‘PAGE TEN ~ ' imam [0380 OF CANADA FLOUR I$LAIIII GROWN APPLES ‘Unexeolled In Beauty and Qllellify On Display At Your Loeol Grocer Most POPULAR VARIETIES i... Thom ay Th! Hamper ‘When You Buy Island Grown Apples ' You Help An Island Industry. bAuY “acitoss z. .Serpen"~ 3. i lizard 6. Cease 9. Earn H0. Signal >_ system! J1. Silk scarf (Eccl) 1,1}. Rugged moun a. l! k ‘lspur t i Out-of-date 1 1 Epoch A F slob l Poem "P???" Fish 6. Music note "El 7. River l \ I Chin.) y ‘I8. Canvass v shelter 9. Lair 0. Consume" ;22. Ridicule Q4. Escorted \ to a seat (if. ‘Body of i water F29. Tuber (So. Am.) ‘g2. Metal 15 19. of 21. 3. Mature ‘$8. Aloft, :37. Land- l measure 88. Venerable 5 people 5o. A thin, L‘ cotton -' fabric l '42. Banal Q3. Old Norse y works 44. Prong! E45. Ages 4g. Period of time kingdom 15E Eur) helmsman Upright snilptured Broadcast Ripped Car-eased Antlered animal Indigenous Queen Carthage Revolve c R oliswo R o t is. mine note I5. Selenium . (sym-l Ndsliiquipment for a draft ‘animal 27- Platform 28- Dwiamn- y‘ tor; ~. outtouring 80. Smal,» one-horse ' sleigh _ 31. Projecting eridl of ‘ chureiel 84. Pull o! » pits 85. Weird EJLI llllid 1.‘. l Ill DEBUG llLll-i l-Ilsl Yesterday's Anwel 38. Mohamme- dan call to prayer 30. Girl's name 41. Japanese shrub naitrgcitrrroqnoris-iierem how to worn‘ ti . AxrnLiiaAxlt/l. unoivorztLow, i One letter simply stands for another. 1h this examine-h lg \ r for the three L's. X for the two 0's. ete. Single letter- “Iljfj- ti-ophies. the length and formation of the wordrere‘ r" hints.‘ Each dav the code letters are different. ‘ ' I A Cryptogrun Quohtteo YMX none itnx‘ itxrz n it's-still‘- RYMTY‘ Exax KMLY zocstqirrosuz wmsr ESTPX LS nsxzX-cmnzn. iYesterdays Cryptoquoie: I FEEL MY CLASP. ANELSINK DISCOURAGED INTO rsttow, 1 HANDS on? . workwee- Distributed by Kins roaiunTu-mui THE GUARDIAN, CHARLOTTETOWN - IBy Thornton W. Burgess) Sometimes it pays to merely ‘bluffp . More often that is not enough.| .4315 Mother West Wind., l To bluff is to pretend that you are what you are not, or that you can do something you cannot do. and make folks believe that it is so, Buster Bear is a great bluf- fer. l-le delights in making peo- ple think he is very much more savage and dangerous than he really is. He tries to make folks afraid of him when the truth is he is afraid a! them. That is ‘mum b ti shit Buster had been oas ng. - ~~ c _ Ifei-s very often are boasters. He B,g'*;;--;,, wagy he was a lhad boasted that he was not Bea, lafrald of any one in all the Great lForest, but that all were afraid 10f him. Now he wished he had held his t giie. Yes, sir, he wished he dn‘t boasted. He hfl-d broken llp n hsppy party of Green Forest folk feasting on sweet lit- tie beechiiuts the Merry Little Breezes had shaken from their burrs to the ground. Selfishly he had driven all of them away that he might have these nuts for‘ himself. Before- he had had time to more than taste them he had discovered he was being watched by the last person to meet. It was Fiathorns the Moose, known j among his neighbors as the g "Mm" n» i.» Fin-i Contract Bridge i lie pretended the By Josephine Culbertson scared headed for the nearest big tree. Flathorns came thundering behind him. Buster didn't shuffle along as he so often does. I should say not! The way he was getting ovi-r the ground was something to see. Yes sir. it was so. Ha heard the thundering hoofs behind him and he knew by the sound that Flahtorns was gaining. Big as he was he was n scared bear. and all those looking on knew it. If he didn't, what a fight there would be! horns standing back among trees. "I won't let him know I know he is about. I wlil just pre- tend I don't want any of these nuts and will quietly leave this " place. l won't hurry, not until I'm out of his sight.-I don't want him to think I am running away, that I Lm afraid of him," thought Buster. _ Just then Plathoryns snorted. 1t made Buster jump. He knew then A Tricky Position There i5 one defensive position that comes up rather frequently, but which is consistently mishandled by almost all players. Let's look at a typical deal: that it was too late to pretend 37°?“ Peale" that he didn't know Fiathoms PM‘ 51W Wlnmml was there. That snort said plainly QJ 3 that Flathorns was ready to fight. IA. ‘i’ But perhaps lflathorns was Just Q A Q J 10 I l! I bluffing, pretending he wanted to _ _ QK 8 fight. The last time he had seen Q A 9 5 5 Q Q 7 7* Flathorns was early in the spring, 4 N V3 3 5 3 and then he was in no condition QQ 64 2 W E OK 5 to fight anybody. He had lost his o’! 