![1934-10-04 [P C-6]](https://data.docslib.org/img/3a60ab92a6e30910dab9bd827208bcff-1.webp)
dyestuff known as quercitron. This their fuzzy undercoats are about half The bidding i makes the bark of the black oak Jolly Polly South West North East Nature's Children grown, the reddish, hairy flowers ap* 1 Ht. Pass :s Cl. to Well valuable. The bark on the younger Pa*s Who Learn Dress Pass ti Cl. Men pear. The ruddy stigmas and tassels Contract 3 Ht. trees Is smooth and dark brown, turn- Pass Pass dark and thick as It older. of stamen nestle among the baby A Little Chat on BY LILLIAN COX ATHEY. ing, grows English East made the noncommittal open- The wood Is heavy, strong and coarse- leaves. BY P. HAL SIMS. The de- well-dressed Englishman, ing of the Jack of spade*. grained. These qualities make it hard The BY JOS. J. FRISCH. who is so as to be a Black Oak. leaves, when fully grown, are proverbial to work, yet render it valuable as a clarer ran a number of trumps; wasn’t born that Quercua velutina. from 5 to 10 Inches long, 2 to 6 Inches Elementary Vienna Coup. commonplace, Juel. HUGH WVNN, WHO GRADUATED FROM played the ace of heart, and ruffed way. Contrary to what most wide, and cut Into 6 to S ,1—\ OTTOM on the board,” said THE need never stand before a If you see the tree In Winter, you deeply COLLEGE LAST YEAR, SAID THAT Ip a small heart In his own hand; Americans like to believe, he • • black oak tree In the Winter have another sign to look for—the broad, bristly-toothed lobes, with A PERSON WANTS LKE THE_ I J kabltzer A, a trifle glee- doesn't most of his waking hours then a few more trumps were laid spend large, pointed, fuzzy buds. Still an- HE HAS fully, after the declarer is not and ask “Now which rounded sinuses. The leaf now is GRADE | J down. the situation wearing out mirrors. His valet yourself, is acom. Re- A—J had finished playing the Finally, spade other the half-grown STAY ON THE tre- blame for his appear- YOUoak smooth and dark was Investigated. Despite the to distinguished is this?” Lift the rough member, the white oaks mature their leathery, green LEVEL. hand. his clothes themselves are mendous put upon him. West ance. and layer of bark and peep under fruit each year and drop it in the above, with a brownish, hairy llnnlg. “Is that so!” retorted the declarer, pressure no more (in general) it. The inner show had held on to three spades to the actually striking orange-yellow layer will Autumn. The acorns of the black from stems. unoriginally. "Well, you just Ameri- They swing long, yellow nine-spot. The declarer gave up a than what the average better unfailingly identify your tree. oak in Winter are on the terminal me how I can make any more on By Autumn they are bronze, dark six clubs. can men's shop offers. A nature trailer should have a the hand." diamond trick, making twigs. Some years they are scarce, brown, brownish yellow and, once He is well dressed largely as a result small, He would find “It's a Naturally, seven clubs should not sharp penknife. In a reddish. squeeze play,” offered kib- while, seven clubs cannot be ef acquired instincts (if there are such it most handy for separating buds, itzer B. be bid. and The acorns are Interesting, in that made if the king of diamonds and the things). More than any other one boring for insects, and too many things "No, it isn’t. It's a Vienna coup.” they are found singly or in clusters, of hearts are not in the thing, his public school training, at to mention. And a Vienna coup it was. Here king-queen deeply seated in fringe-tipped cups same hand. The declarer should Harrow, Winchester and Eton makes Few have considered plant- is the hand: 1 people^ from one-third to three-fourths of him that way. In these schools one ing the blaclc oak as an ornamental draw trumps, and then play three their length. The baby acorns are first he learns is to dress ■eunds of spades. If the spades of the things { tree. It is handsome and has lots In their AA-Q-3 swelling tiny cups, close by break, seven is home anyway. The a certain way for certain occasions. of personality as a lone sentinel on ¥6 j the older ones, that are sitting plump now be knows that his silk hat is worn for a hillside. Its natural habitat is from K. C. D—We may say either “Hugh ace of diamonds must played, He and ready to fall by October. The ♦ Q-8 from or and the last spade in dummy ruffed. a