31161152.?’- J24}. Golf "names. EVERYBODY Dancing 9.30 to 12.30 (Zlub WELGOME Admission 15c ER NUMEROUS and magnificent;- r d r u e d,“ once viidely N g1 America, 110W urtmflglkiiitililhonlyrin the Rockies and l! we CascadB5~ iwtqesowrsawmtfi“ Ii. MILTON FRAZEE INSIIRANGE _ Fire - Auto -I Life Representative Manufacturers Life insurance Company ‘I79 Queen St. Phone 714 ' Charlottetown, P.E.I. wspiti. larse a§oo<§ )6) 9<~ eoeeeeveeoaeoove-oaoooe ti. F. liutchoscn i i l OPTOMETRISTS Z 0-0-0 “Specialists in the fit- llapcleon and Uncle Elliy v-vwoxoow-ooo‘ correction of ocular do t ‘EELS-n . z 53 Grafton Street 0 sasm~resss Social Dance . and ICE CREAM SOCIAL At FREELAND LODGE MONDAY EVENING, AUG. 1th Ice Cream served from 5 P.M. to 8PM. Dancing from 9 p.m; to I mm. Come and have agood time and meet your friends. Proceeds in aid of Freeland School FIVE NOT ALIADWED By Mohammedan law a rmsn can have four wives. and any mar- riage in excess of that number will be dissolved by s judge on the woman's application. B LACK H EADS» Don't s ueese blackheads - dissolve them. et two ounces of peroxide powder from any drug store and apply qentl with wet. hot cloth over the bIsc eads. 'I'hey simply dissolve and dssppear by this safe sharia will By Clifford Maclrlde ting of glasses for the GEE: UNCLE ELEV! “THERE ARE 50MB EW ‘it ‘%LLOW ME. I'LL COLLAR ‘Il-VCNICKEN STQLIIQGKzTf lfiwwkw i n% A... I-DLY CATS.’ TN / BETTE. 'RE SIYTEEN BE I HAD (By Thornton W. THE YOUNG BRAGGART Unless his ways mends, Disaster in the end attends. —R.eddy Fox. --_- the brsggart He was a. fine-looking young Fox. Yes, sir, he was all of that. The Old Pasture never had seen a finer-looking one of his age. He was the biggest, strongest and in some ways the smartest, of the five children Raddy Fox and Mrs. Roddy Fox were bringing up in the ways that every Fox should know. "He is wonderful. lie is one of the smartest children we ever have had," said his mother fondly. Dedqr shook his head doubt- fuily. "He brags, and it isn't smart to brag," said he. "l-le knows that he is the biggest and the strongest. and the smart- _est of the children, and I suppose he can't help showing it. He'll get over it." said Mrs. Reddy. Her eyes, that can be hard and fierce, were soft as she watched him. "It isn't smart to brag, 1i; he. ccrrnes a habit. It grows. No one likes s braggart. He is inviting trouble and isn't smart enough to know it. That youngster has the makings of a clever Fox but he needs a lesson or two to lessen that good opinion of himself. And one of these days he'll get it. Then we'll see if he is really smart," de- clared Reddy. He shook his head as be watched the young braggart showing off before his brothers and sisters. ' Youns Foxes. like all other youngjolks. have much to learn before they are ready to go out for themselves in the Great World. They have to learn fast, very much faster than boys and girls, The boastful one learned fast even for a Fox. The trouble was he knew he learned father than his broth- ers and sisters, and hei- bragged about it. ‘Ilhey called him Bygg. gart. He didn't mind. Indeed. he took it as a compliment. Not a day passed that lie didn't find something or do something to brag about, something the others hadn't been smart enough to find, or bold enough to do. While they were still very young he ventured away from their door- stop and caught a mouse, the first caught by any of the chil- dren. He bragged about it until the others grew tired of hearing him. When they were old enough to be led on short hunting trips in the Old Pasture and for short distances on the Green Meadows he bragged about going farther than any of the others, of daring to do thing! the othccrs were afraid to do. Over and over again his fat-her and mother warned him not to be too bold, that the Fox who is over bold comes to no good end. "They are Just trying to scare me, but they can't scare ma," boasted the Brsggart to his broth- ers and sisters. I know enough to keep away from folks bigger than myself but I'm not afraid of