..i'Aoc TEN A rm: GUARDIAN. cnaawrrarowu M Hollyhock. Mixed. Columbine. Mixed. Delphinlum. Mixed. Foxslove. Niixcd. Gypsophila. Lupin. Mixed. Forget!-Me-Not. Mixed. Arabia. White. Cerastlum. Vvhite. Lily of the Valley. by mail pnslpiild. PERENNIAL PLANTS TALL OR MEDIYM HEIGHT PLANTS Azrostemmu. Deep Ruse. Canterbury Bell. Mixed. Sweet Willinrn. Mixed. lrll. Light Blue Only. LOIV PLANTS FOB ROCKER!” OB EDGING An Hhoyp plants IR rvnis much. Six plants for one dollar Scvmi plants for one dollar at the Eafdeh. Clinton. Please liriut: i-:u(lim;irtl hdxes. Blncklwrry Ltiin-s, tut-lip for :i rlollur. Postpaid. Aspnrzmus, '.'-;c;'.r-uiil llllliils, lhll'l.Y (or u tlollnr. Postpaid- URUER EARLY. JOE R. XMITH. Clinton, 1'. E. I. Oricnlal FMIPY. Red. Perennial Phlox. Mixed. Chinese Lanterns. Mint. (for seasoning). Platycodun. Blue. Primrose. Yellow. Golden Stars. Yellow. Marguerite. Tall White Daisy. Veronica. Blue. Sweet Rocket. Mauve. Globe Thistle. Blue. l"ol.i'anthus. Mixed. Sedum.. Mixed. Lysniachia. Yellow. Q 1 1 1 1 u 1 4 - a I u , Attention Farmers Now In Stock John Deere Lime Sewers Both Tractor & Horse Drawn i A..Pickard Farm Tractors Ltd. 1 Malneque Highway DAILY CROSSWORD acnoss 5. Tho mo of 22. Most 35 1. Coffee shop :1 plow impr-rlinent an is. Lgad pellet: 6. An ohslnclc War.) 9.0! the sun 7. Elliptical 2.'3.Biiter with ()3 10,1-:l:irk and 8. Occnrion 25. Ono-spot BE! 2 '.un o. F nr cams Elli 12. Water wntcr 27. Branch of an 11. Father learning nu 13. : 13. Pccl 29. Dmws mu 15. Apple suds closer I4 17. Unit oi 30. Head! ' r. Au"; ' cove ng Mtmll 15, 31. American 30. Proeecute ' Indian judicially l6. l9. Chinese 32. A hroad- 17. Epoch admires silk topped hill 39. Alter-noon 19. A chevron 21. Pure 84. Attempt (abbn) 20. Projecting tend ofa church 3'24. hands I25. Near (per t.) V 26. Fortltles 27. Approach 3 ' Unwindo J , 0. Protective ' i head covering: B3. Neuter pronoun 35 Smells 36. Prophet 38. Timing device 39. Fat. 40. Organ: of hearing V I1. Pith (slang, DOWN .1. A com- batant 2.T.ikenle I. Craze 1. Erbium ,.” uym.) . OKULRO. LI'L ABNER DAILY e, YPTOQUOTE-llere's how to work It: AXYDLBAAXII IRLONGY-lELiLOW One letter simply stands for another. In this example A is igid (or the three L's. X for the two 0'5, etc. Single letters. a - trophlel. the length and formation of the words Ire Kill him!- llach dav the code letters are different A (lryptngrlm Quotation KTGCZ. CQR JLYOTH JZA, FQZ XRBRX. FQZ MRRTO xz F02 QRULO X7. KLUHRL-0-KZKK Yutanlofs Cryptoqunlr: TWENTY ORATOBS4-sH.AKESPEARl'. IRLPH. UXA GOLD WERE AS GOOD A3 PETER RABBIT IIUBS HIS EYES Hope is eternal. That we know. The world would end were it not go, -Farmer Brown”: boy. . . . Peter Rabbit was sitting just outside the dear old Briar-patch this lovely spring morning. He could hear the clear voice oi Carol the Meadow Lark singing ii-om a fence post far across the Green Meadows. Over in the Green For- est Blacky the Crow was cawin;.. and somehow his voice was good it: hear. The chorus ironi the Smiling Pool had a new voice in it. Peter was sure. that it was thei l0lCP oi Old Mr. Toad. :vli'CcilTElS to the chorus of Peepcri tiny Tree Frogs who are the very iirst oi all the Frog family to naken in the spring and can hard- ly wait ior the ice to melt bciosc blowing out the music bags High above the Green Forest he :ould see Redtall the Hawk sailing in circles. and somehow he kne.v that Redtail was not hunting, hut, contract Bridge Culbertson we By Josephine .5039 41.1119 JQGOOQDSPL .t..'