QCTOBER 2s. 1949 THE GUARDIAN. ("'1 ARLOTTETOWN PACE NINE — I m B . liot Bhieken _.;||d._. for LITILE rnownn ouwxnx cur-ran cnrlrnoa Tuesday and Wednesday nonw- mm- ocmann 2s and 2o gvgifingz _ P‘; Big Masquerade Dance" Tonight EAST RDYALTY RINK HALL SPECIAL COSTUME PRIZES Hall Heated Music by Eastern Rhythm Boys -Bus Leaves Bus Stand 10 O'clock Dancing 9:30 to 12:80 Admission 50c DAI LY~ C ROS S W0 R D dunno mg ACROSS 3. Perseverlng 23. Domesti- m d An spe L Measure cste: 1e. BrlstIe-IiD l» flier-em =4. odd . prams; (India) 25. Greek letter 10,Apsrt 5. From 27 Den 11. Diminutlve 6. Sprout 29. A flower- of 7 God of love bud Priscilla 8. Slopes 30. Island: l2. Continuum 9. Convince: of v noise: 13. Lair: W Asia ‘ 13. Eden-i: ltlrleh poet Minor - c ‘ ' J5. Half em: 16. Edges 81. Lavishe: Tlflflllfl lllfll 16. Issue again 18. Woody ‘ extreme . u Bgclr- perennial fondness 34. Men's neme ground of 21. Best upon 37. Mushy a plsy 22. Perforating, 33. Same as mill!!!" .19. Sun god ‘ e: with tyro. s ' so. Guinea: 2o. vv/elponl . shot novice iebbr.) i 21. W0"? i 23. Melodies I 25. Joy ' ‘r26. Poker etske .27.Guide . '28. Greek letter 2B. Grssshopper- like insecfi I2. A Soviet ‘ Socialist ' republic 35. Gsme st ‘ cards _ '36. A wooer .37. Fluff fro! . cloth I88. Branch o! learning '38. A jinn! 411F016 in thread l. Herd. {reQQ silicate: , 2. Arrange in e line . _ DAILY OBYPIOQUOTE-Ilerde how to work l - A X Y D L I A A X It h L 0 N G F‘ E L L 0 W One letter simply stends for mother. In this example A i: used m the three m. x roi- the two 0':. ete. sins" letters. 0w!- troplilee. the length Lad formation o! the word: er: ell liintl - Iiscli dey the code letter: ere diflerent. A Orypiogeem Qwllufi - \ .1SN)l NJD ISD TFDBl-IV. GJ TBGI- DJV. GI NBB I‘ VDD? NI! INVHD- BDVV NBS. F1‘ AGI DAIGCDH IIII ‘nspo-wrnsoas. Yesterday’: Oryptoquole: DEAR AS THE VITAL WARMTH THAT FEEDS MY LIFE-OTWAVY. . Wood ielande-Barihou Ferry Service The Connect!!! U!!! B°W°°F PIINOI EDWARD ISLAND i NOVA SCOTIA daily including Sunday-STANDARD TIME Schedule for 569$. 2M1! to Oct. Silt lllcllllll’. Making 4 Bound Trill Dilly schedule for the resent:- p SEPT. 26th TO OCT. Sill ‘Lesve Wood lllsn’ ‘ ..................... ..... .. l l-Ih l lI-Il- gmilrsienflxysn- ..... WIMN___M_ n ‘m. ‘ Wm Leave Csribou- g:,-;g;-,¢_;g_>--='-= ~- - ":1: .2 :2: i ‘.222: 0v. m u» NOV. ma “‘?.J.".‘;°‘t.!;‘.."?.i.".T. .... .. M. a ---- l v»- [Mciisrlee A. Dunning -.. 1i :.m. I 11-m- ve Csrihou— . I :.m. l P- . Cherie: A. Dunnini ' u um a m“ Prince Nov: For dslly information listen to C 1;” AM, EACH WEEK DAY-STANDARD TIMI iiortiviniierianil Ferries Lipliteli ~ w“... U1. AINEB lBy Thornton Wll-h 10y the harvest voices rin As autumn k g aprmg. e995 the faith with —Old Mother Naturc In the Green Forest and on the green Meadows, in the Old Pas. 111's and the Old Orchard, in the gfifllllng Pool and along the Big V91‘. a-utumn is both a glad time imd a 5m llme- MOlhGI‘ Nature "llellds it for :1 glad time. for she has made it the harvest time; the ltlme °l DlBnl-l’. 