a -__._e _,-..-s.‘ c. . f". ..__ PAGE TEN DANCE» WINSLOE STATION HALL TIIIIIIIIIT ‘Eastern. Rhythm Boys Orchestra ADMISSION 50c Canteen Service Dancing 9.304231 I l i1" l... iii!» i? ' BINGO iioly Redeemer iiall TIIIIIBIIT s30 The prises are the some as those prevailing It other Birigoe in the eity. For Charitable Parpoeee LADIES . . . Hear the story of a larmer's wiie - actb-ely engaged in Canadian political life. Hear and meet Mrs. Gladys Strum, M.'P., from Qu'Ap- pelle, Saskatchewan, Canada's only woman Parliament. III PIIRKIIALE llIILL e Charlottetown ' TIIIIRSIIAY, NOVEMBER 25, 8 P. M. Ladies and gentlemen cordially invited. Member of Island in Show, 0.8.5. ST. ANDREWW DINNER I'he one hundred arid twenty-fourth annual celebration under the auspices of the Caledonian Club of Prince Edward THE CHARLOTTETOWN TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, AT 7 P.M. The Toast . . . . . ..._.g....."The Day and A’ Wha Honor It". The Oiator...............Dr. The Hon. Cyrus MacMillan Tickets obtainable from members ol the Committee: J. .Wm. MacKinnon, W. H. Beaten, J. P. Nicholson, Bruce MacPherson, W. Blair MacDonald, Norman S. MacLeod, J. E. Burnett, Malcolm MacKinnon. Among the three-minute speakers will he the Lieutenant Governor His Honour J. A. Bernard, ex-Chief Walter R. IIIIEEIIS GIIIINTY PROGRESSIVE consisiiviirivi: " convention A Convention of the Progressive Conservative Associa- tion of Queens County will be held in the Empire Theatre, Market Building, Charlottetown, the 24th. day of November, i948, beginning at 8 P. M., for the nomination of two Pro- gressive Conservative Candidates to contest the next Fed- eral Election. vention Each Poll Chairman shall hold a Poll Meeting for the purpose at appointing five Delegates to attend A lull attendance is requested. REAGH BAGNALL, President. JOSEPH. R. MACMILLAN, Secretary. l r i l THE GUARDIAN, MR- QUACK rs iixcrriin Tlwush satisfied with what you've found. It "in may Ply to look around. —Mr. Quack Mr. Quack the Mallard Duck 1s handsome and he knows it. Like most handsome folks he often shows thatrhe knows it, especially When he thinks others are looking at him and admiring him. He likes to be admired. Who doesn't? He and Mrs. Quack and their flock u! young Ducks they were Sililposed to lead to the Sunny South for the winter still lingered on the Big River. There was still good eating in the big wild rice bed along one shore. Though some nights Jack Frost made a little ice along the shore it didn't interfere with their feeding ancLin the morning it soon melted. In day. time they kept out on the middle of the Big River where they were safe from the dreadful guns they knew were hidden in the rice. or sometimes visited the Smiling Pool. They had found out. that there they were safe from dreadful guns. for Farmer Brown would not allow hunting there. When the Black Shadows stole out from the Purple Hills each evening it was safe to go into the rice. "We T9311)’ Ought to be moving l] ContractBriclgei s. a, Josephine Cuiberteitn g fi£><w£>tb3>00Q Finesse, Or Play ‘For The Drop? Whether to finesse or play for a dYOD i5 not always a mathematical problem! For example: Northdealer. Both sides vulnerable 41a @542 QAKJUI! qsAQ-I . §Q85 QKIOB - 42 N 9Q1076 9539 W E 0Q?! gee: s 4.9742 Q85 oars QK83 §764 ‘x1063 Thebidding: North East South West 1 Q Pass 1 NT Puss 2 Q Pass 2 NT Pass 3 NT Pass Pasii Pun