.,,,, Marsh l. ~.‘~~' ”"°" Jase-mm Mgr-eh 28: ,:-.i _ _ . t"; ' March 3.1 ‘ " ti: , v -. “f” "fainter-Humanitarian. a Contrlbu i) mirth, fl|i|y lisiiesiner llelli Tllllllilll‘ ' . 8.30 Th; prises are the some ll “m, pflVllulll at other ainroe in the “$7- For Charitable P0119395 , O-OO-OQ-QO-O 13mm 1 in. ‘sprite-mas nu. llhreh sjihflx-‘ni’; put-l’, cioselsoss a Italy.’ 4 u lulled No Man.‘ etjcarulsnlty in its Simplest ..,,,,,,,__,,-..,.,..'., hoses-sf sees - n» Collection ' “on a. Cultural use of the Community i. Prophet of Peace.‘ Bc-‘llilerative Meeting HARRINGTON HALL TUESDAY, MARCH l, 8 7M. Mr. W. R. Show will discuss the idea of Cc-operotion and other matters of interest to formers. The ladies can come os well as the men. SMITH Mucl-‘ARLANE GUY .RODD. i chiroioedist? E For Foot Ailments; § consult § ii. J. i. anowii. n. r. ' Orthopedic l i ill Great nurse We“ QIIARLOHITOWN. r11. l l I l HAZARDOUS LANDING (CPI REGINA -- — Kellll Malcolm, chief pilot of Saskat- chewan's air ambulance service, answered an emergency call recent- 1y. landed his plane at night on a field which wee lighted only by automobile headlights and a one- mlnute parachute flare. norms: tlective WEDNESDAY, MARCH mo. our office and Delivery Service will close 0t l PM. ctiiriiiii. ciisiirsrniss LTll. CHARLOTFETOWN APOLEON AND’ UNCLLELBY By Clifford McBride \ ml%3b¢sJ§ BLlZZAR-US eon/ea CAN'T rm: ‘TH flu l "d? I'M A RE5TLE$$ 0L5 Q%&IR l‘ lel a‘ \ ' ' i-il-~.i‘i‘»i“ll.'..l'.‘l".tt'.‘l 3-l l-l'l- ABNER criaritorrirrowa Be slow to anger lest you rue Thcdt-hlnsl you say and things you 0- ‘ n —Old Mother Nature. Idldso. Ididso. Idld hear wmebodv sinslna in the dark last llllht. and I don't care whether Mrs. Peter believes it or not," mumble“ Peter Rabbit as he once more ran lioimtv. llpperty, up, racing the Black shadows of an. iother evening over to the Green Forest. But he did care. Folks always care when others do not believe them. so Peter- w“ trlimPy. feeling very much out of sorts. for Mrs. Peter was sure that he was mistaken and said so, "You come over there with me and hear it yoursell," Peter om: urged. But Mrs. Peter had refused to leave the dear Old Briar-patch, there alone. As he ran he tried toirecall all whom he ever had heard singing after dark. “Die Thrush cousins, eipecially Melody the Wood Thrush and his cousin, Hermit, love to sing just after the com- ins 0i’ the Black Shadows,‘ but they are not back trorn the Sunny soul-ll yet and won't be for some a Con trdct Bridge I: Josephine Oulberleel CUTTING COMIMUIICATIONB A deal in the recent Master's 1n- dividual Tournament pointed up the necessity to “cut the communica- tions" between one defender and the other. f West dealerlg Neither side vulnerable ~4aes a 1 D. "w- ‘POO s-e-eo (-1 ‘do a '4 a Q at several or‘ the tables South reached a contract of four spades doubled. with some such bidding as: I ‘ r syn "was: mm. East ems t Pass 1 A 1 Q 1 A Pass 2 4, i z i z 8Q 3 _Dble. Page ass Pass The opening lead was uniform- ly the heart deuce, taken by dum- my’s ace. ‘Ihe various declarers then launched various lines o1 play, but, unlortunatelyfin no case was-the doubled contract fulfilled. At one table when South entered his own hand with a diamond at . the second trick and led the spade l jack through West the latter oov- ered, forcing dummyis ace. Then. ‘ when Wesfgot in with the spade ,: king, he led a heart which East ' won and a diamond return pro- duced a rufl. A club shift put East in agalrrand a second dia- mond rufl gave the defenders a two-trick penalty. <9 Other declarers did better by going down only one, ,1 t it is strange that none of hit upon the winning plan! That was simply to lead the club king at the second trick! East would win. and his best defense would be to cash a heart and lead stilt another heart. Declares mould