...- ,wAY: . y . 1. ONLY IICE KIISPIIS iav ”Smspl Cvnrklel pl” when you pour on the will Ilirw Rice xmpi. tomovvcwl Druids": MIDI! HLK" Csvul Cam: in 1 amt New N1-01. Eurmny Sue Manly 5' -ll. Ilquiu am "lllea rm-mu" In a r Ill delirious hranrl M In-Ion-rt trlrllmnrll nl nu: Kali Ir Pom any Mf'.aaar1a.l.t1l..t an-brim"-ll mp l'n(".rl(ltV HINT ruy K. In" Pu nl mnmn, 143', OPENING DANCE EAST ROYALTY RINK HALL Friday. May 11 George Chappelie and His Merry Islanders Bus Leaving I.M.T. 9:30 Adniissioii 50 cents Canteen service 1?;-ea Check R00, 1'1 j STELLA MARIS HALL NORTH nusnco E- WEDNESDAY EVENING. MAY mm. DRAMA FESTIVAL PLAYOFFS Senior plays from Lorne Valley, Hunter River an York will compete ' Admission 50:: Captain Briggs of lizllilax will be the'Adjudicator mm Curtain 8:15 sharp d Attention Farmers Now in Stock John Deere Lime Sowers Both Tractor & Horse Drawn Malpeouo Highway A. Pickard Farm Tractors Ltd. ., Qmsi GUARDIAN. ciIAiu.b'r'rsTowN lly Tlloratoa Tm: NEW Nualllou The small in use who seem unfit May in! the end prevail through or . -eold Mother Nature. I O O whitefoot the Wood Mouse is a '-'.0(.'0Qi!'J';1C":”.":"ZtC" -- --: -.n,--. 3 E contract Bridge i g By Josephine Culbertson -.:'.z----.- N. .'-. .--auunvaruwzctwxag. NOT EQUIVALENT In the following deal. reported by the Bridge World magazine. de- clarer seems to have a sheer guess betwe two finesses, but closer inspection reveals the superiority of one play over the other. hstdeoler. Both sides vulnerable. Match-point duplicate. 4 MAX-T36 90.1 ' QA65 4.73 497 ' ' 103 .1035 WNE :7l82 09813 .942 1.965 S 4.AQ41 QQ4 2 VAK9 oxiin .pKJios this was the bidding at one table of the duplicate match: East South West North Pass 1 N T Pass 6 N T Pass Pass Pass At rubber bridge, North probab- ly would have reached a spade slam, but at match-points he pre- ferred the notrump contract. No lead seemed very propitious to West; he finally selected his top spade. hoping it would do noharia. South won with the queen and led the diamond Jack, obviously in the hope that West,would cover. West; was not that gullible, however. South then decided to play East for the diamond queen. so he put up dummy's ace and finessed to the ten on the way blch W955 won the trick, and it did not inat- - ter what he returned-Southcouldl not win 12 tricks outside of the. club suit, and. needless to say. when he led a club from dummy- East was not slow in putting "Po the ace. It was not South's guess in diamonds for which he could be criticized-it. was the fact that 119- "touched" the diamond suit wheiii W. lingual very small person. or all the folks in the Green Forest he is one of the smallest. only Teeny weeny the shrew, and the members of his family. are smaller, and only Mrs. Whitefoot and -other Wood Mice are as small. Among an the Green Forest folk none have more adventures than do Whitefoot. and Mrs. Whitefoot; none have to run and dodge and hide fog their lives so often, not even Teeny Weeny. You see. there are no small folks more hunted for by hungry folk with curved claws and sharp teeth and hooked beaks. They are hunt- ed by day and they are hunted by night. Thus all the time fierce. keen eyes on the ground. in trees. and in the air, are watching for them. Just living is exciting for Whlteloot the Wood Mouse and pretty little Mrs. Whltefoot. They were living in an old stump at the foot of a tall tree in the Green Forest. They had lived there all winter and it had been a very happy winter. That old stump was just about the