AUGUST 31, 1949 NAPOLEON AND UNCLE ELI? Iv Clifford Mclride IR|.U.S.F, " 13-» ~=-"-'.3.."J‘F........ DANCE Siinnyslde Ballroom Every Mon., Wed., Sat. Eastern Illiytli Boys ADMISSION 35c Meet your friends there tonight LEADS ISLAND GROUP Tahiti, in the south Pacific. is the largest of the Society Islands. PLAN GIRIIS RESIDENCE VANOOUVER-(CP)-All the com- forts of home will be offered when residences for girl students at the University of British Columbia are open in the fall of 1950. The buildings will feature the latest In modern housing, and will be located close to campus centres. A resident counsellor will occu/py a suite in each residence. DAILY CROSSWORD 17. Part of a g ACROSS 2. Flower 1, Ill 3. Conical spool l5. Not firm of thread 9. Metal l4. Mix with 10. Culture the hands medium o. South ll. Shore America birds (abbrJ .13. God of love 6- S-shaimd jis. Owns moldins .16. Airplane 7. U. S. “ting pa“ admiral 13_ 510th l. Mounted 19, Not, policeman , wgrklng l1. Indian wild '20. Philippine sheen mountain l2. Fodder vat 2i. Indefinite 14. Bolsterous grllflg outburst :2. Wild as! ~ (slansl (Asia) ' 24. Levees 27. Sudden gush of liquid 28. Cleansed with water 30. Neuter pronoun Si. Spring_ (Sp- Am-l 32. Goddess of discord 34. Jewish month 36. Roots used in making canoes 38. Sayings 39. Lath 40. Riches 42. Man's name 44. Regulation e5. Close to 46. Pieces out DOWN l. Biblical mount. 19. Writing 21. Furnish 23. Sacred bull 24. Forehead: camera. fluids with notes 25. Valley w ere moon stood still mum] I-u (Bib.) Weeterday-‘a Answer 26. Percolate 29. Famous 37. Wheaten actor flour 33. French 38. German river river '34. Puts up a » 4i. Extinct sin stake {Poker} l3. Gold as. Pooh (Heraldry) DAILY ORYPTOQUOTE-llereh how to work It! A X Y D L B A A X It ls LONGFELLOW One letter simply stands for another. In this example A is used for the three L's, X for the two 0's, etc. Single letters, apos- trophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints. ‘Bach day the code letters are diflerent. A Cryptogram Qllotetifll EUEZl-ICR RFMRI wmncrrrlirndnh! HY Pzuin-DQI-"ERT- Yesterday's Crypt-Minnie! ._PROPBETS?-1 SAMUEL. is saut. asso ironc- The: Distributed b! Kill Futures Mimi" ____________________.__.__. .. _ irns GUARDIAN, CHARLOTTETOWN lly Thornton While the sun shines make your l)’ Ready for a rainy day. —Little Chief Hare. Little Chief Hare. who isn't a Hare at all but a Pike, was as busy a small person at; was to be found in all the High Mountains. Happy Jack Squirrel and the other Squir- rel cousins are no thrlfticr and no harder workers _ln the season of nuts and seeds than is Little Chief Hare on sunny days in haying time. While the Squirrel folk fill storerooms with nuts and seeds, or bury them where they can find them in time of need. small, busy Little Chief cuts. makes and stores 3W5)‘ Bmllflh hay to last him through the long winter until green things appear again. Paddy the Beaver is a lumber- man. cutting down trees, then cut- tini; them in short pieces and stor- 1118 these in a pile tinder water in hi-s pond. There under the ice "my Will keep him supplied with bark. which is the food he likes best. He makes a big food pile ln the water so that he-is sure of enough to eat no matter low long the winter may be. In like manner Little Chief is a haymaker. In summer Little Chief lives on sreen grass and other plants just as do Peter Rabbit and Johnny Chuck. But ln winter there are no green things growing way up there on Lhe High Mountain. In his home way down among the rocks Little Chief is snug and com- him. Neither can the cold winds nor snow. But he must eat. Of course. You see, he isn't one of those who can store up food in the form of fat under their skins and then sleep through most of the coldest weather. So he must look ahead; must get food while he can and store away enough to lest him all winter. Long, long ago when the world was young his family learned the gentle art of~making hay and ever since all Pika’: have been hay- rriakers. It isn't enough to just cut grasses and other plants and store them away as soon as cut. They would simply wilt and shortly become sour and mouldy, unfit to eat. They would become decayed and no good at all. When Farmer Brown cuts the grass on the Green Meadows he leaves it lying where it falls long enough for'the sun to dry it out. Then when It is dry he stores it away in his barn. l-ie never cuts on a rainy day and he never puts his hay away in the barn while wet. He knows just when to cut, just how long to let it dry, and Just how to store it away so that it will not spoil. Little Chief Hare knows these things Just as well sis does Farmer Brown. They are equally good haymalrers. Little Kid Surefoot, the very small because very young son of Billy and Nanny Surefoot. the Mountain Goats, had teased Little Chief to play with hlrri but Little Chief declared he had no time for play. His home was somewhere in a great rock slide, a great jumble of blg and little rocks among which nothing could grow. Beyond the edge of the rock slide were