rim cimimiaisi. CIIARLOTTETOWN W nwnmm APRIL- 15. 1'95.- l SIITII BOOTYS GREAT FIND Toke naught for granted lest you- may In pain and sorrow have in pay. -Old Mother Nature.l Old Mother Nature knows. Every day she sees in the Green Forest. or on the Green Meaiimis. or in the. Old Pasture, or at the sniiiinz Pool. dreadtili things hnmwii to others because some of them have made the mistake of taking things for granted. not making sure that they are as they seem to be. If. is an easy mistake to miiiic. one that the young Just startlni: out. in the Great. World are very likely in; make, and all too often par tor; with fright, or suifei-inc, nr both.. or with their lives. ' Young Hooty and sister l-iootvf children of Mr. and Mm. Hooi.V ihei big Owls who lived in a lonely parti of the Green Forest. had leii. home and were now out in the Greail world. Young I-ioniy had been the first to leave. He had his first. lesson in hunting before his sister. had left the nest. Gradually he had moved farther and farther uii-I. til now he was living by him- self in the woods at the foot or the Great Mountain. When Biater I-Iooty had iearnedi to hunt for her own food she too drifted away from the iii-iahbor-7 hood of the nest and surroundinz. ikinds of food she saw others of Sing by James M. Cain CRAFT!!! SEVEN - Part. one "Make 'em doice. Make 'em nice, sweet, no loud at all. No his dra- matic. Nice, a sweet. I lid- Yeah?" Parma begged. . "I'll do my best." Lennard said. "You do like I say, we knock 'em over." solve went out through the itinizerbri-ad. and he threw down his pen and I threw down my paintbrush, and we got out the props. and the orchestra played the introduction to ill! duet. Then he started to sing, and I woke up. I mean. I not it through my heart that. when the bird said dolce. he meant doice. He sang as though that bonnet nf Mlniils were some little bird he had in his hand. so it made a catch there and lot she blinked and blinked and blink-. l between meals. For a while father. and mother brought her something; , to eat now and then. But she 5Itl.i1o"kcd ”' m" "M M"kM' them less and less olien until fin- ally she had wandered away where they did not him: and she had no more help from them. There were times when Sister Hooty wished she could eat the the Green Forest folk eating. .if Chatierer the Red Squirrel could eat acorns and nuts and seeds why coiildnit she? She tried it and couldn't. She simply couldn't. She” could eat Chatterer if she could hunting grounds leaving them to' ed father and mother for it is Mother Nature's law that the yotmg must scatter and find or make home places for themselves. Like her brother. Young Hooty. Sister I-looty had soon found out that those who hunt others in or- der to live must be smarter than those they hunt. and that getting ,3 d , . I d I UK the act. and when we caine enough to eat may mean truly "gt sro:mOew1:oTh:, :3: no”: v.'rom the second one hard work and often a long time . , I , contract Bridge 3 l By Josephine Culbertson 'Ao-Qeoseec A Naaaowwzsrarz There an few experts who would make such a desperate double as East made in the folinwiriiz hand. bizt. the Goddess of Luck seems to have been watching over him! South dealer. Both sides vulnersble. .375 those they hunt. and the hunted W, I k b O A S A must be smart enough to keep from stezkogur ';wr?o?:1'd tvxgn :;:':r':ler': 9K3 3 ' 5”"? cwlmi" ed some red lburizundy to go with NQ952 wmderlng ""5 W" End wmhlit and sherry to start That ' A K Q9 6 A 4 2 daring that way. looking for a-unusual Wm-j ', Vi” , er. shes like most 3 N '5 2 place when hunting was good mug” she.” in You d x k QJI78 W E QAQ 10 pnough for her to stay a while. but ah; doemmgt k 3 'l 7" - Cl 5 I S 76 sister I-Iodty at last came to the she l a 9 much” h"""- NN N105 13 edge of the Green Forest. For two H” "'9 ook "1 hers I Mlm . A 108 M” we Md had pom hummgv sohi(;th;;i:.wlitTi(vi;:it to (:lleb;'aie...I -VKQ103 O l t. .sn. had had i l '9' 0"-V '1 O 9 1' Isriiitiftiii ealintiligi siingush it was ”'f.h'i . EAKJ7 the middle of the morning she was ..?1:ni?"de"f-';:-V iY"”l5'm" . H The bidding. still hunting. It was a dull day with ..Did'nV,y:,o,, yegjovnaihecurllnmlhiis South West North But no bright sunshine to bother her an" the 6 Mimh-1ue'” ngrlzmzhet 1; Pass 19 Pass eyes, and she was very. VCFY hU"' down me mm” .. ' to Pass 34. Pass . y. "It. was all n,,j,,y.. .'