race. raw -fl-IE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN Tllllli voun out To c.r.c.v. In order that all the VOl.el'S of Prince Edward Is- had my be granted the privilege of hearing from their Progressive Conservative Candidates-a. privilege which has been-deprived them due to the calling of LI. snap Election at a time when the condition of the roads in a great many districts is impassable--the fol- lowing times have been obtained over CFCY:- IIIDAY. APRIL 13-. 3:35 to 8:40 P.M.-K. R. lit-ll, M.L.A. SATURDAYH APRIL 14- 7:15 to 7:30 P..Vl.-J. A. Gallant. 10:30 to 10:45 PM.--Walter Slclienzlc. LISTEN to the lli'o;:i'rssivc Cotisi-i'yzii'lve Candidates! THINK it over Then VOTE llmizressive Coiiservative LIBERAL HEADQUARTERS CHARLOTTETOWN and ROYALTY Morell Hotel Building 136 Kent St. Phone 2760 MAJESTIC SIGHT WELL ATTENDED The Grand in .xvm':i;i bl 'llw Statue bf Liberty on Bed- 217 miles long. 4 to 18 lhlCl's uirlvl tr:-'s Island. New York. W115 H11- 3", the brim and 4,000 to fowl rriled in 1881 in the presence of deep, -' L000000 people. D,A'iL.Y oc.R1oss.w.0.R D1 ACROSS 2. Male 19. Infants l. Break of day beveragi 21. Strangely '6. Collections 3. Prince 2.'l. Norse Sod 9.Postpone (Chin ) 26. A stair lo. Languished 4 New York 27 water god I2. Song bird rabbr )0 lBabyl-l 13, Qty (Wis! 5 SV.'1fUy 28. Goddess of 14. River 6. Mania mime the hunt. (rah-1,. (short) 29 Not. us. Greek 7. Keel-billed injured i ummb, 4-iirkon 31. Islands of!- ; form) 12. lnzislnlive W. Greece: V""'P4IY'l MI"! (7, 1m-legnggg horly 32, Ptiissn ' 39. Forbidden . uncle , 9. A stunted war.) N war.) 13, on of um thing 34. Square tire-p :42. River tsp.) torso bone; 11. Thick place (Glass .44. Through no. Lgopnrd-like is. Enlisted Mfg.) 46. Siberian wild cat; 16. Chamber 35. About gulf 22. Relish . 21. River ' (Scot) 25. Dazed 28. Owing . 80. A style of- t e 33. Install p 36. Persons. pronoun . '37. Exclamation I35. Unsuitable 40. Nickel (SYN-I -II. Cared for an lnvallrl 43. Sacred bu (ESYDU S - 6.AryanrS. . (van)... x 40. Fetiahrh (West. I7. Civil ' I wrong. .13. Scorch I IDOWN ,1. To run off, 1.? the rails .K .,E ( TIIAn.;ffCR1'PT0Ql'0TE--Here's howjo work lt:l ' AXYDLBAAXRv, .laLONGFELLOW . oil; letter simply stands for nnothe-r.l. In this e'xarnple'K ll used for the three L.'.-2. X for the two O'a,letc. Single letters. apos- trophine. the lnnzlli anrl formation of the words are all hints. Each day thepcode letters are riiitr-rent. l v-- - A Cryptogram Quotation EN-A rite DHMZ VJL rvaliio nos. EADD UA ENA rnxnicsxnwrutux DAINTY BUT NOT FUSE! Too often fussiness in taste Proves costly in its needless waste. -Old Mother Nature. Big Claw the Land Crab is I dainty eater. His tavble manners. if you may call them such where there is no table. are perfect. He never gobbles his food. He never crams it into his mouth. He never bites off more than he can chew, or tries to swallow his dinner whole. He never drops his food; Dainty people never do. you know. He never tries to stuff his mouth full with both hands at once. It is no wonder Farmer Brown's boy called him Mr. Dainty. Now one may be dainty in table manners without. being fussy about one's food. It was just so with Mr. Dainty. Long ago whcn he was small, a very small Crab indeed. he had learned that the Crab who fusses over what he has to eat usually goes hungry. and that nothing is more uncomfort- able than going hungry. It was a lesson that every Crab who would live to grow up must learn early in life, very early inderd. and Mr. Dainty had learned it. He ".lDUD')"ItUi:lCi-1'?2I'J'Kl contract Bridge E ly Jooeptuno Culbertson sf”ClY"C'CiC'ClO':'CiC!ClOC!OUQDOUQQL Goon PLAY NEEDED The opening lead was helpful to today's declarer. hilt he still had to exert hiimself for the slain contract. Nortlfdeuer. Noi-u;.3out.h vulnerable. 4 A 5 2 0 A 4 3 Q A. . g. A K .i 1 a 3 4 K 9 o 4 Q J 3 4 9 1o 9 - N O 8 7 2 5 K 7 5 W E O Q 10 6 3 .5 Q 10 I S 2 c 2 -In 5 4 10 7 3 y R Q J 6 5 l 0.1 9 as - E 9 " Tllelbiddlng: North East. South West 1 4. t Pun v 1 9 Pass 3 o figs! 3 Q Pass 6 Q Pa.ss' Pass Pass Apparently. West did not want in lead away from his 5-padc or diamond king. or perhaps he re- fused to guess between those two suits -- in any case. he opened the tru-mp ten. Such it lead often gives up a. "tempo" (time until and so is rarely to be commend- cd. it certainly smoobhed de- clarer's path in this deal South won the first trick in his own hand and studied the situa- lilo". 