PAGE TEN VelIdors' Association . third floor, City Hall. V p -F The Annual Mi-villi: oil the Milk Producers and he held TUESDAY EVE- NING. NOV. 13th at 8:30 I'.M., in the Meeting Room, will l'h'li('Y (SAY, Secretary. Wood Islands (allowing sclicdulc. Learn Woiiil lslniiilv... Prince Nola Charles A. Learn (iariimii- Fhnrics A. Prince Nmii ., Catch nn curly Head Oflicci DUNN .('l1'il'I”i i9i'-- t n34-y (int v ..,., ACROSS fl. Deepp hale x 1. Moving Iv 1"” . .. tmech.) winvw 7. Shore ll-e""'-1 (0. Not likely ”''l 12. Narrow lg-4 an :3... 'xt'viii1''.'l'. - roaclway' 13. More matilrte H. He is tcontr.) ulrnprcy Affirmative vote (van) (Ml Part of XI. Attvoliltit Tlirilf rm: 7 x..i gimil I5. I6. Q7. JR. with A hand Good conductors of electricity Consume Positive pols p 27. Harsh nos! 29. P13 pen 30. Contribute?! to a fund 31. Yellowish 34. Old Dutch tnhhr ) Porsnnnl rronmin '37. Youth 38. Malt. beveroze Q9. The ankle tiinam . Oil of rose petals . Phmre group 4. CCfQrl'1OfTT95 fin. Large worm C 21. 23. ('8. I35. V Body of f7” yval('.P Ht ltllll. Diinntni; plliiiiiii: ,, LISTEN Til ( l( V AT 7:30 .-LXI. STANDARD TIAIE rriusiiii: iuul DiA'iLY c: no 5 s W6-riot caribou Ferry Service THE (it).YNE("lil.V(; LINK BETWEEN PRINCE EDWARD ISLANI) AND NOVA SCOTIA Tho Prinrv Noni lllltl (hurl:--i A. Dunning operate on the tNi.iiiiIalril '.l'iiiir) . It 2.'vth in .V(H. 30th . it a.m. I run . .. ll mm. 3 run .... it mm. 1 yum ll n.m. 3 tun. llltlid disiippoiiitmcnt. NURTHUMBERLAND FERRIES LTD. ('llAllLU'1'TETOWN, r. E. I. For l';irtii'iiI.irs Phone '13, Charlottetown. l!' Mill. t-rrcraze 2'7 A pt-nrtion, ' as rnrds '37 Flixilhlnts W .r3'VH'4ii.iYf'"3 2-Prwivl l:i'nss tn ilry t .. lCxl1lPSSiOn ltsril to l'i'i,;h!en 54 l. Hiinihlv Ti-rix rl h.1i'k and forth . TOllFilPS,' end to end 31. Fails to win 85. Slinslinncnn liiilinn lepton-day's Lulu! 16 Salt trhclll.) 38. Wheaten hour 40. Falsehood 41. Land- measure! 42. Cravat DAILY Cl!) lt'l'trQl it'll:--llt-rt-'5 how to not-It it: A X is L 0 om 1 -- or einipi--. if... lliv . l. in-.xphin::. iii it"; .1-;ach day the l:”'i' ' Yl) LBAAXR. N(iFl'7LLOtV vfr r our-llicr. In lll!3 exam;-so 'A lS iizm-l 1... (:1; ctr, Single lvtlwi-.-, . prw HY" lltttt rriit. A r) pt:-pgrorn Quotation isor RFD rims i'PBs:tzoi( YYO EBADY W360 ZI irwrizizizn. . Yo-ll-riln)'5 CT)Plt1tlllOiPZ FOR. THOUGH HIS BODVS UNDER: I-LATCHES. HIS smji. HAS com-: ALoMrr-l?tl3l?ltjt,-W,-.;.;;W .1 T It PZP KNZO. L! BEE! EBB p 'l Jinn nf the uornls nrr till lilws. FZY ZY RFD ANZPD RFBK ETIIJNZPKD. t J ....n”i? ily Tlnmlto A DREADFUL LESSON A. thing you learn a trighttul way 3"" mid 1-5 in your mind to stay. Liglittoot the Deer. it was the hunting season. which usually begins at. the 'most boautzful lime or year, the Lime when Mother Nature paints an the landscape in lovely colors, Never is the Green Forest more lovely. and strange nsitmayseem never is the Green Fm-est so rill- Nl uvth (right and pain and 543,-. row. It is the lime of terrible guns where hig people and little people alike 'lVP in fear every moment of every day. Lillhlloot the Deer, Mrs. Light- mot. and the two young Deer who felt mo