lg is . . ow is l. l E PROGRESSIVE OONSERIIIITIIIE r . CONVENTION A Convention ot the Progressive Conservative Associa- l tion of Queens County will be held in the Empire Theatre, Market Building, Charlottetown, the 24th. day oi November, I948, beginning at 8 P. M., tor the nomination oi two Pro- gressive Conservative Candidates to contest the next Fed- eral Election. Each Poll Chairman shall hold a Poll Meeting tor the purpose aI appointing tive Delegates to attend this Con- vcntion A tull attendance is requested. REAGH BAGNALL, President. JOSEPH. R. MACMILLAN, Secretary. l ‘lull1ll%llllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllll l. " l lllilllllllilllllilll lllllllllllllllllllnl... llIILIi VENDORS MEETING‘ M, s meeting of ltlilk Vendors Tuesday night last the main will" [rider discussion was the ever increasing cost of delivery. and ta try “rid arrive at some means of reducing aorta. liottlc losses nnd Bookkeeping for charge accounts, time lost trying to roller-t. and in some cases failure to collect, seemed to be things “m, might, he eliminated through the co-operation of Vendors and cus- tomers. and so assist in keeping prices within reasonable limits. llottle losses among the Vendors in the Charlottetown area last ‘err ivos more than $4000.00; this loss could easily be eliminate’ if I-ustomers would return them to the Vendor!- Plumbers called to make repairs tell us- some cellar shelves are rineri with milk bottles filled with Jam and PICICICU. The man on the (‘itv Dump tells us that hundreds of milk bottles go to the dump. Why not l'l‘i.lll‘ll them to your milk man Sometimes citizens phone us to know how much we will pay fnr milk bottles. We have already paid for them, why charge storage? We “III he glad to get them back. do not lthow that milk bottles are protected under the CRIMINAL CODE 0F CANADA and there are penalties for using them for any purpose except as a milk container. Costs of all supplies in connection with our business have increased thirty to fifty per cent, since milk sold at 10c n. quart, but our spread has only increased 4c on forty quarts. Other merchants doing business with probably less capital invested are allowed to add a percentage to the cost price; we are not. When milk sold at 10o a quart we paid 50c per pound fat for litany people milk. to. Sell for (‘ash ruling in illi3 that milk be on a C —Tlie War Time Prices s. Trade Board system. opened churge accounts which the Vendors cannot afford. deciding that on and half the cost of the bottle) will be collected. Bny tickets-Don't ask for (‘ Tllflft. Signed TIIE MILK VENDORS OF CIIARLOTTETOWN AREA. Vendors in the Charlottetown area: s RESOLVED sary to keep down the cost of distribution. Signed: SUNSHINE ISLAND DAIRY C. J. WOOI) CLAUDE SMITH llEAL'l‘ll PASTEURIZED MILK COMPANY .l. ROBERT DRISCOLL HARRY WOOD JOIIN FARQUIIARSON GEORGE GREGORY W. If. SMALLWOOD PURE MILK COMPANY LIMITED PURITY DAIRY BRIGHTON DAIRY DRYER JONES WILFRED HOLMES ALLISON A. HOLMES ‘jlllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilillllllllllllliillllmlllllllhlllllillllllllllllllllllllllill " ‘ E0 F0 no Supplying Aid To Britain The letters U.E.F.B. stand for The United Emer- gency Fund tor Britain, a Dominion-wide organization whose chief concern is supplying aid to Britain. The British people are in need oi tood. A Do- minian-wide fund raising campaign will be launched on November ISth. in support at this most worthy cause. Give Generously RIP KIRBY I DON'T KNOWWANDI GNIAR I NIVR SAW HIM THE OTHER Now with milk n. 15o a quart we pay 05o per pound M for milk. and, our spread has increased only the very small fraction above referred l l basis and our Milk BosrNl-spfgsed what L’ the nmner’ H anything asr . a similar ruling that milk and cream supplies be on a cash ticket‘ ln late years some Vendors as s convenience to their Cull-HIM" in some cases has resulted in lass. which Taking all facts into consideration the meeting was unanimous in alter Monday, November 15th all milk will be‘ rash or tickets, and for extra bottles a deposit of 5c (which is about‘ .