ll? PAGE TEN Arrmmlou P. s. I. TRUCK owners ASSOCIATION A meeting will be held in the LABOR PROTECTIVE UNION HALL on TUESDAY, JULY 6 at 8 O'CLOCK. RATES or PAY WILL s: DISCUSSED All Members ore requested t0 Aile-"d l,""'_-_50 3w§@@>o@@>ee@oe§oe®oo@eo<>oo<@>oe@ The Towers Restaurant‘ P Reopening for Summer Season Wednesday, July 7 With Special Dinner Beginning at 5 P. M. OPEN WEDNESDAYFS a AM. _ mo PM. DURING summer MONTHS ELLIS BROS. WHERE YOU IUY BETTER — BUY CHEAPER Central Royalty PHONE 1786-1 _ Si. Peter's Rd. HAPPY DREAMS Father takes delight in scheming; Mother's happiest when dreaming. -Old Mother Nature. There always is a song in the heart of Little Friend tihe Song Sparrow and he is at all times ready ‘to give voice to it. Especially does he love to sing to his pretty brown mate when she is sitting on her eggs dreaming through the long, lovely June days. Sometimes when he finds an extra tasty morsel Little Friend brings it to her and feeds her as she keeps illcse precious eggs covered- and warm. This year the nest had been huilt on the ground in scme shrub- hery just outside the Old Orchard It was close to one of Mother Brown's flower beds and not far away was the blrdbath that Parm- er Brown's boy kept always filled with fresh clean water. It was that; bath that had decided the Little‘ Friends to build there. They dearly love to be near water, for they are very neat and vrant to bathe often. That birdbath was Just the place for that. Mrs. Little Friend had taken great pains with that nest. She had lined it with fine rootlets and (Bv Thornton W. ‘Buiivgessl a little hair which she. had found, in the barnyard, l "We“ve never had a, better nest)’; she declared when the last little‘ rootiet was in plate. Little Friend agreed with her. ' It was cunningly hidden, was that nest, being built in a clump of ferns. The lovely broad green fronds, as fern leaves are called, hung over it so that it was not likely to be seen even by the sharpest eyes. At the same time it was airy and the sun-beams could get to it between the fern fronds. But though it was so well “hidden one pair of eyes had found it. They were the eyes of sally Sly the Cqwbird. She had heard Little Friend singing often in that shrubbery and had kept watch in the sneaking way that it hers. She had seen Mrs. Sparrow slip under those ferns and not come out. After that she had hung around in the neighborhood until she had seen Mrs. Little Icriend out looking for her breakfast. Sally at once supplied under those ferns, found the nest left one of her own eggs in it, then sneaked away. When she found that strange egg in her neat Mrs. Little Friend was muqll upset. but she was mo tenderhearted to throw it cur; d5 Little Friend wanted her to and, as some of the neighbors advised< bel- to, That _was two days aEQ_l -. "n"? By Gllttord ~ I'LL BIJLB A QQIDGI. ON ‘PH! V?! o.‘ flue V%VER1~ — RlGINT KERR. THEN I'LL our ‘THIS DRIVEWAY AND SIVERY "no; AGE: BfiCK HERE; INTI) 5i FTUDIO» VIRHFg MQdillUP COULD QNI ‘LI-LEE EXPRE ION ‘I'D N73 TALENT “M114 THESI». - L‘ 4 / "-1 or." when..." ‘Hill!!! Frpurved v s m»... Um‘? LOOK AT THEY LITTLE IMDCRP SWIM! I'D BETTERIURR/l GOTHI- Idfli 3,1. _..ssi~;.-=s.L-'- KI aormrromvu/s Abs/rm né/‘zgtzl/‘zlilazvggeo/a/za llfiztwoovmdsmw Awul/AOIIMM 6 » Allkuwwl " Now she was so used to it that she no longer thought cit it as not being one of her own despite the. fact that it was bigger than her own eggs. $0 ilow she dreamed through the 10m: days. sitting on thosel precious eggs under the green‘ fern roof. listening to the love "T135 Oi-Liti-le Friend. She left the nest only to get food. Be- reuse there was plenty to eat and it ‘WEE 985i’ to get, she never “as ions away from that nest, When she returned she carefully turned each ess so that the Warmth 0i her body should reach B" ports equaily- Then. once more settled on her treasures, she soon was dreaming again the hwooy dreams of motherhood. There were foul- eggs of