-.'..5rp - r. u rus "-:nXs'aEa.mun I! t:da,i's declarer had aimed his tfforli at "keeping the dangerous tiefcndcr oii lead." he would have been rewarded automatically. It adtlcrll the Hyla and his iriends. those. H113 Green. Forest came A sound as in l their little throats until they look: p icr all the world like silvery soap ; storm but the sound mlde by 010113 bubbles. i i ynwake only 8 day or two. 7' dealer. North-South vul- ll Q A K 7 I A K 3 9 A10 3 7 0 Q52 0 Q 9 85 N a 106 2 9 J 4 W E 9 Q 10 8 2 0 95 3 Q Q J 4. A .1 at S 4, q in 7 s .343 9 9 T 6 5 0 K4 2 . Q K 9 3 The bidding: North East south West 1 9 Pass INT Pass 3 NT Pass Pass Pass Luckily ior South, West opened the low spade, and the jack won the lust trick. south then turned his attention to the diamond suit. laying down the king from his own hand East dropped the jackland ricclarer took time out to think. Unrortiiiiately. however, this "hud- dle" was non-productive. because South finally decided to lead an- other diamond to dummy's eight- spot. East took the trick and made the marked shiit to clubs. and South was down one beiore he could regain the lead. In the postmortem south ex- plained to his highly unsympath- etic partner that "East always false-carded when holding queen- jack at a suit. and so. when he actually played the Jack.South had been sure that he did not have the queen." This "reasoning" on South's part can scarcely be termed scientiiic. The only point oi the play was to keep East oil the lead and prevent a club return. and any eiiori South could devote to that end was wcll worth making. As a matter oi tact. South should have entered the dummy with a heart or aspado and led the iirst diamond with the intention (or hope) or passing the trick to west; but even as south started the suit. by laying down the king, his next lead should havc been directly to the ace. 1! East's jack was really a singleton. there was very little advantaac in lines- sing the eight-spot. it it held. south could only get back to his hand ior another itnesse with the club king. and if the club Kim! was really "right". South could stilt win nine tricks by leading his third diamond through West'ssup- riositious Q-9 to dummy's remain- have them. ing l0-8-7. away Peter saw Johnny Chuck sitting on his doorstep. was doing it from sheer joy in be- ing alive and back home. Also iroin oi distant tliundcr. Pctcr could gust hear it. and it was good 1,5 hear. You don't like thunder? You don't think it is good to hear? That tliuiider was. ior Pctcr knew that it was not the thunder oi it wings as Thunderer the (muse drummed ior the admlratltn oi Mrs. Grouse. Out on the Green Mc'adows not far away Peter saw Johnny Chuck sitting on his doorstep. This was the iirst. time this spring Peter had seen him. ior Johnny hail slept all winter and had been Peter was tempted to run over and greet him. but changed his mind us he saw Ready Fox at the edge oi the Old Pasture also looking toward Johnny Chuck. Peter may be hap- py-go-lucky. but not