APRIL 1o. 194-8 Y actually reduce; with wafer last-acting SPRID is the ideal finish for home in- teriors. Goes on over almost any kind of wail surface — wallpaper, wailbosrd, old or new plaster, brick, tile. In most cases’ one coat covers. liq easylo mix; easy roapply, W,“ T w ‘h’ aaeabrasborroller. ‘ ‘ " i n a (more fiokfi m a TINY STAB i- A NIIGIIBOIJNJMPLAIN! -Q_-n The prejudiced are always blind, And so the truth theyseldom llnd. -Old Mother Nature. Neighbor Jones had stopped at Farmer Brown's a few minutes on his way to the village. "It was a hard winter; too much snow.‘ said he. "Mice and Rabbits did s lot of damage. Girdled and killed some of my best young fruit trees. The Mice worked under the anow where they couldn't be seen." "Well, the snow has gone now.’ said Farmer Brown. "But the Mice haven't. 1 believe there are more than ever, and Rats too. I've never seen so many, or known them to be so bold. Rail have killed a lot of my Chickens and have even attacked some o! the Hens. And there doesn't reel to be much I can do about it. I have trapped a few, bug not for some time. They are too smart for that. I was over in my hayfleld at day or two ago and.if I have halfl a crop this year I‘l1 be lucky. That ; field Ls alive with Meadow Mice.~ I've never seen anything like it.| And as if the Rats and the Mice ‘are not enough I believe Hawks and Foxes and Skunks are on the. increase‘ I keep a gun handy. I} guess they have found it out. for they hallo kept away from my‘ place 1stely. By the way, I have‘ seen a. pair of Marsh Hawks two. or three times lately over your} Meadows. They acted as if they may be nesting or getting ready to. If they are you ought to do some-i thing about it." said Neighbor" is underway hare to landscape 3°“!- this New Brumwlok capital's river- ] ig-Itirnatod that the smallest front.‘ Bulldozers and huge shovels “They are and we are." spoke up shooting eta- m spite of in are giving the back o! the st F“"“" B‘°“'“"b°Y-““° h“ “°‘"" brilliance, is about the size of a John River a face lifting. large grain of sand. ---- svccassrui. swam- Larrosoarn FREDERICTON TIREDERICTON’ -- (C?) - A actress. scored her first suoce ioint provincial-civic undertaking a; Zaneita in Le Peasant in 1869. Sarah Bernhardt, famous French listening. 4 “What do you mean by they are. looking puzzled. Farmer Brown's boy grinned. s; “They have a nest, and we are doing what we can to protect it Quickies _ By Ken Reynolds ./ l V "Of course you can't read‘ that Guardian Wont Ad.- wreie it and i can't write!" and them." he replied. ' “And you will pay for it by los- ing some Chickens. You mark my words." retorted Neighbor Jones. "Have you ever seen a Marsh Hawk take any of your Chickens?" asked Farmer Brown quietly. Somewhat reluctantly his neigh- bor admitted that he never had actually seen a Marsh Hawk take a Ohicken. “All Hawks as big as those Marsh Hawks will take Chickens every chance they get. You can't have Hawks around and have Chickens too. You ought to shoot those irwo nesting on your . meadow. instead. of protecting them.” he added. "You say you never have seen a Marsh Hawk take a Chicken. I doubt if you ever will. I don't say they never do. I guess they may once in a wihlle, but it isn't often. And when they do it is because food is scarce. And if they do they Ply. and pay high. for ever!’ Chicken they take." spoke up Ihrmer Brown's boy. “You don't say! Do they pay cash?" replied Neighbor Jones laughing at his own joke. , "They pay a lot better than if it was in cash.‘ For every Chicken they may take they-pay ten time: over in the nmrnber of Mioe they ‘boy. "You'll have to show me." re- plied his neighbor unllllngly. | Farmer Brown's boy smiled back. “All right." said he. “This isn't guessing. Itphas been proven Tram‘ OUGHTA a: A LAW! Iv Fogaly and Shorten | HEN ‘DU FRANTICLY f GRAB A CAB IN A ST RANGE TOIiN T0 GET I0 TiiAT BUSINESS _ ' APPOINTMENT“- , IT.’ .. © usvruulu A’ EASYGEAND 93 PODUNK (By Thornton W. Burgess) and you are?" asked his neigihborfl won't |Brown'a boy and all the freckles catch.” declared Farmer Brown’s' That field is alive with Meadow Mice that 100 Meadow Mice on an acre of good hay land will in a sinfl season eat one ton of green zrasa ‘Ilhat is equal to one halt ton of cured hay. With 100 Mice on an acre of good grassland, and at times like the present there may be three of four times that many. figure what the loss may be on a ten-acre field with hay the price it is now. “We could afford several times over to give that Hawk and his mate a Chicken now and then for what they save us in hay by the number of Mice they catch while they are with us. But we don't have to do even that. They would rather have Mice then Chicken any tlnne. You say you won't have half a crop this year. We will We'll have pretty near if not quite a full crop. But we wouldn't be any better off than you if it were not for those Hawks and some of our other helpers. “Other helpers? What other helpers?" asked Neighbor Jones. "Some you complain about and have." replied Farmer ‘ on his face seemed to run together as he grinned good-naturedly. The next story: "Farmer Brown's Helpers." l N0 GLORY EAR-NED ‘lihe North-South pair in today's deal consisted of nationally known expert but, they earned no glory in this case? . o-IvA , soutlndealer. North-South vulnerable m Rubberbrldge. i ‘K754 $106543! gas QQIOS *7 ‘J03 s2 N 99a 0-H W E 0J7 .105 S ‘K100 ‘A1058 s2 i H OAKQ QAKQ9842 #96 North-South were using a system in which the "big bid” is an artific- ial two clubs, other two-bids being reserved for semi-shutout purposes. Thgbldding proceeded: . amour N07”! fill South West 2Q, 2Q (l) Double Pan 3 Q Pass 8Q Pan 4 Q Pass 5Q Pass 6Q Pan Peso Pass It is worth observinl i-hlt West's pgychifi two-heart eves-call lfihlflllfli its precise object-it steered the opponents away’ 1mm "W" be" contract! North-South cmlld- h!" made six hen-ts against any defense, but, due to West's bluff and to their own incompetence. they were talked out of this iavdown 41m oonlraot. Evidently, South did not chose to accept his partner's double o! two hearts-which acceptance would have shown up the 900m‘! completely-because he felt that the penalty would not be great enoulh in view of the North-South potent- ial slam, but this was a hirhly dubious conclusion. If North COT-Id double two hearts when 50""! himself had the a-K-Q o! vhlt suit, the penalty would be tremend- ous. 11 by any chince west stayed in the contract; and if he rm out. the situation would be It”!!! clarified. , Even alter South took out the double, both North and §outh~ might have bid hearts on their own account at somedlter stslfl but i! 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SNIFFEN AN’ YOUR GRAN'MA’_S PASSIN’ Tl-i’ SANDWICHES-- z, SEE! iT WAS JUST . A$ EASY" l WELL, YOUR SCRUBBING PM pAvmawoutio I'M some A DAY?) LET ME ON STRIKE WORK FOR YOU.’ UNLESS YOU LET ME WORK F-‘Qii omur 5:35 ,/