JANUARY l2, 195i) GIVE YOU 19.9) 1.. s. ,..... NOURISH ENT! ~ GRO-PUP ls o solid food-not 70% water like most conned dog foods. You odd the water. Crunchy bite-size Gro-Pup cubes are the kind of chewing food dogs go for at. once. They help to keep teeth clean- gums firm and strong. Man famous breeders feed Qro- up. It's n hearty, nour- ishing diet that contains every vitamin and mineral do s are known to need. Easy to igest, too. And Gro-Pup is thrifty to serve-you can snve us much as 60% nvcr most canned foods! Y_0ur grocer has Gro-Pup in hnt cubes and meal form. Food both for Yhriety. GRO-PUP ‘ Mode by Kellogg's In London, Ontario OLDEST NEWSPAP ER Established BELATED ALLY The Soviet Union declared war on Japan on Aug. 8. 1945, seven lays before VJ Day. NOTICE Commencing January 1, 1950, all Automobile Deal- ers and Dealer Operated Garages in the Charlottetown . area will remain open on WEDNESDAY AETERNOONS and will close on SATURDAYS AT 1 PM. All Parts Departments will remain open on Friday evening. est United tates newspaper. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND AUTOMOBILE DEALERS ASSOCIATION ln The Interest 0i The General Public The Electric Inspection Department for the Prov- ince of Prince Edward Island operates for the purpose of preventing fire hazards and injury to persons and property, and also to oversee electrical installations so as to ensure proper maintenance and operation, in short to protect the public from inferior equipment and workmanship. - Hencelorth, electric signs not approved by the De- partment will not be permitted to be installed. Electrical apparatus and particularly 939cm“ "H burners must be Canadian Standards Association ap- proved. lt is unlawlul to buy and install any equip- ment not bearing C. S. A. label. Your insistence on seeing the Journeymanb Lic- ense will ensure a better standard of installation. EUGENE P. GULLEN, Minister of industry and Natural Resources. {Fiiifilvilifi N'|'LL MlSQ THU’ L|'L SHADOAI IT WERE GRUESOME -—- BUT FRIENDLY. ALLUS A-FOLLOWIN’ ME. AH WERE KINDA GITTINF o»: a... ... 9.1L"?! m =£‘_.. oi“...- in Hartford. Conn. in 1764. "The Courant" is the old- lBY Thornton W. I LIGHTFOOT LEAVEQ. A PIE- BENT r The past is the past. The future still Is yours to make it what you will. —0ld Mother Nature. Prom hi: form on top o! c lmall mound in among the cedar trees Jumper the Hare watch“ Raddy Fox out o! sight. For what was to Jumper one o! the longest minutes he ever had known he hm been lace to iace with Roddy with only a few feet between them, yet Raddy hadn't seen hlm. That is, Roddy didn't lmow he had seen Jumper. He had supposed that what he saw was a little hemp or snow that might have fallen from one of the coder branches overhead. This was because the snow wu no whiter than was Jumper, 1nd squatting there with his feet drawn close under him. his head drawn in and his long ears laid fiat back along his neck and shoulders, he had looked as shapeless as s little heap ct snow, not in the least like an animal. Jumper had sat perfectly still. Had he moved s0 much as a whis- ker. rolled an eye or twitched an ‘TPGOUUUKODUDOCfiUOUY Ofibg Contract Bridge 1 i‘. 3 l ‘IQDQQUIZIZQDQCIQQQQDQQODOIQLQ I A SUCCESSFUL FEINT 3 liy Josephine Culbertson \ A psychic hid by South in the following deal had extraordinary success. North dealer. ‘Both sides vulnerable. North-South 80 on ecu"- ‘ u rqessi ' 4r .~ i "' é; "it?! “av” " .