AINIII. MIMI ST. PAUL'S OIUIOII IUIIIRIIDE Wodleetlay and Thurailay 001033 25th & 28th ITOP AT BLUE HAVEN RESTAURANT svnnav, ocr. 312 CONSERVATIVE CONVENTION SECOND QUEEN'S Coiivcntion to nominate two Conservative Can- didates in this district will be held in CLYDE RIVER HALL ON TUESDAY. OCT. 24, 1950 AT 8 PM. Poll cliairiiien are asked to have five delegates appointed. ANDREW DOLLAR, President. LLOYD MMPIIAIL, Secretary. NOTICE r , I 3 OLD TIME FIDDLING & STEP-DANCING CONTEST IN HOLY NAME HALL, ST. PETERS BAY WEDNESDAY NIGHT, OUT. 25th DOORS OPEN AT 7:30 P.M. Admission 50c & 35c. Excellent Prizes Send entries 10- ROY Ma.cKlNNON or HUBERT MclSAAC . ; Suppers served from 4:00 on FOR lE;ch Day? k , , , , ' Sae ancy or l'00sI'- DINIWJE Bingo and other attractions. . riimci: or WALES COLLEGE OONOERT SERIES A series of three concerts will be presented this season at the Prince of Wales College Auditorium for both students and the general public. MONDAY. NOVEMBER 6 at 8:30 Raoul Raymond. bass . and William Keith Rogers. pianist THURSDAY. JANUARY 18 at 8:30 Margaret Ann Ireland Celebrated young Toronto pianist. MARCH r” The Prince of Wales College Glee Club Under the direction of Frank Johnston, A.T.C.L. Popular Prices:- General Public 5O cents Students 25 cents Tickets for the first concert may be purchased at Hughes Drug Company or ordered by writing or tele- phoning the Concert Secretary at Prince of Wales College, Phone Number 2800. The price is low and the seating is limited; secure yours now. , fNorth had a pretty weak 'lia'nd,f Canadian Legion Clover Club Dance EVERY siiruiiniiv AI Blanchard and the "Clover Club" Band Admission-75c Dancing 9:30 to 12.00 For reservntioiis Phone 1222 Reservations held until 10:30 pm. SATURDAY NIGHT IS YOUR DANCE ZIIGHT AT i E h 2 i .g 4.7. ; tr g? z- , u A -W) . lit l'4”i!-j.i'.iI2 . C-LM .mC.l.N-....IT('S ll Looms FOR :0-O-Q9095-Q 50 60 0-0 0 069 OrQGO-OOfO&-O-O-0&0-O-O-O9-GOO-GOO-GOO-O-GO -ee-99494ooeveooooeoooeeoeooeeoooeoo APPLE PIE AND CHANGE OF IIAIT . , , There's little that is really new; 'Tis mostly change in point of view. --Old Mother Nature. Such ll breakfast party as that was in the kitchen of Aunt Sally's old house! Never in more than a hundred years since it was built had the old house known such a breakfast party. First there was Aunt Sally herself. eighty-nine and a sweetly independent a hoe- tess as ever served apple pie for breakfast. In the olden days. and the days of Aunt Sally's child- hood, no New England breakfast was complete or at all what it should be without apple pic or doughnuts, or maybe both. Her guest of honor was a hun- tcr who thought of himself as a sportsman and was most indign- ant when Aunt Sally wondered how he could so love to kill. "I don't love to kill," he protested. ”It is the hunt, not the kill. that I love; the being aifield and try- ing to be smarter than those I hunt. It is a sort of game, an ex- citing game." "But you don't feel that you have won unless in the end you kill the one you are hunting. and you are disappointed if you don't. If you didn't like to kill as well -'5CFQDOFO04'.rOOf."'-' '('L -n"Cs')i)0 contract Bridge By Joaephtne Culbertson v .o3:i3:ti;roooo';-oaooooc-aoctncata. MISPLACED HOPE When circumstances demand. it is wise to play for the position of cards you hope exists -- as- suming that you can do so with relative safety. But in the fol- lowing case. even if the cards had lain as declarer hoped, he still would have failed! south dealrr. . North-south uilnerable. ass 0 9 4 3 O 10 9 6 5 2 aiaz QQJ98 5 M01 9.14 .a.KJ7s Exxon has so 132:" N WE S NO CD man '10 is Q Q ?3'w7 2 fl 7 3 IIOCD 5 The bidding: South West. 2 N T Pass Pass Pass North EIAC. 3 N T Pan but with an acc, to say nothing of his five-card suit, he was cor- rect 'in carrying the two-notrunip opening to game. West led the spade queen. and South correctly won the trick in his own hand. to preserve dum- my": entry. But then declarer slipped. l-ie cashed the diamond ace and led the diamond seven! West look the trick with the jack and led another spade e- and south had no further chance. It was quite obvious that South hoped to find one of the'detcnd- ers with an original holding of K-x in diamonds - in fact. he later argued that a doubleton