JULY t I9, 1949 BINGO iloly iietiooner iiall Tflliiiiill s30 The prises are the same as m“. prevailing at other hinges in the city. mi GUARDIAN; CHARLOTTETOWN Be the first in your Prov- ince to own CHINCIIILLAS‘ (not Rabbits) We have a few for sale. Proven breeders. Native born. For particulars, write, HEBRON FUR FARM P0 80x13 . lly Thornton W. Burgess) . . , Hebron Nova Sootla s“!!! i011! you 1 find ' . When alone thxlbvrlgomo kind. p”, i i —Yap Yap the Prairie Dog. ..,_,, _, ' "This is just as good a home as the one we had m leave,» defined LIVE STUCK EXIIIBITORS Yap Yap the Prairie Dog. l-le was sitting on the doorstep oi the new home he and Mrs. Yap Yap had worked so hrrd to make out on the Great Prairie. "Ln all but one thing,” agreed AT THE CHARIJOTTETOWN FAIR Mrs. Yap Yap. Ygriii/hat one thins?" barked Yap must have all cattle blood tested for Bang’: Disease "we have no neighbors," replied anytime within 60 days of show. Mrs. Yap Yap. "Jack Rabbit comes around al- most every day." retorted Yap Yap. ‘Jack Rabbit is nice. l-le is neighborly. But he isn't. a Prairie Dog. l-le isn't one of our own a-a mus-e take-off M50; Dump-Rakes; PotveruMoisiers; Side-deliv- ery Rakes. Scuillers. L. ll. MaoLeoii & Sons Victoria. P. E. Island ATTEiiTliiN FARMERS WE HAVE FOR SALE THE FOLLOWING NEW AND USED MASSEY HARRIS MAClllNEliYs No. 31 Mower. 6-H. w! l Steel-tired Farm Waggon -- -- Sllghtiy used Pony Tractor with Potato Cultivators New Pony Tractor equipped with lights. pulley. and power kind." said Mrs. Yap Yap. She sounded a wee bit mourniul. “Don't tell me you are lone- some!" exclaimed Yap Yap. "You've got me." he added. Mrs. Yap Yap nodded. "If I didnt have you I guess I would go straight back where we came from even if I knew that that dreadful Blackfoot the Ferret is still there. But I want neighbors. folks of my own kind around me." replied Mrs. Yap Yap. "I want a lot oi them," she added. "Then you are lonesome." said i nrsnnm~s " - Contract Bridge By Josephine Culbertson . Price 5125.00 Price $120.00 Price $150.00 Price $850.00 sis-sensuous, i TRICK VS. STOPPEI Wood islands-Caribou Ferry Sorvio .3132; fitilniiiiiitreiig: 53:3 The Connecting Link Between PRINCE anwann ISLAND a NOVA SCOTIA daily including Sunday-STANDARD TIME lchedule ior June 28 to Sept. 25 inclusive:- ichedule for the present:- ‘Prinu Nova"-Leave Wood Islands ‘Prince Nuva"—Leave Caribou .. .. ‘Charles A. Dunning"—l.ea\'e Caribou .- mnui“ a. Dunning"—Leave Wood Islands o an. 1 1am. a ma. For daily information, listen to CFCY at a A.M.' aacn wean DAY-STANDARD rum iiorthumiierlanii Ferries Limited HEAD OFFICE: ity. lt may be far more important as a stopper, even if it is never used! Observe this case: CHINESE AND BOOKS In the middle of the 18th cen- 7-17 South dealer. , Making d Round Trips Dally Both sides vulnerable. North-South 60 0n 900N- .. ‘I A.lil. 11 AM. ii RM. . J 7 4 9 A.M. l P.1\L is P.l\l. ' K 10 9 6 3 .. 1 arr. u am. a mu. . J 5 3 pp K 5 A g Q K 8 3 zqsra WNE 915K g e s 4 O K Q i 6 ;Q 1 r z S a w '- Charlottetown. ram. ‘ :1?‘ 1° 9 '-‘ Q a 10 z TRICKY DISTINCTION 4A 9 5 6 3 — _ Th ridding: The zebra is a light brown an- so“; ‘ we“ Norm l”. Pass 1 Pass iury. more books had been print- lmal with dark brown or black . . , 1 Q in Chinese than other iarig- stripes —- not. a dark bronn an- l: h” INT P“, uages combined. QIJIBKIES ‘imal with light stripes. H. P”, p“, p“, BY Kilt TEYIiULIIS On the score. South should have ,_. “'-"—"- b‘ i== i. . ti. ‘ytii!’ lyi' Hnrrzi “i<!~¢—-@- ‘Re~1»ml_=“__@ let North play a one-notrump contract; or. at any rate, South should have played his own two- club contract better! West opened the diamond nine. East put up the queen; South won. promptly cashed the heart ace. then entered dummy with a club to cash the heart king. After making the valueless discard of a low diamond, South returned to his own ace of trumps and then set out to establish his spade suit. East took the first spade trick and returned the jack of hearts. South ruffed and led another spade. This let West take his ace and draw South‘s trumps. If South had not prematurely cashed the high hearts. he could not have been forced to ruff a heart. and would have had s trump left at this point. As it wasuWest was able to win a trick with the queen of hearts after he had drawn trumps. and East then took the setting trick with the diamond king. South could have made his contract easily if he had simply ignored the hearts. After winning the first trick. he should have drawn two rounds of trumps and then started on the spades. No defense could then prevent him from winning three trumps. two spades. at least one heart. and "who; did you expect — ourGuordion Wont Ad sold it was m," diamonds’ ‘or the required wdier pipe, didn't it?" \.l’L ABNER total. i R53. '*‘ ll? KIRIY llA.'