. lkaosvuwsmapwwsew. ...- Q‘..- PAGE TEN i. Sunnyslde Ballroom Every Mon., Wed, Sat. Eastern Rhythm Boys AliMlSSIilll 35c Meet your friends there tonight Chiropodist For Feat Ailments i om LY c no sysyigoiio i, Ainofl l1, -' $1.1m‘ ' UUNIN _ l’. l 3i. 32. 34 \\'.’i'.l':i i _, like 511,»: ,BrilIizir.i colored i ‘to S f. as . . River of “=0; l ifilyth.) Owing , . 12s Comfoi‘. Scotinh Garlic .$r'.o\l~ 153ml.) Pr‘ err"! d8. . Record Coniendl com p089! ni-rcarliea ICE CREAM FESTIVAL BINGO, GAMES DANCE, etc. MONK, AUG. 22nd at NORTH RUSTIOO \?21W'" The QIIEEII IIOTEI. é , Your ‘rim: In 9 MONCTON N. B _ ‘ n n I E G. A. CARE, Manager é n. .1. A. snows. n. P. z EUROPE“ 1w Booms: 1 ‘Onhopedlc § 82.00 per day and up z 143 lirrat Gcnrge Street Lunch a Dlnn" z CIHliLiiTTllIUWN. rill. .500 and up fioooooovoooooooooooowm‘l Port of entry (SE. um] Alaska) of a ship's voyage .18. Addltlond‘ '» 4i. ‘ United ‘ States o! America. (sbbrti Hawk's cs1] 3rd king of Judah (Bib-I Rever- beraics South wind Flower _ ' 42. (Halwalli . M. RWEIIAIT‘ _ 8-29. minvicmcrroquorns-iiei-sm how c» work it: i A X Y D L B A A X l! i» Loivorzijbow lh and formal the cvie letters are di ", .\1 for the two 0's. etc. Single letters. apos- ion or the “Wards are all hints.’ fterent. ' A Crypiogram Quotation _ ' BlFO LVM‘ DSRWBC. l’ I‘.‘».‘l avnho ULVMAJG LNIJD LWY‘ WMBGMUD 'CELGG 'I\VMC—URUMVI._ ‘ Yesterdays Crypinquole: ’GAIN CANNOT BE MAIDIBWWITH; OUT soul-J 0mm risnsoss hi-Inhlllfldl m. Ulla LOSS-PUBLILIUS svavs, run...- n..4s..a-_ Wood Islands-Carib The Connecting Schedule lnr June ‘ZR to Sept. Making 6 R Eohedule for thr- present:- “Prlnce Nnvn"—l.c'ivn \‘l'nnal Islands ‘Prlnru Ni»: n- (‘nrihou .. "Charles .‘\. . “Charles A. liii.i:iirii;"'--l.i~nvn Wood For ilnlly lnfurmnilmu. listen tn m. ——I.(‘i\\‘f‘ (‘nrihnll nu a Ferry Service Link Between PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND & NOVA SCOTIA (hilly including Sunday-STANDARD TIME 25 inclusive: ound Trlpa Dally iiartiuimlierland Ferries Llmlteil 1 church s 40 -- was niicr being r ll vnr- , _, closed uni-o i910 ihroiirzli damnee. v-“Lil. Ashen VHJY KIN onz-rsutr’: o"; rsuLT It!’ ‘ll’ "N" T norzzv -iY MANY anti. - \~'HUT'S LIFT’. KiRBY swore! MUST o: eAuuri . WHO'S u: SHOOTING AT wow? e01’ 1'0 o: CAREFULWHE‘! oesesurli 1 A.M. n A.M. a ma. n A.M 1 PM. is ma. 1 A.M 11 A.M. a PM. lsl a A.M. 1 ma. n PM. cacv n a mi. mcn WEEK nAv-srANnAnn TIMI" nmrllltl- HARRINGTON. Northampton- shire, England — (C?) —- An in- ‘sectlclde solution is to be pumped {into the beams of the 13th cen- bomhjtury church here to counter death l watch beetles. who sees with understanding eyes Is seldom taken by surprise. —Billy Surefoot. Bllly Surefoot was the biggest White Goat far and near in the part of the High Mountain where he lived. Two blessings Billy had learned to make the most of, his sure feet. and his keen eyes. He couldn't trust. and depend on his nose to warn him of danger as some of Mother Nature's children do. Anyway he didn't. He trusted to his eyes to see danger. and his sure feet to take him and keep hlm away from it. There was little those far-seeing keen eyes of his missed and what. he saw he made sure he under- stood. He simply locked long, ellfillih to make sure. "Half seeing never pays-f. 1t can be its bad a-s, or Worse than, no; Heine at all." says Billy Surefont. What Billy means ls that not see- lll! a