BURNS ONCERT WEDNESDAY THURSDAY nu 25m JAN zen Under the distinguished patronage of His Honor Lieutenant-G "or J. A. Bernard and Mrs. Bernard, Premier J. Walter Jones and Mrs. Jones, His Worship Mayor B. Earle MacDonald and Mrs. MacDonald, PROGRAM CaledoniaPipers Pipe Selection Opening Remarks ............. ..W. R. Shaw Chorus . . . . . . . . Zion Girls Choir Address 0n Burns .. Frank MacKinnon Solo . . . . . . . . Dorothy MacLaren ..~|.. Solo (Selected) . . . . . . . . . Christine King TNE ONARLOTTETOWN BOARD OF TRADE EXTENDS A CORDIAL INVITATION T0 mtrnnnstrnn FARMERS to attend their JANUARY MONTHLY DINNER MEETING CHARLOTTETOWN HOTEL, WED" JAN. 25th, 1950. Time—6 P. M. Price—$1.25 Guest Speaker-W. R. SHAW, Deputy Minister of Agriculture Oil "PUBLIC RELATIONS BETWEEN THE BUSINESSMAN AND THE FARMER" (For reservations call the Secretary, phone 1874, b _ fore Wednesday noon). _ e . ATTENTION OIIRNSEY OREEOERS A MEETING WILL BE HELD FRIDAY] JANUARY 27th AT 2:30 PM. in The DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE BUILDING reqnglaslllieeting is important and full attendance is J: It. CARR, Secretary. For Foot Ailment Consult ‘ u..|..\. nnovm, o. P. Orthopedic Chiropodist %"¢ nmoo llaly Redeemer llall . . TONIGHT 8.30 The prizes are the same n those prevailing at other Bing» In the city. 14s Great George street CIIABLOTTETOWN, raft. a, Highland Fling . . . . . . . . . Mrs. John MacKinnon place in me Green For t and Quariette . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Brooklyn Quartctte fltffigihilafiftiwhgt is?‘ ‘;::§:gug}: Violin Solo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bazii Phillips “"3"” "1 d"? 5m”- YW k"°“' Jumper is one oi the le-w Green ‘ Forest roiks who can get about on . . / ~ _ THE GUARDIAN. ..___j_______‘ 3‘ lBY Thornton JUMPER 1S PEEVED For good or ill some how or other I“ "me will’ each aiieots another. ‘And ior himself alone. no matter. how he may try. l-le may think‘ that what he does has nothing tol do with any one else, but he is‘ mistaken. Jumper the Hare had watched Lightioot the Deer. Mrs. Liightiout and the twins tramp out their yard in a certain good ieeding the snow instead o! having to wade —Old Mother Nature. l ‘Phat is Old Mother Naturals way; uI saying that no one can live to; W. Burgess) much there there?" said Bio-city. "Isn't i leading grounds in winter. Then he too lives largely on low-growls‘ shoots and tender twigs o! various kinds of bushes and little young trees. He also cats some bark just as Peter Rabbit does. He often saw his neighbors stand up on their hind (eel; and stretch up as iar as they could ior a mouthful oi browse. They hadn't done this at first. There had been no need oi it. But as winter dragged on and his friends were still prisoners in their own yard there was more and more standing up on their hind ieet and reaching for food. They had already eaten all that girew low enough to be easily reach. ed. Jumper didn't notice this until one day when he was visiting the Intermission through it. or being unable to get , _. . _ _ around in it at all. His long hairy Pipe Selection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Caledonia Pipers toes spread so that Lhey are like Solo . . . . . . . .- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . John Bears Zififiliyfisgo Tififlh keeqiphainn}, £5.23: u‘ . . Violin (Selected) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Archie Hume my can mm the snowshoe Rm‘)- S I N u.“ . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 3 _ _ .. _ - lie often visited that yard for o" ( o N) " Mrs‘ John MdLk-mnon Mr. and Mrs. Llghtioot were old Ba y] g Selection _ _ > _ _ ‘ _ _ _ > H D iriends and long-time neighbors. g‘ p onam MacLeod That part of the Green Forest Duet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . John Bears - Mrs. W. Goss “he” ‘hi5’ h“ ma“ ‘he'll’ 5'3"‘ F D t F had long been one oi his favorite I n HQ s . . . . - a 0 rank Johnson 0' K‘ Presby t;v#:0190000ocwcriacnc=croc~c Quarietio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Brooklyn Quarteiic _ g auu Lang s... . d ilontraot Bridge I '_Kmg_ g By Josephine Culbertson “Dlmsslo” 5° CENTS g ocsuonooooonnna AFTER THE OPENING LEAD Anyone-experts or novice-is apt to go wrong on an opening lead. since oftentimes the selec- tion must be made blindly. Alter the dummy is put down. however, a good player will "check up," and. l! necessary, take remedial action. Consider this case: South dealer. Both sides vulnerable. 