JANAURY 27, 1950 i. pslllhtfll Severe Rheumatic Pains In Shoulder and llipo-For Months! Lfeel: fine now and is de- lighted Sornak relieved con- stant misery of rheumatic pain within two weeks! A man with two children has res- usibilities. Aridcontinuecl sutTer- mg from rheumatic pain handicaps him bodlY! But Mr. T. S. Dixson of Cake Station, Albert County, New Bruns- wick, found a EOlUiJOIl to his prob- lem. No more sleepless nights for him any more! No-rnore tossing and turning in bed, racked with pain! As he tel-ls il;——- “For months I sutTered with rheumatic pains in my left shoulder and right hip. Although 1 was not i-ompletely laid up, this handicap- ped me badly. Often I could not ‘lee properly at night, for my hip would bother me quite a hit after going to bed-and whenever I turned over, would catch me quite had. "No wonder l was glad to _hear about Sarnak. For within two weeks of the time I started to take it, l 0t relief. Am now feeling fine and h); all thanks to Snrnak.’ ln our files are thousands of letters from people like Mr. Dixson, who have found relief from their rufiering by taking Sarnak. Those euple were once made miserable gy nagging pains-rheumatic, MR. T. S. DIXSON arthritic. or neuritic~or hy hack- aches, lumbago, kidney, liver and stomach upsets and constipation. Now they are happy —bccause they feel fine. You, too, may be sufiering need- lessly. And you owe it to yourself to give $arnak n chance to hel you, too. Pain relief is fast with arnak because it's in liquid form with no tablets or pills to dissolve first. Sarnak storts_ its effective relief from the moment you swallow the first dose. So give it a try. Get k today. A» All or»; Stores $1.35 NOTICE OUR STORE WILL CLOSE ALL DAY FEBRUARY 1st, 1950, FOR STOCK-TAKING PEOPLES CO-OP ASS'N. LTD. North Rustico, P.E.I. ANNUAL MEETING Prince Edward Island Jcrscy’ Breeders hold their Annual Meeting WED., FEBRUARY 1st AT 2 0’CLOCK iii Agricultural Building —DAILY C ROSSWO R D siziui: one _ [BEBE EllIlIlE ACROSS 2. Unite l9. Hits L-jflflfl flfliflflfl l. Shouts to 3. Falsehood hard Elmflfilll 6. Solemn 4. Science of (slang) . promise valid and 20. Contamli 10. English accurate ‘ nate authoresr thinking 23..River ll. Drama 6. Cubic (So. Am.l l2. Assert meters Z5. Coin l3. Grave l. To choose iBraz.) , l4. Cunning ‘l. Genus of 21. A roll l5. Vex the lily of i - l7. Organ of l. Mexican cloth Yellow-r’! All"! hearing - dish of corn 29. Plays s . l8. Each and meat 30. lnfrequency 34. Dispatched (abbn) l. Produced by 3i. Moslcm 37. A peer 1B. Perfume cross- rulers 40. Soon 2i. Measure fertilization 33. Glacial f2. Give over (Chin.) w 12. On the deposit t4. Simian 22. External ocean ' containing 46. Part of seed l6. A tie gold the face covering 24. Flew Z6. Young bear 28. Bind 29. Mythical monster 32. Plnches 35. Radiurr isym.) 36. Slope l8. Frencly, article 80. Constella- tlon 41. One and one 4? Receptacle t}. Ancient weight , (GrJ 45. Downcasl 47. On top 48. Part of I _ knife ti). Since (Scohl 50. Conduit DOWN 1. Under- ‘round room I'Z'I DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-llereb how to work it: »AXYDLBAAXR Is L 0"NG FELLOW One letter simply stands for another. in this example A is used ilor the three L's. X for the two 0's. etc. Single letters. apos- trophies, the length and formation of the words Me fill limit Each day the code letters arc different. A Cryptogram Quotation OVWNMYl-(LRKC. Leno: EUNOK RWBCAKO PB JVK EWYKO; JVUL PJVKYO Quo TK APOJ~MPYCOMPYJV. Yesterday's (‘r_yptoquoto: DREN FROM PLAY ANY‘ f" CORNER-SIDNEY. iii-f Aim nit AN A81“! ABNER DON KIN CHANGE TH‘ EXP assnqu we: no: WITH PAiMTAN . c‘ POWDER- A TALE WHICH HOLDETH CHIL- D MEN FROM THE CHIMNEY -Bu1'. ONLY Mam-r! HIV-Qua. warrant-l: KIN 04mm: TH’ an PRESHUN ou A KNttcAPfI O'Q' THREE ' WISE MICE Prey never, never try t0 pfgach EXPBPlBHCe ‘Will better teach —0ld Mother Natu.i'e.