%a%a"i "Llghtfoot left me a. present," he chuckled. eyelid Roddy would have instantly known him for what he was. l had taken courage, a. lot of it, to stare straight into Reddys hungry yellow eyes and not. even blink his own. Now the danger was over and forgotten. Anyway Jilmpcr had put it out of his thoughts. Ex- cept to remember important les- sons, Jumper thinks only of the present and what may be ahead. Raddy was hardly out 0t sight when Jumper was once more doz- ing. Like Peter- Rabbit and others of the smaller folk. he is a light sleeper, dozing rather than Sleep- ing soundly. his cars on guard while his eyes are closed. If some faint sound wakes him he is in- stantly widc awake, as wide awvake as if he hadn't been asleep at all. He doesn't need to rub the sleep- iness out of his eyes as some folk ca. O The snapping oi’ a small twig caused Jumpers eyes to fly wide open. He didn't move. Those long ears of his didn't fly u-p to catch any new sound as you might ev- pect thcy would have. Moving ears might catch the eyes of a hungry enemy who otherwise would not see him. Long ago Jump. er had learned that just such seem- ingly trifling things as that may mean the difference between life and death. To the Green Forest and Green Meadow folk nothing is trifling. The smallest thing of- ten ls as important as the biggest. Boys and girls could learn much about the importance of little things from Jumper and his friends. Some one was slowly coming his way and not. trying to be quiet about moving amen; the trees. ass 'K876 ‘$33. 4» K98 “Em” N grate: Qqios W E 051° gees 5 d-AN 4.10s ‘Q15 QA ‘K7642 §K953 ‘rho bidding h w ‘I - Sut ‘=5 gdgiah it: 10a (l) Pass INT Pass‘ 2b Pas‘ Pass Pass t West, who had no means of knowing that South was compara- tively short in spades, led the ace and another trump to protect his own spade strength from rufts in dummy. This, as it happened, was not very important-South would have made his two-diamond con- tract agalnst any opening lead. South's highly unconventional one-spade opening was not merely a haphazard "psychic"-thcre was a logical reason for the selection. South felt that any opening on his questionable values might mcrclv be "starting something," and it was quitipossible that ltis best action was to pass and hope that West would do likewise. On re- consideration, however, South felt that there was a very good chance that his side had the balance of power, so he decided to risk an opening in hope or converting his part-score into a game. Having made that decision. the question was what to bid. South rejected the idea of a diamond or la club opening, because either of gthese would be too easy to over- call. Ideal1y—l1 defense had been the only consideration-South would have liked to bid a heart. but this was too risky. South could not afford to play the hand at hearts under any circumstances. whereas he could stand a spade contract. even if North raised to a fairly high level. It should be observed that South's spade bid robbed East- West- oi their only safe chance to compete. West could not only sate- ‘ly "move" over one spade. and East certainly was not in better straits. over North's one notrump! Right away Jumper felt easy. No enemy would be so careless of i noise made in moving about. Slow- 11y Jumpers long ears came up . until they were straight above his .head. Then Jumper sat up the better to see. Some one was mov- in; among the trees, but at first he couldn't be sure who it was. Then out from behind a cedar tree stepped Liyzhtfoot the Deer. Jumper and Lightfoot are old friends. The-v have much in comm- -on. Both love the