Novammn s. 1m ' ' PEACE or Mmn 1s CHEAP AT rms PRICE VERY home a. mains ' pea * ' sonal property such as furs, jewelry, pictures, ctc., which if stolen or destroyed by fire could not be rel placed without financial embarrassment. Ll You can insure against this financial loss by means of a “North America" Companies “all risk" policy, which has been designed to pro- vidc the broadest possible coverage at very low premium rates. For the sake of your peace oi‘ mind, consult I your Insurance Agent or Broker today about this “North America" F Daniel 5'_aII silk‘? insurance protectifll. INSURANCE COMPANY OI NORTH AMERICA - COMPANIES cauamau uaao orrrcz-rolzonro FIRE a MARINE ' CASUALTY Service Oiheea throughout Canada INSURANCE COMPANY OF NORTH AMERICA INDEMNITY INSURANCE COMPANY OP NOITH AMERICA THE AILIANCE INSURANCE COMPANY OP PHILADELPHIA PHILADELPHIA FIRE AND MARINE INSURANCE COMPANY 1 BOARD OF TRADE DINNER MEETING I CHARLOTTETOWN HOTEL TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8th. I949 Guest Speaker ALEX SKELTON _ Assistant Deputy Minister DEPARTMENT 0F TRADE & COMMERCE OTIAWA The Members oi the P. E. I. Federation of Fisherlg will be guests at this meeting. Time cs5 PM. ” Meal $1.25 Wood lsiands-Garibou Ferry Service NOV. 1st to NOV. 80th Ieavo Wood Island»- Prlnce Nnva . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . a . . . . . .... I mm. l lam. ‘ Charles A. Dunning ...a ..___...._.....- l1 mm. I p.m. I have Carlbnu- i Charles A. Dunnin .. 8 a.m. l p.m, . Prince Nova ll s.m. 8 p.m. pkjiif qmxxrvroyuooxrs. sro 0A8 ll rnuoxs Devalued in the true sense o! the word FORD COUPE 295.00 A Good Servleeable Coupe 1944 International 1% ton Stake Body . . . £50.00 i946 International Ito-Mg ton Stake Body 750.00 i947 Mercury 2-ton Hydraulic Hoist . . . . . . . . . 1200.00’ and gravel box, good tires, excellent. running order. SPECIAL 1947 5-Passenger Studebaker Club Coupe,’ equipped with overdrive and Motorola Radio, New Tires. Excel- lentoondition 1200.00 WJI. JENKINS Great George Street f By Josephine Culbertson | . day's deal, the declarer had only Bllchy’; Go“ Tum 1 13° I 800d turn every day, | m“ I5 hlplller that wily. ~Blacky 'the Orov. Blacky the Crow's c937, 1s blank ‘Evewbwy knows this. It is irozn i “m he Bot his name. aha it is "w" "ils- I Billllect. he olml is "ma" v! bolas black-hearted, doing many bad things which ii his coat were white he wouldn't bogus- Dected oi doing at all. O1 course blackness really has nothing to do with badness. It probably is Slip. posed to because darkness is a iornl 0i blwk. and many bad deeds are hidden by darkness. But just as bad deeds are done in daylight. so a black coat doesn't mean black deeds. It doesn't mean anything at g1, 91th" bid 0!‘ 800d, in regard to the one wearing it. OI course Blacky does do things he shouldn't d0. Who doesn't? Some oi’ the things he knows he shouldn't do. Others he knows no reason why he shouldn't do. The 60m he pulls up in the spring is lust iood to which he ieela he has as much right as any other ioorl he finds. To the Crow 101k this has always been a- lree country since 1011B beiore Man ever discovered corn and learned to plant-it. But ii’ Biacky does many so- calied bad things he also does many good things tor which Man seldou. gives him any credit. It seerrs WUQDIMfiUDCIUDUOOCIHQIfiOJXII" I Contract Bridge HIGHEST LOGIC After losing the contract in to- nne source o! comiort-that he had “played the percentages." This. however, was poor compensation for the game that would have re- sulted Irom application oi’ the high- est losioi aouthdealer. . Both sidea Vullitlfihla. “J10! "K732 0X90 z ~68?! 7 5t I. gale N soon oQa W E 087531 4.4km 5 are n42 ‘A Q00‘ QQJIS QAJIO IIQB Thebidding: _ South West North East 1Q 24. 2Q Pass so Pass Pass Pass West cashed the ace and king o! clubs. then played the club ten. East discarded a low daimond, and South ruiied. Declarer drew two rounds o! trumps. then led the heart queen. West took his ace and returned the ten oi hearts. This was taken by South with the jack, West's last trump was drawn. and the heart live was led to the king in the hope that the suit would break 8-3. When the true break was revealed, South saw that his only chame was to guess the position o! the diamond queen. Haviru discovered that West had started with six clubs. three spades, two hearts and cohsquently only two dlasnondsx. South rlnesseif. against East ior the vital queen o! " ’ but uniortunately. ‘Nest won the trick and the contract was “|one." I! South had had no better guide than a count oi the opposing dis- tribution, his play would have been correct. but a lar better method was available. He should have