ruff this in his own hand. and then lead the spade jack through West. West oouid not make more than one trump trick whether or not he covered immediately, and South would end up by losing ‘only one heart, one club and one spade. If, after declarerl! play of the club king st the second trick, East returned a diamond instead o! s heart, declarer would get rid oi his losing heart and still be on safe ground. (ly Thornton w; so so now Peter was hurrying o"; “ma Anyway, the song I heudievenixsg after evening in the early lhe heard that puzzling song the For the first time Peter [became a little doubtful last night isn't anything at all like theirs," thought Peter. “White- throat the Sparrow sometimes wakes up in the night and sings. but he isn't here yet.” He remembered how once before he had been sorely puzzled by a mysterious song that he had heard spring, andwhat a long time it had taken him to wind out that the singer was longbill the Woodcock. But LongbllPs song always came gently dropping from the sky while this song now puzzling him seemed to come from the ground, or close to it. Anyway it was still too early in the season for Longblll to be back. When he reached the Green Forrest he went straight to wheie night before. No one was singing when he got there. Peter sat around trying to be patient and finding it hard work. Do you know of any harder work than being patient when you feel irnpatimt? There was no singing. In fact it seemed to Peter to be unusually still. Mistress Moon climbed high above the treetops, chasing the Black Shadows from open places among the trees and crowdiru them together in other places so that they were blacker than ever. For the first time Peter became s little doubtful. Could it be that Mrs. Peter had been right and that he had dreamed about that sing- ing the night before? At last his big cousin, Jumper the Hare, came alorlg. ' "Jumper, iwho sings at night?" cried Peter. "a lot of people sing at night, but not this time of the year," re- plied Jumper. "They haven't come back irom the Bunny South yet," he added. ' “Just the same. I heard some one singing over here last night," Peter declared. “You probably were taking s nap and dreamed it, Peter," re- plied'his big cousin. He was of course, still wearing his white coat that Peter had so often envied him or. "That is what Mrs. Peter says. and I wasn't doing anything of the kind. I was as wide awake as I am this minute. So there!" rctorted Peter. He was provoked. It always is provoking to be told over and over something you know isn't so. “Well, I 'wasn't around last night so I can't say who was sing- ing," ireplled Jumper carelessly, then added, "if anybody was." Peter/ stamped angrily. "some- body was singing, whether you be- lieve it or not. You live over here in the Green Forest, so you ought to know who it iwss. There must be some one who lives over here, who doesn't go 01f’ to the Sunny South, who sings in the dark", u-etorted Peter. - - Juniper shook his head and was 111st about to say something when near by where the Black Shadows seemed bfackat some one began to sing. There was no doubt about it, some one was singing in the dark. __...___-_._ Tum Your: PICK The freshwater A drum rlsh of Canada, is also called white perch. grey perch, thunder-pamper and “ED913011- By AL CAP? ‘ ‘ i. T rm: GUARDIAN. W511!’ T!!! GDbgFSIéRE, IM- . i_ --- izAzY £50m‘ >OUR ' Y , “Te:- aauqkgra-e-apnnah-I-eleee-fl l -i__2_i_v Kh-lés-fill-Iqlenidlrxvra u. TIPPY AND "CAP“ STUBB . “a . _ more msacviwiw WILL use»: w: i _.._.._..__ = l ‘it *" wit" i rm ANAWFLI. oisawofmmsm / , 1$ -, 6 I, TO MY DEAR Riaumvss-siuc: 7 r L. W1 (m g. ; MY MILLIONS HAVE owmmso» .. g . —,—~—~ v ,4 ii. t. : . i» “i i; not ~— -< s - . _ - "l! s it ,‘ a] . NON THAT MR. SIMPKIBS HAS L051‘ HIS MON _ ALI- FIGHT Tb PUT TH! Fl ' “l\\