Green Forest. Both live on much the same kinds r of food. Both rare hunted by others and often must. run for their lives. trusting to their legs to get and keep them out oi‘ danger. But in one matter they are very different. When snow is deep in the Green Forest Jumper can move about on it. because his big long-teed hairy feet are like snowshoes. keeping him from sinking in. Lightfoolfs small sharp-edged hoofs cut down to the ground. To get around he must ivade or plunge through 1t. and when it is very deep he can get around only by tramping out paths. The snow wasn't deep enough for this and Llghtfoot was having no trouble in getting around. He wasn't as handsome as he had been in the fall. His coat looked some- what shaggy. He didn't hold his head high and carry himself as he had then. How proud he had been then of his antlers. which s0 many folk call horns! How he had tossed his head to show them off! Now he looked as if they were too heavy to be carried about. Llghtfoot stopped for s few (Oontinuc-d-‘rin-Page 11> by AliCapp WAL-Tili TH’ WAY I1’ IS WIF SHADOWS-HERE TODAY-GONE TONDPROW. HE WARN“? BOBODY, AN’ HE DIDNT HAVE NO BODY- BUT. AH'LL SEND HIM OFF WIF SOME - MQURNFUL MO§IC~ RIP KIRBY HTS HAD A BIT ‘POO MUCH. ' LIT HIM SLEEP IT or: IN m5 CARmFiiG-l - AIR wru. HIl-P n-u-ru. use CARE or mam m!) A pit-nail w-usv as Ffltume w om...ooenv w AN‘ oer 1 ofliH-"agsié WERE U! THE CHAIR _--__ now W5 Govwel ocwr won: rune m: wwaom eso 5041s E‘ /s v- ‘Q Q W CHAMPION OF THE WORLD ND IN THiS CORNER THE POPULAR i AND SPECTACULAR HEAVYWEIGHT THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN KING or THE RQYAL MOUNTED N IUPROYECT vouRsELvEs AT ALL filing ‘HMESWSHAKE HANDS... o0 1o acreage l5 voua CORNERSWAND come _ Twigs Wm; our FlGHTlhVAT rue sect... W: éELL INSTRUCTIONS PQLCOKA“ AND IN A secouo "run CAME OUT GREATEST o‘ FAST TOWARD ALL reacts WE “m! PULSES c: also- POUND AS rwo cars-r ,_ ATHLETES ‘ M ARE Arum H. "m 1o enema ‘W21; A m ' ‘ cov“, mom won a‘ EIGHT,‘ KIA/G m/s/swwwanewca MNGAND ear mm PE/SOA/EB mumvrssau ruse/trey 5' $11 édMiT/l/A/Gili/E IOTIA 6&7 £49 OF ‘E41! K Anderson t’ h/ \ /' Cnm. Ann: ——- i DOTTY DIPPLE I COULDN'T HELP IT" WITH THEM I A lags mama 1 nevelz WORRY ABOUT we cuteness: wean we _ V_ HAVE CONNIE To 5"’ ' TIPPY AND "CAP" STUBS uealaccwme -- WE'RE vezv weu. weasel? WITH voua woaa/ QUICILHORACE" 1. AGLABS or= . warez» N ~ coume THlS ISTHG FIRST TIME ME. DRlgPLE AQY ? SEADNI’: M MY LAND! I'VE GOT TOl BUY A NEW l-IAT AN’ A DQESS/FOQE"! AQE YO GE HLl none {so Tdu rota w PERMANENT»! MERCY! u= r0 KNOWN w WAS GOlN no BE THIS MUCH "rnouauz TO T' QQY, (Qifiéii? READY-- ‘l! MARY! by Edwina WHAT'S T‘u"MAfifzi2 weu. GEE! vioulze com’ ’\7/AY WlTl-l Youe? on Arrow, AN’ ALL i CAN no‘ IS GO TD SCHOOU/ . AN'-- / 1'».- liuoqn unis- Ala- . n.-v..1-..»4 n is», res-n - -' FMMMWT DEAR-GO UP AND GET HE A HAHDJEFCWEF OUT C: T TOP DQAWEQ O: KW D5555 BRINGING III’ WKTHICK -ALlD ALGO BEING DOWN MV 6CAQF — "Oi-l - YE5- AkD MY SEWIQG BAG AND MY READING GLAGSES '1 by George Mciilanus aQgfZ/b f-“KXQ WHAT DO YQU MEANJWONT NEED: . V? MYCI as? We Paw. YOUR owru 6000mm?‘ r l. wows; com‘ ‘mu BARE Lock . THEM up.’ I l "THEYVK LOCKEE t UD NOW “in /\‘ \- l it ..- ww- "were ‘IWUMSY/GH/E ME l Tl-‘AT KEY! ‘Irv-m TILL wAtLoweo n’ nqrry runny-n ‘IE5, '. a coAfAnDsuzsmtmle Evarw- THAT cAliwrznsl-lAsAnevl F-‘URl G4,! ONLY WANTITQQ SHCNIWU, Fenian-l ma»: JUST’ m IMPRESS PE0¢5LE~ ' 'c:oul.D~mtJ,Pt.EA<:-EF/xnl;n2_e|\'z ME A 644E014 For A HUNDRED lZLLARQ? f‘ A HUNDEED xLLAR$< -_ ‘-v/——<——-* t J> -