I Evour? T hat’s because it’s better tea J "SAl.AllA' 1' IA ’ oAi:v CROSSWORD ~. ACROSS DOWN 21. Mindanao ’ 1. Smoaiag Indian car (RR.) Trouble “leased ienthcr if-‘Inc line of ‘.5. Undressed a letter akin oi.’ fur Mcslcm hating title animal l-Znave 0! 27. A prickly riuhs scnsaiion Body of 29. l".i\er 14. All *orrect l-Zafiir lscoi.) 15. Peru.-rn.e-i warriors ii»). Deceivcs 1'(.Sick 8. Unsociabic Il1.'I‘olool-; fo 1!. Primary 9. Recreation 33. Route or color gi. Nari-ates aircraft 6 15‘ I. Sacred bull ( Egypt.) 3. To show amusement 10. Whole range 12. Large. white bear 13. Abundant 9 pm» .° ,. Saturday‘: Ann-er at‘. }‘.dil.:e mo‘.- .I‘.oc‘.: (Malay) 42. or inner; dry ll. Waairoo Q. Type measures 4!. Sa:,”ir.z,'s -1 lo: Achievo- .wishe: :4. staggers ‘ ment . ’I‘cn cent 3.". Fingerless 23. Any powcr- hand cover. ful deity 24. Short 1 journey 26. Blemlshes 28. Third tone it diatonio scale 30. Tentacle 32. Cicatrix I5. Farm animal 58. Abound 38. I-Iuten 39. Make choice 41. Akin (Rare) 4:. Music note 41. Rent under lease 4?. Sea-fishing dragnet 49. To be of! (Colloq.) B0. Lltge load G! 61. Spinning toys 62. Remain DAILY (JRYPTOQUO'IE—Here’s how to work it: \AXYD.LBAAXR lsLONGl"ELLOW One letter simply stands for another. In this example A is used (or the three L's, X for the two 0's, ate. alngie iettera, apos- trophies. the length and formation or the words are all hlnta Each dav the code letters are dlKeren' ‘ A Crwiogram Quotailor TB‘ FERITI-‘ DTR PT DYA1‘ RIEH K1’ ll-I DYAT—-YATFKMFQ. Saturday's Cryptoquote: AND THERE DID SEE HOW THINGS BEGIN. WHAT CAN. WHAT CANNOT Bl:-—CRlilCH Distributed by King haturu lyadloate piece 6oME IN,/....... NEW GRAY MAGIC ROYAL loaf your eyes on in New Color! Now lookl Adria its New Touehl Now Foatunal O Finger-Flow Kaysi Shaped to‘ your finger»- tips! 0 lomovoblo Cylinder! Single-handed —- press, lift, and cylinder is out, to clean or change! 9 Clean Chorigo Rlbbonl Slip ribbon loop on without even removing empty spool from huh! I “Mogie"' Margin! One-handed operation! Position the carriage, flick the lever-—your margin is aet! TDDAY./...v. ....... a dernonalrotionl Soc and try- this NEW GRAY MAGIC ROYAL! ‘Inflated Trade nut F. A. iMc00llRT I02 0llEEll sr. PHONE 2213 4 Ll'L annrsr . 2 . ifly Thornton JOHNNY CHUCK AGREE! Though seeing not as others see Sometimes ‘tis better to agree. —Johnny Chuck. From a corner of the garden Johnny Chuck watched Fl!-p the Terrier reluctantly obeying Farmer Brown’: boy calling him back home. Johnny chuck’: coat was torn. He had been Litten in mariy places. sharp claws had dug into him in many other places. His face was scratched. One loot was s’) hurt that he walked on three legs. holding up the ‘hurt one. He was a sorry sight. Yet Johnny Chuck felt good all over. He really did. Yes. sir. he really felt good all over. He had been in the hardest light of his life, but now the stranger Chuck whom he had undertaken to drive out of the neighborhood had taken to his black heels. 01 top of this he had made that noisy little Dog afraid to touch him. And he knew that Polly Chuck had seen all this happen. That is why ne felt so good. _?_________.__;_____ ooancruoooooiaoc-on or.-C-cone \ o g contract Bridge g B: Joaaphlno Culbertson .-.Ct£liZt£tCiOC>0QQCi1Zt£1OOD£2DC'G!1Q.L NO NEED To GUESS It goes without saying in many cases a declarer is faced with a sheer guess as to the position or missing key cards, sometimes. how- ever, a well conducted investigat- ion may reduce the guess to a near certainty. Let's look at a. deal in which this opportunity was present. West dealer. North-South vulnerable. A K 3 2 Q 8 3 O J 10 5 asasiz Q P Q 1 O A K o 7 N QQ J 10 5 0.1632 W E ‘G384 LA 10 I ‘ Q T 3 S A A Q J 10 8 6 4 6 2 ' ' 9 K 1 ’ A K The bidding: West North East South 1 9 Pass 3 9 a Q Pass Pass 4 O 1 A Dble. Pass Pass Pan South could not be blamed for ‘taking a save" against the oppos- ing tour-heart contract——\vhich. it'- cidentally, would have been cold. Unlortunately. however, South paid considerably more than he had toi West opened the heart king and cashed the heart act. as well, then, to let declarer develop the hand without help and do his own guess- ing. West shifted to ii trump. South won in his own hand, then returned to dummy with a trump. south won in his own hand. then return- ed to dummy with a trump. and led the diamond jack. When East played low (correctly waiting to cover the second honor led iron dummy), south went into a long "trance," in an obvious effort to guess the diamond situa.t1on.. Should he put up the king. playing East ior the ace, or should he let the diamond jack ride. playing. East ior the ace. or should he let the diamond Jack ride, in the hope that it would drive out the ace in West‘s hand? South's protracted "huddle” was fruitlcas—he finally guess wrong. putting up the dia- mond