- 15. Mimicked — Mi. '|.' J. YEO IIAS ' RESIJMEII ‘PRAOTIGE \ <ifihdhhfifiE SAVE TIME And IHHIEY Buy new and be certain oti getting an early start on your sew building. LARTEB BROS. l0 Passmore Street Phone l232-L‘ ' ' lasauurv s 1%» _ ADAILY, C RQ S_'SWQRD_ i ACROSS 46. Send forth i0. Halli 1 Edible 47. Wither 10. Carting molluslr 48. Droops in vehicle - 5 Jewish the middle 20. Triangle -~ a» month DOWN having two l 9. Minute i. Ferryman equal sides l nber oh on river 24. Music note a plant Styx 25. Land- 10 Title ot imyth.) measure “B313 u‘; mg respect _ 2. Class 27. Amerioan [mun m1 [m l1. An Asiatic 3. Assistance author r --- DANCE Siissysldo lallroolil TONIGHT Eastern Rhythm Boys ADMISSION 35o Phone Z498 Provincial Agents ior Iron Fireman Equipment HUME] HLIUU mammal 4. Native o! and editor ‘kllerlss’! All"! l2 Cutting Brazil 28. Unable to 85 Out instrument 6. Question speak 38: Narrow l4. Noah's boat 6. Ate dinner 29. Musical woven stri] i5.Arabic"Z" ‘l. Dry dramas i1. Prepareior 8. Purity 31. lniter to. A ship's jail e2. Poem publicati ii. Wan 32. Salutes M. Wine l8. Behold! i8 Boy's jacket 33.Cercaigrih receptacle i9. Animated 21. Negative reply 22 m» measure I3. Malt I beveragee 24. Male adults l5. Keel-billed _ cuckoo 20. Fetish l iAir.) I8. June-bu; B0. Too 32. Depart 3t. Aioit l5. A light lunch l6. Radium isym.) 7. Apportioa 8Q; Earth as l1; dell 40l ager 41. A shout o! applause l3. Roman house DAILY ORYPTOQUMIl-llerds how to work it: AXYDLIAAXI IaLONGIELLOW One letter simply stands ior another- In this example A ll tllll ior the three L's. X ior the two 0's, etc. Single letters. apos- trophes, the length and iormstlon or the words are all hints. no day the code letters are diflerent. AOryptogramQaotaIloa UN UC CKUM NLKN YUBNU AGI CBIQMG GPGV NLG YHMO-GBISUAUMOO. Yesterday's Cryptoqlsotel rr rs orsoaiicsrui. ro swu- our AGAINST ma: ems: sroml: rwrca-raovalta. Pistributed by Ring Features Syndicate. lac. (By Thornton W. THE SPOT run‘ Movitn Oitener than you may dream Triiles are not what they seem. -Old Mother Nature In winter Jumper the Hare, he who oiten is called Snowshoe Rab- bit. is dressed in white. He n an white but the tips oi his long ears. which are dark. Hts smaller cou- sin, Peter Rabbit. oiten called Cot- Wfltflil. doesn't have a white coat and often has envied his big cousin that white coat, but only when there was snow on the ground. "We have to hide under some- thing or in something where we can't be seen but Cousin Jumper "in hide in his own coat. He can Si! right in the open in plain sight ' "yet not be seen. I wish we could d. that." said Peter to Mrs. Peter. "Don't make iooiish wishes. I! you would stay M: home in the dear Old Brier-patch as you should you would have no use ior a white coat" retorted Mrs Peter tartiy. Peter said no more. He did his ~ wishing silently. Usually that 1a the best way to wish especially iooiish wishing. Most ‘wishing 1s . 1 l . _ Jumper was crouching under a small hemlock tree white coat than Peter has. Peter may not think so. but Mother Nature knows. she ‘gives what is really needed. and ii and when it is no longer needed she takes it away. So in summer, when nothing around him is white, Jumper? white coat has been replaced with a brown one. in summer a white coat would be- as easily seen as a brown coat in winter. Now there is another in i116 Green Forest, a very Small Person. ioolish. Contract Bridge By Josephine Culbertson N0 MEDALS! North-South in today's deal did not distinguish themselves in the bidding! ' ‘Néitfileaier Both sides vulncrw... 1K1 ‘one QAQJ75 m ‘A1106 5.4a: ‘Q10! 9853 N Qqase O3 W E 2 49154 S 91042 = 81' QA963 & 9am"! exiles -bK9\ Thehidding: North East loath Woes 1Q Pass Pass 1 2Q Pass INT Pass Pass Pass A mere glance discloses thirteen cold tricks in the North-South hands, and since those tricks were quickly claimed by South, it was inevitable that a bittel; exchange oi "charges" should have taken place immediately between the partners. North was particularly critical I oi South's iailure to show his good diamond fit adding that he lNorth) had taken the three-no- trump call to be a “closing” bid. South, ior his part insisted that his Jump to three notrump had been the announcement oi sub- stantial general strength. and thus had been an implicit guaran- tee oi a iit in at least one oi North's suits. South observed, with some acerbity, that North might lhave made at least one more bid on his iar-above-minimum holding. There can be little doubt that South had the better oi this argument and that it was North who deserved the major share oi the blame. Even though South could have made matters simpler ior North by mpporting the dia- monds, the fact remains that North should