PAGE TEN ' THE OHARLOTTETOWH MALE OHORIIS Will Present A MUSICAL CONCERT - ON TUESDAY, JUNE Oth AT 8:15 PM. In IIEARTZ MEMORIAL HALL Guest Ariists Admission 500 In Aid 0! Boys Work Ticket. on sale now at Henderson O Cudmore: l!oiman's lllusio Section: Chorus Members and llownttfs Grocery, Belvm dere Corner. Canadian Legion Clover Club Dance EVERY SATURDAY Al Blanchard and the "Clover Club" Band 'Admission-75c Dancing 9:30 to 12.00 For resefvllons Phone 1222 Reservations held until 10:30 p.m. SATURDAY NIGHT IS YOUR DANCE IIIGHT AT THE CLOVER CLUB Evooeofevvvvvrvrvvvvrvvvvvvvv-vvfo-9-O-9-c 9 i E 9 E 95O90-06909009-OOOOQOOOOOOOOO-OOAOOVO-QC THE BARN DRIVE IH INTRODUCING SEMMER SPECIALS It AFTERNOON TEAS "' Fruit Salad with Whipped Cream "l Strawberry Shortcake and Whipped Cream " Fruit Salad Sundae "' Strawberry Sundae Roll. Bran Muffins, English Scones, Hot Biscuits, Cinnamon Toast - Hot Chocolate . ATTEHTIOH LIi.'ISS'.l'OCK TRUCKERS AND PRODUCERS Since Monday, June 5th, has been declared a civic holiday, our plant will be closed. We will not, therefore, be accepting hogs or other livestock on this day. We shall be open for business as usual on Tues- day, June 6th. CANADA PACKERS PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND TUBERCULOSIS LEAGUE MOBILE X-RAY IIIIIT SOHEOIILE TUESDAY6JUNE- Middleton School WEDNESDAY '7 JUNE- Lower Freetown School . . . .. . . . . . . . . THURSDAY 8 JUN& . Freetownschool................... :30to4:30 7 to9' FRlDAY9JUNE- Kelvin Grove School .. . .. . 1:00 to 2:00 North Bedeque School .............3:30to5:ii0 As this service is now free all adults are urged to avail themselves of the opportunity at the most con- venient centre. T0 ISLAND BUSINESSMEN MR. WALTER CAMPBELL is the only authorized agent to solicit and accept advertising in connection with the LABOR JOURNAL . . lose , ions in complete control. He still ll if he refused the first club trick L171. ABNEF vou MAY cm-:12. 'SHE." IS warrmcs Foil vou. .l'.........-.-...---....--- - LOOK! IJUST GAWA FLASH W'l..iGirtTTHQiJO-i THE THE GUARDIAN. CHAR LOTTETOWN ily Thornton W. THE HOME IN THE GROUND Busy happiness is best, Those so occupied are blest. Rattles the Kingfisher and Mrs. Rattles were happy for they were busy. They were very busy indeed. They were digging a new home and you know no greater happiness is to be found than in home mak- in;:. Rattles was especially happy because the new home was being dug where he had wanted it dug. in a steep sand bank by the Big River. Mrs. Rattles had insisted on another place which he had been sure wouldn't do, and so it had proved. There were too many stories ill the way. They had been forced to stop trying to dig there. They had gone fishing. then Mrs. Rattles had flown straight to this sand bank by the Big River and started work on the new home as if this place had been her choice all along. when they were tired they stop- Aowroonrmmrot-oooct-7' -t-cn70:i:iI1v 2 E gcontract Bridge 3 '2'. 3 By Josephine Culbertson fix-:ooceco.cioooononooonoui:m R 5'0 LACK or OPPORTUNTIESE In today's deal East could have defeated the game contract at two separate points. and via two dit- ferent plays. but he missed out in mm opportunities. North dealer. East-West vulnerabu, 474 V A Q 2 Q 6 3 2 5 K Q 10 9 3 43933 41062 0.11087 VVNE OK95 e375 601094 4, 3 2 S Q A J I eakqs 1043 A A K 5 Q 7 5 4 The bidding: North East south W81 1 Q, Pass i Q PHI! 2 ; Pass 3 N T RID Pass Pass an .9 South bid only one spade over one club because. even with four- plus honor-tricks in his hand. a slam seemed rcmoie unless North could show better than a minimum opening. Actually, as -will be seen. even the modest three-notrump con-tract could have been defeated. played as it was from the South position! It would have been a good idea for South to arrange his TPS'l0ll.SFs in such a way as to make North the deciamr at three notrump. west opened his top heart. and dummyis queen lost to the king. At this point East could have struci: a fatal blow by shifting to dis- pmoncls, but. not imnaturally. he . prcfcrrcri to take out clummyis side lentry. hence returned his part- ner's lead. Declarcr held up the heart ace, but it was driven out on the next round. . South led a spade to his hand and returned a club to the queen. East (who perhaps felt secure in his double club stopper) won the trick and shifted to diamonds. South won and led another club. this time putting in dummy's nine. .East had to use his club jacke-or it-and after that. dcclsrer 'had a club for communication to l dummy. and so could claim (in al:) 4 three spade tncks, one heart. two diamonds and three clubs. y East's removal of dummy's side If”Ht1'.V. the heart ncn, though not ,Il10izlcal in itself, was inconsistent with his subsequent handling of . the club situation! when he took 3 the first club trick. he made it bad inistaiccl In so doing. he left dc- tclarcr with two communication gcarcts in the club