race rem DANCE Siiitnyslde Ballroom Every Mon., Wed, Sat. Eastern Rhythm Boys ADMISSION 35o PICNIC NORTH RUSTICO Wednesday. July 20th. .Meals. Bingo. Games. _ Dancing. ate. Meet your friends there _ tonight Meals begin 5 p.rn. C i uve srocit EXlllBlTllllS AT THE CHARLOTTETOWN FAIR must have all show cattle blood tested for Bug's Disease anytime within 60 days of show. ATTENTION FARMERS wr. tlAVF ron sane THE FOLLOWING NEW AND use!) MASSEY HARRIS nracnmenri i m. s1 sins-er. 6-ft. cut .. .. Price 5125-0" 1 Steel-tired Farm Waggon v>>“h—llf martizfuilzil-ii" . ' d P rac or w 1 Slightly use Olly hi“ $150.00 1 xvi-w Pony Tractor equipped with iishts. pulley. and newer lake-oil . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . .. Price $850.09 Aim; Blimp Rakes; Hay Loaders; Power Mowers; Side-delu- ery Rakes. Scufllers. L. ll. Macleoil & Sons Victoria. P. I. Island 1 I ncrtoss 2. Kingdom 19- Rem“ _1. Military rAraui 20. Liberate assistant 3. June-hug 72- CMTWJI‘ l5. Fellow 4. Frcmale 23- grePiim _ s eep I9 gluarrfieeblrd 5. Pltiless publication .10. Teutonic 6. Search _ 25. Canton character 7. Particle o1 (Switn) ill Frightén addition. 26. Electrified g2‘. Beneath 8. Frog PHI-mks i; urge _ ii. Spoke 27. Deterlorati extinct div- 13. Poles 29. The driri.:. ing bird ‘i5. Sponsors of the 5. Caress _ 18- DY)’ mill‘ 5°55 6. Riveriltl _ ‘Yesterday's Anon}? 86. Peruvian- Indian tiple fruit 30. Pronoun 8B. Fematlej-eell 7. Part of verb of tho 32. Retains _ 39. Char _ "to be" pine 35. A thumP 40- QM" 1!. Fuel i .. 0. Nourished 2i. Pious 23. Blunders 24. Encroach 26. Little lslart 28.The East BLOpen (poeti- 32. Mend. asa bone" as. What? m. Negativllr reply . B35. God of f pleasurI}_ (Egypt h" 6. Frozen- water 137. Move sideways [$9. Having a _ mint nasor {(1. A bend in thread‘ '42. Aims bmlI I43. Stitches H. Juicy fruit DOWN _‘l.. Blame . 1 DAILY citYrToQuora-neres how wworkli» axvnanaaxn uaonoffiblo“ 1Ar_ . l . l ta d for another. ln this exnmpe I tiled r Brtltgevherxees Tipsy; fgrpthe two 0's. etc. Single letters. apos- tgo hles the length and formation of the ivords He)“ W1"- Eagh only the code letters are different. A Cryptogrnm quotation anoosx on CKKP ruaziifsc. FHE cxxr» PHBX—LZHQKZO- . r - VE TO irsicrdah"! clVPloillmli“ “n?! THEE I WOULD 1D WITH THEE l wouu) WlLLlNGLY DIE-HORACE. Distributed by Kins F "W"! ""4"!" 'F.>§F'SRD. Engrlnhd- rcrwmox- ford llnivcrsltlis new depnrimfinl 0i’ groittfry and LONDON- (C?) — LL-Gen. Sir Charles Dobell presided at. a lun- minerrilogy was rhecn nf former cadets of the jgither side vulnerable. ' Q78 I106! QAKIHII _ 5x10: , Al! AQB Qaiioo N Q1 .‘8;532 w E Qgllill- 4.4: S ‘goal QAKIOJHZ OJ Q90 4 $373‘ "moi-ridding: _ .West North East‘ South 4Q Pass Pass 4Q Pass Pass Dble. Pass "monds and two cllibs. His double “IHE GUARDIAN. lBy Thornton On earth below, in skies above, There's naught so wonderful as love. —Old Mother Nature. Young Coyote the Prairie Wolf. who hid left the home of hIl birth to find a place for himself in the Great World, was thorough- ly selfish. Yes. sir. he was selfish. He thought of no one but himself. That is what selfishness is. think- ing ct only sell’. But he wasn't to be blamed for that. There was no one else for him to think of. He was alone, going where he pleased when he pleased. and doing what he pleased. He was wholly independent. There was no one to advise him or to care what happened to him. So what- ever he did he did for just him- self. Whatever he got was for himself alone. There was no one to share it with. For a time he was quite content to roam about. He wasn't iono- some. He felt no need of com- pany. Each day he had to catch his own food. and many times that was not easy at all. Sometimes he went hungry for quite a while because he still had very much to learn about those he hunted, and their ways and how to outwit them. He spent so much time hunting and sleeping that he really had no time to be lonesome, or so he thought. a lJLoallkllnnnnevlsanwannnanaiifidlifl Contract Bridge By Josephine Culbertson uraklasaunsenaoalenMreoenlablnolsapa ebepenvenptocpav ‘R§I‘F(QTOTFCTI’$IT Grasping Bis Chance The contract in today's deal could have been defeated right off the reel. but the declarer was given s chance and he took full advantage of it. west dealer. “We're 03553.1 the heart king. and he then could have put South in a hopeless position by either shifting to a club. thus getting a third-round ruff. or by playing another heart and getting East to cooperate byruffing with the queen. This latter defense would establish West's spade jack. Act- ually. however. West led another high heart. and East discarded a club. Declarer ruffed and cashed every trump. effecting this posi- tion: ___ ¢_____ q___ OAK? ‘QKIO “l; N .‘;=i 2?” w E 25?» 