not have considered passing to three .notrump and also, that he was iar oii the track in calling South's jump to three no- trump a "game closing" bid! There is no such thing as a game-clos- ing bld when a player jumps in notrumpi The very least North should have done in view oi South's strong bidding. was to raise the notrump or even to rebid his dia- mond suit, thus announcing that he could aiiord to go past the nine-trick level and then his side would certainly have reached at least l. small slam. Jllmher has lnore need oi a "spot moved. His eyes ilew wide who wears white in winter and brown in summer. but not ior the same reason. N0, sir, not ior the same reason at all. It is ior ex- actly the opposite reason. It is Shadow the Weasel, caller Ermine when he is wearing his white coat. Both Jumper and Shadow have white coats to help them irom be- ing seen by others, but Jumper! white coat is to help h'm avoid be- ing seen by those who hunt him. while Shadows is to keep him from being seen by those whom he hunis. Jumper was crouching under a small hemlock tree. It was day- time and he was resting, tor he had been out all night. He is one oi the night iolk who ieel saier from hungry hunters when run- ning about a-iter dark when in daylight. He looked like a little mound oi snow on which were two small dark spots. They were the dark tips oi his otherwise white long ears laid back along his shoul- ders. He was very comfortable and felt very safe squatting there in his white coat. He had taken sev- eral short naps, sleeping with his ears open, as do most oi the little people oi the Green Forest. It was when he opened his eyes after on oi’ these short naps that he iirst noticed a small black spot on the snow a little way from him. He didn't remember seeing it before, but probably he hadn't noticed it. it might be the end oi’ a stick sticking up through the snow. it wasn't near enough ior him to really see. or perhaps he didn't really look at it. Anyway he didn't give it a thought. He was just about to doze again when he thought that little black open and he stared. Had it moved or hadn't it? It was very still there in the Green Forest. Not a single Merry Little Breeze was about. He must have imagined that spot o! black had moved. Ii it was just the end oi a buried stick, how could it move? It couldn't. Oi course hot. His eyes began to close again. Then they flew wide open. Could you have looked in them just then you would have seen them suddenly iili with fright, iright so great that it was terror. That little black spot had moved. It was moving now, and Jumper knew it ior what it was, thetip oi a small white tail the tail oi one whom he ieared as much as any other hunter in all the ‘Green Forest perhaps more. What had looked like a very small lump of snow had become alive. It was Shadow the Weasel. Jumper held his breath. He didn't so much as twitch a whisker. Did Shadow know that .he was in the neighborhood? Jumper wanted to take to his long heels and leave that place at top speed, but he didn't. Perhaps he was too irighi- entvl to move. Anyway he didn't not even when Shadow turned and came straight toward him. L|'L ABNER VAND, NOVLSIR - lF YOJLL iLANCi UP- MISS mm FFFAIRIE - m: ~' .4 . as: '2“ V ‘all Qt I r f‘ b “L4 By AL cm» __ rna GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN _ . ~~ ‘b-YALYXITLNT) fi/Arwmvaso 4144/ amnes- Me 4/1240 r-rx/i fl/DGE... 1-12; 6E7’ I- r/r/s... r/ME/ < 1 ma." s, s».- .. h...“ ca. ‘ml-m nu I1 rm.‘ lemurs lyalhi. u‘ PAGE SEVEN s; Ham Fill? m: lumoS sol-res A or couase z DON'T SILK WWII-hm‘ MIND HOLDING HANDS m YER POIFUME I5 THE mines .. IT'S soorolnuss... ROMANTIC-O . .. ovta we KIN co venom‘ SMALL town AWEATOUPSOOEY... OH 1T5 JJSTA DON'T HAVE THOSE SOPHISYICATED LOOK, BEAUTIFUL ...we'ae I oouua oars svlrr NITE JHERES A LOTTA POISSNAL nlmos z 00m BUT. I DON'T WANT "r0 TALK To vou-uusr Your? ooe/ F/ THEY COME IN FIVE I55SORTED FLAVOIZS O THE FWTY PLEASE l ‘Innis? ozscaves AKJSSmPUT By George htcManlfi l YES-COUNT DE HOLIQE-YOU SAV THE LECTURE l5 A1‘ EIOHT WHAT ARE YOU TALKIN’ ABOUT Q1665 ? Tl-ilQ DINTY MOORE-I SAID MAHAFFEWG CHOWDER PAP“! l5 AT EIGHT YES - I LINDEPSTANDCOLINT- I'D LOVE TO‘ ATTEND THE LECTLIPE - i Li. AGK MR5. J6EE- lF WE HAVE ANY O Carr ma. x." Vellum lynfimg m. walla nghrs leer-re. I l<NOW-_il665 ~Z HEARD YOLI PHON- lme - NOW vou HLIQPY AND DON'T KEEF THE COUNT wAiTlNfi - TIPPY AND "CAP" STUBb Biy Edwina BOY! HE'S "roo GUlET LATELY! t HOPE u: ISN'T comm’ DOWN V.’ may’: 5 to“! rhnm shah-l. -SOMETHIN'S WORQYIN’ THAT TI'LLIE THE TOILER WELL, HE can raxstm oer»! w an waters A LOAF OF BREADAN’ TWO POUNDSAfiilE sueAQ, m can}. Imbnv asa- ma» i! ‘ y)” 1315i? iVlAfiNilfilifALMfid - iTl-lOtJGlWi HEARDV-iifi-OIE