-HA.'Z'- THIS STATUE vnsrr‘ LOOK so HANDSOME WITH A MOI-l w rrs HEAD.'.’— ;-—/ 0 rr ‘lfli-Klbfl-B-BQT- ? ?- lflfllI-I DON'T mm’! NOT w REAL urz- P ?- '- F~THIS IS A N‘ resale-mar’: m?! AN "1t is too still herel" complained Mrs. Yap Yap Yap Yap. r "Yes, I'm lonesome -- lonesome ior neighbors to talk with every day. to visit with back and forth, to have good times with and quar- rel and make up with," barked Mrs. Yap Yap a bit sharply. "You mean you don't like liv- ing oii by ourselves," said Yap Yap. "That's right. and you don't like it any better than I do. You know you don't," retorted Mrs. Yap Yap. -Yap Yap admitted this was so. This new home was perfect in every way but for its lack of neighboring homes. Prairie Dogs are social folk. Just as some folks you know are country folks, and some are city folks, so it is with iurreci and feathered folk. some want to be oii by themselves and others want neighbors oi their own kind living close around them. The Prairie Dogs are that kind. They are social folk and cannot be truly hnPPY alone. They are city iolk, as it were. "It is too still here," complained Mrs. Yap Yap. Yap Yap knew lust whet she meant. He shared in this feeling. It was too still. You see in Yap- ville, the Prairie Dog town in which they had been born and lived hitherto. there had been the constant sound of many voices yapping and barking excepting when Everybody was asleep. Now they couldn't get used to the still- ness. They wanted company, a lot oi it. to make his new home perfect. Then a morning or two after this they had a joyous surprise. When they came out early in the morning for breakfast it was to find two old friends staring at their homes as if they couldn't be- lieve their own eyes. It was a happy surprise on both sides. The newcomers had also been driven from the home town by fear to search for a place to build a new home. They were frightened, lost. and in despair when they saw the doorstep mound of the Yay Yaps. At once there was much touch- ing of noses in friendly greetings and a lot of eager gossiping. The newcomers had much news of the old home town and it was all bad. Blackfoot the Ferret was still liv- ing there and whenever he entered a home the owners were seen no more. There were more and more deserted homes. The owners had been killed or had left Yapville to seek homes elsewhere. "You will stay and make your home here!" cried Yap Yap. The others agreed that they Wmlld- They chose a place for it, and 1798M to dig. Two days later two more wandered that way and were given a warm welcome. They $90 promptly began digging a home. So a‘ town born which in time would grow to have many homes. “What do you think of our new home now?" asked Yap Yap. Yen. and happily rubbed no"; with him. SALT DOES THE TRICK DARWIN. Australia — (C?) — Drovers. with packhorses carrying salt, set out recently tobring to lower ground 16,000 Hereford cattle posturing on mountainous ranges. Cattle gather from miles around to lick the salt. and horsemen round them up and herd them from the uplands. Br AL CAP! rare MI 1o DISMAL POINT. m] 5mm consensus ' orwa us-ri , King oflThe Royal Mounted’ P/s/rr AF7EE m5 svz/ur one 5.9m 5x50! War/Armani nrmaaesp IEIT use: #52:. urn flibPaldt/EP mm Tl/‘k/IIBPAA/D mar MYSVEIQV house .' f g race tNllNE A by Zane Grey xx-Isomeoue l'LL SURE M\55'lM. H! Manatee m‘ sWELLEST ...ER...GIRL IN OUSIN MiLLiE BROUG ’CNUFF ctdes TO STAY A YEASI- BUT POP SAYS HE OH ot= [PUTTING mu on ENTIRELY rew J - SOMETHING SPECIAL] YES. n-umc cm Goasrma save sue wisues ELDOQA HAD HAD us»: FIGHT win-i MR. Ci-iIQDLEBEF-ZQY FOQE WE ASKED COUSIN MiLLlE "ro ‘Ti-i’ \X/EDDiN'-- WELL" 1M5 BEEizNTl-iihikioli IWiSi-i one wot/m MARQY Mil-l oettvvw» our COUSIN MlLLiE save nonsense-- CORNERS ll 7f ' / so rve ueasn. om NGiNG UP FA rIiEl |665-YOU'VE 601' "ro om Mom; ATTENTION "It is perfect.“ replied Mrs. Yap HAD IN VH5. i ocmce =02 A MONTH - n: I DON'T GET BACK ON THE .109 I'LL QOON BE our 0F BUSINESS - nasr (Maven: MAGGIE vs lanai-ir- VACATYON we El l’ HAVENT BEENTOTHE WELCOME BACK-Ml? J|665 l’. WAS PDEPAPING CU? wit. ir/s MEAN. BUT HE INSISTS HELL GET A iroe wastrel no i awe oesewveo FATHERJFIAT “MEN ‘SUNS Ni no: u magi-n was»: u: hoiswr WANT moon’, n: 5M5 ui CAN'T éifiwfi? i|\">{',‘, um innate vein-nu Iremrtal‘! i- - - "HE WILL NEVEQ BE ‘I ViCE-DQESJDENT OF n, nit; Vi"; Adams ‘ffiikQ. m. ly George McMonul HIGTOQV O JIQEQ 8 co. ~WE DOLJELED OLIQ cQQFITS OVEI? ANY DEEWOLJS MONTH - Iy Merry Noeniqsen osrwisuiue! somrrwes M94125 Dowi-ltzioi-rr‘ AS1bHi$HnJGi