1-75 3 ilrAQ. i t: I Q94 . .58 7 3 Observe _that East did the best he could ll'l holding three dig. marked him with the ace of clubs; if he kept four diamonds. South undoubtedly would be able to read the situation (especially since East would have had in throw off the club queen) and now. before playing diamonds. would lead a club and duck in dummy. East's actual position, however. was no better against this astute declarer. The latter cashed dum- . k h . b t h h t . Y opened by Calgary-born Vice- Royal Military College. Kingston. my‘: lop diamonds and played Cgygiewhgd "innit in: lgve 021T: Chancellor John Lowe. An nil Ont... now residing in Britain. Dana a third round. throwing East nn didn't yet know it rmnpanys £21000 15100000; gift Wilgrcss. Canadian High Comrrnls- lead and forcing ii club return The next story: "Miss Coyote made the department possible. sionr-r. was gurst of honor. that established the king. Tenses" um ABNER ‘ Sometimes at night he sang to the stars. Anway he called it singing; He liked the sound of his own voice. It was at such times that he came nearest to feeling lonesome. His voice carried a long distance. Once in a while ho would hear another Coyote far away in reply. Or was it in reply? He couldn't be sure. It could be an- other Coyote doing just what he was doing, singing Just for the sound of it. ‘men came s night when the stars were very bright. and he sat on a knoll with his noise pointed at them and sang. This time when he stopped to listen there was an- other voice not very far away and in it was something that gave him a ‘ w feeling. a new feeling such as he never had known be- fore. and he knew that this was truly a reply. He pointed his nose siryward and sang again. He sang as he had never had sung before. Then he listened eagerly. Again came that answering voice. Again there was something in it that made him tingle all over. He didn't know why. It just did. Thai was all. The next time he pointed his nose at the stars and sang there was no reply. He waited a little. then sang again. Still no reply. Suddenly he had a feeling wholly new to him. s, feeling of loneliness. He wanted to hear this other singer again. Even more he wanted to see and hear and make friends with the possessor of that other voice. He started off trotting swiftly in the direction from which that Sometimes at. night sang to stars voice seemed to come. Once he stopped to sing again. There was no reply. Yet something made him sure he was going in the right direction and he kept on. P112501".- ly he knew he was right. He knew even more than this. He knew that he would go no farther. He didn't know how he knew, but he did know that there was some one near watching him. the some one he was seeking. He hadn't heard any one. He hadn't seen any one. He hadn't smelled the scent of any one. Yet-he lcnew that some one was near. It was a feel- ing that no one can explain yet is to be trusted as surely as ears. or eyes, or nose. He sat down in the moonlight, for Mistress Moon had risen. and waited. After n. while he saw a shadowy figure move swiftly from behind a clump of weeds to disappear be- hind another clump. Slowly he moved toward this clump. He didn't go directly to it, but pre- tended to be hunting for Mice. looking here and there but all the time drawing nearer to that clump. Suddenly another coyote leaped out and raced away through the moonlight. It was a. Miss Swifty. a young Coyote. who like himself was out alone in the Great World. She was about his age but was a little smaller, In an instant he was after her. Now Young Coyote was proud of his speed. but he soon found that Miss Swifty could also run. She let him get. just so near and no nearer It. was provoking. It. was very provoking. It didift take him long to learn that she could run faster than he could. Being smaller she was lighter and ran more easily. He couldn't hope to tire her out. He found out too that she was teasing him. for she didn't run away. from him as she could have done. If he stopped for a minute she‘ stopped. He had to catch up with her. He didn't l/u/i: ransom auvezs m w: ma: LE7'% IOOXAT SOMEW/IVG SLMNHY LESS SOFD/D -AL (ADD —- BY AL CAPP ‘owns aver-n‘. POLK5—-D mean Muflfeal! ly Ales Raymond I 1'0 Lure -ro...su-r m-r muss » "r BOOOQIT ETHII MY OIAMTM Min-FIT A '8Il% A@ UUQIO WP OOQ-s-VUJ I: I'M I-lib- 8* l -. ‘r - n _‘ A .3. \ .i\_ Ely-JV. lilOWTllfllCfi DONOT rniiistv Movlo nascent! l -/\'t CHARLOTTETOWN Kig of Theoyal Mounted m- 1 ewo HIM A ...vroui.ovou m1 wncu nwi ' gurgw secoireear- m. s: rum sacs. .- TIPPY AND "CAP" STUII . I HOPE YOU DON'T MIND l MY SAYiNG IT. SAQAI-I, ' our mv aeo IS iMPOSSIBLE." THE MATTRESS is Lg i- l Tgjl HUMDH/ l. Tl-iiNK VLL WQITE FOR A Q EENT ON "l Ol-I-THEPE vou Awe- DiNKV-fvE BEEN LOOKIN woe wu- 1 wmr mar TEN mm- oio ME - NEITHER uAt/s t- I'M sow TO WAiT renam- - use: nu. aw I'LL SETTLE FIVE i! ENOUGH COURAGE TU 6O LION HUNTING WITH TILLIE MRAlfiVl-OR REALLY THIN I'M GOING?) B A LION’ 1 l mum/mm: Burma ' 99m’? wit; T'S GENU I I E INE Y HAVE MY\M TTRE$S oww- COME BA CK - FOR