a positive guaran tee of absolute satisfaction 01 your money back. "Canute Wa ter" restores color to your hail so naturally and evenly that no one can possibly tell you are using anything. All questions one naturally asks are here plainly answered. TS IT ABSOLUTELY SAFE TO TTSE1 By all mean yes. You may qm "Canute Water" for Gray Hair without the alightest fear of injury to the hair, acalo or area, aa It contains non of the Injurious elements of the ordinary hair eye, Deing entirely FREE from acid, sugar of lead, sulphur or coal-tar prod ucts of any kind making it as harmless to the hair and scalp as ordinary water. It la for external use only. WILL IT SOIL THE HANDS OR SCALP? No, It will not. Our own pat ented process prerents it from staining the hands or scalp. "Canute Water" for Gray Hair is an especially clean, cony Blent treatment Dot being sticky or greasy. It restores so naturally and enly no one will be able to tell 70a are using anything. New, Glean, Easy, Harmless, Treatment. First Bottle Gives Satisfaction. TS IT A CRUDE DTE? Positively ot. That is ust the thing it tau t. "Cmuu Water" is a simple method of reviving the youthful color of hair that has turned gray from age. Illness or other cause. Proof that "Canute Water" Is not a crude Arm is that it has no numbered shade the same bottle is good tor an snaaes 01 h.tr whllA as the reader knows tne crude dyes are put up in package marked with the different color 01 nair or num bered 1. 2 or 3. HOW IS IT APPLIED? Very easily Just wet your hair with It and allow to dry In good, fresh air. Nothing bard sbout that, Is there? Apply on hair ouoa daily and day by day observe the hair be coming darker and darker. And by the time you have finished the first bottle the youthful color of your hair will be re stored. It will then remain that way and simply require a retouching at the roots once In a while as the new hair grows out. CAN THE DARKENED COLOR WASH OR RUB OFF? The color will not wasa off. Shampoo the hair all you like you may even use a hot curling Iron, as not even that will affect the color. On the contrary, the more you shampoo the hair the softer and fluffier the hair will be come. Believe us. after a week you 11 thank yourself for having tried it. Sold at the above-mentioned etorea, your own drug gist or by mail direct upon receipt of price, SI. 10 per bottle. Friedman Canute Co- 18 East 17th Street, New York City. New York. None Beware of sales-people who get commissions to sell worthless imita tions. To be SAFE, accept no substitute for "CANUTE WATER" (t :iitfttVj A