-\nd we respectfully request your co-operation to return Bottles- rrilit, and pay what you owe your milk The following resolution was then passed and signed by all the lliat we the undersigned Milk Vendors of the Charlottetown Area hereby agree to a strictly cash system effective November 15th, and that we trove bottle for bottle, or a. deposit of .051: each. This is neces- THE GUARDIAN, jll-IARLOTTETOWN T ‘PAGE ELEVEN (By Thornton W. WHAT PRICE KNOWLEDGE? Ectter for a thing be lost 'lhen to pay too great s, w“ . —Biack§' the Crow. ' K-nvwledse alwsr: is desirable, but. the price can be too high, m4 often is. So when there is 80mg. "ll"! You want to know about, some knoivedgc you desire, con- sider well what you may have M, Pa)’ 101‘ it: if it will be worth what; 1' may cost. Blacky the Crow's five children were seeking knowledge. You win 58y that they were merely trying Satisfy curiosity. But what is lefllisfrms curiosity but. adding to ‘Your store o! knowledge? It may ‘not be, worth having but it L; lknowedge just the same. Some lknowledse costs too much for the one who seeks it but is priceless to others who profit by it. The five trd left: father and mother back in the Green Forest, Slipping away silently so that they might not be stopped. They were full of curiosity. They were going back to try to find out what it was about a certain. big Owl sit- ‘tlng in a tree and the cawing of ‘a hidden Crow near by that had made father and mother sure something was wrong. : The Owl was still there, sitting stlffly just where they had last seen him. He hadn't moved. Ho hadn't. so much us turned his head To judge by the way he was still staring, he hadn't so much as blinked. He didn't. blink now. And that hidden Crow was still calling He sounded excited. l-Ie was still urging them to have fun torment- ing that Owl. , Everything seemed all right ‘except. that that Owl didn't move and the Crow kept out of sight? ‘Why? The young Crows wanted ,to know, and one was going to find ‘out. What danger could there be in s hidden Crow and an Owl that didn't. move? None that any of |t,he five could think of. "lf you are going to find out. lwhy don't you go about. it?" asked a brother of the one who had boasted. "I-le doesn't dare." cried a sister. "I do, too," retorted the booster. "He was brave enough back there, but he isn't so brave now." taunted another. From back in the Green Forest came a harsh voice calling them back. They knew that voice only loo well. Many times it had inter- fered in things they were dolngor wanted to do. It had kept. them out of mischief. and more times than they know it. had kept them out or Burgess) 1* u. \ . 1;, ,\t< XIIAJQ The Owl was still there, sitting stiffly just where they had last seen him "You better hurry or fat-III will be here and stop you" warned one. "There he is! He's coming!" cried another. All turned to look. Sure enough there was Blacky headed straight for them and flying fast. At the same time he was warning them to keep away from that Owl. The young boaster knew that: it was now or never. He would have no chance after Blacky got there He spread his wings and began to climb skyward. He would fly high over that Owl so as to look down in the surrounding trees and make sure that: all was as it should be. His brothers and sisters held their tongues as they watched. They were excited, too excited to make a sound. They saw him begin t.o circle. He cried once. Nothing happened. That Owl dldnt. even look up. The young Crow circled again this time a little lower. Than something did happen. From the midst of some young hemlock trees there came a flash and a sharp, startling noise. The young Crow overhead stopped circling. HQ was falling. Above him e. few black feathers slowly floated down after him. They