8 s ci-Q J T4 great antlers. Though new ones IP19 5 I ' were growing on his homely head, ‘K 1° 5 they were soft and tender, worse ‘K 1° 9 than none at all for fighting. Bus- '9 8 4 __ ter hadn't been afraid o! him then. 3"!‘ 10 6 3 " Perhaps there was no reason now The bidding; to be afraid. North’liast sooth west "He may be bluffixiz. so I will 1‘ Pass 2Q Pass bluff a little myself," thought Bus- 8 Q Pass 3N1‘ Page ter. He whirled to face the trees Pass ‘Pass North thought for a long time about going tn five diamonds, and, had he done so, there would be no analysis necessary. However, North felt that he might be off three tricks at the minor-suit contract and so allowed his partner to play ithree notrump. Buster replied to it with such an West made his normal opening, ugly, threatening snarl that ltlthe five of spades. Dummy played made all those looking on shiverulfiw. East put up the queen, and They were the ones he had di-lvenl declarer took the trick with the away from those beechnuts. Heiklns- A diamond finesse, which followed the snarl with his deep-Host to East, cleared llio seven-card est, most threatening growl, {suit in dummy. and successful Be was big, was Buster, and ; defense simply did not exist. East's standing up that way he looked spade return was Ila-ken by West- even blgger than he really “as. As‘ with the ace, but South still had he snarled and growled his lips the spade ten to stop the suit, were drawn back to show all hisl Now observe the vnst difference teeth. He mien-t n pleasant sighelir East, at thc first trick. had Indeed, he was rather a frightiuhplayed the spade seven instead of sight. That was just the way hel the queen! south could do no better was trying to look, By his snai-llnglthan win the spade ten, and now, and growling and his fierce lookslwhen he lost the diamond finesse, he hoped to make Flsthorns wantlthe hand would figuratively "blow to avoid s. fight. up in his fncc." East would lay 5o Buster made himself nppenrldown the queen of spades to cover as big and fierce and dangerous dummy! now-blank jnck _ nnd among which Flathorns was stand- ing and stood up 0n his hind legs that. he might see better. Also it mode him look bigger and more dangerous. Flathorns grunted. It had an even uglier sound than before O I t t I alres Bathtubs Sparkling While A°iWorld ol Cleanliness in Every Package Snowflake H AMMOMA "clenni REFRESHINGLYCIeon S99 ml antlers. One look was enough. l-feinecessitates the Ll'L AllNER THOSE KICK-LOVING KIGMIQ VII-L F80 WHUT fOfV-"LAS ABSORB ALL THE. RNISHMENT l-Il nAN/r- IT'S no: END or ‘r0 Wish??? "" “P? 5 VIM-Md- , notion-z rrs "m: END or wAnlf- TAKE MANGLEBUGLQ as he knew how and hOpQNLSOLIl-h could cover the queen with mightily that the “Mighty One", the king or not, as he qhose, but, ho would not feel too mighty, He|c0uld not keep West from running didiftl know that Plathorns waslciff four spade tricks. f rig so big and so strong. and, The unfortunate part of East's so proud of his great. new antlers‘ defensive position in a hand of this that he actually was looking tori-sort is that the hold-out of the some one to fight. The Fiercerlhonor is not always correct! It BLIBIB!‘ Bear made himself look theidepends largely on the rest of the more eager Flathoms was to fightlhand, outside of the led suit. In him. Buster's bluff failed com- a case of this sort, however, East pletey. Yes, sirhit did so. With should reason that if South has nnotler grunt Flnthorns came‘ the ace and two other spades, Chflfilni! Wt. hi5 head dotvn withisuccessful defense is out of the the piints of his antlers set straight‘ question, and therefore the best at Buster. For the first time Buster thing to do is play him for the had i. good look at those great king-ten and one spade, which hold-up of the ldropped down to all four feet andiqueen to the second round. ly AL CAPP King of The iv/u. 10005.85 flit/Ate rusiz- Royal Mounted '7" - MOI ' ' FLM/T l$i U6 FIE |.l any” ‘zvc-i. u h MARIE»! WAS N ‘Iiil Mibfilue A NACllllLYhON ‘INANKIJ MEAN ‘P556151’ ITMAN‘ MOD F I FNISKCD TALKN’ ‘I’ ' Alf I i ppg4 Amen/x: rips,’ A ‘WM? >00 mom TAFFV, I'VE EKED CONNiE WU YUJR CQJGH . OCTOBER 14. 194g hi! Zane Grey, nefifi/f?” ’ so I w 1135;.’ A n _ wvhilnwn " niln <"_ oj-e‘ , s c’: uu» NICE WEATHER WE'RE HAVlN'--UHI~- on, HELLO! -_-...¢__.._-_.__._n ly Edvliq EA George Mcidonus RUNNIM‘ INTO up mo. it.‘ fntum spa-n- Inl_ um HUH—IT‘S BAD EMOLJGH TOCOME I-QAE~WITHOJT ONE Of-‘I MAGGlFéi ween-wes- \ E5VECIALLV rwies owe! swan-ma I Fi- ME STIEFGTH COMIN’ QN-N%I h MAGGIES BROTHEEJ/ TILLIE THE TOILEIt ONE MkMArltei-in I Hi3! CQILD MR. 61GB, Wl-fi I WE‘? ‘I'D MISS PAINT m, TO FIND THAT WLHII QMOT REIIVI ‘ VIIITQImWHVI ' ‘ runs: z iolwrrl _‘I'HA‘I' mm: HAI Didfiflfltfll