4 . PAGE ran gj V .c - . . Gontract Bridge ,3) Josephine ciilberuan 'OUDu x NCERNING GRAND sums 'gPlayers who like to "speculate" 3,! Brand-slain contracts should ibstraln themselves unless" they ,ess as well and play as well as llv TOMMY in-zars -raroo llth did in the following case. 'North dealer? lNorthv South vulnerablq A K Q 5 Q A 7 8 O A Q 4 .y.A Q J 9 Q B 6 J A A J10 9 no io a N 7 4 2 D 7 2 W E Q.) I 1. l0 8 5 4 S 9 5 2 .5 K. 7 3 Q . .. . q R 9 5 3 2 O K J 10 9 8 6 3 jtl The bidilin,-1: North East South H's-st 2 N T .'l Q 4 9 Pass 1 N '1' Pass .'i Q Pass 5 0 Pass 5 Q Pug gl 9 Pan Pan . Pun Of course. in this case it was North who did the gambling, wlml lie bid the Ql'llll(i slam, and his partner who did the good guessing; and playing. West, well acquainted with Souths style, was sure the spade cue bid had been honest. and so tried the desperation lead of a low club. This raised an immediate problem for the dcclarcr. Obvi- ously, somethlng would have to be done about the heart loser-the queen, jack and ten could not very! well fall in two leads! So South would not only have to set no a couple of discards-onc.in spades and one in clubs-but he would also have to find another trick! South knew West to be ii crafty player-he might well have led from the club kiu simply to dis- courage a finesse in that suit. South decided, however, that the club king should lie with East. for his bid; so South put up dummy's club ace. cashed two high trumps. ending in dummy, and then led the club queen through East. East correctly covered the club queen, not wanting to waste his king on the next possible lead of the nine-spot. and south ruffed. A trump put dummy in again for the lead of the spade king, and now East's ace was ruffed away. Final- ly, declarer simply ran the rest of his trumps, discarding a heart rind the low spade from dummy. when he then cashed the heart ace and the spade queen, West was squeez- ed-he had to abandon either his heart or his club stopper. Quick Relief for ARTI-lRl'l'IC PAIN Get the relief lrolri sharp, stabbing arthritic pain you long for with Templeioifl T-R-C's. Why suder longer? Be active again. Get T-R-C's today, gel comforting reliel loniglil. Recommended by users and dmuista. 60c and 31.25. How fortunate it is that we Iln looks and ways so disagree. -Farmer Brown's boy. . . . Farmer Brown's boy is right about that, very right. What I sorry world this would be if every- one looked like everyone else and all thought alike and did alike. No one knows this better than does Old Mother Nature. There is an old saying that ”varlety is the spice of life,” but Mother Natur: knows that it is more, very much more, than this. It is the very ,,,x' essence of life. So Mother Nature T provides endless variety among all t ' living things. . Farmer Brown's boy, spending p H ,' ,. the winter down on Robinson Taloov ll1;"i':le1Zed Tomm) S Crusoe's island in the Laiid-og- r ' always-sumnier was finding mast Th re was 3 mmkle things very (iiffe;-(ht lrom the (fr igeliicsmiceyres. e ,rnili'ar things at home. The trees Tommy grinned, ”I wish 1 land plants. even the grass. were! could... he replied. --1; I were at xliffereiit. Most of the feathered home I could ten you who rnadc lfollc were different. He missc:l 'Pet.er Rabbit and Roddy Fox and -Johnny Chuck and Jimmy Skiutk and Jerry Muskrat. Yes, sir, he fmissed them. Whenever he wenr (to walk he found himself watch- ing for them. or signs of them, or at least cousin of theirs. So it loss that when he first saw Mali- iicoe, own cousin of Unct Billy Per.