best home they ever had had. It was partly hollow way down into the roots. Half way up there was a doorway too small for anyone big- ger than a Mouse to get through. There was another underground entrance also too small for any- one but a Mouse. They felt they were very safe in that oldstump. They had found it in the fall in time to store away a lot of seeds and some bccchnuts. Now and then Rueddy Fox or Mrs. Reddy (Continued on page 16 he had so much better R. chance in a different direction. When the diamond finesse lost. the contract was lost-but that need not have been the case if South tried for a finesse in clubs, whether or not he was successful! As the club hon- ors lay, of course, South could not have gone wr ng-but let's as- sume that esi. had the club queen and East the club ace. South's lead of a club to his jack would lose to the queen. and West could return a club to defeat. the contract-but how would he know that? Declarer would have made the same club may if he hid Mid A-J-10. intending to take two flnesses in the suit. Thus. West. could not return clubs with any high degree of assurance. and. even after guessing wrong mclubs. South would still have another chance in the diamond finesse. In lother words. the immediate diam- ond finesse was conclusive, one way or the other. but the club play might easily preserve a. second chance. Through the facilities May, as follows: SOURIS HOSPITAL- ' Monday, May 14th MONTAGUE HOSPITAL- Monday, May 21st ALBERTON ' HOSPITAL- SUMMERSIDE- Tuesday, May 15th Every Thursday Every Thursday Every Friday ..... .. through the mail. pointments if indicated. Medical Health and Welfare, Diagnostic Chest Clinics will be held throughout the Province during the month of Monday, May 28th ..... .. PROVINCIAL SANATORIUM- P tients for review will . R All persons who have not been in Contact with an active.case of Tuberculosis and ha"? not attended these Clinics before are reqtifsltjd tItJie(;flJ3; suit their family doctor or.their district u lC k Nurse. either of whom will be D19aS9d to ma '3 39' E. M. FOUND. M.D., (J.llL-. of the Department of 1:30- 4:30 P.M. ., . . 1:30 4:30 P.M. ........... .. 1::30-e 4:30 P.M. ..... .. 9:30-12:30 P.M. 1():()()--.l2:()U A.M. 1:30-- 4:00 P.M. 1130- 4:00 P.M. a ppointment receive Director of Clinics. By Al Capo ' CAME! IVE BEEN H A TERRIBLE TIME NOW. SILK JERRI SHE'S UPSTAIRS ING . .. FDNEV, I'M SO OIAD VG! AVING WITH X THAT ru. mu: 1:: mx KING E 1 ' PAST, JEEP... MOWER WGHT Pic IND HI EXTENSION BE E2 23 .-. g , - In ldl I-n...I.u..i..rnuuv:.L1., W DoT'i'ypIIfPLi5: , HEY! em: out or: MY GARDEN! i WltATSAMA11El...WHKT IF AIE VA BlaINKIN' so MUCH F0 .. LEMME SEE. t V . '-mears norumg, '. KiD...NoT EVEN ” I A SCRATCNI)... ; -g By Carl Atido-iscri E D E 9 5-II i l , . . .- 4::::..c:.;.;J By Ruford ms seems m as " RANCH couma -- NOT FARM LAND ,1; 7'. ' FIPPY. AND "CAP." STUBS . ORWELL STUDI AN CA T00--! I BRINGING up FATHER Yessin r E T ' J?)oL?b?s.g:5'Cw's2N' cLItIIc SCHEII I ANY By Edwina N gsi,aJ. vastness? 7 cup Li R Ti-i ax ones ri,.es:r an I By George McManus The (way M-tom Aden Irwin. lsr. 'n-EN wen. SEE mu A-r EIc-iur- IM so ANXlOLlS To HAVE sou MEET, MY I-UGBAND - 3 4 st gags 5 E . 0 :32 NOTHING DotNa-MA6t3IE- WEVE I-IAD VIGITOPS EVERY NIGHT THIQ , VVEEK-Ml TIRED-I peruse TO SEE Aw n Mona VK3iTOQ5' , .. 7 we moo new -AND PUTA 'No warrants" SIGN on THE g coola- By Westover .......mu-a.L..,,- VERY PRE MANNE , ITSEEMS 50,BUTIDON'Ti UNDERSTAND WHY---SHE'S TTY AND WE LL ---sue messes ' A FINE