(N'l' Pass Pass Dbl. 1.) Sn she came in the edge of the ..l h Redbi. Pass Pass Pas: Green Forest. and there she s10D- h '.ti:.,".."" you M” M ”-l l . sn ” ,'.'”' ' . In the postmortem East admitted trgdtoglgxeti tgildugflnkedf ll liked it. fine." that. he had shivered inwardly SI wumn.t bmeve he, own ,.y,,,. "Y0" mi'R'i will really liked it?" when he doubled three notruinm N39 nr aha umpw couldnm Haw Yeah. but I hate in admit it, Ind 'hen M heard 3,,.,m-3 re. - - ' - but. I really liked it. That was the double, it. sounded likc the voice oi doom. East pointed out. however, that at the time it had seemed vit- al, at almost any cost. to demand a diamond lead from his partner, since without a rimibie of the suit bid by dummy. West would almost certainly open the unbid spade amt. and East was very badly prepared for that. lead. The bidding had clearly marked West. with long shades, and in the absence or any artion by East. he could scarcely be expected to realize that East. had an excellent. diamond holding. A glance at. the deal discloses that West undoubtedly wniild have opened I spade except for East; double. and it is easy in see that this lead would have given smith the contract without. a fuzhi, on that basis alone. East's double was, in be commended. At. the same time. however. East had good rea- son to shudder about the score North-Bouth would have made it their holdings had been ditierent. in even the slightest. extent! it North had held a lUlli'il1 card in diamonds. or if the. diamond jack had been held hy south instead of Nort.i1, the defenders would have had quite a task to defeat the; contracti However. with the "following orders" by leading :- dtarnond. the declarer could no bring in the ninth trick. IAI LWAY TIME TABLE ONANGES Mot-live Sunday -April 27th, 1952 rxi Iva Dill N ..v,xi rl oiwi it cards lyinz exactly as they did. and with West . catch him. which so far she had been unable to do, but she couldn't eat the food he ate. Mrs. Grouse would grow fat on sweet little i beechnuts in season and could live on buds of trees in winter but Owls would starve to death with only such things to eat. Beechnuts meat. Mother Nature had made them that way. I It is Just so with all of Mother iNatureis children who hunt others I or food. They do not. do it. be- tcause they want to do it, as so .many hinnans do. They do not do -"cg-'V&4J. ;ii. for fun They do it because they, must. They do it. that they may live themselves. All the Green Forest folk and the Green Meadows folk and the folk of the Old Pasture and the smiling Pool and Laugh- iniz Brook, both those who hunt and those who are hunted. know this. They know. too. that it. is only the smart. who live long; that just. living is a sort of game. Him- ters must be smart enough to catch ing spent all her short life in the Green Forest she never before had seen open country with trees only tn small groups or alone here and there. But it wasn't the Siren!!- ness of this that made her blink. Running about on the ground were more birds than she had dreamed could be anywhere. enough she was sure to supply her with dinners for the rest of her life. And she would not have to hunt for them. she was sure she could Just. help herself to lone when ever she was hunary. i What a find! She was seeing chic- i kcns for the first time. i. . - Refrigeration SALES and SERVICE Repairs To All Makes MOTORS Rewinding and Repair! l t ” Palmer Electric t i PHONE 1444 connections with ii: for half life. ltle. and then melted off it almost 1 rum-CAL llirllirilic Pains APPLIANCE . If. you are suffering from arthritis, Repair” I . eumatiam, scisucs or neuritis. you to MONTREAL 5 WIN: doll! from Moneton Tlllsnlre about TCA's lamlly fare plan. My the fam- "6 M? haul Aunt-W. is. Inga-ra Agencies us. come in your throat to listen to him. when he hit the A. he li.'ted his eyes, with the side of his face in the audience, and held it a lit- with a sigh. when he did that he It was a wink that told me what I'haci in do. I had to put dolce in tit. I came in on my best and tried to do it. as he did it. when it came lio my little solo I put tears in it. (Maybe they were just imitation gteara, but they were tears. I .We went into the finish and laid lit right on the end 0! Mario's stick, and sioppeci out the tears in buck- ets. Buckets? we turned the fire hose oii them. It. stopped the show. They didn't only clap .- they cheered; so we had to repeat it. i,That.'a dead against. the rules, and Mario tried to go on. but they wouldn't let him. We got through lthe act, and Parma flopped on the yhed for the last two "Mnmils" and iihe curtain came down to a terri- iiic hand. We took our first two hows. the whole izaiiiz that were in back Maria was (back there. Cecil yelled in my ear. "Take him out, take him out!" so i took him out. I grabbed him by one hand. she by the other, and we led him out. and they gave him a its hand, too. That seemed to fix it up about that missed rue . . . It. was )1. half-hoiir before I rould start. In dress. l wflli in my dress. in): room and had Just. about got my whiskers pulled off. when about fifty people shoved in from out- side. wanting me to autograph, thetr programs. I obliged. andi lillned "Logan Bennett." Then 1' washed up and met Cecil. and we got. a cab and went. off to eat. We went to a night club. It had e. dance floor. and tables around that and booths around the wall. Prettiest music I heard all night." The sherry came and we raised our lglaaaes, clinked. and had . HID. lbeonaril. I love it." "You re better at it than in con- cert " "You're telling me? I hate con. certs. But. opera-I Just. love it. and it you ever hear me saying attain that I don't want to be a -511189? .V0li'll know I'm temporarily ”l5R"P- I l0i'e it: I love evervtiilnz. about it. the smell. the fights, the' -illizh notes, the low notrs. the ap- biause. the curtain calls-ci'erv- thing." I "You must leel good tonight." "I do. Do you?" "I feel all rixzht." "Is it---the wily you would be?" ''I never tliouciit." "Not rw-n-iusi. a little bit?" T0 he continued ihnuzlit iti iltlieuniulic & may now iippe to get fast relief from pain and 4 ' .. Thousands and thousands of.men and vvomcn report they now en oy long-lassin relief- (bsnks to LCIN tablets. i DOL- CIN from your druuiss today. Anhtlllslhuasslsla Maritime Central Airways. Hi Oltoen Street DAILY CROSSWORD ACIDS! 10 l-loarda 28. Speclted .Largest. 11 in weaving. 30 Put on. continent the woof as clothes . Diplomacy 16 Help 32. Robust Contains 18 Alcoholic 33 T"llr-DGIHIIK . Flicker beverages mammal . Apportion 19 Choice 34. Circle . Eat away group of light. Turkish title 20 Old measure 35. Musical Simpleton of length instrument. . Tiny 2!. Body of (Hindu) Jnscrlbe water 37. River ill.) Deserted 22 Cushion 38 Brisilciike Dress 24 Epoch organ Recline: 25 incite 39 Let. it stand . Funeral 26. Observe tprint.) song 29. Dip out. as water 30. Cbildishness of old age 11 Young hog 33. Chinese silk 36. Emmet. 37. Beast of burden 40. Artist's stand Long-legged bird (4. Solitary ('6 Italian poet. (6. Noblemsn 41. Water craft DOWN A king of Israel Fish Badly Fuss Sailor Aflirm Give over Woody perennial DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it: A X Y D L B A A X R is LON GFELLOW Une it-tier simply stands for another. In this example A is used for the three L's. X for the two 0's. etc Siiiizie lciicrs. aposo irnphies. the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different ' VJIIL-JIJP L'i'.1i;li'i'.;( as IOQCF hi (murders Ann" (I. Remnant (5. Talk (colloq.l Nnnlls-nun-s-sa- ngsysom-s;-pun I an go.