small places where grasses arid other plants grow. They were Lit- tle Chief's hayfields. Little Kid watched him run out from the rock slide, with his sharp teeth cut a small bundle of grass and other plants and carry this -it and do his part in drying it out. LI’L ABNER r . "in"! ”_"°n| 1 list/fibers. “w?! back onto the rook slide. He didn't take it down into his home deep mong the rocles. He spread his cutting out on a pile already dry at the foot of a big rock where jolly, bright Mr. Sun could get at yet where it would be sheltered from rain. He was very careful to spread it so that Mr. Bun could get at all of it. He was fussy about this. Anyway Little Kid thought so and wanted to know why. "Until all of it is dry 1 can put no more 0n top of it." explained Little Chief. "Why not't"_ asked the small Goat. "Because i! I pile more on top while some is still not dry it can't dry and will spoil. That will spoil the rest," explained Little Chief. "Then now you can play with W. Burgess) "Until all of ll. is dry I can put no more on top of it," explained Little Chief "Mr. Sun is shining." mp1 Little Chief. "I have to make hay while Mr. Sun shines. I'll make another haystack." He did. iil Contract Bridge By Josephine Culbertson fortabie. Jack Frost cannot reach. MATCH-POINT TACTICS -—fi Plays that would be absurd at rubber bridge may be the essence of shrewdness atmatch-point dup- liicate. Here is a notable illustra- t on: . south dealer. East-West vulnerable. A J 5 2 ‘ 10 * 2 {QC 401K imp“ N S K6 AQ J 0 QC’ 4 9 ‘I 2 1 s, A K 3 At every table except one, South opened the bidding with one heart. and eventually reached a very comfortable four-heart! contract. At one table. however, South got a- little fancy and started out with one notrump. North Jumped straight to three notrump — rather too enthusiastically for his holdlngl-and after that, the heart suit was not even mmtioned! West made his natural lead, the spade ten. The jack was played from dummy. and the moment it held the trick. South could see all too clearly that the other Souths who were in a normal four-heart contract would end up with five- odd, wheres-s he ‘himself would apparently win only three spades. five hearts and two clubs at no- trump. Rather than accept what was bound to be a bad match- point score on the board, this South determined to risk every- thing on an effort to make five notrump. To that end, he non- ehalantly led e. diamond from dummy at the second trick! East was alert and put up the diamond queen, then doggedly led a second round of the suit. West, however. was more gullible! lie won with the diamond ace but. apparently quite impressed by the fact that South had started to lead diamonds, West shifted beck to spades! South won the spade return with the king an ran every heart. dis- carding a club from dummy. Welt promptly threw away his seven of diamonds, forcing East to guard that suit, and a double squeeze developed! West had to keep two spades and therefore could not guard clubs; East. had to keep a diamond. When South finally led to the spade ace, East had to give up his club stopper and permit South to win three tricks in that suit. So South got his "top" af- me," cried Little Kid BUIQlQOt. rt-inrwssmTv-vwmnosrwau. W A was»: svm dearth-no. vo‘ agent's": 1'81 PPYFLW ter all! ly AL can AH was A SWEET LI’L SPOT PlCKED our 1V5 saru s: ' 4150mm! 104x! ma.’ 10's‘ PALOOKA HOKY SMOKESWHE AIN'T MADE A SOUNDmWONDER IF HE'S GOT A RELAPSE-MEBBE THAT HAPPENS WHEN THEY'RE GSITTIN’ , . . mu? r/lzuauur/s... H5 rum/rs 1' Fax r/r/s _ 54100171044 1017/! MY P/FL 6.. HES cam/Am Hi2! m 5E5 YOU/flat} P PAGE SEVEN b)’ Zane Grey gps/psgsomsoué swarm was-rm tastier... HAY! eev ' PEACEFUL t|i<e.. H1465 "N" F5"- t 5L m M MIDNITE SNACKWSAY... vou MUST as PRETTY FED UP LOOKIN’ AFTER veaa. HE'S A PAIN- m 1w NECKMYEAH... , 6011A err some- suoov rune wt oer our. HANDS. KNOBS. I GOT IV Cori Anderioi’ MOViN Pi-ruizes? DOTTY DItlPPLE 9° You time . LET HENRY ‘react! YOU we BIZNESS r HERE"! GUESS THIS IS Tl-lE PLACE." GEEJXP-ARENW‘ WE THERE t1 YET??"TIP1P_IE'LL WONDER V/HY A LITTLE MGQE . ‘lfleimwhfauivllamhuiuhr. TIPPY AND "CAP" STUII. ;g;-EHQON_ MOVIN’ PICTURES! WE'RE} MOVIN’TI-lEM ovea TO ‘ - i-ienizws Aum-‘s. rr souuos LIKE " “TIPPlE-l! r/pp/e! DIME! W's ‘Bv Edwina ‘ICLVLL GET A PUNCH IN THE EYE IF YOU DON'T SHUT UP]! I'M LIGTENING TO A 5A8’ “ 5HUT IJPW 5V GOLLY- I'M GQNNA GIT IN A WOCD AND I'M NUT GONNA HEAQ MAGGIE l'Ll_ PAY WELL CO2 Tl-IE TIME- I'LL ONLY NEED ABOUT A MINUTE - WELL—I HATE l r. S -' ”‘\- To IMTEIZEUPT ,’ . .' J-MAGGIE- 315/ BEQUgJT |— ' 20m LISTEN ‘TO IF you PAY " WELL-VLLDOTL’ SOMETHING ABOUT IT I 1Z3 WHO WANTS TO BATHE r nu i. ILAPNF)! ‘s- a.“ - i.. ha. E THE TOlLEk .@ ~ow se-ra RAG "l AND WASH OFF THAT same YOU LEFT AROUND THE "rusy , By Westovei I'M TOO KIND TO‘, LIT AGIRL, THIN vM INDIFFEREN WHEN \‘M 55a - m p l ly Merry‘ Hoenigien 1R ~nu SAIlTsO-PD surwm mes, mrchu i use? rr IF Tue 651' some reset‘. PE-HHV- Tame one Plano-l AT vbufl ¢i~ we»? ‘lhizouen . Aooizsss B0004 MINT-l APm AND GIL“! DATE TUE 3% vJi-IOGS N