aocusr 9, 194v i‘ liorran Ban Parish P-l-ii-ll-I-li Wed. August 10th. i BINGO Iioiy Redeemer ilali TONIGHT 8.30 The prizes are the same as those prevailing at Bingos in the city. other REGULAR DANCE EAST ROYALTY RINK HALL TUESDAY, AUG. 9th 9:80 to 12:30 Mllsic by Eastern Rhythm Boys Under Ausfices of Hockey lub Bus leaving I.M.T. at 9:15- 10:O0. Admission 50c. Can- teen Service. Free Check Room. Maritime Life filz/x fl/Dfl) . / l‘. W. BENTLEY. 01.11.. Manager 131 Grafton ltrsat ' Charlottetown, P. l. I. Box No. 488 DON'T OVERIIEAT SHOES Heat greater than the hand can bear is too hot for drying shoes thht have become wet. Proteins are complex organic substances fol-mi the most im- portant part of rllglilflfll and plant cells. St. Augustine's Convent SOUTH RUSTICO Country Boarding School for Girls Beautifully situated near wa- ter. Small classes, Grades l to to X, under accredited teach- ers. Supervised study, music, singing, sewing, French, sea- sonal outdoor athletics. Address: SISTER SUPERIOR llvl-z srocll P. E. I. 0L0 PRDVINCIAL Cane Tormentina, ll. Aug. llth. To be Al‘ THE CHARDOTTETOWN FAIR must have all show cattle blood tested for Bug's Disease anytime within 00 days of show. The following car ferry service for automobile and other vehi- * daily r ~ ' N-B EXIIIBITDRS EXIIIBITIUN i GAR FERRY SERVICE l. - Borden, P. E. l.“ 21st. Inclusive lly Thornton W. With mother love naught can com- pars For wlt and will to do and dare. —Old Mother Nature. Mrs. Pronghorn. the Antelope was alone on the Great Prairie. At lea-st that is what you probably would have tilought had you been near enough to see her. ‘That ll what vwo Coyotes thought when they first saw her. The rest of the band of which she was a member were nowhere in sight. But she wasn't alone. She only seemed to be alone. She wanted to seem to be alone. She was pretending to be alone. But all the time not too far away were two precious babies Wink hidden in the grass. The eves of the Antelope folk l" V"? lime and dark and beau- tiful.’ and very keen. Mrs. Prong- homs eyes were large mq an]; and very beautiful. They we" 1°V¢1Y Wes and they were as keen as they were lovely, m; m, on m the Great Prairie knew better how to use her eyes than did Mm Pwflllhorn. And never for an in- "N" did she forset to use them. Mother Iovpwqg on gun-d. ‘mtcm 1118 for any enemy who might mp. "nun-n"... N w-“ ,, _,,", Contract Bridge By Josephine Culbertson t "asMslseasslasasslnalasnasnnnlas aansdnnsardad EVERYTHING I! COMPARATIVE fact that a certain play may have only a remote chance for suc- cess is nothing against it. if alter- native plays sire even lee; attrac- tive. Considcr this deal, played at match-Point duplicate. Northdr-lra V, East-Z I ulnerabie. . lcoss uxss 13°." as s‘ ‘ ‘is _ ~- ':<"l ‘g w E QKIO ’ sax-ea '3 4.10s,“ 9 ' b‘|w‘~,_-4* l QAQJ1072 99o coed . - flit The bidding at quite a few tab- les resulted in two-spade contracts by South. In most cases the defenders col- lected two club tricks, two hearts and two diamonds. Only at one cular traffic will for the period mentioned: Lv. Capo Tormentinc Pier 9:10 a.m. 10:85 n.m. 1:00 p.111. 2:40 p.n1. 4:30 p.n1. 7:30 p.n1. 9:00 pm, 10:30 p.m. (Atlantic Standard Time) CANADIAN NATIUNAL RAILWAYS and Bordon, l’. n. 1., roi- the period Auruse 11th w Aurult 111i in elusive, 11ml will supersede the regular advertised Sunday MW!" I Cape T." Lv. Borden Pier 0:10 mm. 10:85 am. 1:00 pm. 2:40 p.111. 