W; PAGE TEN THE. GUARDIAN, CHARLOTTETOWN . H g g . y W W W. MAY ;1o, .1950 . ' ? 'm?”B KING or run: nous. uotmrran by Lane um aosrrrar. ' C444” '4' ”””O Ow!” ' NXQOTTCT i "uovoiuan rnauzas uawnzzmu-yr ' ; wwms A7 YOIMWWAV-f IAINSTHEL SHOW PARKDALE HALL WEDNESDAY, MAY 10th Curtain 8:15 P.M.-Price 50c Sponsored by Parkdale Firemen Electrical contractor WIRING AND REPAIRING ERNEST B. IIAMSAY. 110 Elm An Phone I061! ANNUAL MEETING Notice is hereby given that in pursuance of the Act of incorpora- tion a public meeting of all contri- butors to the Prince Edward island Hospital will be held in the class room. new nuraea' residence. Char- lottetown. on Tuesday. May 10. 1950. at 8 PM. for the purpose of ' ” trustees for the govern- ment of the Institution in accord- ance with the by-laws and for the transaction of such other business as may be brought before it. 1. ANDREW LIKELY. Secretary. Board of Trustees. PLAN TO ATTEND - H)! it BOARD OF TRADE DINNER lVLE.ETliV(l CHARLOTTETOINN HOTEL T 0 N I Illa I r.M. i Guest Speaker: General Manager 1'. E. G H T Meal sus C. l'. REDDALL 1. Crown Corporation Topic "NEWFOUNDLAND TRADE I: THE ESKIMO SERVICE" All business men are cordially invited to attend. Special arrangements The Charlottetown is ALL rooms ENTEIITAIN YOUR FRIENDS AT THE DHARLOTTETOWN HOTEL ' Meals Served in Main Dining Room Luncheon 31.35 a Dinner H375 for Banquets in Private Dining Room at reasonable rates. a modern and fire-proof Hotel, centrally located. Excellent cuisine featuring sea foods, fine accommodation and distinctive service. Rates from 538.75 and up (including Room and Meals) with bath. A CANADIAN NATIONAL HOTEL LY. (JHARLOTTETOWN :- O.N.II. TIIAIN SEIIVIOES For snmmenide-Borden-1:00 am. 8:30 p.m., daily ex. Sun. For Murray Harbor-8:15 p.n1.. daily ex. Sun. r IDJICLOJSIO. Judxc not until you know you know what is and just what isn't I0. -old .Mother Nature. Jimmy Skunk and. Johnny chuck were two of a kind. That is. both were for the time being without homes. Jimmy Skunk had been told by Mrs. Jimmy that she wanted his room. not his company. in their home. Johnny Chuck had been told the same thing by Polly Chuck. Now both Jimmy and John- ny were wandering about where lhixv pic-ased.. If they had been a little upset by being turned out of their own homes they were over it now. You see they knew why they had been driven out. it was on ac- count of the babies. In both those homes there were squirming. help- less babies now. and fathers were not wanted around. 0 If the truth be told they didn't want to be around. Babies were for mothers to take care of and worry about, not for fathers to have anything to do with. Johnny and Jimmy thought only of their own comfort. Now they were free 10 go where they pleased when they pleased. think only or keep. lng their stomachs filled. They gave -a-.m..j.m.m.. rmuuorcrnooounucwvoc oxv..r.u:u:- Contract Bridge 3: Jolephlno Culbertson 4(wwmooomm TRUMP MANAGEMENT Top score in today's deal. played at match-points, went to that south who handled the trump suit proper- ly. -....;- Eist dealer. East-VVe.st vulnerable. 