sny- one my own size." » To prove it he one day brought in a young woodchuci: almost as big as himself whom he had sur- prised and killed before the latter had s, chance to fight. He had been lucky. Had the young Chuck had a chance to fight he would have made it very unpleasant for the Braggart. It is even doubtful if he could have killed the Chuck. Certainly he would have known that he had been in a fight. As ly Fogaly and Shorten ' wisasrcsynne enmity; g (“N Warm \ SCOTLAND YARD BELIEVE! MISS BNINIHER U6 MIRDEREEJOD i e'l I ‘I L . BEST, LADY WWTERBIUOK, IF ‘IOU GAVE US ‘IOUR e42. . ~ ’ 7-1 ‘f I I] II . "l I ‘ \‘\ “N \\-_ I If J1. i rm: cuannragjgraasorrsrown Burgess) //9” "1 killed this fellow as easily ss I can lift my tail," he boasted it was there wasn't s, scratch on him. How he did brag! "I killed this fellow as easily as I can lift my tall." he boasted. “Iim. not afraid of the biggest Ohuck on the Green Meadows." “You better be," said Roddy Fox, who had overheard hfirn. "Pooh!" said the young Fox when his father was out of hear- ing. “l-ie was trying to scare me, but he can't scare me with talk like that. "I'll show him. One of these days I will bring in a big Chu_ck and see what he has to say then." -'Did you really catch that one all alone by yourself?" asked an admiring sister. "Of course I did. There was nothing to, it. I had no trouble at all. That was because l was smart," boasted the Braggsrt. Then he shared his dinner with the others for he was not selfish. Meanwhile his father, looking over to Johnny Chuck's house grinned. "o!" 0f these dad's Johnny Chuck will teach him s. lesson or my name isn't Reddy Fox," thought he. Roddy has the greatest respect for Johnny Chuck's sharp teeth, his strength and his courage. There isn't a cowardly hair on Johnny Ohuci: and no one knows that better than does Reddy. The afraids." neat story: ‘The Un. TWO KINDS OF BAD LUCK South had bad luck in today's oal not only in the miserable fact that both opponents were shrewdly aggressive bidders. West dealer. Both sides vulnerable- Both sides 60 on soora s s 2 Q Q 7 5 gosz 4.x s 4 a 2 _ 4 .r 10's s N e Q 9 QK J s :12?‘ W E gin-res no 1o s 5 4-552.‘ ' T g a K 1 4 a ' ' ,9 1o a 2 - 1Q A J__8_ l _ 4-77 The bidding’ 7,.- - West North ss-w S“!!! pus Pass Pill 1 Q Du‘, Pass I. N '1‘ 2 Q \ Pass Pass DIIIQ- P". Pass Pass " ' u... M d was not Alllthaggdngouhe! certnalnly Could ybe blamed for ootni"! m“ blddini in fourth wit‘: ‘h’ “m” “med!” psnuth hand it obvious that the 0 as the stronBQSl °1 “h” “l” W1: is true that South misht we" have passed on the sesond renal’: W" East" of‘. no rfip’ einst "human nature‘ militat as that sort of action. a vlaver ma? has oPQMd '3" “mung h“ J hand is naturally loathe W!" ti’ stand aside alid let the oilliPfmellflf win the rubber with a measY one-bid. West opened the heart ace and continued the suit, East winning with the Jsck- W" ‘hmed '° “ low trump and, when declarer (indeed, west false-carded with the king. Another heart lead put B“; ‘in "M", ma! a second dis- mond return, again ducked by de- ciarer, lost to the black dime“- wew now Shirred to clubs. and declarer was soon shortened in trumps when he had to ruff "I" suit. I-le cashed nu toP evade! and tried to ruff a spade in rimmi- but llsst over-ruffed and "l!" gal-mg dgclarer again with a club- ‘Ilhe upshot was that South won precisely two spade tricks and two diamonds. suffering an i100- point penalty! I Iy Alex Raymond SAFELY lTTiIE HOTEL’ I YIILL HOGAN BARRISTIR, . SIRRWIMN CiAidudiY/ILI-HNECARLO FREED INMEDIATELY! dummy he picked up, but in the I PAGE NIN}? Iv loTevGrei xnfrfoTrilfnbYIi Maura» 2' orcooaeeoovrr moors. Hows m‘ “l sue scnoswounsa reomos. sues. ccoiwcrrrocooxmuoi r , ‘ oerrm. war. --1 Wl§H vOuD HURRY -' r q ALL RIG-FT. DOTTV“ AS SOON % X FINiSH WHAT I'M DOING NOW" ly George McManul ~-- _ .- -—- pow" arzeue wrru ME! r our woua oases 51.111‘ our ore voua cr-aauz worms some 101115 OPERA wrru ‘ - YOUR LITTLE WATCHDOG“ EEINWN A PLAYFUI. 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