-as-.55:-M A Crypingrani Quotation XCDEZ LYDL LEZZ! LSBTY1 Iii.) ISBLY ML DJQ M'RR CI-3SI.ZTl.' KSSQFDJ. JSI. D XMJURZ VSBUY5 XYZRLZEZQ FZ. Ml. JSK-FSEEMX. Satiirciays Cryptoqiioir: THE MAN WHOSE EYE EVER IS ON HIMSELF DOTH LOOK ON ONE, THE LEAST 0?, NATURETS WORKS.-WORDSIYORTH. DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 15 Seaport. ID Old times I.'I'opofmilk (Fr I (Archairi ti Anchors DOWN 20 Scottish- li. Greeting I. Novii-rs Gaelic V12 Examina (inc-I.) 22 lift-asiir tion of 2. To cast of land accounts again 23. Cushion I3. Acclaim 3 Old nieas- 24. Exprcssioii 14. Exchange tires of of amaze- goods length inch! 15. Girl 0. Expression 26. Man's name Is. Foot-like of sorrow :7. Conflict lonereafl AIIVII organ 5. Wittysayin;:28. Son of 17. From 6. Deck omccrs O Daedalus 37. Hebrew (prefix) 7 Belonging (niyth.) measure 1!. Roman to us 30 Female 38. Plunge pound 8 Room relatives into water Ill. Elevated in a. harem 31. Thorough I0. i.and- : y lrains 9. An enigma fare measures (shortened) 10 Like steel 33. Tcrse (1. White linen 20 Old measure 16. Bound by 36. Transparent vostmcnl. of length a promise iiiincriii ti”Scci.) 21. A wire stitch I 24 American novelist 25. Tea boxes 27. Feathered creature 2!! lvrcalhs 32 Om--spot. . card 3.”! A size of coal 84. Neuter pronoun 35. Tantalum isym.) 36. Middle 37. River I Eur.) 39. Charac- ieri.-(tic 41.1Vhilelincn vestmcnt 42. walk unevenly 43. Morning reception M. i..itersr,v composition DAILY CRYI'I'O0,l'0'I'E-Here's how to work it; A x Y n L B A A x R i.LoNorr:LLow One letter simply stands for another. In this example A is used (or the three L's. X for the two 0's. etc. Single iciicrs, apos- trophies, the length and rornraiion of the words are all hints. Each dav the code letters are different. A Cryptugram Quotation ' VIP ZPQJB RZFCBKQU KZPIHIFG P7. 1.! RCGJ WVZBXZNU IM EBZNG OCE- RCUUXFWJR. Yesterday's Cryptoqsintex WOODMAN. FPARB THAT TREE! TOUCH NOT A SINGLE BOUGH! IN YOUTH IT SHELTERED ME AND I'LL PROTECT IT NOW--MORRIS. TEllONERS' OONVENTION NIGNLIGNTS AT PRINCE OEWALES OOLLEOE APRIL 15-18-17 '1'UESDAY:- 10:30 AM.: President's Report. Addresses by Mayor Stewart, and the Minister of Education. 7:30 P.M.: PUBLIC ADDRESS-High Schools For All-Dr. C. E. Phillips. Selections by the Charlottetown Chor- a e. WEDNESDAY:- 9:30 A.M.: Address by Dr. L. W. Shaw-- TRENDS IN RURAL EDUCATION. 2:30 P.M.: Rhythnli Band and Folk Dances-Model Schoo. 3:09 P.M.: Address -.- EDUCATION FOR TI-IE' TEACHING UPROFESSION-Dr. Phil- lips. (Two Teacher Instruction Group Periods each day, Tuesday - Wednesday - Thursday) There O-ugli't”'.I:o- Be A Law” I 5y Fagaly And Siiorte-if . SE2 ctzisiceul, (T6 smmes now . -rue owes seem -ro sml, i emu -rue FLOORWALKEIZ wuos ALWAYS 3 smuoma ieiewr av -- BUT SHOULD NE Br! CHANCE TAKE OFF HIS HAT I ' Tl-lEV'VE GOT HIM SIJRROUNDED IN TEN SECONDS FLAT! CAPL E. CLARK- I y . I ii atom " '1 mp -dun..-... ' f .'m x :'Ii7I!.i;l' ” ON THE 5AME FOOTING i 4'-I5, "ft 'ff3f333.' UU'l' 0L'.i WAY Bv J. R. Williams Al-(,1wr'rizvisi'-ro Z r LEARN THI5 MELON- HEAD T0 WiPE Hi6 FEETONTH'RUCa INN . N. s NE: 4.” .. .-l ., .. (445 -l,Zl.'i?.wiLi'.iAE1':; . II. l 9;, oq, -. n ' 1253.1? WWI '51 9. st UUR BOARDING HOUSE Maior Hoopla EGA'D.' LIFE HA6 PLAYED ME A FOUL TRICK AND 1'. Haste wrri-i ! -w I've . CASHED (N 35260 wozri-t OF 5TAMP5 FROM Tl-U5 DRATTED 3OOKr""AlxiD Now MR6. DEPLASTE2 DEMANDS iT BACK ' I MUST MOVE um! How V,' ewie-ri.v 85- Aeour mar, ” FORE sue on: erase com-as iNi-lOoP- ARMOR 34 N6 -ro THE BUT. WEAR- HOUSE, AND ING we MARTHA PIZOBABLV Noun: Piza- VOKE A LOT f OF-' SILLY -iliiiiiiii Z HERE5 Your: sitolfie," you 5TOi?E TOY ON MY INNOCENT OE I'LL 60 E5, ER OPINION noes - SEEM A BIT ADVERSE-'4 ,, DPSIZEPUTABLE om ctzooK! . THE ioeA.' FOi6'i'N6 This DIME .'-2: F012 A A2000 5TAMP BOOK I-1--v OPINION OF THE DEAL . PQODUCE THE BOOK Ti-li5 iN5TAi0T "3 klvmy oarci-i! HAM-KAFF! one . MR6. DEPLASTEZ! (T was you: sosi WHO stAR1'ED NEGOTIATIONS K SEEM6 ADVERSE,' WNT-v I'LL GO FETCH YOUR PRECIOUS