- ony tracks you might find in the Green Forest but I don't know the jungle folks, so of course I dont know their footprints. But I do know that whoever made these is a digger. He has short legs and a long tail that he drags." "How do you know that?" de- manded the other. "There is the mark of the tail. that long straight mark in the mud. It is like the mark Jerry Muskrat; leaves when he drags his tail in the mud up home at the Smiling Pool, only bigger. The legs of this fellow must be short or he wouldiit drag his tail as he does. He is quite a traveler because this path seems to be a long one. I wonder sum, it gave him ll. little more ”at home” feeling, and he kept sharp- er watch than ever for four-footed folk or at least their footprints. Then one day when he was up among the hills he discovered a narrow little path that he kiiew; had been made by busy feet going: ;too and fro. a little path such as Johnny Chuck made in the grass at which end his home is... said 'at home. He followed it slowly Tommbu 'and carefully, ll'0lltiCl'lllg all the --Listen! someone 15 coming,-v me who had made it. In a muddy place he found footprints. Thev didn't tell him much for they ,were unlike any he was acquaiiited 'with, but they did tell him that whoever had made those prints had 'four claws on each front foot, the two middle ones long. i "Wlioei'cr has claws as long as the ones that made these prints in the mud is a digger," said Tom- ivhispered his friend. The two boys stood perfectly still. There was a rustling sound ahead. It drew nearer. In a mo- ment from under some overhang- ing leaves appeared the oddest- looking little person Tommy had iseen since he arrived in the Land- i of-always-summer. "Tatoo," whispered T o m m y': friend. ml," , "Who in the world is Tatoo?" . 'What makes you think :30?" Tommy whispered, tasked his companion. i "What else would such long CANADA claws be for?” demanded Tommy. PROVINCE OF The other couldn't say and Tom- ' P'"NCE EDWARD 15'-AND my continued: "Those prints were IN THE PROBATE COURT not made by climbing paws, so of The 15th day of March AD. 1951 course they must be digging claws. In Re Estate 01 HONOURABLE And they are on the mm mi JOHN A. MacDoNALD. law or where a good digger would llallll”-i Cardigiin 1" W333 C0111"-Y in me ally have them," said Province, Merchant and "How do you know those prints: senator: deceased. tell-Bl-& are of front feet?" asked his frieiiii,,T0 the Sheri” 01 "10 COUMY 05 "Because right there is the pi-imi Kings County or any Constable of a hind foot and if you or literate persons within said look closely you will see that there am COUMY five toes on the foot that made GREETING: that print," replied Tommy, WHEREAS upon reading the "You seem to know ,1 10; about petition on file of John A. Mac- those footprints. Suppose you m1IDonald, Jr.. of Cardigan aforesaid, me now who madg them," smd land H. Francis MacPhee of Char- lottetown in Queens County. in IN PERSON ; GRACIE PRi"3E OF WALES OGLLEGE AlilliTORliM TUESDAY APRIL ans. 8.30 .4ilV.i.'x'(TlC SALE AT:- ADMISSION 352.00 PLUS TAX ,.. s aaovunmwmcw x cxvemcuc: , sur ( we do! CALLS roa Meaty? new CLIENTS, 1'! said Province, Administrators of ithe above named estate. they, Ipraying that a citation may be is- sued for the purpose hereinafter ,set forth: You are therefore here- iby required to cite all persons in- itcrestcd in the said Estate to be and appear before the Judge ore- scnt at a Probate Court to be held in the Court House in Charlotte- town in Queens County in the said Province, on Wednesday the 18th day of April next coming, at the hour of twelve o'clock forenoon or the same day to shew cause if any they can why the Accounts of the said Estate should not be passed and the Estate closed as prayed for in said petition and on motion of H. Francis MacPhee, Esquire, Proctor for said Petitioner. . AND IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that a true copy hereof be fortn- with published in some newspaper published in Charlottetown afore- said once in each week for at least four consecutive weeks from the date hereof and that a true copy be forthwith posted in the follow- ing places respectively. namely, in .the hall of the Court House in Charlottetown aforesaid, at or near .tli estorc and Post-Office of R. J. MacDonald of Cardigan in Kings lcounty aforesaid, and at or near FIELDS RUG STORE THE GUARQIAN. UHARLUTTETOWIN KING or me ROYAL MOUNTED CANADA'S ll-'1 .S'IZ1S'T SIEZLIIVG CIGARETTE TOBACCO Editorial Sparks Hot