king was as probable as a doubieton Jack. Here he was 100 per cent right. but his argument was also 100 per cent pointless. What good would it do to find the diamond king singly guarded? True, South would establish his own queen - but the suit would be irrevocably bIPCked- Surely. the defender with the diamond king would promptly remove the spade ace from dummy. Since South's objective was nine tricks. and since he could not hope for that number without taking several diamonds. he should have tried for the position which. if present. would give him clear sail- ing. That position was the jack and one diamond in either defend- lly Ttaretea VI. er's hand. and to exploit the pos- . lumen) The Pie didn't last long as hunt you wouldn't shoot Wood- chucks. You don't eat them. You don't use, their fur. Dead they are of no earthly use to you. But you try to kill them Just the same. Why?" said Aunt Sally. "They are a nuisance to farm- ers. They ruin gardens," said the hunter. "Let the farmers and garden owners whose crops are ruined take care of the Chucks who do the mischief. Folks in mischief have to be punished. But these friends of mine who eat breakfast. with me almost every "19""!!!- and drop in at. other times during a day if they happen to be hun- gry. have been in no mischief. On the other hand they have given me and others a great deal of pleasure. Yet only yesterday you would have shot them had you had the chance." Aunt Sally looked at her guest reproachfully. Then she looked down at the other breakfast guest and her face softened. There were three of them now. Old Mother Chuck. her handsome daughter or the golden coat. and a brother who was just. a plain Chuck. They were con- tentedly and happily eating bread. They always preferred bread to any green things Aunt Sally had ever offered them. She cut I big wedge of apple pie and passed it to her guest of honor. "You see. l'm old New England." laid she. "When I was a girl we al- ways had apple pie for breakfast. I hope you are New England too." Her guest smiled. "I am when there is apple pie like this.” said he. Aunt Sally chuckled. It was a soft contagious sort of a chuckle. "Those Chucks are New England too," said she. "They like apple pie for breakfast." She had spread newspapers on the floor: now she put down a plate with three pieces of apple pie. The pic didn't. last long. No. sir. it didn't last long. There was no doubt that those Woodchucks thoroughly approved of the old New England breakfast dish. "May I have a second piece of pie?" asked the hunter. dition." said Aunt Sally. "I hope it isn't too difficult." said the hunter. Aunt Sally's eyes twinklcd. "The condition is that you promise never to shoot any of my Wood- chucks.” said she. "That is not a condition at all." replied her guest. and there was A twinkle in his own eyes. "Your woodchucks are perfectly safe from me. and so are all other Chucks from now on. unless they are in real mischief. I'll ncver shoot another Chuck for sport. Now do I get that piece of pie?" He got it. Mother Chuck, Gol- die and her brother each got a cookie. Last of all each was given a chocolate cream. "This." said the hunter. "has been the best breakfast party 1 have ever attended." KING Elllli COFFEE -mIo.ioiMv(n1'sasiNs1oi.ooua - vtf HAD-I . V sibility, South h d t 1 a ti .- I .1 THE CLOVER cI:UB the diamond acc aandoquggn Ell); "HI E H l I gog .. ;g”gg his own hand. -. Ll'L ABNER I By AL CAPE Kt -: I ,r FE? ' THANK 1'ItA'I'sTuFFouGi-rr WE NEED FUEL tElNTlER- T'MN(E T0 or. POWERFUL DL -Jl-'.ERlN' ia:- ENOUGH TO HURL. M is . - - Ti 8u"l5”'”?'r?.'t'an"”i52f;-' Us sci-iii: uemcu mow U-Till IANANA . .c.. . "You certainly may on one con-- ..-ssv 0;"u:i2 , Q Can Anderson WELL,MRS. SWIFFLE, NOU SURELY AE A GOOD COOK! I'M GLAD Tl-l' Cl-lUBB5'3 DIDN'T GET HERE FOR DINNER I LUCKY WE STOPPED lN-- i:iim'uTuu oi-"ii-scum MRS. KELK6 SAID SHE wuzN'T HUNGRY -AN'si-IE ATE TWO I-tELPlN'S oi; EV't2YTHINGw: A m it I wuazr i:.1-'i-linfmli WELL JFTHEYD Ml5' ' MY '-AND E ' ,gAiLEx'e..,1'HEY'LL coifnr-: TOO LATE! NOT ATI-IING LEFT To EAT!--THAT Mi:zs.KELKs -- ; . DSAI2- rrls 100 BAD war you HAVEN'T THE ARTISTIC ABILFTY 1' HNE-I'VE JUST Flkllil-IED A BEAUTIFU. PAINTING AID PUT rr N THE MMD5 ROOM To CHEER HER UP .'I P i I J t I l