suit-with re- zsulis that we have seen. whereas been utterly -Rattles the Kingfisher. lurglssl "My dear." said he. ”you chose the very best place in the Whole ' bank." ped working and went. fishing. The Kingfisher folk long ago discovered for themselves the restfulness of fishing. Everywhere, on the Green Meadows. in the Green Forest, the Old Pasture, the Old Orchard. around the smiling Pool and along Laughing Brook other feathered folk were happily busy building homes. some on the ground and some above the ground in bushes and trees. "Do you know nvlist i think?" said Rattles, shaking his tousied head. "What do you think?" asked MYS- Raities, whose head was Just 85 tousled. "1 think there is only one proper place in which to make a home and raise a family,” replied Rat- ties. "I suppose you mean this bank. You know there are other sand banks just as good," said Mrs. ties. ”1 mean in the ground. Not on the ground or above the ground, but in the ground," declared Rat- tles. "Sometimes I think we King- fishers and our neishb0FS. We Bank Swallows, are the only ones with any sense in making a home. How any folks can for one minute think their babies are safe in nests on the ground is more than I can understand." "Or in trees or bushes," said Mu. Rattles. Rattles nodded.”0r in trees and bushes." he agreed. "But in the ground is different. If any babies are safer than ours I don't know whose they are." "Time to get back to work." said Mrs. Rattles. so back to work they went. tak- ing turns digging, Rattles had .'-et Mrs. Rattles choose the place to gun digging but when work was begun he did his share and a little more. when there is work of this kind to he done, he is a hard worker. is Rattles the Kingfisher. when he came out for :1 rest, Mrs. Rattles went in to work. It was easy digging and because this was so they agreed they would dig way, way in before making a bedroom in which the nest was to be. "The farther ill. the safer the nest is, I feel." declared Mrs. Rat- ties. "And the safer you Rattles. So they kept on digging until they had a tunnel or hail twelve feet long in that bank. It was al- most straight until at the end it was given a short turn. There they dug a. snug little room. big enough to be comfortable. yet not too big. Then they rested, sitting on a limb of a dead tree at the edge of the bank a short distance from the doorway of the new home. Rattles looked at the hole in the hank approvingly. It was just big enough to go in and out of easily. "My dear." said he. "you choose the very best place in the whole bank. It is just far enough down from the top of the bank to be out of reach of any one up there. and too high from the bottom for any one to climb up." This was true. The bank there wns almost straight up and down. Being of sand. no enemy could climb it for sharp claws dug into it would just pu.ll the sand away. There was nothing to cling to. "It is going to be the best home we've ever had." declared Mrs. Rattles. Rattles chuckled to himself. careful that she shoudn't hear him. she had said that same thing of are," said jsoulh would have helpless. .......7..-.. wzi.i.-rumor-rr avzavi-Hines DI NZ ' every home they ever had had. ” by Al Capp . Ci-ti” .... I if .3 ll D was av :4 sum: I'll GE xvurae 7.415,! JOE PALOOKA S we Aumsusmmne mus IS eu.i. srsau... we HAVE ' wgalzmc, some osvices HAVEN'T Votuoneeas, couuriess Peon: wnowmi Tlagy METAL GADGET A . srccmusrs ia ENGLAND to HELPHUNT HUM WIRl:i.I:55 out RAW, IN me la wuo i5 LOST m-me roemoeaes A FROM H. F. 10 ouem vo Pa; maucutaa. 025521 raoseeciok. A LAWYER amuse ADMIRALTY mm T. FIELD or wno uums L057 HEIRS, A IHIRED mo LONDON SEARCH, ARE DETECTiVE...A WELL KNOWN FOKTUNE DAILV MAIL. OFFERING HUNTER,ETC., i':1C., ETC. LONDON; ENG- YHEIR "THANKS A MILIJON se avnces. son was arrest or uswsmveas ASSISTANCE. vou mo RADIO ours M16 TOPS. ARE ALERTED LET ME KNOW To GIVE iF you svowr NEWS 10 HUMPHKEY. ms ARMY p H.F. - OFFRIENDS. HENRY 7”- Q;(. : ; G -- . pp , :;::1. i4UH?: mom- sav AWORD1 TIPPY AND "CAP" STUBS vvl-wr You 1 car you one couveasa ION, LETS are rr um; I l WHY. WHEN IWASA BoY.wE ALWAY6 MADE A :2 I KET AT weoowes--so we D cows our AND GIVE us - BRINGING UP FATHER ” o APlSN'T LISTENING ! 0 CAP. G0 on T0 320-- YOU'RE SLEEPY! TIPPIE, WE CAN WNT TILL AFTER Tl-i' WEDDING To BUILD OUR BOAT--! rCl-IIQPLEBEIZQY AND F2U:H.EA WALL BE LUCKY by ueorge Mei? "'11 l 4 LISVEN-I'M GETTING Sick AND TIRED OE SEEING WOU MOVING AROUND THE HOUSE - -WHY DON'T mu DO SOMETHING ? few GET Bu5Y - - t(;i TILLIE THE ")0ll.EB MUMSY, THIS IS ELASTIC- HELPI AMYTL-4iNC1 TO STAY OUT OF A FlGHT- NOW WILL VOL! 5TOP THAT comrouuoso I2AcxET'9l lwl (,ETTo.k3 AN AWHJL HEADACHE WOM IT-- ...,..4 r.y..inqlr-nun;-np4nn.I x.. l.- MAYBE I AIN'T HOMELIERN A RHINOCEROS BUTl'M by it estovci Ma. waos, WILL sou our IT in THE I i LIVE-WIRE" THAT THERE'S A ' Mm HERE HaMli.Ila'N MAC? A om ELM ' vaurmuavnaic . ms: rrcouLo1ti.i.- : gizaflilit