4:80 p.111. 1:50 p.m. 0:00 p.m. 10:80 nus llioad lslands-Baribou Ferry Service Thr- (Tnnnectlnl PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND k NOVA SCOTIA linlflv lnc-imllntz Sunday-STANDARD TIMI Cchczlulo for June 23 to Sent. 25 lncllllivfii Milking 0 Round Trips Dlll)’ il A.l'i. EACH ll/CEK DAY-STANDARD TIME iioltéaumheriand lilIAll QFl-"Nilfi: (!i1:ll'luti0lrl\vl|. l‘ RI. Ll-lwncizrlr r.\- nh-"uaussr ‘Arwr- ‘ IIEERD ‘COUT Y0.’ THEN ‘XLY YU IS AB$QFUTELY pnrrlcmzxeso ro yfl-illT ll YO'ON£_ FAULTfONE-‘FAUKT 7 Link Between 3 P.l\l. 5 EM. 8 RM. It RM. Ferries Limited table did South manage to make two spades. 'I‘his was the course of play: Wat opened the club icing and drifted to the ten of hearts. De- clares called for dummy's king. East won and returned a club. West toot his second trick in that suit, then shifted back to hearts. East cashed his queen and to avoid setting up the eight of hearts (when South's nine dropped) led a low card in the heart suit to let .his partner ruff. It was somewhat tempting for South to discard a diamond on this trick, because, if West had one mom low heart, dummy‘: eight- spot would win. Moreover, it ap- pearled almost sure that South would have to lose two diamond tricks in any event. so why not take this chance to get rid of a loser? Alfter more thorough ana- lysis. however. South decided s- gainst the discarding plan. The opponents‘ leads and plays in hearts convinced. him that. West was now void of the suit and would rufd, so nothing could be gained by discarding a diamond from the closed hand Instead. South ruffled the heart relurrn hiph, drew trump s and ruffed rllwvmyis inst heart. then led the ace nnd a low diamond. What he had hops-d for came to pass -- East, in with the diamond king, had to make a return that permit- tsd South to discard a diamond J Burgess) Mrs. Pronghorn the Antelope was alone on the Great Prairie pen that way. “See before you are seen" is one of the rules by which the Antelope folk live. So it was that Mrs. Pronghorn saw Young Coyote while he was still far away. saw him before he saw her. It was the same way when later lids-s. Coyote, who was called Swifty. appeared. Each time when Mrs. Pronghorn first saw them she was some distance from her babies. By the time those Prairie Wolves did see her she was still farther from the helpless lit- tle kids. That is what baby Ante- lope: are called. "kids," just as are babies of the Goat folk. She was not afraid of those Wolves herself. but she was for the kids, “That Coyote don't know I have babies so will not be looking for them, but might just chance to wind one. So the thing for me to do is to lead him far away," thought she. as she watched Young Coyote while pretending not to see him. Perhaps she chuckled softly as she watched him creep- ing through the grass. trying his best not to steal close to her with- out being seen, and ail the time thinking he wasn't seen. That sort of hunting. trying to make an ap- proach without being discovered, is called stalking. Young Coyote was a good stalker. "1'll run just fast enough to keep out of his reach, pretending there is something the matter with me," Mrs. Pronghorn planned, wander- ing about slowly as she nibbled at the grass, pretending she was graz- i ng. when the young Wolf was as near as she dared let