0f joyous feasting. "It is chieltly Man who has made t; a sad time for the Iurred and feathered folk, for he has made it the season of dreadful guns, While it is the season for joyous feasting, it also is the season for storing away food for the day when none is to be found where now there is so much. It is the busy season for those who look lhoad. While the hapvpy-go-lucky hast. the thrifty work. The fcast- ers are happy .n the present, but. the thrifty are doubly happy: they not only have plenty in the Dresent. Just as the others do, but will _l’1-'1V9 ‘Plenty in. the future QUDUDUUUDDEIDDQKJU 607770170" Contract Bridge By Josephine Culbertson CK£Q3QL ACE-SHOWING RESPONSES One of the prime reasons that "ace-showing" responses to two- bldS 8TB not imrl; 0f the Culbertson System. is s-Xem-nllilcd in the follow- ing deal: Bouthxdéaler. . .. Both side: vulnerable. ‘QQJIOBG 105 East Pass s Pu: Pass Pas: North and South vlere using ace-showing responses, therefore North's bid of three clubs was automatic. (Another tenet of this ace-show- ing system (alter tum-bids) is that the opener himself remains the supreme arbiter of the final contract; i.e.. the responder is in e. sort of Strnltjacket throughout the auctlon- he must nnswer nil “question? that are put to him. but he must not ta-ke final action on. his own responsibility.) That the flCE-ShUWlIlg convention is at best a mixed blessing is proved by the fact that West was tolri which suit to open against six spades! Knowing‘ that North had the club ace, West quickly selected a heart, and that choice in itself was enough to defeat the slam. As a matter of fact, South was in a desperate position, he tried to save himself by inking a club finesse to his own jack. hoping to discard a heart on dummy! third club.‘ but this merely resulted in a two- trick defeat! It should be observed that if West had hot been given -such excellent. truthful information, he would have had to "toss n coin" between hearts and clubs for his opening lead! Surely. it would be better from the declarer‘s poini- orf view to hnve this 50% chance for the contract. than virtually no chance at all“ What is more. it the partners hnd not been saddled with the ace-showing convention, they could have easily reached the same six-spade contract without reveal- ing too much. and with North as declarer. Then East would have had quite n problem-to select the only lead. hearts. that could delcllt the contract! W. Burgess O “Bury them." ty. "'I'hen you know where they are" when others may be hungry Am] that happiness is the gtefltflg happiness of all, though they may not know it. Happy Jack the Gray Squirrel rgvas working lrom sun- up to sun-down, with a little time out for rest during the miqdlo o! the day. Perhaps he didn't res: vcry comfortablely then, tearing others would get moro- than their share of the nuts and acorns. 1t was just so with his cousins, Rusty the Fox Squirrel, Chatterer the Red Squirrel, even Striped Chipmunk, 1 As long as they were harvesting ‘Ln different places all was quiet, but whenever the Squirrel cousins .were at work under or in the same itree there was much quarrelinz. "They quarreled over whose tree it lwas ivlwh of course it didn't be- .long to any oi’ them. They sc- \cused each other o! taking more [than their share. They scolded lone another. They called each other names. When their mouths were not full their tongues