h" own and one of sally sly'5_ Th” would mean five babies in a few divs t0 feed and» worry over and ti‘ lwe- 1° W111i mean. work from morning to night for Little Fflend. flswell as herself. He wouldn't have much time than for singing, not singing 5s he was singing now. How those helpless little naked 115M918! just out of the shells would grow! What fun it would be to see them get their eyes open and almost at once begin to grow their coats of feathers! How fast they would grow! If they had plenty of food and she and their father would see ‘to it that they gfbuv’ Mrs, Little Frie pains with that nest Then would come the pleasant task of teaching tihem to fly and how to find their food and what dangers to watch for. It would he hard work. anxious work, but loving work Just seeing the dar- lings ready to start out in the Great world for themselves would be worth all the work and worry So tenderhearted little Mrs. Sparrow kept her eggs yl-arm and dreamed happy dreams. The next story. "The Beginning of Worry." » <74 ~ fl Contract Bridge 7% n; Josephine caramel-n .1 3T?“ '3"‘ THE DIVIDING LINE A very narrow margin divided victory from defeat in today's deal. South dealer. , _ Eest-Vvcst vulnerable; g 1o 1 s z V Q 1° g A a a o 5 ___ Q Q 3 3 o‘ K Q 4 9 A a a N v K a 1 e 4 2 w E o s g 1o s a S o Q s 4 4. 10 2 4. 9 s 1 6 a a l< J 9 o e p x '1 2 ' g A J 6 a ‘hie bidding: ' South West North Ease 1 Q Pass 2 Q Pass 4 Q Pass 5 Pass 6 A Pass Pass Pass West, confident that he would get a trumlp trick, put down the heart ace as his opening lead, and he was shocked and disgusted when South ruffed. It then became South's turn to be shocked and disgusted when the first lead of trumps disclosed that although the combined hands had ten trumps. West would certainly have to he given a trick in the suit. liiuttering about his horrible luck, south ens-lied his second top trump, then started to run the clubs. West did not hesitate about ruffing the third round of clubs his high trumpjplnd his heartre- turn put South in a virtually hope- less position. It is true that South could have executed a "backward" finesse in diamonds, leading the jack through East and then tin- essing against West's ten spot, but this would have been sheer double dummy play, and when south con- tinued more normally by finessing to the diamond jack, the contractq was lost. ' South had been something less than farsighted! After seeing the trump break, elementary technique required the ruffing away of dummy’s last heart. so that when West took (or was forced to take) his high trump. he w-c-uld not have such an easy exit, with hearts eliminated from the North and South hands. West would have to return a dlzmond, and this would Eive declarer a very excellent double chance. He would put in dummy’s nine in the hope of forc- ing the queen, and as the cards lay, this would succeed. But even if the nine drew ten from East did have. they would be in the nest only a few days. Perhaps a _W°°ki DQTMPS a few days more L South would still have a chance for anc-ther finesse in the diamond suit. By Alex Raymond t.‘ @- with ' -. ,~.,.,,n¢.,\u§e's=~.- »,- a rrs am 1o oouecr rluusreizsi m.’ .. . o \ y. t»: J um: __1. 35s“ ' 2 Trail/stars In mry Packaged Kellogg's PEP You'll went to collect time Iwell s s Transfer Pictures! There are 64 . all in full colour, in the m. Pun . _ to IIYG and trade. Fun to use. A|k_ . motheno gel you Kello PQPJ And Pep has such e y Ytofl‘. any your! like it! THERE ARE A LOTOF THEM’ n, I (MD M, Mm A xnosev. vouuflno LEGITAMUT ease... r new‘ on. LIKE mu ..,. l mam, WHICH uwr our TJIST 1M some ON A SPENDlNG SPREE one 1 JUST FEEL was SPENDING THEY GIMME ‘NIB NUMKR ... I HOIO JE G01’ BhMnJLL av oouy- waves we MXSJJDGEU rw euv- r curses l you‘? olsLizE HIM A5 MUCH as l THOUGHT l: 0:0!’ JJST TO SHOW vou MY BROTHER Lli<E5 YOU‘ HE TOLD ME TO GIVE L1 THESE CIGARS!’ ly Edwina You sees” r siizu-rooi‘? 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