him get she pretended to be frightened and dashed a/way. instantly he was after her almost at her heels. But that was as near as she let him get. Instead of dashing away at top speed she kept Just far enough ahead for him to think she couldn't run any faster, and that if he kept on he could tire her out and so catch her. .Wh_en,they were far. far away from those precious bahim she $909981 pretending. Then she ran away from him with ease. After a while he gave up the chase. she kept right on until the flashes of her white rump patches far away was all he could see of her. Sure that he had gone about other business she trotted around so as to approach from another direc- tion the piece where the kids had been left. All the time she watched sharply for danger, not forgetting to use her nose as well as her eyes. She did not go directly to the babies but began grazing a short distance from them. On their part the kids had kept still. as fist as possible, their little ears laid back. They looked like nothing more than two very small hea/ps of sand. They could have fooled the sharpest eyes. They gave off no scent. As long as they did not move sharp eyes and a good nose might have passed very nggi‘ n; them without discovering them. They were not together. but quite a distance apart, so that if one should be found the other might escape. Later when Mrs. Coyote, Swifty, appeared Mother Pronghorn tried the same tricks. But Swifty, a mother herself, guessed what they meant. She guessed there were bwbv Anlelupes and she didn't fol- frcm~ one hand vuhiie he ruffed in, t": 1 "-1; ard so he lost only one‘ d! mend lrick. low Mrs. Pronghorn tar, but went home lo tcll her male what she guessed and plan how they might find those kids. {anus on: rsun’ o‘ nuns-snooze alvlu. as. NAM S AND LiKl TSlTfi-E DOWN’ l~l'L ViFl. AH SEES BY YO SIGN Y'0 GOT Q15. AMILABLLAVNLABIJ- - s." Al. can wlr A swgn‘ PWIF OI King of The Royal Mounted ,;'___ _.._u urn! Bums; . WHAT Aliktll DOM!’ OUT‘ AFIEE 114M ? ' LISSENMWHAT 0O 7H4 T MOUNT/E E/DE 410A Y. BUTfi/FS GOMVA 5054A’ B4IKAMD (‘A7234 Th” PH57EAIDED 7Z7 “ ' 00c 1/0/2555 HERE KID.’ gfilfeéslégirii/lem 1s oz/srovsé Tl-IA PAGE SEVEi i .. A by Zane Grey w; SHOULD s: soon. THET/l/EF 15.1w smear/cs us.’ - f LOOK. lnsreaJ cor six OF MY OWN AN’ I GOTTA SOMETIMES WHEN ms Mlssus l5 our.’ so YOU cor cnoumser Aclo55 "me srneer...swl.loar now, move Atoms.’ - l..-“ _ ndsml YOU PUT MRS- BLIMP’S HAT 9 WHERE ON EARTH DID f _/ e ..m,x..n.-..-y-s|nr~.na¢ as" TIPPY AND "CAP" STUBI LL ON ACCOUNTTA COUSIN MILLIE TELLIN’ YOU TO MAKE ME GIVE HIM A BA - ‘IOJTPPIE WON'T (UME HOME?! wuv oowr You ran. HEQ "lo so HOME rs - Pan's eons "ro A worst” I ’COUNTTA us: WON'T 5TAY WHILE HEQE~AN’ NOW nwpllzs . -=,_v_-_-. hi’ WHEN I GO N ‘fl-IE l-DUSE i’i.L PEETEND I'M 516K 5O l’ KIN GiT QJT OF GOIN‘ To Tl-E TEQQ TONIGHT!’ m1. n. In“ 10911:‘? TILLIE THE TOlLEk you MEAN AFTER PiTCHlNG HAY AU. oAv, You snu. HAVE ENOUGH sueasv "ro so -ro_A BARN. oAuce? SURE ~ TlLUE 0H - MAGGIE — IVE GOT A 5DLITTIN' HEADACHE —l DON'T Tl-JIUK l’ KIN TO THE OPEQA ly George McMunli A5l< »ou TO H|'l' ME EIGHT ‘IE6 -AN‘ I'M GOQNA IT l’! ; r . . WITH .. WHY was’; you COME smoweurrlwatrrwoaelss ' cnraousk-eosuwfislflflll-I 1 mvlssmooufirls more: ,..: cAR? suuckstntuefl WA PLANNINWO WAtk. rrs on. l c» ;, FIVE Mans ~‘ nous oo naAtw ‘ “M60? oanwrzws , . '—i vn-lvpooo 7):. HUADIS» Y