AUGUST 10, 190 ' i Sunnyslde Ballroom Every Mon., Wed, Sat. . Eastern lllytiiis loys ADMISSION 35o Meet your friends there tonight I01‘ UNDII OOLLAI ji- wste ‘ abandoned last year but been completely replaced. ---_-_-_.__. DAIRY CENTRE Ontario and Quebec. IllTlllllTlG Plll Don't Arthritlc 7e . Electrical Contractor WIRING AND REPAIRING ERNEST R. RAMSAI, I29 Elm Ave. Phone 10631 Take Ternpieton'e made for elective relief of Arth new: and filllllllli! palm 60c VIOTOMA - (OP) — Pity the poor bobby. ‘lburiet cameras at the are pointing st s smell Swim oi’ city policemen wearing the old-type choker uniform and bobby helmet. The old style was hasn't The deirying industry of Canada is carried on most extensively in es from wearllomc. throbbing Do as thousands oi Canadian: hve done end get quick Rug, ‘LR-C's. Ipedelly rltic. $1.15 Y-ll A THE GUARDIAN, CHARLOTTETOvvw l2. Life is something of s game Thet no two play just the same. -—.Old Mother Nature. Mother Pronghorn the Antelope WB-s worried. Yel. sir. she wars worried. It wasn't for herself that she worried. It was {or two of the cutest babim on all the Great Prairie, her slender, big-eyed kids. as Antelope babies are called, just as Deer babies are called lawns, and Moose babies are calves. They were helpless little folks as QfOOQ Q O #090 O-QRO-OOQO-OO-OQ-Om 4 3 HOLIDAYS AUG. 13th t0 AUG. 20th Our plant will be closed from Aug. 13th to Aug. 20th in order io give our employees a well earned rest. Wednesday, Aug. l0th is the latest date for which we can accept cleaning and promise delivery before the holidays. . The Office will be open every day from 8 A.M. till l2 noon to accept cleaning. NEW METHOD CLEANERS LIMITED THE HOME OF BETTER DRY-CLEANING 6-6-00 i haahhaahaaa r$vw DAILWCROSSWDRD A0505‘ 52. Shelf of a 14. Marries '1. Blemish trunk 11. Ship's 5. Float bottom 9. Tibetan DOWN 20. Praised f. Detective Y. God of flocks iGr.) 3. Foreboding 4. Silent 5. Sun god 6. Turkish title 7. Propltious 8. A garden- er'e tool 11. Chimney i] Ll [I] D i! t! DEC poet 28. Fall sudden- ly into ' water - 30. Frozen dessert: 3i. A protec) tive shell 32. Comply 34. Illness Biiiltupefy‘ 38. Insctivei UiIiIEIB GCIDDD HUGH HUGE] . n. Yesterday's Answer I2. Movablei barrier lb. Before d7. Extinct bird priest 24. Cebine l0. Culture monkey medium 26. American l1. American Indian 13. Affirm 15. Greek letter .16. Slight cut . To be in debt . Shoshoneln Indian . Cone of soot earth (golf) 12. One-spot Color cards underhand . Seaport city of Panay (P. 1.1 . Trees . Gear tooth . Japanese i sash '39. Consume . Silkworm (l. To be undecided . Lutecium isym.) . Measure- ment . U. S. Navy petty otllcer . Fish 50. Crucifix iEccl.) British colony. SW Arable DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-l-lereb how to work it: A X Y l! L B A A X ll ls LONOFELLOW Ono letter simply stands for another. In this example A is used for the three L's. X for the two 0's. etc. Single letters. spoo- trophics. the length and formation of the Words are all hlntaw Each clay the codc letters are different. bl. A Cryptogram Quotation ii: CWNKWYG KYJ JDODMWIG Alt! DF HNWHRNWJ CQN R00 GUDYMF- GUQARF SWAHDF. Yesterday's Cryptoqilote: AH MEi AH MEi THIS APPLAUSI HAS RUINED l-llM-PLAUTUS. Distributed by king fleeing! lyndleste most babies are, and there was no one to watch over them and pro- tect them in time of ranger but their mother. Day and night; she must keep them safe from hungry enemies -- Fox and. Wolf and Golden Eagle, All mothers worry. Worry 15 part of motherhood. Some