went almost as fast as their busy, scur- rying feet. They tried to drive each other away and couldn't. pi course not. Thai: was a- waste of time and time was precious. Every minute wasted that way was a nut or acorn lost to some one elso So they quarreled more with their tongues and tails that with teeth and claws. You didn't know they could fight with their tails? Well. perhaps they don't exactly tight with their tails, but neither do they with their tongues when it comes to actual fighting. But no sell- respecting _Squirrel would think he was doing himself jus- tice in a quarrel if he didn't add a Jerk of his tail to every wag o! his tongue, It sometimes seems as it tongue and tail must be joined so that when one moves the other must at the same time. Now all this scolding and quar- rellng by the Sulrrel cousins was part o! the joy of the harvest. Some folks are made that way. They are happiest when quarrel- ing, or even fighting. It seems queer. but so it is. we folks never are happier than when the?! are scolding. It is so with the Squirrel folk. Perhaps it is sim- nly that they love the sound o! their own voices and lust as some folks love to sing while they wont the soulrrcl cousins love to scold while they work. The harder thev work the. more they scold. or so it seems. This was especially true oi‘ Haplpv Jock vand Chatterer. es- pecially the latter. He slwsvs seems m be trying to make up will‘. his tongue for what he lacks in size. He really is a very small DH- son. although to hear him you wouldn't think he knows it. Rusty the Fox Squirrel, lilSINl (Conitln ed on ‘p888 135 BINGO iioly Redeemer liali Tiiiiifiiii 8.30 The prise: ere the some l: those prevsillng et other Bingo: in the oily. Iv Al. CAPF - m‘ SAM: AS Ln. ABINER NIIOILF. is n‘ P- TH §AM SELFISH REFOOZAL T‘ ‘ HARRY DAISY MAI. AN u.» xmkeymond ‘ ly Ale Kins of The Royal Mounted x/z we 4mm 4 u/sua; l/ STEAL/HG I CD05 LIA/E by Zane Grey HAVE WFIOGIL 680574515 F44’! C44’! 0F FL/UT? 80D)! DOC~1M 6050615758 4 MIGHTY CAPELESS K/LLEE I Prwus may 71/4 1;! -.':WHEW-.‘.' I SLIPPED. BUT HES 589E GUY. HE'S lWlCET A5 FAST A5 PALOOKA... EXCEPT NE AIM"! A5 KEEN Wil Hi5 DEFENSE. Til?» 16-15 v s v-i 0a- f/Iu” I-r-wl- vitamin \ - _ \~/ Iv Curl hndern HAuzcuT PRICES MEN 81.2.5 BOYS 65¢ Heller's; QARBFP- snow flFPY AND "CAP" STUII HAREcuT Pnices Men $4’- BoYs 50¢- F WHAT A DAY! wELLJ HODE MiLLlE FlNDS TH’ FOLDIN’ BED COMFORTABLE --AN' WAKES uo lN A r BETTER HUMOR-- A/ / l will. , IRINGING UP FA PHEI - AN’ SO ARE CAP AN’ TIPPIE" . / 7;‘ l 2 h." ‘<- j Th Ceeue Ihllbrw Minn Snvizy II. LI5TEH JDLJGAH-WHEQE l<ll~i I FIHD‘SLUG" Muss? I'VE GOT TO GIT some MODE or: Hi5 MIRACLE I'LL CALL we MEDICINE -! NEED 0ocro|2~ HE rr TO BQACE ME use um PUT rr U9 FOR HIM! (A _' runs firs-run Oi: Hi6 MEDICINE- "russ: oumvsvour or: THE wmoow- 140161.116’ MUGG IQKPT user: MOW- urs ‘room ONE SIP HUM-IF! DID IZLN H1O HIM IH THAT c MIGHT POP ME IN 11-12 EYE.’ THAT MEDICINE i6 TEQElFlC/l THE DOCTDQ DON'T -—HE KNOW-‘THE LAST HE SAW OF HIM - HE VWXS RUNNING DOWN ‘THE STREET WFTi-l A LAMPPOST OVEQ Hi6 QHOULDEQY M’: TERmaLv v/onsziso a ly iieny iieenigee: a "*='"'=~'-=~=-~*==' H55 0W1 FvI-I-Bfiflmiuirrmsu Aumueo ‘n: aw sATlfioNJe Wm‘ H's Fwmm’ “Mm?” -0 H i