| "Felling happiness," squgakad; Danny Meadow Mouse when thin first snowflake came gently falling: over the Green Meadows. | "It." said Nanny Meadow Mouser H” whal?" Sqlleflkod Danny. "1f there is enough," replied Nanny in a voice as squeaky as his. There was enough," There was more than enough. But as long as there was enough. the Mouse folk didnt care how much there might be. The fact 1S, the more sngw there "was the safer they were. 1t meant hunger and discomfort, m some folks. but to s11 the Mice in the Green Meadows, in the Gram Forest and in the Old Pasture and U16 Old Orchard, it meant such freedom from worry and watchful. ness as they enjoyed at m; other time in all the year. All they had to was to tunnel under the snow along s11 their little paths through the grass, then K0 and come as they pleased; visit one anotherfls homes, and run about generally without ever a thought of danger. They were completely and se- curely hidden from the sharpest eyes, the kcenest noses and ears of the furrcd and feathered hunt- QKUDDUDDUUDUQGUQCIWZUFIO Contract Bridge g1 By Josephine Culbertson .tQ3Zi1ZiQ3Z£Q31Q33€ ‘Q£8Jm. AN EXTREMELY USEFUL PLAY Few shun. of experts rank ap- l-lfbclate the usefulness and scope of the elimination play. Unfortun. lBy Thornton W. Burgess) THE GUARDIAN, "Silly things! They deserve to be caught," thought Roddy as he watched them. II. While they rematnld b!‘ under the snow, they couldn't be seen, they couldn't be smelled, they couldn't be heard. They were as safe as if there wasn't an enemy in all the Great World. But being too safe isn't. excit- ing. It even gets to being a little dull. It was so over in the Olcl Pasture near the home of Roddy Fox. Some Mice there were tired of digging tunnels, running about and knowing nothing about what was going onwautside in the Great World. They were getting bored. Excitement always had been a part of their lives and now there wasn't. any. So they decided they would go look for some. Why will folks who are safe, and know they are safe, do foolish things just for a. little excitement? So three Mice climbed up on the surface of the snow where there was nothing to hido under or be- hind. and where their little dark coats could be seen from afar. It was a, foolish thing to do, of course. But those three venture- some little folks were not alto- ately for himself, South in today's deal was one of the “uninformed? Neither side vulnerable. North-South 60 on score. (Q42 J’! §10754 ‘O43 11085 97 Q :A1098 WNE 0:243 5 O QQJ! S ‘some L875 l QAKOS QKB QAKQSZ 4.x: Thebldding: South Wont North lint 1Q 1Q Pass 2Q Dble. Pass 2Q 2Q 24 Pass sq so 4Q Pass Pass Pass West led the club elsht- Eesti won, and avoiding the heart ro- turn which would have let declar- er finesse to the Jack, made the safe lead of the club queen. South won with the king and cashed his two high trumps; then. when he saw the break of the trump suit. he shifted to spades, leading the ace and king. When he next led a. spade to du.mmy's queen, West 10st; no time in rulting with his high trump and exiting with his last club. Declarer had to ruff this trick, or concede detest on the spot, and when he later had to "open u-p" the heart suit for him- self, he inevitably lost two more tricks, and his contract. Especially after seeing the break of trumps. South should have given more thought to his plan of play! The sure-to-succeed line was mark- ed-li; consisted largely in taking away West's exit card in clubs! South should have made his first spade lead to dummyk queen (thus giving West the smallest possible chance to ruff a spade before south was ready). and ruffed dummy's last club, simultaneously eliminat- ing West's last club. Then South could be sure of putting West in- iby letting lilm ruff a