=*-~'34_>n11.‘a, 194s ii Illll ‘rllr "' "avffliiftitorhagfluz-lt-zwmy; %.'1i'$ 0m soon, ant Slllnl D run were ids __ M thl lint l iii-new M-l.."'"' ..“.‘..‘.1'l.’$1.".'.".'.i'l‘..”°'°°°'°°"' "" Don's niss ill ll you wont to TAKE FARl-nin your hand. A -w|-s ‘vs I may. as ant YOUR “ma? Snowl old-l)? ‘P v 51".“ 9'50". in invited lo on lilo all!“ 50121. Don't 5l TODAYI |------'-- -- rm: our mo MAIL n-lls courou now! ---------- yll/ws couto uss AN rvsmnc omrasrv LAUGHSl man. Of VOW I31’ AVAILAIJ IKKEIS Al (m w") EACH, so; m; "m" “up; or us.- nmaoss tossouimousv onom won t. ruu. rAvMull. sums " UDIHUI ADDRESS -¢-.-.------4 yxxnrncu o $1.59. 51-25. 51-00 ‘h: Included mqfl 014mg; m q Y-Grads Club of Charlottetown. mu m: courou 1o o P- 0- 5°! 24¢ ‘the Green Meadows. v vim- " - FARMEE BROWN'S HELPEBS And iudsmént by the facts abide. Let prejudice be put aside. --Old Mother Nature. "I've never seen so many Mice on the Meadows as there are this spring. It looks to me as if we are in for a. Mouse plague. With so many now they’ll increase so fast that they are likely t: pretty near cat us out o! house and home. The can do about it. No matter bow good a growing season we have‘ there will be a short crop of hay grass faster than it can grow." said Farmer Brown. ‘ Farmer Brown's boy was think-y lng of this as he started across» _ Everywherei tiny paths crossed and recrossedi through the new grass. Now and then he caught a glimpse of a short-tailed Mouse‘da.rting along one oi’ these little paths. What his fathenhad said was true. Condi- tions through the winter and early spring had been just right for the Meadow Mice. lie couldn‘t remem- ber ever having seen so many! Wortlsy's Drug Store, Jenkinsfhar- macy, ssuglses Drag Co. Ltd. and arms Atso OIIAINAIJ m Milton's ' uld Spain. s I a s I s s I I I I s I l a r I s s I s s s s s u PEISON, AI a s l. ‘on.--¢---~------'------~-------~---_------¢--¢- Ihis All Sponsored by- R. E. Mulch & 0o. Ltd. BRITAIN'S "DOLLAR." EXPORT DRINKING HABITS — (OP) — ‘A list of Britain's manufactured goods most popular in hard currency mun. tries was given by the beard o1 srsdo recently. Principal item; were; About 28.5 per cent of tea drink- ers on this continent take cream and susar, 26.1 per cent take sugar alone. 8.1 per cent use just millr or (‘Team and 14 per cent drink their worsted suitings, certain cottons, -knitted, woollen and linen piece- nvode. high quality cutlery and vhlflowlre. beer and Mtisky. tea piatn. Puerto Rico has an average 1am- perature of '13 degrees in winter and ‘i9 ln summer. Quickies By lion iioysolds "I ‘guess I'll lIUVG-N look in Hie GuordiorfWont Ads for on- ofher boot-tins one ls beginning to leak pretty bud!" THERE OUGHTA BE A LAW! l-le knew that with conditions Just; right a single pair pf Meadow MlCCi may have nwre than o. dozen funi- lies, each of five to eigiht or more. children" in a year, and that wheni they are only a few weeks old these . children will have children of their ovnn. With s0 many Mice now what would the Green Meadows be like by the end of the summer? Where would the hay come frcm. ter? Not only would there be little hay, but other crops would also suffer. The garden was likely to be ruined. And there was nothing to be done about it. That was the front of Farmer Brown's boy a brown bird with broad wings rose "lightly into t-he air. He was nearly but not quite the size of Blacky the Crow. His wings made no sound He flopped them easily then held them out motionless and sailed a little way before that easy flap- ping of the wings again. "A ghort-Eared Owl!" exclaimed Farmer Brown's boy. "It is a long time since I've seen one here on the Green Meadows. I wish a pair would nest here. They might save a little hay for us by matching Mice. I have read that Mice are what they live on when there are plenty of them." Just then another Owl rose from the ground and the two flew away together. It was clear that they were a pair. Supposing to stay and nest! fit was an excit- lng thought. Farmer Brown's boy crossed the Green Meadows to the Old Pasture. There he was very careful to walk slowly and care- fully so as to make no squad. N0 yea; rustled against his clothing No dead twig snapped under his feetHI-Ie reached what he called his lookout, a big rock from which he could lock over parts of the 01d Pasture and much of the Green Meadows. Cautiously he crept up on the big rock and. peeped throupll R screen o! bushes. Just a little way off was the home of Reddy Fox and Mrs. Roddy. Neither of them was to be seen. Long ago he learned the value of patience. He lay on the rock as still as the rock itself. At long last he saw a sharp H059 poked out of the doorwoy. Mrs. Raddy was at home. Two or three minutes later Reddy stepped out from among the bushes. He had brought trwo Mice. L He put them down near the door- way, then walked off to one side By Fugdly and Shorten ' '1 LAPTRAPR TilE UIVOIZCE lilo so. yous uouorz _~i DEMAND AT toast IMEP- is "will "’c‘i‘-’id“’1%“é.i3i’s“ii>t"ii§€ Si? i.