PAGE TEN MEETING A SPECIAL MEETING of the Central Itoyalty Men's Association .4 special meeting will be held in the School House at 9 .m. Thursday. 1st June, to se ect nominees for the office of School Trustee. Attend- ance of all ratepayers in dis- trict requested. 35.000 BEWABD OFFERED MONTREAL. May 29 - (CF) - A special reward of t5o.(l00 has been offered by the Canadian Ban.rers' Association in the case of the gunman who killed R.C.M P. Con- s.able Alexander Gamman and .voundcd bank manager S. G. Bickley. following an attempted holdup of the Beaver Hall Hill branch of the Bank of Toronto here last Thursday. J. U. Boyer. president of the Canadian Bankers' Association. said the special re- ward was being offered although the Association has a standing award offer. of no fixed amount. in bank robbery cases. A.r. and A. M. A joint meeting of St. John's Lodge No. I and Vic- toria Lodge No. 2 will be held In the Masonic Temple, Charlottetown. at 8 o'clock Wednesday evening. May diet. The Rev. J. H. Freestone. l).D.. an eminent and out- standing Masonic speaker. will Illdresl the meeting. All visiting .VltIrlier Masons invited to attend. REIIEVE .7iTHfS& plum nuasmc m P a': OPENING DANCE EAST ROYALTY RINK HALL Modern and Old Time GEORGE CHAPPELL'S ORCHESTRA Dancing 9:30 to 12:30 Admission 50 cts. Canteen Service Free Check Room SOIITHPORT SONOOL TAXES All School Taxes owing in Southport School Dis- trio! No. 44 must be paid on or before JUNE 10th or will be handed in for collection. BY ORDER OF TRUSTEES. Prices as follows: NOTIOE TO PATRON3 Flower plants will be on sale starting June 5th and will be sold by the box only. Double Petunias, 4 doz. box 351 40: ias and other varieties. 4 doz. box tl.25: boxes con- taining 3 1-2 edging SL00 per box: orders accepted on day of delivery only. but a few day's notice may be necessary for orders larger than the average. Do not come for your plants before June 5th as the necessary help can not be had before that date. Plants sold and delivered at Greenhouse only. P. BURKE, Royalty. single Petun- suunii OBSERVANCE The attention of the Public is directed to Section 6 of The Lord's Day Act (Dominion) which reads as follows: 6. GAMES AND PERFORMANCES WHERE ADMISSION FEE IS CHARGED. "it shall not be lawful for any person, on the Lord's Day, except as provided in any provincial Act or law now or hereafter in force, to engage in any pub- lic game or contest for gain, or for any prize or reward, or to b:-Hpresent thereat, or to provide. engage in, or be present at any performance or public meeting, else- where than in church. at directly or indirectly, either for admission to such which any fee is charged,' per- formance or meeting, or to any place within which the same is provd:-d, or for any service or privilege there- at." There is no Provincial Act in force in this Province extending the provisions of this Section. J. 0. C. CAMPBELL. Deputy Attorney-General. lJ'L ABNER THE GUARDIAN. QHARl.()TTl-ITUWN l' FISIIIEMANB LUCK Successful fishing you will find Is patience, skill and luck combin- ed -old" Mother Nature. Plunger the Osprey. commonly called Fish Hawk. is I famous fisherman. He lives almost wholiy on fish. so of course he has to be a good tlsher-man. He would starve if he were not. And Plunger doesn't starve. He is always well fed. so is Mrs. Plunger. so are the child- ren until they are old enough to learn to catch fish for themselves They sometimes go hungry for a while when learning. but they learn all the faster for that. There is nothing like hunger to quicken wits. Long ago Plunger learned the value of patience in fishing; that without patience few fish will be caught. And long ago he teamed the important skill. Both these could be learned and were But one other thing has an equally import- ant. part in fishing. It is luclz. Patience and skill alone are not enough. Plunger has proved that more times than he can remember Luck has given him a catch when and where he least expected it. and luck has spoiled a catch he was sure of. This morning was I had morning .nnr-nr. --r.rm - -. contract Bridge It is bad enough to be mum” by the declarer, but it Ls far more annoying when one's own Dim!" does the "dirty work"! ODMTV9 East's fate in !"”l"i dell- .- -r.-wr -rt.- .-,5, . By Josephine Culbertson .. . moo.