South felt that he was not quite strong enough for a. two-club re- Sponse on the first round and therefore bid the more conservat- this Con- winter months. IIIIRTIIIIMBERLANII FERRIES LIMITED Charlottetown. P.E.I. ‘ The Ferry Service between Wood Islands and Caribou, will b i948. e discontinued an November 30th.. Until that date, sailings will continue from each terminal i at 8:00 llld 11:00 a. rn., 1:00 and 3:00 p. m. 1948 will establish another record for traffic in all depart- ments, Emssenge s, Autos. and Trucks. Traffic figures will be supplied as soon as available. Our Company In Interested In hearing from the public, as to the desirability of having this service continued during the ive one riotrump. When North re- bid his diamonds. however. South correctly repeated the notrump call, thus giving a very fair de- scrlption of his holding. - West opened the spade four. East, of course, put up the king. and South. after long thought, took the trick. South then led e diamond and finesseci the jack. East won and led back the spade ten. South covered. but this only led to greater defeat. because after West. had won the trick, he put East in with the spade nine, and now East was forced to shift to hearts, This lead through declarefs king gave the defense a few more tricks. and the result was a. 500-point penalty. South should have taken a more realistic view of the diamond’ sit- uation! Granting that the finesse offered a slight advantage mathe- matically, it ivas nevertheless bad play to take that finesse! The right line was lo cash the diamond ace and king. This would guard against East‘s getting in if he had the doubleion queen. and It would be ii losing play only if West had the diamond queen and his partner had the heart ace, and if West upon faking the diamond queen. shifted Io a heart. In other words. the combination of circumstances that would defeat the contract if declarer played out the ace and king of diamonds. was far more remote than the position of cards that actually existed. (By Thornton W. Burgess) lie took to iiis own wings and fol. ' lowed on." Mrs. Quack would say. "We really ought." Mr Quack would agree, noddifll his hand- some green head Then he would add. "perhaps tomorrow." Now as every one kuoivs. tumor. row never comes; always it l5 to. day. So the Quacks still lingered and wished they might stay all winter. They dreaded the long, long journey to the Sunny South with dreadful guns wailing for them all along the way not to men- tion other dangers. “If only we could be sure of open water and enough to eat we would stay. I'm sure we wouldn't mind the cold. I hear that Mr. and Mrs. Black Duck stayed last winter and are planning to stay this coming winter." said Mrs. Quack. "You don't say! Who told you that?" qiiacked Mr. Quack. "A little bird told me." replied .\lrs. Quack. The little bird was Sara Rail whom she had met aver in the rice. 4 "if they can stay we can." de- clared. Mr. Quack. He was very de- cided about it. "It would seem so. but we don't know how they do It." sighed Mrs. Quack. "We'll find out." declared Mr. Quack. “I'll do some looking around. That's what I'll do." He was beginning to get excited. Mrs. Quack nodded "Nothing is lost by looking around. Often it pays." said she. "'I'hey lived around here all summer so they probably- know of some safe place where there is plenty to eat that we don't know of." said lvlr. Quack. “If so we should he aisle to find ii.