worry more than others. Big and fierce mothers. “(other Bear, Mother Wolf. Mother Lynx. have less to worry about than smaller more “mid "fill-he". but they do worry, 95P901ii11y when their babies are WW young and small. ' M°th=r Pronshorh had two kids only a few days old out there 0X1 the Great Prairie. There was nothing in hide them in but the short grass. There was nothing to hide them under or behind. They must. hide in plain sight as it were. To do this they must be kept looking as little o; pgsslble like what they really were. Th ‘dld this by lylhs as fiat. as they a‘ Contract Bridge By Josephine Culbertson “yguggqguur n so M es I COURAGE Mneunneycrfl‘ Contract bridge is not usually thought of as s. game requiring courage. and it is true that there is seldom any peril to life or limb; nevertheless, no one can play the game well who lacks nerve! Con- sider thls deal, for which I am indebted to The Bridge World Magazine. West dealer. . Neither side vulnerable AKJ5 Q1083 QAQIOOBZ 1076 O43 gave WNE 01:21“ Q15 AQJ §K4 ‘s06 S ‘K83 QAQoo-l, IQ 9703 4.9542_ . This deal occurred in a recent toam-of-four match between a British and an American team in London. The Americans gained almost 1000 points on this board. In one room the English East- West pair pushed the opponents to five spades, which was ddublcd and set one trick. 1n the other room the bidding proceedegg‘ West North Beet South 1‘ 10 19 1Q Pass 2 g 4 Q s 4 Pass Pass Dble. Pass Pass Pass Here, of course, an American pair held the East-West cards. The ace of hearts was opened and the suit was continued, South ruffing. South immediately led a diamond and finessed dumn-iy's ten. To quote The Bridge World correspon- dent: "Without a flicker. East play- ed the fourl" What this excellent. imagina- tive and hervy defense did io the poor English declarer can easily be imagined! Apparently. both of the missing diamond honors were on side, and he could run the entire suit. So, "full o! hope," South drew the necessary three rounds of trumps nd led another diamond, covering cat's jack with dummy! queen. East's blank king took the trick. and the shift to clubs gave East-West four luscious tricks in that suiti It is also easy to see that South would have been in a beautiful position if East had taken his dia- mond klng on the first lead of that suit. instead of risking the Ll'L ABNEV w! IS wow GOIN‘ lly hornton W. Burgess) -had told hel'_so in Words they ~- 11- t", ielrjli.‘ _ Il-Qnflllu‘ l’, . .'"$. if "Where are they?" he barked could on the ground. keeping still. not even twitching an eflr. from even near by looking like h0lh1ll8 more than two small mounds oi sand. They were not even close together, but widely apart. so that should one be found the other might not be. She was worried this mornlnl because the day before she lie-d been chased by two Coyotes. as Prairie Wolves ,s.i'e called. She W85 sure that they wore a pair and were living not very far away- 5h? had fooled them by leading thorn far from where the kids were. They didn't know that, but she guessed that they might guess what had happened and might oorne back to look. Now here they were just coming in sight. They We" 59-Da- rated and trotting from side to side so that they crossed and re- crossed the trail of each other. They were looking for something, and she was sure she knew what. They were headed for the place Where they had seen her the day beiore. She had moved the kids since then and then gone back there herself. Now she was wan- dering about as if getting her