bit: to be called lawns lalihouzh they really were, was .deep in the Green Forest. For n :long time after the hunting sea- lson began. they had nothing to Hear from the dreadful guns be- 98U59 35 NH iin hunting of Deer uas allowed. But there o)eG 0smv09&096 A 3! Josephine Culbertson ..l it 3, 7 ,o-uvco9-twsrwxgs-- l .. v- t CH9 0? the ideas which have "pl-"95 l'?0Pularil.v rests on 1 hiirhly questinmthle ruumiauon. This” irlc-A is that a ”Ci'l:-lngc or mills by the opening bidder im. plies cxtra values. The tallacy of the idea is brought to light by 5"” 5 V-SWVR1 case an the follow- ing: south dealer. pBoth aides vulnerable. Q 5 OK 4 0A. 5 Q1 7 mhll M96 2 Gen 05 106 WE hxhwo OIOCO mac:-uou no-I;-ID tI'OC -O 1 1083 3 SI 74 H3 2 41:60. 340?? any: 01 This was the bidding in a rub-l ber guns where all four players , were highly experienced: I South West North East ' 1 Q Pan 1 NT Pan 2 9 Pass Pun Pun Smith. H1 rolixdding his spades river North's one notrump, was simply practicing the same bid- thousands or other half-in-lbrmed players. South felt that a rabid or spades was the tconservativc" course, whereas a bid of two heart-s would have been too ag- gressive. Aside from his nation that R. change of sull,: implied ex- Ira values, South argued later that his spade suit had been much better than his heart suit. South was wrong. Ot course his spades were superior to his "hearts, but that was only A small part nt the question. South had ,Illi'eiirly announced il Splidc sull, so what would he the harm of mving North the choice of two Suits instead of telling him that South was interested only in A spade contract? Good partnership bidding de- mands that these "chances for choices" he provided, one partner tn the other. Consider the dilem- & contract Bridge " didn't ding technique which is used byi "W N””' W”! Put in 133' 50Uth'3imoat certainly would have made mtiinl procedure. North could not I two hearts, I W. Iurocul ' ' i FN ,1l.. , 2 . 3 ;t.,. :lf”,..p-pztglgfii sit Ii Nani. ., a r a. in i A- ”How in the world can hurt another at a dlstance'."' one of them. come a time when the dreadful guns would be hunting them in- stead of other Green Forest foik. Llghttoot and Mrs. Lightloot had lived throuirh several such seasons and knew what they meant. For thetwins this was the tirst hunting season and they s ,didnit understand it at all. They understand why mother looked so anxious and so start- 'led every time they heard the ibang nl a distance gun. Of course they knew nothing about guns. pTn them a ;zun.w.1s no iiiol'c than in loud noise. They couldn't un- ldcrstand why mother and father ',were so uneasy and so worried. iAnd neither mother not lather lrould tell them. It was some- "thing they would have to learn by ex-periciicc. Many lessotis; all through lite. can be learned in no other way. . Now and then they saw a Man iit I distance. No matter how great the distance. mother would urge them 10 get out at sight and keep out at sight of those two- llelzged loiks. 