“ said Mrs. Quark. "I ivill." declined Mr. Quack "I'll look around until I do." “I've noticed that they aren't as neighborly as they used to be They don't stay around here as much as they did when we first knew them. Every morning at day- light they fly up the Big River and are gone all day. Have you noticed that?" said Mrs. Quack. "No." replied Mr. Quack “If that's the case I'll go up the Big River myself tomorrow morning. I'll follow them and find out where they go. They eat the same kind of food we do and if there is a place where they can get it all winter we can get it there too." The next morning at break of day as the Black Shadows began to hurry back to the Purple Hills Mr. Quack saw Mr. and Mrs. Black Duck leave the rice and fly up the Big River. He took to his own wings and followed. Mrs. Quack remained with the flock, leading them out to the middle of the river before the coming of hunters. Mr. Quack was zone a long time so long that she began to fear something had happened to him. When at last he did return he was an excited Duck. Yes sir, he was a-n excited Duck. He was so excited that he could hardly quack. "I've found it. my dear! I've found itI" he quacked when at last he found his voice. The next story: "Too Good To Be True." Favershamf Kent. England - (CP) -— E. Cclyar. '79. has com- pleted 63 years’ work as ii laborer on Parsonage Farm at Osprlngs near here. 8y Harry Haenigsee SUPEQ§ONIC AGEJHE LABOR SAVING GADG it's urreiztv QEVOIJFINGMOIHERI ‘HARNESSEO ebwsi? 59mm? 114E witDEST means o‘ MAM! THE ATOMIC meme we or - AND i sTiLL HAVE 12> oust ‘Z7 I @011’ AUNT HLEN-IVOIHEQ AND DARLEEWS MGTHEP A&N‘T' SPEAKING GO WRLEEBPS MfilI-IEQ GGEWILDIFQQ£EN ANDMGIIEPGEISWILDIFIVISW wfiiitrflfifififilDiflfllOfl EEQRhMTFlEFZSWEI-AAVEUQ ANDBNICi-IT is MQEEHS MdI-ififlswrzsfb Btow A , FUSE _ _,, , CHARLOTTETOWN KING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED IOE PALOOKA xuaiwm 4 aoaauom Flfldfi. You M1016’! NOVEMBER 23, 1948 3V lam nuFu/onwncea MVP! Alk EKBOOA’ IND/A s H / F‘? B‘ ““ rats cmzenen: Til! eezriror . our». rown VISITORS ‘ID ‘MNOPORTMASSAOIJSETTS semi , CARNEEVALLAS maven rennin-mic iiateniiiuat . .3»,- eveur WHICH HAS sen imioeo eovni some r \ NOPORT was rouiiozo IN ieee OUOHTA ee riiie Pennant PIE unnflulmiioii is unrest HORACE. I THINK I'LL BUY YOU A NICE RING F0? YOUR FINGER" ' r "-40. l _ l: , , I.’ l‘ TIPPY AND "CAP" STUBBS RMV/u-GIISET" I . 1 o, "ct-ii. a; ‘L’, ' (‘Tn ' ~.'.'. s‘ -'\\ I "~?"“~<§r.-§€/€~ . i‘ + ' "4 - ._"l . ‘='~"'~~i -:.\ 2/ i ly Ham Fisher ALLIEVEIZSEEOFYOU ' AT BREAKFAST is mug ' - HAND / :-' DOLLARS-YOUR GPAWMA MUST HAVE A LOTTA ‘wit’ sssinctosristteicge l-"n-iiisix or LENDIN’ SEVEN MEBBE SHELL LENigivOU t oowr sea WHY sou SAY WIBBY! i-IEJLL MONEY sacio, BRINGING UP FATHER m? wags-Miro I USE "m; PHONE P I WANT "r0 CALL up THE t GQOCEQ L’! u, l 07-. “c4156; Jnlurrl spam, lnr. Wall imn i-me we IDEAITHAT Quiz PROGQAM Miei-i-r CALL ANV MINUTE‘ aov - - I'M GETTIN‘ WEARY — WAiTiNi! sou KIN NOT.‘ so "r0 THE smos- YOU cmwr ueE "rt-v PHONEL’ VII-IA‘??? I CEQTAINLY WHY Dow? ‘IOU ANSWEQ THE PHONE WHEN r CALL uo? WAKE up WHEN I'M TALKING ‘I'D YOU av Lari Anderson CARL- ANDIFQONW i<<fiinii%i>w r... I u... ri.»-.~s»i~-.t~.v-u»<m~n| TILLIITTHE TOILER if THE “VICWRY/ I'VE Jug-r TIME ENOUGH ‘I'D MAKE A GETAWAV... some n4: sate: BOAT I *"'"""e ALL WE'LL ‘rm: no ci-uwom.