452 QA974 gqms aqioss nan §J1074 Qiosss N .2 K354 .3 WSE §A872 4,72 {.843 goose QKQJ3 Q6 §AKJ5 The Hiding.‘ South West North Bast 1; 10 IL 20 29 Hm so HM 49 mm. Ha nu Pass West selected the same lead that would probably be made by many experts-the spade ace. He intend- ed to lay down the king also, and by that sequence announce to his partner the ability to ruii a third round o! the suit. Unfortunately [or this idea. dummy turned up with only two spades, and this, o! course, should have made West revise his plans. However. ior some undisclosed reason, West decided to play the spade king also. He then shiited a low diamond. East took the nine with the ce and returned a diamond-but outh was now in an excellentvposition. He ruiicd with the heart three, cashed his own top hearts. and then went to dummy with a club, to cash the heart ace. While he was thus draw- ing West's last trump he discard- ed a spade irmn his own hand, and could then claim the balance with solid clubs and the spade queen. West should have shifted immedi- ately to a diamond. instead ot cashing his second spade trick. True. by guessing correctly, Smith could drive out West's spade king and establish his own queen, but meanwhile the defenders could South twice in dia i’ upumn. iortiiy West's trump holding so that it would be sure to produce i " i the setting trick. monds. _ and by thus shortening his trumps._ yard he wanted a bite to eat. Just the tender tips oi a twig or two “as all he wanted. He tried one path after another and not a twig ‘could he iind within reach, not ‘oven when he stood up as high as he could On his long hind feet. and then he could reach pretty high. All had en browsed oii. There wasn't a twig within his reach anywhere. It wasnt until he jump- ed out o! a path uip on the snow that he could find a bite. and then only beyond the reach oi long lnecks. ln that part of the yard any- way éverything within Jumper! reach that could be eaten had been eaten. lt really didn't matter to Jumper then because he could go about on the snow where he pleased, and so could get what he needed where the Deer couldn't go. Blacky the Crow happened lo see him as he was leaving the Deer yard. “Isn't much leit there for you, is there?" said Blacky. \ "I wonder what they will do next winter. They will have hard work to find as good as this it they have to make a. yard then." .v “Perhaps they will make it here again." said Jumper. “What-tor? There would be no- thing ior them to eat here, or ior you either tor that matter," said Biacky. “Why not?" demanded Jumper. His eyes had opened very wide. He looked surprised. He was surpris- ed. "Shoots and twigs of bushes and trees don't grow in a. single summer like grass and other plants that come up every year. You ought to know that," said Blacky. "Oi course I know it. I just didn't think of it. Why-—why this has always been my favorite part o! the Green Forest in winter because there always has been plenty to eat here. Now it is spoiled! There won't be anything here {or those Deer another winter, but there won't be anything for rne either!" Jumper sounded peeved. He was peeved. What Blacky had said was true and there was nothing that could be done about it. Never beiore had it entered his head that what Light- ioot the Deer and his family did could concern him in any way. He had been glad when they had made their yard there. Now he wished mightily that they hadn't. WINDLESHAM, Surrey. England (OP) - Only Christmas Day baby at the local maternity home was a son born to a Mrs. Yule. He is to he christened Christopher Robin. MIMMIHILI A7’ HONIY. 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