_,,§...__.. - Ilenie Meals Al.» Clover Leaf coiion SALMON. Clover Leaf PINK snunon, Clover Leaf‘ rssrr SNACKS, Clover Leaf SARDINES. GLWEII lilfnllsnaila’: largest Selling SEIFDIQCE KEEPS RANGER ON JOB GRANDE PRAIRIE, Alta, March 1'7 — (OP) - Alberta's oldest for- est ranger wants to retire but he can't. For 15 years Pete C. Comeau has patrolled the virgin forests from Gronde Prairie, Alta, to the Brit- ish Columbia border. His job is watching for forest fires, protect- ing game and keeping an eye on registered trap lines. “It's a hard life and Pete thinks ' if. is about time he gave it up. “Only I can't; it's in my blood. I would like some comforts but I can't seem lo stay out of the bush for long." Pete spent 10 years lumberjack- lng when he first came to Alberta from Nova Scotia. Then he became a forest ranger. With two pack horses and saddle mount he patrols lonely bushland trails. Bears sometimes steal his packs at night and attack him at times. During the months when fires are infrequent, Pete cuts trails, using a dog tcam in winter and a horse in the summer. MARRIED WORKERS Fifty-eight per cent of United States working girls are married; the pro-war figure was 42 per cent. DAILY ACROSS 1. An instru- ment of torture _ .Brightly- 5 colored fish Chills and fever Coin i Turk.) A duckiiko diving bird To gather with stitches Guided Father Malt contempt beverage 7. Melody 18. Pronoun 8. River (NE. ' 19. Disparago Manhattan) (22. Any powers ful deity .Engravo, i as by corrosive: B6. Tempestuous ‘E8. Retired I30. Shield '31. Captured. l as game 4. Military cap Farm l, animal . Fresh-twitter i tortoise . Hypothetical l force . A slight ' drink . Erbium ‘l lsym.) . Deiile between t\\'( , mountains . Per. t0 thO sun . Elude 50. Sheer .51. Haifa pinl b2. A huiled Indian corn i dial.) Auction DOWN Most infrequent Matured Young bear Retains, Goddess of harvests iIt.) Exclama- tion of oi f" 10. 11. P‘? 9K"? 12. 14. 15. l7. CROSSWORD l1. Adhesive 13. Trust 16. Man's 20. Shoshonean 21. Piece o! 24. A gear 81. Stud 32. Proverbs 33. Color, _..£ nmzi-vi Z"PI-l nu 1):» DR- Ibrv <Ioo —i- 0-0) mixture "-4 )Fl'l IF-"l nickname iposs.) moi-u >110 urn 9'2 tho Pin-Ia IIPO (o: nnnnnzon vvul 01 1-4)‘ n Indian rub umot>In> V'~\>0 vii-u -rn avon mill-l stone l II tooth Yesterday's Answer, 25. Largo 27. Regret. 29. Evening B5. Kind of dog 36. Not working 39. Lees / 42. Entreaty 44. Summon 46. Fortify 47. Twiiicd fsbrll 49. By way of sun god i Egypt-l as fabric DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Hercrs how to work it: axvocasaxn ls LONGFELLOW One letter simply stands for another. 1n for .iiic three L's. X for the this example A l! used two 0's. ctc.'Single letters, apos- tropliics, the length and formation of the words are all 11mm Each day the code letters are different. A_ Cryptogram Quotation ' [XTQDO BND FBNPIO JZR RT RNDBI. T O Q B B R D N Y R B Z K O D. Yesterday": Cryptoquotef r: ‘RTDTITKG-QTO- l Ll'L ABNER (By Thorn and takes. The difference is what he makes. - Old Mother Nature. The honest trades gives Prickly Porky the Porcupine chews his food well. wherein he shows better sense than some boys ‘and girls Who are in too much of a hurry to get back to play, He is a little noisy about it. Of course that isn't polite, but probably no One ever has ever told him this. Anyway, living so much alone as he does he probably would think a little matter like that doesn't matter. That's his mistake. Not only is it impolite if anybody is around but it". draws attention to himself when he would rather be unnoticed. Anyway he never has the stomach-ache from eating W0 fast and not chewing his food. Peter Rabbit was sitting find" a. tree in which Prickly Porky was getting a. meal. He ls doing that much of the time when hc isn't taking a nap, Prickly Porky doesn't believe in hurrying. espe- cially when eating. So he eats slowly, chewing and chewing his food, getting from it every bit, of goodness there is in it. 0f course, luvsMNIIMNHNMMMNMMnuununr Contract Bridge By Josephl Culbertson nun: tru n u n u >4 u n u i111 n u u u u un Mvlnnxnutr Z r x X X X X OPINION WANTED A correspondent asks for an op- inion on the play of the following deal: ' Both sides vulnerable. ¢Q914 Q53 §10983 QQJIO “u, games erase N zggii .122; WQE ,f,l{784 4.5a ‘ 2 §J5 QAQ‘! §AQJ04 ‘A98 Thebidding: Soul-h West North East 1. P555 2Q Pass 3N1‘ Pass Pass Pasrr was; opened the heart six, East! put up the king, and South took] the trick. Then, on the theory that “there was lust as much chance for the diamond king to lie right as there was for the club king," South led a. low club to dummy. East captured the trlrk and returned his partner's heart lead. South ducked (belatedly!) but West naturally over-took the ten with the jack and knocked out deciarers heart queen. When South then went to dummy with a club and tried the diamond finesse, West pounced on the trick, ran. all of his hearts, and the defend- ers then collected their two high spades, to defeat the contract four tricks! My correspondent strongly