cashed his last trump, discarding s, diamond ITOm dummy. Now, when he led a heart to the king and iound that the heart suit did not break, East would be known to have one more heart. and when declarer next played the king and nine o! dia ‘ irom dummy, since the queen did not actually Ilv Thornton W. luroessl always easier to see and remember the bad in others than to see and remember the good. Bo Biscky lS judged by Man only by the bad he does. Too often Man judges ‘his Xellow Man the same way. it isn't so with Biacky's neighbors o! the Green Forest and the Green Meadows. Danny Meadow Mouse knows that when times are hard and‘ food is scarce Blacky will try to catch him. He must b smart enough not to be caught. elcomz Robin knows that Blacky will rob him oi eggs and babies l! he gets a chance because Mother Nature had given him a craving {or eggs and meat. It is for Welcome and Mrs. Welcome to see to it that he doesn't get that chance. And both Danny Meadow Mouse and Wel- come Robin know that more than once Blacky had just in time warned them oi danger. It is w with many others. Striped chipmunk sat on the old stone wall. It was a lovely day in late autumn. In the Green Forest most o! the trees except the ever- greens were bare o! leaves. A few oaks still held theirs. but they, were no longer green. They were rich. warm brown and they would stay on the trees nearly all winter. Over one end o1 the old all grew a bittersweet vine. It ad lost its leaves but that made the opened red berries clinging all over it ail the prettier. The air was crisply cool but not really cold. Jack Frost had been coming around nights but not in daytime. Striped Chipmunk felt good. Harvest was over. He had his share o! nuts and seeds stored away {or winter use. Some or his neighbors who had watched him running home trip alter trip with the poc- kets in his cheeks so stuiied that his head seemed to have swollen to twice its usual size thought he had more than his share. Oi course he didn't think so. He had worked. and worked hard, ior all he had. "Anyone has n, right to all he can get through honest work," says striped Chipmunk. Now this fine morning he felt s0 line that he had to tell his neigh- keep his tongue still and he didn't. He sat on the biggest ilat stone on the top oi the wall and told every- body within hearing how good he felt, and most or those who heard him right away began feeling good too. Happiness and good feeling are catching when they are ex- pressed. They should always be expressed. "He is silly to tell everybody right where he ls. Just the same 1 like to hear him. I guess everybody does," thought Peter Rabbit, He was sitting In the bushes at the end o! the old stone wall where the bitter- sweet grew. "CawFUawl Caw!" Peter Rabbit pricked up hi! 0am Striped Chipmunks voice broke oi.’ abruptly. For _a moment both sat perfectly still. “Caw! Cswl Cawl" You or I wouldn't have under- stood that. but the two listeners dill. Blacky the Crow was wamins them that he saw, or had seen. Shadow the Weasel and they better beware. It was Blacky's good turn for that day. l-le was proving him- self a good scout. NORTH AMERICAN iIFE L. S. STEVENSON BRANCH MANAGER ‘I40 RICHMOND ST. AMITIML COMPANY BINGO lloly Redeemer liall TOIIGIIT coo The prises are the same as >._._¥ um AINER ‘ _ M", n. E t. h “d. so ch those prevailing at other zould putmdlp Illielace. with ‘the “N” I" u" “"7- "wfln" of “Win! "I! saw“ i Iv AL CAP! bors how line he ielt. He couldn't ' THE GUARDIAN. (‘Y-IARLOTTETOWN ' I King of The Royal Mounted HULLO LISSE BZZZ 5212 . “i I EARSON OIV KUPCINET, YE H . m szzz ‘ cmcaoo. TAYLOR ' cnANTLAw RICE...H c x § ‘E \ \ Mill-I“ \. KM/fi 1M 44/ fildtflfflkbfikaflfl ' 60774 TFLLWU flMTIKkWIYF/S UP 7D Ill!’ HEJUSTPA/D M54 l/HUDERTDGLMPS 70W VIMTHE LM/DEP IUMYPA 118E‘... \ IPAGE SEVEN 5y Zane Grey PPLE, YOU WERE l"' A HALF-HOUR LATE AGAI WHATS MY--IT’S 5O PEACEFUL . z.’ ~ - . flnhuWd i, m5 inhale! fir". - MILLIE’S A-- UH~LOVELY eussr, AND-l BUT, WELL--IT'S /%l/%/Z//K ' lislow, AIN -- _ BRINGING UP FA rHEI GQANMA -- HAVE YOU PAID YOUR BIL AT TH’ DRUGSTORE ~'CUZ MEBBE THEN I CAN CHARGE SOME CANDY-- NZ‘ -_ MERCY! AQE YOU STANDIN’ THERE TALKIN’ WHERE EVTQYBODY CAN Is George MeMonus AND YOLI EMILED BACK ' YOU BPLITE -I SAW HEP SMILE AT YOU‘ . FQIEND “TO THINK ‘THAT JIGGS WOULD FLIPT WITH ANOTHER‘ flaw’ ie/iiilliil wan-l N6 NOW IF ugsoNMaS QUIT, m. CALL sl-lizk UP THE SFIRITOF MME. CHAMPIGNON LOTQ OF MEN APE LIKE THAT- BLIT I NEVER THOUGHT HE WOULD FLIDT WITH SOMEONE ELSE WHILE HE WAS OUT WITH ME ~YOU CAN'T IMAGINE HOW OF COURSE I - — CAN -MA66IE - I FELT THE SAME WAY WHEN VOLI PLIQTED WITH JIGGG AND GTOLE HIM mom ME- REMEMBER ?