Debate Over care of children EDMONTON, March 31-(CP)- would you enter a strange house if a baby was crying and there was no one home? Better think twice before 3'0'l1 answer or you may find yourseif in a jam. An Edmonton bill collector pro- vided the spark to ii red hot de- bate recently when he heard I baby crying but no one answered his repeated knocks on the door. Fearing something was amiss,he went in, found no one at home and comforted the child. Later. he discovered the child's mother vis- iting a neighbor. The next day an editorial in the Edmonton Journal criticized the mother for leaving her child alone and praised the collector for his action. The editorial pointed out that leaving small children alone at home often resulted in tragic fires and accidents. It said "the collect- or's thoughtfulness might easily have been the means of prevent- lng such an outcome." At this point the mother entered the fray defending her action in a letter to the editor. She claimed she only left the child for a few minutes to attend a neighbor ill with pleurisy. The babyls crying, she contend- ed, did it no harm and she re- buked the bill collector for enter- ing her home without. permission The collector. a father of three children, answered in another lat- ter thnt he thought it was his duty to investigate the child's cries. "I believe," he wrote, ”that a home should be a sanctuary and that if any of my children are ever in distress there will be some good samaritan, be he collector. inilkmaii or just passer-by who will have the consideration and thoughtfulness to render assistanie ..which I tried to do." That should have ended the matter but by now the public had taken notice of the affair and soon the Journal started receiving indignant letters. some criticizing the collector and others the mo- ther. some people thought the collect- or should be prosecuted as a tres- passer and others congratulated him on his action. One woman said "he was just a redblooded being who heard a baby's cry and naturally went to see what he could do to help." other letter, signed "two mo- then who occasionally let their children cry," asked: "How would anyone feel. if ev- ery time her bab cried. some complete stranger ere to walk in expecting to find a neglected baby." And so it went pro and con for almost two weeks until the Jour- nal finally appended this note to the end of its editorial page: "With today's letters, the debate on the collector is closed." ........:.AAAA.g.gg of Cardigan aforesaid, so that all persons interested in the said Est- ate as aforesaid may have due no- tice thereof. WITNESS His Honour Harold Leonard Palmer, Judge of the said Probate Court at Charlottetown in Queen's County, the day and year first above written. By the Court. (L. S.) the store of J. A. McDonald 65 00. (Sad) N. ELIZABETH WRIGHT Registrar. WILDIIOOT CRIIM-OII. CHIN i 7 vouimov am is unity (coco Looxmc cuv mm in: am COMOEDJ 900 Thu concarruunoirs i segue vouo mi viionoor X - OI. . an arm OIIIP am CKMA IL you, aAwiID.' 4. MY445 GFFSO 1 - 65rAmY.' Arkiir 2. am rEmw4z.aAH! I FEEL .Ay . iuiinluhx E .- .. : WGJDERFUL. A sons: AS 6ST A I'LL EAT SOON AS I RUI. wuv DON'T vou EAT, KNOGBV 7 ' au- '6Zi?.2f?5 Mus at Mr 2: o cw--i-vou.. vicar.- ' I'M WOIRIED. W GOTTA I! t CAREFUL WITH THAT EVE. NON U95EN IS NO Hl'l1lN' HENRY By Carl Anderson Doc 0 I '”X:':.sC3.. "A i l 0 0 G ?. I DOTTY DIPPLE I SPRAINED MW WRIST THIS N.C"'3ilNG" UNCLE BEN, WHATPE YOU sale SEi'YlhT&iEiHlQl?t2l5iE. A PRESENT--?? S K- i',- T r 43.1 ,a. ;-343.1-i.”i.. .- x V -WELT: some N - .. e on Ll'L sweii-ii:aT25,o8EEsg my TAKE CARE OF IT ” IW I, The Coup lhuhrv Alum Vnvrr, in WAI17 HORACE ” I'LL --THEN YOU WERE iZoi'EWo'c2”E D BUY rw ' 1: Li eov A FOOTBALL-ANi V33 so-IE 6AiD-- 8UYIN"EM SILVER seen ' -- 'l ”" ll HLJM-I TOLD JIGGS T: . GE HOME OF HIS LOW-6 FRIENDS -I'LL C I'LL CALL UP- I'LL BET HE5 OUT WITH SOME Ti-IE ounce-? WELL-WHY DON'T ROW ALI. U0! TALKING To HER, Awma so 1: I'LL even my A mmuic MVLUNCHV &H'1'uEillE MWAND CM&5DA 3! wine Greg , A A 1