that happy- go-lucky. He would call on Johnny Chuck some other time. And then Peter iorgot Johnny Chuck. Ho iorgot Reddy Fox. I-in forgot all the joyous voices. Hr sat up a little stroiclitor. Then he stood up on his hind legs as if he thought he could see better that way. He rubbed his eyes. or tried to. He did it a second time. Com- ing across the Green Meadows io- nard the dear Old Brlnr-patch was a two-lcgizcd Ilgurc that was strangely familiar. strangely so be- cause it was so long 5ll1('C Peter had seen it. i Peter kicked up those long heels oi his in the iunmest mannenthen ran around this way and that. kicking up his long heels. "Have you gone crazy. Peter Rabbit?" asked little Mrs. Peter. poking her head out oi the Old Brlar-patch. "See who is coming!" cried Pct- er, and kicked up his heels again- Then he sat up and once more rubbed his eyes. He had to. He was still having hard work to be- Mrs. Peter was sitting up and looking. She knew now that Peter wasn't. crazy. she didn't ieel quite as excited as Peter. but she was excited. That was Farmer Brown's boy coming straight toward the dear Old Brier-patch. it lust couidntt be, anyone else, ,And he hadnit been seen all winter. not even once. He had spent the win- ter way down in the Land-oi-ah ways-summer. but of coursr Peter and Mrs. Peter and the other lur- red and ieathcrcd ioik didn't know that. a suddenly. Peter began to run. He was running straight toward Farm- er Brown's boy. Yes. sir, he was doing. Just .that. ”Now I know he's ct-a'I.,x." thought ' Mrs. Peter. But oi course he wasn't. Half way he stopped. sat up and stared hard at Farmer Browns boy. then turned and raced back to the. dear old Briar-patch. Farmer Brown's boy latuhed aloud. "Go it. you scamp!" he cried. "I do believe you recognize me and are glad to see me." S-low right he was he didn't even guess. ICE cow 7-: By Al Coon WANTE?.'.'- READ n.-..u..-... ,.,.,. :.,...m...s.-....i.-..- Ncw mar Ynhs oum Ti-V) WAY. DAISV MA: CONE. 5 ATTRACK-TED -rt-4' HLJSBIN AH ALLUS KINDA WAL. r.vt:swn-nus is woamw our FINE. DAlSY me mwq IS tom wcsuszo-airr, r-:- FORTO-IHLJTLY. no-I" ro EACH V cm 1 . I KING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED ,,'g,i'l.: L . - . ..- .....-....-........- ....-. -..........-.....-........ ..u....... a..-... ...- - . - i- -K I l.AwuMowEP.s SHARPENED YOU'LL have to REMOVE. SOUR THINGS. HORACE, so I can WASH- OUT SOME HOSE FOR room! HPPQTN "cap" STUB, s -1 I r 73.4114: IUME... IWIA WI) M960-l'TA I009! 11' D'VA LET 'iM GIT N KEEP 'iM BACK . MTH VER LEFT... o ' ti."-”.":: WHAT WOULD you 170 u: rr WERENW FOR ME PI on, You FORGOT vouiz RAIORI - ...f.,.. -. I l l - l i l i l i l i I I I L isiiinainc UP RATHER ;?)METHlN' FIERc&,so-l r . --ALL wen. NAFTA Do P out: OLE ALBUM wrm MY BABY IT. AN' WALK , AN -- HCTURE N E 5 RN: ,-.. ET EY'LL BE FIG as A L mi”. t l'-1ivl.:.p.ir- Ciuib y lM.4U: La-VT) l ,. . , . . T -run.-'.: IL.'.. 53:; HOME TOBAV-I JUST FEEL LIKE SVENDN A QUIET TIME AND HAVN' A 6000 BEST- HON MANY TIMES MUST AND WHY DON'T YOU DUST THE 6 IN THE Lima 9. I'M SICK AND TlQED- TALKING To you - ('apt.IH'vkp-I':mmVu&mh.Vg1l;v,,,m.,. . .B.y.George McManus ---j jnaronu. AFTEPNOON ' Aaet D&T moavcuzoroeooootr. By. Carl Anderson MAY 1. 1951;. K4 . 33! Zinc Grey