saw him plunge down among the trees. Then. as on wildly beating wings they flew up they saw a Man rise uom his tilde- out among those young hemlocks. the very place from which they had thought another Crow had been calling. ln his han" svas a terrible gun. They would never again see their brother, but the four frightened young Crows never again would be fooled by the treachery of a hunt- er with a stuffed Owl and imitat- ing a Crow/s call. What price knowledge? The next. story: "Blacky Does A danger. Good Turn." .' Contract Bridge Dy Josephine Culbertson ,%0 0<;>%Q Bold Bidding Rewarded The bidding by North-South in today's deal was a shade over-ag- gressive, but good play by the de- eards, made the contract. highly remunerative. South dealer. Both sides vulnerabil- 4 Q9 3 . Q Q J 5 . O K Q J 4 A 9 7 4- A A K 8 5 A J ‘I 6 4 3 9 o .1 N v 6 1 Q7632 W E 010854 4, .r s a S l» Q I g 1o Q A K 1o s 1 e Q A a 4. K 1o e a The eluding: _ South West North Ilaet 1 Q Pass 1‘ P"! e § Pass 4 I Pass 5 Q Page 6 Q ‘Pull Past Pass North probably bid two clubs with the though-t that. that action clarer, aided by a lucky position of jump to two notrump. Actually, however, the club bid "hit" South's hand sq well that. South naturally became enthusiastic, and when North then carried the tour-club bid to four hearts South felt that there was more reason than ever to investigate a slam. North might have signed of! with five hearts to South's five diamonds, but by this time both players were being car- ried along by sheer momentum. West opened the spade king, but when East gave the discouraging signal of the three-spot, West sen- sed that South had started with a singleton spade. and therefore shifted to diamonds. South won with the ace drew trumps in two leads, cashed the other diamond tricks discarding s club then cashed dummyb last trump. Now the closed hand was re- entered by ruffing the spade nine, and South laid down his remaining two trumps. discarding clubs from dummy. This was too much for West! Forced to hold the spade king s.s e. guard against dummys queen, he hsd to let go s club, and thereupon South led to the club ace and back ta his own king. drop. ping East's queen and Wests's jack in the process. ‘The club ten was {IOiWkPGTIOCiIY good for the fulfilling I‘ t.‘ . FAMOUS ‘QUEEN The name Esther comes from tthe Hebrew name Ishtar. JOE PA l KING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED - ' “i: mus ~ morn/mane Atrloa ma: fl/l/A/FMINCI’ FILM/GUS B/PD/A/G, unit/mes . .. re»... .. ~~ _ =' l, l; y‘ .\ = _ z v I fr fi ‘P; e ' / Q. r ?/ \ LOOKA WMPHREYMWNT WU AIN'T ET YORE PIE AN’ BRINGING UP FAT i‘ '12}. WHAT KIND OFA MO/IE l5 THIS? O “60OEY" LET ME HAVE m0 SORRY. sue-- “eooev” BARS, wE Dow-r mass-- HER ' l i . YEG - SIIZ- YOU JU6T A UNITE‘ '= ittétbbé? rake/crease. sfgvsrforowceg-ggg‘, BLOCK -i DON'T FEEL “Eur; THAN l’ TI-llkik’ ." YOU__,,ELLO-HE|_|_O-», I'LL UVE H“! A CHANCE 1/.’ .4 r" ISN'T TH I'LL ca; l: ooi< w‘ AT WONDERFUL.” T M r22 / I - Y?‘ HENRY w. >4»! ._,. ......,|t,__ -.......»-...i was nwirc conservative than e NORTNIIMBEIILAN Leave Wood Islonds— Prince Nova Charles A. Dunning . Leave Caribou- Cliarles A. Dunning Prince Nova I948 SAILING SCHEDULE, SUBJECT TO CHANGE (Daily Including Sunday) NOVEMBER 1-30 .,s-----. LISTEN IN TO CFCY AT 7.30 A.M. (Standard Time) FOR LATEST NEIMS and INFORMATION II FERRIES LIMITEO Standard Time 8 a.m. . ll a.m. Ip.m. ‘Ilolllae. Ip.m. 3pm. II a.m. THAT'S ass/venous! I 1'0 KNON rr ANYWi-lllli! WHAT HAPPENED t fihflFACl GAYS “COMEOUT O’ HERE! I WANT ‘I'D TALK ‘IO YOU!" 1 SNEAKED ‘ID THE %OR.-.IT WAS AWFUL FOOSY-HI I TILLIE THE TOILER mast, l WANT some INFORMATION mom m! THAT'S A curs oaess. ou,uo' irs nor EVEN NEW. i LEI’ oowu THE SKIRT. wsetr -- mo l PICKED or nus HAT FOR $1.2es:LrE 'i ours: nine. i5 ONLY AN ' LINA, COME CLOSE" LOOK INTO MY EYES" I WANT YOU TO GIVE ME SOME ma’ HIM,HE'S Ar-‘rasrw 0F r-‘Amerzmwuo is E5001?“ N6 ME To Tue