'A cross-riiil' was ”out." be- cause (among other reasons! the opening lead had reduced dum- m.v's ruffin: power. Besides. it was far more propitious to set up the loniz cluib suit. Thus. the only question was how to estab- lish that suit. s Otwimlsly. South could lead to the club ace and ruff A low club. then return to dummy and ruff another club. with a good chance of running the rest: of the suit. Bub declarer did not want. to lly Thornton W. Burgess) Biz Claw. the big. hlue Land Crab had learned it V6l',V thoroughly. At the same time he had leani- ed something else of equal im- portance. This was that if he didn't get his own food no one would get it for him, and because the things he liked best to eat were not always easily found. it. didn't do in be fusy about what he ate. It didn't do at all. "A fussy crab will be a hungry Crab. but a hungry Crab is never a fussy Crab." is one of Big Claw": favorite sayings, and he proves the truth of it himself by never going hiiiigry long at a time. "A Crab should always be dainty about how he eats. but never be fussy about what he cats." is an- other favorite sayiniz of Big Claw the Land Crab. Of all his neigltrliors in feathers, fiir. shell. or Just skin. none is more independent than Big Claw. the big blue Land Crab whom Farmer Brown's boy called Mr. Dainty. Hc was born independent. From the time he had hatched from a tiny egg he liiid looked out for himself. No mother or father or nurse ever had taken care of him. It hadn't. taken him any time at all to know that no one was going to take care of him. He must find his own food, feed him- self. and watch for and hide from hungry enemies who seemed al- ways to be looking for him. So he ate what. he could find and never allowed likes and dislike! to interfere with f.iLlin.: an empty stomach. . He early l0Rl'll('t"l that down in the ground he was safe, and had little if anything to worry about. but above ground he never could be absolutely sure that he was safe. So when he was still very small he learnrd not. to be afraid of work as, alas. so many folks Cnntinued on page 14 shorten his trumps iinnecessuily -he milzht. run up against rt 4-I trump break. So. on the sound analysis that n finesse in club: would be hiizhly advantageous if - it. succcedcd. and not fatal if it. didn't. South led in the club jack. This finesse gave South a good start. but he still had to be care- ful. He did not make the mistake of trying to cash a high club then and their instead. he led I low club. and when East "re- fused". South ruffed. He then led in the diamond ac:-. ruffed a sec- ond low cluI'.). and ruffed a da- mond with the lirart ace. The 5-1 club break had made him depend on a 3-2 ti-u-mp break. but this existed. and when South could then drgw the outstanding trumps. he had only to go back to dum- tmyis spade acr and cash the estab- lished clubs t.o collect his slam. 'uill be held in Borden ANNIIAL MEETING The Annual Meeting of Bedeque District. L.O.L. Lodge Room. TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 17. AT 8 PM. SHARP. All Lodges in the district are asked to he represented. Borden. on Jacn-'-uri-iwr.. A. A. MacCALLUM. ' Yesterday-'9 Cryptnquot45:Tf.Sf-lOULD'!5fAVE FOUND IN Sat! District secretary- PAHT OF. MY SOUL A DROP OF PATIENCEmSHA.KE3PEAB.E. LI'L ABNER 3)? Al C-33?? A - "MT 1 T1ME'. TSAVE AH isall M D yo oPoAwu.'-Au Dom avm acumen 4,0 .- M. KING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED 5? mru,J4cxr5,wa.e 1 624p1rw4s Mmkifffk N G H VAPRIL 13. 195.1 . By Zane Greg !.S4;'65a6EMl7.' rm: Mwzswr - S4 lM4n9A'.I (HUU55 mssawa tWFyK7SAOKLPSOPl!IVaV70B.E!T mavekuvlmar mean w:u....; 6ous1ADK:7y'E):g? comm Gt-T .- au A4l4uauMAI:e7Aza11'E.' K new F DOTTY DIEPLE '” pm WHAT ARE sou p LOOKING A'l' DADDY P TIPPY AND "CAP" STUES iv... mus,-v.-nip.-u 1-441-I-:-4 ' A FOLDER OF: NEW CARS " AREN'T THEY NlCE ?! C ON , nun our, FELLAs1Hows -it THE onus? THERE'S THE one pot: us! it eyliuforc KlTCHY-i(lTCl-IY-KOO! HE'S Jusr 114' NAGE or I-its GRAWP viNaool;EN--! --AN' Ll'L BETSY isk so LIKE HER DEAR PAPA Y BEAUT MR.ci-lll2PLEBEl2RY. YOUR . CLlll,DQE"::lUl4-ARE JU 51' 7 .8y George McManus ' ;'.., . ..'-..- . . .- -. OH' OH! TI-IRE GOI9 one or MAG6IE'S nvotzrri weds If! SGJ LUMMOX -- bCIJ'VE KOKEN ' ONE OF Tl-E TWO BEST tA5E5 I OWN - WET: EVEN NOW- MAGGIE -)OLl DID A GOOD JOB ON Tl-:4 OTHEE ONE .'.' A r i. saw! rm msmvetv Java: some-to swam: -to uim eves: AGAlN.