certain kind of occasion, and his Maine to Georgia and from Minnesota Wynn graduated college” A kernel Is very bitter and yellow. To A-K-Q-J-10-9-2 The play of all the remaining trumps bow ler in a certain kind of place. to Texas. Many of them are found in was from col- A9-8-4-2 *J-10 many, the tree is known as a biennial, “Hugh Wynn graduated In the declarer's hand squeezes East. As a schoolboy he has, for example, Arkansas, Kentucky, Tennessee and takes is favored ¥3-2 because it two seasons to ma- lege.” The latter form by ¥K-Q-5-4 He cannot hold on to the king-queen of blazers ... a different a quantity Missouri. ture Its fruit. ♦ J-10-7-6 4K-9-4-3-2 for each occasion when blazers The tree in purists, on the ground that a student ® of hearts and the king of diamond# blazer grows very poor soil At one time, the *6-5-4 *8-7 yellow dyestuff is as well. This also operates are worn. A cricket blazer. A soccer and reaches a height of 70 to 90 feet. does not graduate himself, but AK-7-6-5 spueeze found in the inner bark, was used on West if he holds those three im- blazer. A tennis blazer. Prom the Under favorable conditions, the timber from a school or college. ¥A-J-10-9-8-7 In printing callicoes. The yellow graduated portant cards. Getting the ace of start, he is bound by conventions, of this tree is excellent, but often the some abundant—lean and fat years ♦ A-5 bark was first dried. Then It was Send a self-addressed, stamped en- diamonds out of dummy Is the te that certain are done at trees are too small and to are common fruit trees. key knows things scrubby among ground to a yellow powder, and the velope for the leaflet, “Business Eng- *3 the whole hand. and of no other times. be used for fuel. In the the tree Is certain times anything except early Spring, citron-yellow coloring matter was re- lish.” Address Jolly Polly. (Copyright. 1934.) It has been said a thousand times, Some of the best lumber is made into alive and glowing. It is one of the moved. Besides yellow dye and the but the hasn't worn the truth saying furniture, and used in general con- prettiest sights in April or May to see tints and shades obtained from the that the reason an Englishman struction and the oak bedecked in downy buds, away, cooperage. grim powder, browns, grays and drab col- he un- as show their red coats appears to be well dressed is that It is the yellow layer, found they slowly ors were obtained by adding salts of is appropriately dressed. His clothes der the deep-furrowed bark, that is with silver linings. Iron. belong to the occasion and with him- valuable. It Is rich In tannin and a When the dark green leaves, with (Copyright. 1034.) self. This, incidentally, makes him extremely slow to pick-up novel or new fashion ideas. If they don't go with his particular way of dress, he just doesn't bother with them. He is an individualist and a traditionalist. If he fancies some- thing at 20. the chances are better than average he’ll be wearing it at 60. He is as loyal to his shops as he is to his ideas, and his tailor is ——■ pretty apt to have been his father's before him. At the present time he is giving the two-vented (1. e. side-vented) jacket a big run, chiefly in cheviot U||l|UU||ftflSilMljlB|MUBB|||l versions, but rarely with a belted back—even when it’s a sports jacket. He is also doing things for the so- called "Pork Pie” hat. which in this country goes by the more conventional land. For Englishmen never let full name of telescope crown hat (a round dress slip to the revival stage. A din- soft hat type). He's wearing It largely ner coat in England has always been because It suits more faces—though considered as a sort of negligee man- it's not more dressy—than the snap- ner of dressing when men only are brimmed Homburg. present. Typical of an Englishman’s think- This same w-d Englishman has two lng are his ties. About half of them pieces of standard equipment which wear the conventional Spitallields all- will probably never reach any signifi- over patterns. Most of the rest wear cant portion of America. In the first regimental stripes. If an Englishman place, he wears gauntlet-type rarely belongs to a club, school or a regi- buttoned) white chamois gloves the ment, he takes pride in being able to year round, because he’s been bred to wear the tie whose stripes betoken It.
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