thing clearly and fully may lead to mistaken judgment. This ' Contract Bridge By Josephine Culbertson g . '3 A CONTRAST IN BIDDING FTSI?" In many deals there is no need for "super-scientific" bidding. Once the salient features of the hands are known to boih partners, a. direct jump to the proper contract may yill be the best course. At other times, however, exploration beyond that oi the ace and king position must be made. Observe the bidding method of two nation- ally known experts in the follow- ing deal. South dealer. Neither side vulnerable. Q Q 3 K Q J 7 K J 9 3 J 5 2 N S A A A é E -IIOC'O soumH cnwuiq 64 3 ‘CD uwy; +AkQm This was rubber hridgc xiv. u very sizable stake. _The bidding proceeded: South ‘Vest North East l a]. Pass 1 Q Pass 2 Q ‘Pass Ii N T Pass 4 Q Pass 5 Q Pass 5 Q Pass 6 N '1‘ Pas: 1 N ‘P Pass Pass Pass As may be. seen, the hand did not have to be playcd out -North could claim ihirtin i‘ 1 Contrast this bidding .i'l1 what probably would be heard or, many bridge tables. It is sale to ven- ture that thousands of Souths would start off witn thrco nn- trump. North would certainly carry thL- straight to six noisunip, but there the auction ‘would 593p. Or South might start with one club. but after getting the one- heart response, he might jump straight to four notrump, as a. Blackwood bid. North would show his two kings — but. what good would that do South? For all of his top cards. South cannot pos- sibly count even twelve tricks, let alone thirteen. by mentally adding heart and diamond kings to his own holding. If South starts off with a two- bld, he may reach the grand slam. but even then there ls great doubt. Suppose he starts with two clubs. North answers iviih two hearts, and South then bids two spades. As before, North jumps to three nolrump, but now North does not need as mum-h for his Jump as when uilouth opened with one club! when the three- nolriimp bid reaches South. the latter cannot justifiably look to his partner for more than the kini! of diamonds, ihr- kiizg-qiicc-ri of lzenrts. and ill’ he wishes to be optimistic) the queen of spades— and all those rnrds added to the south hand will not necessarily produce a grand slam. AKLLTAKI. lvmv nan-LI. > All’ Mam. or ummn m ftI’BLAGI..'.'-TO§S n- NTO m u saranw Hm ear-wk) lBy Thornton W. Burgess) ,_ 01v: FAULT.'.'—H£'IA Billy Surefoot was the biggest whl g goat, far and near. in [he part oi’ the High Mountain where he lived in turn may make no end of real trouble. So Billy is never satisfied with a hasty glance, He stops and looks until he is sure of what he i-s looking ai. He is mlled Bllly Surefooi. but Billy Suresight would be just as fitting a name. Just now Billy was standing on a high flat rock on the top of a ridge looking down the rocky slope or one side to where far below hlm he had caught a glimpse of somv one llioviiig among some bushvs growing there. He had guessed who it was. but he wasn't satisfied to merely guess. Ho iwant- ed to know. He meant to know. So although he knew that on an- ‘nthor ridge brick of him Nanny Surofoot. and Little Kid Suretoot, their little more than a week-old son. had appeared and were watch- ing him he didn't turn his head. He kept his eyes fixed on the place whore he had seen some one mov- ing. Ho did a funny thing. That is it was a funny thing for a per- son having hooied feel to do. It wouldn't have been funny for