9049 shoe ' strangely enough, none of the eight North-South pairs reached five diamonds, although that con- tract was almost a laydown. The DGFIECL 111- of the hands was hard to visualize, This was a typical bid- ding sequence: Ily Thornton 'W. Burgess) JOHNNY. JIMMY AND ltlDDY , no thought to any one but them- selves. They didn't really mind at all being turned out of their homes. There were plenty of places where they could safely sleep when they were sleepy, and both knew that they could go back home by and by when the babies wergbig enough to get out in the Great World and hunt. food for themselves. So they thought of nothing but their own comfort. That sounds selfish, doesn't it? They -were talking things over when who should come along but Roddy Fox. Raddy grinned when he saw them. He stopped at a safe distance from Jimmy skunks little scent gun and sat down. He has great respect for Jimmy Skunk be- cause of that little scent gun. so he is polite to Jimmy when they chance to meet. More than once in the past he had tried to catch. Johnny Chuck. but not of lain. Johnny was too big and strong and tough and too good a tighter. Any- way right now he was safe with Jimmy &unk. If Reddy should attack Johnny Jimmy might mis- takenly think he was being attack- ed. So Roddy simply sat down and grinned at the others. "50." said Reddy, "you two have been driven out again." Jimmy looked at Johnny. Johnny looked at Jimmy. Then both looked at Eeddy. "What. do you mean?" asked Jimmy Skunk Just as if he didn't know. . "Who says we've been driven out?" demanded Johnny Chuck way down in his throat so that it sounded almost like a growl. That is how he wanted it to sound. Reddy merely grinned a little more broadly. "When I find folks as far from their homes as you two are when one should be inside asleep and the other sitting on his doorstep I don't have to be told what the trouble is. I have seen it happen every spring since I can remember. You're so selfish you think of no one but yourselves. No wonder Mrs. Jimmy and Mrs. Chuck don't -want you around when there are babies to look after. 1 should think they would drive you out. I would expect Mrs. Roddy to drive me away if I was as selfish as you and thought only of myself," de- clared Reddy. "What are you doing way over here so tar from your home in the Old Pasture? Why aren't you back there helping Mrs. Roddy? Don't tell us that you haven't. any babies. we know better." said Jimmy Skunk. "If we are selfish. how about yourself? what kind of a rather are you?" asked Johnny Chuck. Reddy stopped grinning. "I try to has a good one." said he snbcriy. "You ask what I'm way over here for. I'm hunting, and I'm not. hunt- 295? 16?” cuoxcr 7v carry no vou MIND u: 1 an msioii. ? I vom wstrr TD Missruis w paooizmt .1 MM--6ooi7I SAY, I LIKE THIS SALAWI 1llYiN' 1'oIT ooa 1aatNiN' seems! mg for food for myself alone as you fellows are. I'm trying to help feed seven as fine wooly-coated little Foxes as ever rolled and tumbled I ou,sAu.v--1 Just wamso WOU TO LOOK QIEQ THESE STAY A --AN' sxousr mar MA E 'EM MADI!--WELLNIE BE,Tl;lOi.lGl-l,lF 4 LL DON 1' ear To s wow I i--Fol: We TIME To BEGINA mmy 1 y 1 . , . '--wens I-lAVIN'A WONDER- For Charlottetown-1:15 a.m., l0:30 a.m., 1:45 p.m., dally.ex. sun. For Borden-7:l!l a.m.. daily ox. Sun.: 2:45 pm. daily ex. Sun. Wests laid down the club ace; others led a trump, hut thlv was of small consequence. Every declar- sclf, .When they have been fed. and not until then, I'll think of myself. That is the kind of a father I am." "YOU SHOULD 9. F 6 etc n-2:30 pan. daily ex. Sun. Pus Pass 3; SQ '-”59t'h91' 0” ,5 mndli d90T5IfP' FUL TIME " z.;!' 1,2: M-hi.” mm d.'", ,L 5",, P.” P”, P", Thats what Im over here Ior. Irn HAVE STAVED WITH U5 ygg ,, A my, su1vmnnsInE:- -a-j-a---em hum"? 