breakfast was all she had on her mind. 1t wasn't on her mind at all. Her two babies were on her mind, not breakfast. She hoped those Coyotes would chase her again so that she could lead them far away as before. They didn't. They paid no st- tention to her. They ran back and forth this way and that way over and around the place where they had seen her the clay before, their noses to the ground. They looked into and behind every bunch of grass or weeds. They were hunt- ing for baby Antelopes. If they couldn't have made it more plsin. she tried not to show how anxious she was. but to appear as uncon- cerned as she would have been had there been no precious babies. At last Young Coyote turned toward her. “Where are they?" he barked. She pretended not to hear him. She paid no attention to him. "You may as well tell us. We know they are somewhere around here and we'll surely find them.” he continued. Then Mother Pronghorn did more pretending. She pretended to be anxious whenever either "of them moved in a certain direction. As one of them drew near e. patch at extra tall weeds she gave an angry sort of grunting bloat and made a quick dash forward as i! to try to drive the other away, It was Young Coyote. As she came close he snarled and leaped at her. She reared and struck with a front foot. She struck hard. It was armed with a sharp-edged little hoof. It struck him on one shoulder. It hurt. It made hlni yelp. Before Mrs. Coyote could leap at her she dashed away. Those Coyotes didn't follow. They were‘ searching all through that patch of tail weeds. They found nothing. Young coyote was limp- ing. She made a small circle and dashed at him again. He dodged and limped away. She turned and dashed at Mrs. Coyote. She. too. dodged. She Jumped at the throat of Mother Pronghorn, but the latter was too quick for her.‘ All the time in another place two Antelope kids, pretending they were little heaps of sand, never once lifted their pretty little heads to see what was going on although they wondered what the sounds loss of the king. they heard meant. W 8y AL CAP? llllNGiNG or sirens: l King of The Royal Mounted PAGE SEVEN by Zane GI?!’ “we ms l FOX TH/E/E. Bur 1 014F1- nan/rs aunw, m1! TELL/AI’ us ABOUT m: MOUAIr/E SETTM/‘A TEAP... JOE YEAH, an A can FER moesmiie ouoimi as 1"CALL YA FER HOURS HOME SOON FROM TH‘ ~Jl 4 a i“ QQ; I/L .1“. - I OldfiTéif/WOL/AID 4741/6/11 - dfl/TH m/s 0151: Angus/ms, i JuDV 10m BE MORE/ED 4800f Yam- 657 HOME r850. ~ - rm none.’ t seen 1mm’ ' 1w unit seen nusv.’ HANG mind i. rs... ,1... 4qpifa7nv: Kn‘ ii‘...- Bylaw, io< w-ii.o~........s . .. . UPmWE AltPT MAKIN ' IQ Dflflfi TILL I SETTLE A PROBLEM .' #52554 own: u/ar/ YES, AND wmr 7M9 a 0F Jun/s re/zs Far Il/LA 4100.0 u/F 51/5, awe .1 - wavy/mes A Move ~. 7/15 CeoormAA/is/ HOLY SMOKIIME... . ' DIDN'T KNOW YA HAD A KID... I MEANWNE‘ WOTS TH‘ DOPE‘. *5 Crimp ' l Ai4isEn.aN—-— -' DOTTY DRlPPLE suT r vow near: ACCIDENT INSURANCE - » 1 STAY IZIGHT HElZE I AT HOME MUCH OF ms Tiny MY GOOD MAN, DO YOU HAPPENED IN THE HOME '17] REALIZE THAT 557, OF ALL THE ACCIDENTS LAST YEAR INTO THE HOUSE AND 34,5420 sea-His ACCIDENTS] "NOMSHALL we so _, -. TALK ABOUT THIS POLlCY P hlylBuforll l - $5 A _- ; i Duelist! is King rm...» Syn-hills. IT'S ALMOST SUPPER- TiME--AN' TiPDlE HASNT IA "ll IGNT IT JUST TEQRIBLE THE WAY WOMEN D2555 TODAY? lT5 VOSITIVELV DEGUSTING .1’ DID VOL] SAV CATCH Tl-IEIQ 05mm: o: COLD." l Grammy PITCHED HAV ALL oAv-au-r WWW?!” . x4; %}W.LLL 52d . i \'i I" g; $4 P i/l/IV/I/y/xii, fl ‘ i i; "um/v "1' ' lr/l/wl’! '