im- plied that. he had been the Victim of circumstances ln this case. and wished to know whether his part- ner's criticism ‘was valid. If North maintained (first) that South should have conceded the first trick, he was right; and if North further maintained that South should have laid down the ace and queen of diamonds, in- stead of leading n. low club to dum- my. he was eminently right! It was quite true that there was an equal chance for either of the minor kings to hold by East. but by attacking diamond immediately, South would at least assure him- self of a great many tricks, and could then fall back on the club finesse to complete the contract. The great defect in South's line of play was that it exposed him to a severe penalty. _ TOPS FOR 1,000 YEARS South dealer. l 1i ton W. Burgess) a s. "/»//,/ _ O "I'm Trader the Wood Rat" ‘that is the only sensible way of ,eating. ',doesii't. sound to you like good eating? 1t would it you were a Porcupine and there was little else to eat. Prickly Porky wasn't eating the rough, tough outer bark. His fare is simple but he has the good sense to insist on only the best of it, the tender inner bark. "Don't you get tired of bark?" as ed Peter. . “Of course I do," grunted Prickly Porky. “Too much of a good thing always is tiresome. That ls why I am going to top of! with some green food." Where would I get it but right up here in this very tree?” grumbled Prickly Porky. He moved out along a big limb until he was where he could reach and pull in some flat; green sprays of loaf-covered twigs. No. I am not mistaken.‘ Every twig bore slender green leaves. You might not have called them leaves. Probably you ‘would have called them "needles." Most folks would. But the "needles" of the hemlock trees and the pine trees and the fir trees and the spruce trees are true leaves, and because those that grow in the summer do not die and drop when winter comes those trees remain green all the year through. That is why ‘we call then evergreen trees. The old "needles" do die and drop after a time, but the new ones keep the trees green. 5o the brown needles that. carpet the ground beneath the pines are as truly dead. leaves as the big brown leaves beneath the oak trees. Twigs that were in his way as he moved along that limb were bitten off by Prickly Porky and dropped. Hts big front cutting teeth snipped one oft’ with a single bite. It was no trouble at: all. much easier than trying to step over or around them. As he climbed about eating ‘only the ten- derest leaves, he cut off and dropped some twigs that bore little brown cones. You know the big brown cones of the pines and the smaller cones of other evergreen are the fruit, though they look n0 more like what we usually think of as fruit than the needles 100k like other leaves. Only the seeds they hold are good to eat. Chatterer the Red squirrel knows how good they are, especially the pine seeds. A spray bearing two little brown cones fell near Peter. Hardly had it landed when one iwho Peter at first took to be Robber the Rat: appeared as if by magic, running toward that fallen spray. He stopped abruptly as he saw Peter. His big black eyes were fixed on Peter with something very like a stare. "Oh, it's just youi" he en- claimed after a moment. “Yes," said Peter, "it is lust, mo. When I first saw you Ithought you were Robber the Rat, but 1 see now ymi are not. Are you |, Rat?" “Certainly I'm a Rat. but I'm an honest Rat and I don't like being mistaken for that dishonest cousin of mine. I don't steal; I trade, MAID; WANT NOTHING BUT I'm Trader the Wood Rat. Have HU$BAND3_ BUT wgEN THEY HAVE THEM WANT EVERY. Paris was the largest city in the you anything to trade?" replied Tmivrgonnvwnn - world for 1.000 years. the other. . .__ - n ~ By AL CAPP s-so YO’|(A$A'Li'L m ' , raizuirwir act's/moi ~ 1N suns CANT - HE LOOKS LIKE ANYBODY ELSE —ONLY. l-"RANKLV. AH NEVAH SEEN NOBODY ELSE THET LOOKED LIKE till!!! I He was eating bark. That ' Peter's eyes opened a little wider. "Green food!" he ex- claimed. “Where in the world are ' you going to get green food this time of year?" “Don't ask silly ueqstions. ‘GUARDIAN, CHARLOTTETOWN KING or’ meson esmso veRY sn-Fnssissnca RAY- XSUSFECT H5. As A vs av ATTRACTIVE- KNOBBY- THOUGHT _‘/°U-- PARTIES. HE NEEDS A REST TOO. - 60 AA/RSTIYW/ WW 670 M" wcWflhTfJlilliY, .3 lllll WHERE'S THAT oouisktvfl! IHYmHIM AN /. .'21.%‘l‘lll .. Makeup. 1949 —-i-_',1 -- Bvif RIO NEADID n; ONEY BROTHER... ‘y . Phases IZZY P %Wm/%%w/, /// is THAT sou, GRAWMA? DiD \OU AT UNCLE saws AN’ UNCLE eusavs siaocizv? DID you ANYTHINGi’? gy ,',-' _‘\lflVl‘ ‘Mizeizisi-ir, out: BUSINESS is IN PRECARiOUS conomou AND wou MADE METHINK YOUR ale mums TAKEN Aomnrnae cameos wouto SAVI rr/ or us BY PRETENDINS O ‘D BE A G swan! éw- - _ m ‘up cuss axon/mu- PS I _._L‘SHO‘ CAN Bii-l- e BUY ME‘ A coAsr-To- COAST CHAiNOF ones? auv summon costumes FOR ' if I i "t, . If Pliny ilesnigun I'LL StMFLV DIE IF I 05947531- auovmoacro commas -.'= sue 1n: ' ‘$40415 AN CHI HASH’? ERIN CAttIV .' ON NOIIRWIOWECKS SWERS ' a