“ . “Wm 0F T"? "'6" THE t vols or INF ATION ' °°$T°F WWW * . SSNFD STARVELON i , lii$ CLIENTS "' ””‘* " .7 t 4 s25 rooms WHOLE o ' “it? Fditilisaiunmtiia“ SWEKTN SLAVE. MuCilfANi) mt / _ us cxPEcls HER till OOMPLAINING! IT'S PLENTY! JUST - [EARN H00 T0 MANAGE LIKE Any LEQS‘. ' 1 8y Thornton W. Burgess) worst o! it there is nothing we‘ this year. Tlhose Mice will eat that?‘ l ing I doorway. It for the cows and Horses next win-' l discouraging thing. From just lni they ‘were , rna GUARDIAN, unAawrrl-rroww KiNG or ‘m: ROYAL Mounrro 10-. l’. I ‘ .., k-Jusll‘ l bird lighted on the ground. another circled overhead large while sat dowp, In a lttle way and a’ ‘ came out. As moment Mrs. Raddy she ate what he had brouEht 1°!‘ . her. Roddy grinned just have seen‘ a Dog 81'1"- _l.lll‘.h€l‘l and disappeared in the bushes. Farmer Brown's boy waited un- til Mrs. Reddy had gone back into the house. He left, as carefully as he had come. lie was Brlnnlrlg. t0"- l-le had found out what he had .come for. Roddy and Mrs. Redd)’ had babies in the home. How did he know that? Roddy was brinB- ing food to her, but he wasn't to?" it into the house. l-le was taking care not to go too near the was plain that he wasn't permitted to enter. “I hope there is a big family." thought Farmer Brown's boy as he made his way back to the Green 'Meadows. Those Foxes will be a big help with those Mice." He stopped to look across the ‘Green Meadows toward the Bix ‘River. A large bird lighted on the ground while another circled over- head. ills face brightened. "Hello!" ih: exclaimed. “Harrier the Marsh l-lawk and his mate are back and locking over their old nest If they stay. and. probably they will, and if they have a big family. there will be a lot more helpers. If those Short-Eared Owls will only stay We may have some hay after all." The next story: “Come and Get |ts DO'l"l'tY_ Contract Bridge n, soitipam canal-us . 7.\‘;‘.f»1'~"\"~‘7\§'5\7\'\m. y cnuna. BUT EFFECTIVE The declarer's “psychological? play in today's deal was rather crude, but it was the best he could do under the circumstances — and it had the supreme virtue of sue- ceeding! i North, dealer. . i Neither aide vulncrable._ t QKQ QAK? Q1098642 ‘ ‘Ha go's: 1087 ' ' ‘53 N .85‘ ' Qassz W E OK‘! | sac s ha" Q9 i ‘ A34 QQJM) ‘Q35 4.7642 Thebldding: North East South Wool 1. Pass 1N1‘ Pass i 2Q Pass 2N1‘ PM!’ i 8N1‘ Pass Pass Pass South's two-notrump rebid was obviously a gambling effort, al- though it is true that his first re- ‘Simharhad left him with a little "nverage.” West opened his fourth-highest spade and, the moment the dummy went down. south saw that he faced considerable danger in the club suit. Even if the club was “right" the opponents could establish at least three tricks in the suit before declarer could nook out their dia- mond controls. So, to disguise the spade situation as much as possible and in that way to encourge further attacks in spades, declarer over-took the spade queen with his own ace-as though he had startedwith only t-wo cards in the suit, ' South now led the dluznond Jack West ducked; East won and return- od the spade nine. Dummy’: king won, and another diamond was led, West winning with the ace. West. to his shame, new die ex. actly what South had hoped no would do-he continued with spades evidently hoping that declarer was now void and that the rest of the suit could be run defensively Need- less to say. that was not the case! To repeat, South's hoax was prctw feeble, and it could not have worked against any West who watched the "spots." First, East had played the spade deuce on the opening lead. which he scarcely would have done with four to the jack. Second. East's. returjn of the spade nine had specifically denied the jack. So South was marked with that vital card-and the shift to clubs was clearly marked for West. By Alex Raymond mess was A new; ma: n '- 5M: >~MGYWSM trronsvsnlsoooosovam... ii PUYITIN uealwloaooac- roar nevus nusosv ~ rous... DRIPPLE PAGE ZHIRTEEN pm: . .114: a/soawzvw/zs-wrmzz lfimdtllllfiAflbi-Ti/EY mszocammg By Zone Grey " n autos: P CASEp’ . . D0 semen-nus ABOUT KETCI-LP BOTTLES ? ' rATiiillfiti“ w Z Q = ‘u rkwkiliil/ a QELLLY? ‘IOU 5A‘! MOT H5125 1011-452 BIMMV- THE sav- ‘A/ElTER-IS BACK ? WE WEQE. WOERIED ABOUT HIM _—|5 HE ALL RIGHT? wiazwssr RIGHT cwslz TO Hi5 House- BE suns TD asz HIM f 4- up. ml. n; v-e-rulyilrn. h‘. ins lived rififinlfmar" sruass l By ‘in! IS THAT ALL ‘m’ BREAD wowvs ear FOR sANov/ici-iss ?? --n= ‘THEY oo, MY FOR cow-enter 605s UD! watt, i-IUQQY -- GET THQEE MORE LOAVES~4 PRICE T i"? ‘m: TOILER YOU'RE Aonuealvdus CHARACTER, MRS. scRuesuvIfl-te AccomPalceoFaAales m! -\n AS ouur .,_ ___,__‘\ By Harry Hoecigssn n-s Guam! tum‘ nu an: imam’; Paw.-