spade or. if ‘ihe refused, by leading a trump. and West would have to establish South dealer. _, i 's.bout_on the snow in and gethei- without wisdom. Before they left the weed stalks up which they had clim-bed they looked carefully this way and that ivay, not for- getting to look overhead. i “There's s. lliox," squeaked one. , "1 see him," said another. ‘What of it?" said the third, "Ho pant catch us. We needn't be afraid of him." Then the three began running out among the stalks of weeds. Some of these still had seeds in their in their dry old flowerhesds, and they were easy m get because they were only a little above the snow. The three Mice paid no_at.tentlon lo Reddy Fox. They scampered about as if he wasn't around. '.f'hoy squesked happily as they ran here and there. They seemed not to care who sow them or who heard them. “Silly things! They deserve to be caught," thought Reddy as he watched them, his mouth water- ing and watering, and his stomach feeling more and More empty. Of course it wasn't, for it was already empty as it could be. But the three happy little folks running about on the snow were not silly. If Reddy had taken notice he would have seen that with all their skipping about they were careful never to be too far from the holes in the snow out of which they had climbed. While they pretended they didn’t see Reddy there wasn't an instant that they forgot him. Even though they were sure Roddy couldn't get to them through that deep snow. they were taking no real chances by getting far from those holes. They really were three wise Mice. At last Roddy could stand it no longer. Even though he knew that snow was too deep he had to try to catch a. Mouse. He made a sud- den mighty leap. The three Mice vanished and Roddy struggled back to the fist rock as best he could. his coat full of snow. He was hungi-ier than ever. NERVE CENTRE The village c-f Droxford, in Hampshire. England was tfhe head- nusrters from which General Eisen- hower directed the Normany land- the heart king for South. lng operations Oll‘ June 6, 1944. by Al Capp , THIS Ii sir/muesli? were some our ‘r0 MY AGLN, CHARLOTTETOWN ____ _g___ KING 0F THE ROYAL MOUNTED awe/so.’ w. JOEYmX ‘lRiEil. .1051 PAL... f COULDN'T GIT ' NO SALTIIUWELL BE OKAY, BEBY... Dou-‘fcua FEEL BAD- nae-NJ». n‘ n. - spam 1m ADM/TT/A/ A/ 01-1-0 - H THA 7' 1 H5 vs 1.45.414» A/VD 4M sow MAY TUEIVIPO5 yes, Post": mow GETW-IE 41.42. OFFERING 70 5&1; 1/4: sow 5g /_@_s_/11Y§g4/. - 14/1/5195 04b fl/M/Ks A/VD FRAMED - lU/TH You. ~ 501.0 /s ME,’ ‘ ‘ |-\- NE WI N. TRUCK WIT STOOPlD SILLV SDOPER" susiiuris uxs ma? ouilrui JiST STICJUN‘ 1' "nroues WHICH 60 0N .- RACES.’ L‘ I I'LL Niven HAVE NO MOfiE by CarimAndersou born DIPPLE K i . i 1 " vouiz WIFE / WWI-E "OU ~-AND YOU'RE NOTTo. PUT YOUR THINGS TONlGHT on MY cuAiQl! i DON'T wasn- YOUR CLOTHEQERSCATTEQED Now, I WANT lT STRICTLY UNDER- $TOOD--THAT is YOUR CHAlR ANDTl-llS is MINE! x X ... ' —/\ Jfiqnhggd i, n; Ftliiilfl 5yndrll BRINGING UP FATHER a. YCLJQ TEOUBLE P6 VOL! OON'T GET ENOJI-il-t lIQEGl-l Al? AND i5. EKCIGE — NCW- THE \\’AV TO 51w HEALTHY i6 -- i. i= vnub rcoaer ABOUT oocvcos- YES" 5H C AXE -- ANV CA nth“: YZQON --- 5'6 1 KR WANTS NT —ANDT S Y R THAT is MINE- AND 1 wowr ‘i936 0N MY BED TOWEL IS YOURS AND Tl-lE LEFT l5 MlNE" NOW GO WASH UP, 5O WECAN MEET THE OTHE lF 1 WAS QMMG- YOUVE GOT THE RIGHT lDEA-JEQQY- lM GOING TO FOLLOW vouo EXAMPLE FPOM TILLIE THE TOILER THESE LADIE$ ARE lN-‘QOCENT OF THZFT BuT THEY BEHAVED LSPICIOUSLZ Asa MY ALL-MALE Dvisouwzt was oNTi-ii 3'0 /_ Q . PENNY FATHERIM scam iTizD UP "m; nous are euci-i Aime "nmc- ‘z Win14 sidlilisle OF iT- /\ '7 ~- Ziéi \ -' x? . \ emetovees OH, weasNEvER YES, II nuts mm ummf . MR. MANLQY, WHiLE ' Ybu wees LECTURlNfi us, some R541. THIEVES wens . AT woizic/ I'M HAViHG COIN FHoMES PUT IN IMMEDIATEDW ly Harry Hoenigiln m‘