-n:.. -'-nouggu. Ow. hours": i; South dealer. Eupwest vulnerable. KB 3935 OK QA ab 3 Q2 83 101 -2”" he I-QC -v guuub The bidding: South West 1 Q Pass 5 9 Pass Pass Pass The particular make-up of both the North and the south hands made it difficult to sound out slam possibilities with any great assur- ance. but the final contract. though speculative. was by no means bed. If the defenders could not establish a club trick immedi- ately. the slam would depend only on a fortunate position of the diamond ace. West made his normal opening, the spade queen. Dummy's king won. and South drew the necess- ary two rounds of trumps. East discarded low diamonds. psouth new led a dinmotld to the queen, and groaned inwardly when East. put down the me. East would have been very well advised to return a diamond. but he couldn't see anything wrong with leading the club Jack. South covered the jack. and West's king forced the are. South then led to the spade ace, ruffed his last spade in dummy, and cash- ed all of trumps. West, looking at the club eight in dummy, saw little value in his own six and seven of clubs, so no gave up his cards in that suit. and for some strange reason kept the lack and seven of spades. south nc-.v had the diamond seven and the club five. and dummy. discard- ing after West. kept the klng-deuce of diamonds. This was too much for poor East! Forced to guard the diamond suit. he discarded his last. club-and South won with the ful. filling trick with the five of clubsi lly Thornton W lumen) 3: F . 't ”lifA)1 So Plunger slowly circled overhead looking down into the water. for his kind of fishing. Because the Merry Little Breeze .kept the surface roughened with little waves he couldn't. see for enough down in the water to see any fish that might be near enouzh to the top for him to plunge for them. The only quiet water 'vas where Laugh- ing Brook coming down from the smiling Pool joined the Big River behind a point of land. The Merry Little Breezes had not yet danced in there to trouble the water. The only thing wrong there was that two other fishers were there, Longlegs the Heron and Rattles the Kingfisher. Longlegs was standing wih his feet in the water and Rattles was perched in a tree overhanging the water where he could look down into it. Plunger much rather would have had that quiet water all to himself. 0! course, each of the others felt the same way. Each wished the others -would give up and go away. But. each. being a good fisherman, was MAY 31. 1950 by Lane they inuvplp acme 4:1 ooa?,,;,E Mmeeav rms snows! ms .ms- mg” "65" ousur 10 rev, -9 KING OF THE RUYAI. MOUNTED ' M75-75 MY 5235.?-one HA6:-35;. Iris .msrAaour x 7Wkl.'.LlN'f x 7....-. . uumpuaev! uev,ituMrmte- p QADL. patient. AWE" 0-t- . so Plunger slowly circled ovar- 1 lllgulf lookmll NEW” mm i:':::i"i:-' nxpLE by Bum” enoug see c y Door!-Y D down in degp w-term yet notlo ,,.,,.,. ,, -- - --- ' -' " . high that e cou n' ,' I i quickly enough to catch a fish that V'ix;;.'iLLlBBNZTuTsl'lTAgg might be near the surface. He SHEwAN.rSM5.mmoNMy wanted a big fish, the bigger the LUNCH HDLR! better if it were not too big for him to lift and carry back to Mrl. Plunger on their nest. Big fish were likely to be in water too deep for Ionglegs the Heron to wade in. p so it wasnt likely that Ionglegs would really interfere by catching the kind of a fish Plunger was looking for. As for that noisy Rat- tles the Kingfisher. he was too small to catch or swallow a fish much bigger than a Minnow. Plunger scorned such small fish unless he could have a lot of them. so after all. it didn't really mat- ter if the two others were fishing there, or so he thought. and gave all his attention to watching a fish below him. By and by he saw one. It was big fish. It was just the right size. It was a fish he would be proud to take home to Mrs. Plunger. He seemed to remain stlll'up there in the air high above that. fish. Once he closed his wings and started to plunge, but almost at once spread his wings ynd checked himself. i'roo deco." he muttered in dis- appointment. "l couldnlt have reached him in time. Yes. sir. he was too deep. I would only have scared him and perhaps some other fish I haven't yet seen." The fish swam deeper. In I few minutes it disappeared in weeds on the bottom. It was flshermerfs luck. bad luck. Plunger wasted no more time watching for that fish. Presently he saw another almost as big. This one -was nearer the top. much nearer. ”That fish is mine." thought Plunger and shot down with great claws set. to clutch that fish. But just then another fisherman plunged into the water near by. it was Rattles the Kingfisher. and as he came out of the water um flew back to his perch. there was I small fish in his bill. But he had frightened the big fish. and it darted away just. before Plunger struck the water. He disappeared for an instant. Then he beat his great wings to lift him am the water. Hts claw. were empty. In screamed angrily. "Fisherman's luck." said Rattles the Kingfisher. and swallowed the little fish he had caught. by Al Capp .'-son?-Au am in ms bUkl.AP an Fo'rwo on All BIN BANGED, DDIGGEB APED AN' SOAKID IN (590.59 BEETLE EXTERMINA 7-, con: wlm me: you ooear--slant we” vou.'.' , THERE ARE DISHES IN THI SINK, RID... Phg X t.g,E, ,.....-.. I V IIIPPX ALVH "L'Ar" STUBS by Etlwind WHEN IS l2UEL.LA'S AND Ci-IIRPLEBERRYS WEDUN6 TO TAKE . PLAcE?? I WAS JUST GOING TO TELL , YOU" DID YOU CLEAR OUT ALL Tl-USE ' BOARDS 3OU'D DZASGED INTO Tl-l' sue-ma-A.-u...n-.m.:-a BRINGING UP FATHER I1 ueorge lVu'." '11! r... in mm.-.. - .. .....g-.--c aoseuveav . Momma-uewmwnostal - ON A PICNIC.-