1”" mild I" M1'5- "N0! 1 BUT WE DAUST COME ' - ggg '..a' The opening lead varied; some and the children. not just for my- HOME" ', .- v '- .. l- x"!.':f."II,,v.ll i : lllfggz For Tignish-6:15 rum, daily ex. Sun.; 12:01 P-M-. MM!-u ( hl Utk .-lg-7 ygv wod Fm "Taking care of babies is for ma- -. thers." mumbled Jimmy skunk. Johnny chuck nodded agreement. acron-rnonvdim mes er except one drew trumps as quickly as possible. cashed the spade ace and finessed to the spade jack. then discarded a heart on the spade king, However, with a spade and four hearts left in dummy, and -with only three trumps still in the closed hand, two tricks then had to be conceded. only one South took the proper view about trumps. He won Wests diamond jack opening with the queen. led to the spade ace. and immediately finessed against the spade queen. leaving the diamond ten at large. Now he cashed the spade king. discarding a heart. and led a heart from dummy. East could not be greatly blamed for going in with the king. and after that de- clarer could cross-ruff the hand completely, making six-odd. The other declarers obviously feared that the missing trump was in East's hand. and that East might ruff the third round of spades. They overlooked, however. that even if this happened. south would still make as many as he could make by drawing the out- standing trump. MONCTON - nannrax -isamr JOHN Lv. Charlottetown 7:00 a.m., Summe Blue 7:15 a.m-. dilly FL 5""- uosrnnsi. - rononro Lr. Charlottetown 7:00 a.m., Summe -ids 7:16 a.m., daily ea. Sun. Throulh air-conditioned sleeper Charlottetown-MontI'ea.i. WORTHING. Sussexff England, Many 8 --(AP)-Franklin Dyall, 76, British actor-producer. died here today. He played his first part-in "The Mlsqueraders"-in 1894. Be- ginning in 1929. he appeared in a long string of motion pictures. CAB FERRY SERVICE BRINGING UP FATHEBV F "liorden - Caps Tormentino I)alLy Except Sunday Lv. Borden 8:10 a.m., 1:00 p.m.. 4:30 p.rn. T Ly-. Caps Tormentine 10:85 a.m., 2:40 p.m., 7:30 DJ"- Sunday Service Lv. Bunion 6:45 pm. Lv. Cape Tormentine 8:00 pm. Additional Trip; Effective May 281- -T Lv. Borden 9:10 a.m., 1'00 p.m. Lv. Cline, Tormentlno 1 35 a.m.. 31 wuar mu 1 Do To KEEP MAGGIEN room 60lN' To "vmsvz spszwr-s'?i I DON'T LIKE THAT PLACE--I MueT THINK on: GOMETHNG To D.scouI2AGE HER---Ami I'VE GOT IT I! A WHAT ? you AN' THE GANG ARE ALL 6004' T'o"wATei2 5ai2uo65'? ' F1klE'! we ARE J For Souris-2:30 D-m., daily ax. Bnn.: 1:30 a.m. 'I'ues.. aim. (Elmira: Lr. saum-e:4s p.m.. Mon.. In-1.: 5:45 p.m. Tues. nut south West North WELI: HELLO-DiNTY.'W THE THOUC:i-('7'! I'VE CHANGED MY 50-K3-IT 4: , 9 Mi D-WERE TVLE I? '7 .. sow THERE - Too." l'l.L BE SEEING won! at m...... lDR,IIAMlll0N'Sy Pins WQHEADACHE ; INDICESTION ! BILIOUSNES5 . lconsraparion OAHADIAN NATIONAL r nu x 1 rm.-v. s.-atm m,v..m -94- ---- ” by AI (lapp ' 0 ts 4-store; Bl-J17 AH ITAIIlI'N- AN' T wsuws A aavau-ru, FO'ALL Ab-i KNONS.-WAL NUM T THAT INSTANT- WI-K.lT51'NU' lD'SAY-SO4EBODtI WWII ' WELL, i1"'”aoesNi1- LOOK LIKE THEY'RE WOULD THEY BE WORKING IN THE PLAC AND NOT KNM NED BEEN BEAU by Ale: itaymoml llPi I'LL THE &5 ALMOST HAD HI! W A MURD& RAH. IT'S A PROMISE...YOlJ'l.L A SbiIl&(E A Cl-IUMP IN A MAIL QDR ROMANCE SEND FOR THEM, GET YOUR 5COOP...IUT PI4REu BUT I WANT AN I HOPE IT WON'T II DCUJIVI 04 IT A MUHOIR WI-IN IT QIAK5..- STORY! 1 . JW M91 oi” ii in! )3.-r K 4 f v.-A-11711:. vi." l . V” Ir 1. . i I jag. (Z. 1. .... -.a..a-....- . vw, ,