king. This gave the enemy a 500-point penalty. which was more to them than the game they oould have made. There is no question that South had a difficult guess in diamonds. but that was because he made it diiflcultl on the bidding, it was I practical certainty that. the dis mond ace was held by one defender and the club ace by the other. Thus, the obvious thing to do was to discover who held the club ace! South should have led out the cli:'.) king. and when East showed the would be automatically located. $SBEiii‘iE,oli ace of that suit. the diamond ace 1 Jl"0 to-. ,o ' s W. lurgeul Ha sirutted a little new. or tried to, as he turned to Polly. “I guess those fellows won't bother us again very soon," said he prldefully. Perhaps he wouln't have been so prldeilul had he known that down in her heart Polly knew that had not Flip the Terrier appeared John- ny -would have lost the fight be- cause the stranger Chuck was just as big and strong as Johnny. younger and so a little bit quicker. It was that Dog. not Johnny. from whom the other had run away. “Come on. my dear, we'll go houw now. This is no place (or us." said Johnny in I masterful way. He started to limp 01! toward the Green Meadows. when he looked back over his shoulder Polly chuck hadn't moved. “Hurry up, my dearl " called Johnny He sounded I hit impatient. Polly chuck made no reply. She acted as if she hadn't heard him. She was sitting on the doorstep of what had been the winter home the stranger Chuck had dug there in the corner of the garden in the fail. Now she turned and went down inside. Johnny went back and waited on the doorstep.. At long last Polly put her head out. “IL is a very good house. but I don‘: think I want to live here," said she. She seemed to be talking in no one in particular other than herself. ‘Of course you don't. This is no place for us. We'll go back down on the Green Meadows where we belong," said Johnny. .l-le licked his sore foot. "Who says we belong on the Green Meadows?" asked Polly. . Johnny looked at her in surprise. “Don't we?" he asked. ‘‘I don't. You may. but I don't. Not now anyway." said she. "You can go back there it you llkc. but I'm going home." declared Polly. "You can come -with me it you want to," she added. "But you should come with m-.-,'' protested Johnny. Polly paid no attention to this. »she climbed out on the doorstep, turned her back on Johnny and walked away. !'or a moment John- ny Ohuck stared alter her. Then hurriedly limped after her. “wait (I minute! Where are you going?" he cried. Polly didn't wnit, “Honie," she shortly over her shoulder. Suddenly it came to Johnny that he didn't knew where her home was. Looking for it and for h~r was what brought him there to the garden. It seemed to him thiii. he had searched everywhere else since he had wake-ned from his winter sleeb. He had wondered allil wondered and he was still wonder- ing where she had spent the win- tor. In the fall he had gone to bed for the winter belore she had. ‘this is why he didn't know where she was living. If he should lose sight 0! her now would he be able to find her again? “If you are coming with me you better hurry." called Polly. Johnny looked over on the Green Meadows toward his comfortable home in the ground over there, Then he hurried alter Polly Churic, ‘I'll go home with you ix thus what you want," he agreed. and wondered where she was leading him. ‘ said MASS -1-“on rinoiiisis VATICAN CITY. March Ill - (AP)—Pope Pius raid mass today for 3.000 holy year pilgrims in the Hall of Benediction of St. Petr er’: Basilica.‘ Tho papal mgss wu said especially (or students of the University of the Sacred lleart in Milan. llilii ‘i.'i'i'..".'. ‘.§.'.'.“.':‘i.'.'—> rm: eon Leave- I’M HBU ~/ou THINK or ‘n-Woaain 33» Bhngzdot 0 ‘:40 IVA I l KHIAC W" I'LL MYKI A PINCUIHION 9U| YOUR III, WWVIPECTOR EL 5 U6 TONE.‘ ‘ THE GUARDIAN. QHARLOTTETOWN KING or THE aowii. -MOUNTED ‘WAT WAS W TILLIE THE TOILER RRV nice. ‘av mourn; -1:5 or me,- N"! I ' A «. .A.\\.i‘2..’’7.i . ' IT SEEMS 5YlANGE...Uli... I WAS 5'POSED TASK VA ABOUT THE mount! VA nan 5WlMMlN' ‘IWCHANNEL. va new it was ROUGH, Hun... 1 NEARD mar. Putrrv cor. «un...ou. YA MEAN va FLOATED on voar aAci<,1oo...uuu r --—\ MY LAND! xwop EVER DREAM I’D BE WAY OFF HERE‘-HAVlN' A ARE YOU READY, G|P,L$ '1 -- TH’ DlNlN’ F2004 CLO6fi$ AT CAN’T FIN AQL HEAD iNE-- BREAKFAST DV GOLL‘/-TlJE?EK MAGGIES BROTHER IN TH’ KITCHEN‘- . "‘ "‘-r. MEQCV! \CX_|'D BETTB2 CGIIE WITHOUT ’EM, IF YOU WANT Al:lY YHNK6 ms A 'ri;i.evi row 551' AND HE5 \hA’lCHIN' A :1-om AT sea y - IN AN AWFUL I ACMQFUIL 301 % l‘F--mu- ’~TcUv we nave NO IIEIPATALL rm 5 ' h A i - « , . oew. Mosimncins . IF -ma-rs THE use, I on, mass oaiv-r,-riu.i:.... T|LLlE--AND rrs, ALL mun «V Mi_Gi-IT A5 weu. Qurr .' I:iwipo<ms 8 co couu: no/an FAULT. '—" ~ou've GIT ALONG wm-nou'r mu! - Gor Muss i / /