1 "l don't see why we have to." .iniid one at the twins. "They don't lionk dangerous to me." V "we never seen one ot'tlinsei two-legxrd folks PVPV1 i1')' Mi catch any one yet." said the other tiwin. "And T have never seen one of them near enough to any of us to hurt us." said the first twin. "It. seems to me silly to be -afraid of any one who cannot get. around any faster than they can." .saio'. the rither. "Tlicy almost ynever run. When they do run it is only for a short way, and. com- .pared with us, they are slow. pMost or the time they just walk." They asked mother about this. ."They don't have In run to catch Continued on page H lafford A two-over-one takeout or one spade. but his hand was worth isome resiponlse: and so his one inotrumvp was the logical action. fYet.. because of South": bidding Iideas. the partners were quite unable to locate the fitting 4-4 ;heart. mill: and were forced to ;play I. contrtu-t considerably less attractive. In short, the two- lsvpade rebiri stopped North dead .in his tracks. He did not like to ,lIaag but he cnuld not afford pnncither bid, and even it he had lpersisted to two notrump. South scarcely would have shown his ihenrt iiult at the three-level! ' E South went down two at lspade contract. a nyone asked l hil, whereas he ni- n;'w'Ai;r'iiiiL"i.Y ,4:-m ' wulifla l'LL can ooN'rBoTHE!,1 my i-WJL N AN'uy"IlI.i' my WIL,lF tr lsN-r ; H 2 2 -r c 299 2 APAC -o: my MV Lcouema THEM4Tf.')i;CC":'luOAL Hgveet ' 5;"y”y4 I ly Non-um use A Lit 'u:m:'? . sow vzwa A ff A74 52 gww oon 6ATuKl7Av GAME. . ggwrggfgu 73AM; Al-l'lS LOOKIN” rox TH BlG.UGLV carrrlata Wt-UCH THROWED DNSV MAE. OFFA Tl-JEN VORE ME HO GOT NAME NAME. BUT SOON I HAVE PRETTY NAME.- M RS. ABNER YOKLJM -.-,vo0it:'- IF THE POLICE coMs,AFb'sA: 'P5 coovslzxrs aur Tsu. THEM Moi-uiNc! IF AN Amnicm Dsreci-iv: NAMED KIEBY snows us, you mow WHAT TO DO! m 64v, Tl-O16 I5 A GKDAWD Aver I aor--. Silt: rt-row: WHICH :35 lNiN'ME WITH By Alex Riivmnno l G I. I l 4 l I I THE GUARDIAN. (IHARLOTTETOWN KING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTD OHDEA ISHOUL JOE CALLED WHILE VOU WERE OUT: I. 0 OF HAD THE GROCRV D'LlVEll WSTEAD OF GOiN' OUT . WMA1 DID ME SAY! I5 HE ASSURE!) ME NE 55515 ENE. AND ME SENT VOU HIS LOVE. X TOLE AIIIVE TNOTELJL, guess 'lM WIllTlN' TSEE W AT THEM SPORT AM! THE PAPER VON"! . I DIDN'T WANT ER LLA5 SAV- '-.- i... .t.., i.. av it-nu r. 1.14 ... ....-. onvry DIPPLE 9!! Ruton Gun. Cl 44 b 0 .3 . Li's ' 0 y ..,t - . . . I . By Carl A nd"!"Ol MM--THE MINUTE I ear THE KITCHEN CLEANED UP, THEY START EATTNG A6AiN! MAVBE ID BETTER :0 THINGS LIKE THEY DO Julil tin-. t'Kirclleii CLOSED .ll.l-7AM WELL, I SPOSE IF I DIDN'T TAKE 'i'iPPlE', I'D SAY-'Ol-l,I DON'T TODAY. I'LL WAIT TILL TOMORROW, " AN'-- WANT TO WALK 9.. 7'-our Dunn um van. or. sci:-zm-iric ARTICLES wt oi-l,YDU wmrr To do Ti-VOYAER WAY?! WELL, IT ooeswr MATTER, S . BRINGING UP FATHER BUT VQJ HAVEN'T HEARD . THE WOQ5T OF IT - Si-IE WANTS KXJ TO GVVE THE ON TO Ml? 1 MY Lil-IDLE LIFE ISN'T FLA5HlNEi BEFORE ME .. ONLY THE Lnvst CLO'THI8ii'vE wcvzml wt-l:iaLwwD, i suPPosE WUR PA.sT PUBLICITY s'ruN':s FLASHED BEFORE Iy tloiry Hunlpll name: woul.DN'1' esr rr roe w-r. weewsns. A PERSON? MEQOIBGJGI-l'i'tTVvl'f'H vwoi.EeN1'iI!euna sAv:N& ENGOLPINAHUQQK NYITP