Peter Rabbit or Happy Jack Squirrel or Dobby Coon. or Buster Bear to do, and it was just what either of these would have done in his place —l1c sat up. Yes. sir, he sat up just as one of them might have done. his front feet; hanging down beiore him. He could see better that way. Can you imagine Bossy the Cow. or Lighifoot the Deer, or Flathorns the Moose_ sitting up like a Squirrel? Of course you can't. Neither can I. But this is what Billy Sureioot was doing, and what the Goat folk often do. “Bear? said Billy to himself. "Old Grizzy Bear. I thought l‘! much." Even as he spoke Buster Bear's much bigger cousin. Grizzly Bear, came into full view. He was out- side the bushes and ihere in the open he began digging furiously. He “'85 making earth and small stones, even some fairly big ones, fly. Bllly Surefoot chuckled. "He won't Bet hlm," said he right out loud. "Who won't get whom?" asked Nanny Surefoot. coming up Just in time to overhear him, She and Little Kid Surcfoni hnd made ridge. Now she too sat up the bet- ier to look. Oi course their small son did the same thing. I-le did lt because they did it. l “Whistler? replied Billy. "I guess he has his home down in among the rocks there. I've seen him several Limos near there. But if I know Whistler, and we are long-time friends, Old Grizzly, strong as he is and big as his claws are. will never succeed in digging Whistler out." Whistler the Mar- mot is Johnny Chuck's mountain cousin of the Far West. Just see- ing them you would know that they are cousins. They have whet ls called a strong family likeness. Old Grizzly was grumbling and growing and snarling as he dug. His great paws tossed big stones aside as if ihey were nothing at all. Then he came to a. narrow opening between two huge buried rocks and knew that this was the cnd of his digging there. Despite his great. claws and great strengih he couldn't. move one of those rocks. He wouldn't have Whistler for dinner this day. There was s sharp whistle from above him, a whistle that carried way up to the top of the ridge where the two big Goals and the little Goat sat. On a flat. rock in the middle of the slope sat Whistler the Hoary Mal‘- mot. He had reached ihcrs by an underground passage. ‘armor furs c-owonr mm mums: fv/r 1r 41.1.!’ so nltrt III! gsnsg/MMIAK’ now mtrsn n ms sccazr. um. mgLv 114’ FORE SOUSC I their way around from the other . € war jaws an . w/vo r/etb var 5w?! i i .AUGUST 20, 1949 "by Zane (‘ireuv ‘ \,‘_ ' GPACIOUéTT/IEEES .. . ~ fiUlLEf/IOAEK/Gl-IT .- - , arts? ms never! U ueaensm‘ ooc sun runs rms u; vs now steam/A Been rose»; . AROUND ALL me AN Mumauii... ru. have: oer ‘FSLEEPQQ-‘l AN’ KEEPIN’ ME AN‘ i i 1 oorrfwoiurrte n": REAVZ “"( <A§<A>MI~GI zvsow/ “qo-‘J . vs“ l r \ in r h, , . _ J ulold _, PY AND "CAP" STUBI. / u J/z/ MIGHT BE HEADED FOR KINGSVILLE" YOU HAQDLY TD DRlVE" , ll ' ‘ J I'll/III! / s-nun-qy we , , .. . vim-owe l-r m; his... 1,-4.1.“ . NGING UP FA HER 10g BAD wu CALFT so "r0 BLABBEQ- MOUTH’ MUGGINQ‘ PAIZTY Tl-ll5 EVENING.’ HAVE ‘TD e0 TO "m5 OPERA-EH r? HA-HA-HA/ WHAT A were vouwz-E some TAK: ‘F1115 NOTE 55E THAT 5HE c.5115 IT EIGHT AwAvI um! WOULDN'T KILL THE PERTATER was wrrH PARIS FINE l cm LET A BAD NIGHT!" HEQE ' KlJMQlJAT - — win/s“ 1 . _ i ly Edwina \l/ELL,QNLY F002 THERE i MlLES 1D coiNrédwl. YOU'RE SEE us, MISTER- ly George McManM _.___-n Iy Westovll AND 1 SUPPOSE HE. 601' ALL THESE