-r.-waists 155??-"c :;1 2 2 PAGE TWELVE appointed. CONSERVATIVE ciliivliilllilli SECOND QUEEN 'S AT8 P.M. Convention to nominate two Conservative Can- didates in this district will be held in CLYDE RIVER HALL ON TUESDAY, OCT. 24. 1950 Poll chairmen are asked to have five delegates ANDREW DOLLAR, President. LLOYD MacPlIAlL. Secretary. TRY OUR NEW ISLAND SERVICE FOR. CAR OWNERS & GARAGES RADIATORS SHIPPED to us will be CLEANED, TESTED, and REPAIRED BY EXPERTS Radiators received before Noon shipped out same day. ALL WORK GUARANTEED SAINT JOHN RADIATOR REPAIR 00. 202 BRITTAIN STREET, SAINT JOHN, N.B. DAILY CROSSWORD Egg . Acnoss 3. help 18. rasp B3 II! 1. chief 4. note 19. beam E U i 54,31 or the 2l..theme E E ,u, . 9. medley scale 23.drsdain anew . m u :0. river (Fr.) 5- "Oi hot. 27- openmst uigmg un 1t.humus 6. suszeshonn 28 El.!l5Ei(sEIl E . '1 . I' ' 1'. Wmwmhy Ii hol 2 .allied Lllllbit-Slim El E i ”' W" ' - V I - v izianisin rs:-Juinu ”””"” ” 3 "mm BEBE uiziilei I 16, exclamation 11 (f!.lE.Ira-n) 32-glglrlggroftlv .... i 17.ste ina -SY6 , , - serI)es 12. pay me E045 Y"”""'y' Am", " 20. branch attention 33. contradict 22. business 13. large volume 35. produced. ' 4a. marry journeys 15. a president as fabric 44. macaw 24. poem of Czec!io- 39. waistcoat 46. Pennsyl- 25. affirmative slovakia. 42. hail! Vania (abbf-Y vote 26. conical roll of thread 28. sever 30. having a no- table history 34. afresh 36. an inspired prophet 3?. Greek letter 38. baking chamber 40. at home 41. curved barrel strip: 43. like wax 45. evenings t poet.) 46. Persian fairy 4?. small depression 48. Hebrew month DOWN 1- professional tap dancer. 2. old measure of length nAll,Y CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it! AXYDLBAAXR i:LoNGr',r:LLow One letter simply stands for another. In this example A is used for the three L's, X for the two 0'5; etc. Single letters, apos. trophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints.. Each day the code letters are different. ' A Cryptogram Quotetlol za oxz LMBPVQ LB xnw XL W3" oxys x xxoz sew or wxs cxzBU- xzus r3'r xzswmsu-nonsus. Yesterday's Crypwquoto-UNLESS THE VESSEL IS CLEAN. WHATEVER YOU POUR INTO IT TURNS SOUR-HORACE. uuvu or EH19 ROYAL MOUNTED- 1 '.N,' .; ,.-i.lilIiuT.'''.'5 -THE GUARDIAN. AN onnaasnnorno AUNT On earth below, in Heaven above. The one most precious thing is love. -Old Mother Nature. Aunt Ballyls woodhouse, open- ing from her kitchen, is small. and and as neat as the kitchen itself. Should you see it in .the day time you wouldn't even suspect that at night it became a popular night club. You never would suspect that for years furry folk had been com- ing there from far and wide, night after night. But so it was. From early evening often to a .....s.h.n:....... .-ir - l,D'JoOO".Il:N('ylgIa .43.... contract Bridge By Josephine Culbertson -79... - .;O&QQQC!OD l IIAIID 10 DECIDE The problem West had in the following deal It I WICRY 035 and battling one. p Weotaaalonu - North-South vulnerable. gxs 9410933 QAKQDTI anon 4' grout oxen N on 74 w 1: gas 3.3;;-o-oz S '''':;no7 gssraz 333:3” gsoa '!'l1abldd.lng. Welt North l'.ast' 53km 1o Dble. 2;. 29 29 so Pass Pun South fulfilled the six-diamond contract with ease, simply by find- ing the spade ace where it figured to be, in West's hand. because of his opening bid and rebid. In the postmortem West said that he had seriously considered "saving" ,at seven clubs. but had decided against it because he hop- ed to defeat six diamonds. Obviously, this hope of West's was not without foundation. The dilemma. he was in recurs with Brest freiquency. and there can- not be an entirely satisfactory solu- tion. In this case. how could west lly Thornton W. Iiirooll) late hour Aunt Sally played the part c”! hostess. seated in I low chair with boxes placed to make steps to one side so that folks with short legs. like the skunks. could easly get into her lisp, she irivitezi them to do this by holding a pan oi milk or of other food. And they did do it. They did it without eel- taticn. Sometimes perfect st! 3- ers among these furry visitors came in and were in her lap within I few minutes. You see. the first time they poked their noses inside the entrance they smelled love You didn't know that love could he smelled? wellpit can be. so on fear. so carr hate. Anyway, that is the way it seems for it is by their noses that the folks in fur know these things, For so long there had been so much love in that little wcodhouse that the Goon folk and the skunk folk. even the Rat and Mouse folk, knew it the mom- ent they entered it. They knew it by means of their noses. Their eyes might fool them. They couldn't al- ways trust their ears, but their noses never fooled them. Bobby Coon, who had been shot in one hind leg and for a time made quite helpless, was spending the day under the floor of the woodhcuse. He had crept into the woodhouse the night before and the instant his nose was inside h- had known that while he was there there was nothing at all for him to fear. Aunt any had been sitting in her chair as usual and the in- stant she had seen him she had known that something was very. stant she a seen him she had seen how in he was from lack of food. She had seen how stiff was the wounded leg. Pity and love filled her heart and Bobby had known it. she had warmed milk for him and had fix- ed a special plate of food for hlni He had eaten his rill for the first time in days. All the time he was eating he had been unafraid be- cause of the love that filled that little woodhouse. the love from Aunt Sally's tender heart. when Bobby awoke during the day he could hear Aunt Sally's footsteps just above him. They didn't trouble him in the least. He awoke hungry. Under the wood- house it was still dark but outside it was still light. Bobby dragged himself out. He wouldn't have dared do that anywhere else. Aunt Sally locked out the window and saw him. "Poor Bobby." said she. "He must be very. very hungry to Vcnme out so early." be sure that if he sacrificed at tlieI She hurried to get a pan of milk seven-level he would Iiot simply.be; and put-it-on the floor oH.he wood- giving the opponents polnis instead. house, Then she opened the slidlr.-.3 cf collecting points? (As west later door that cvered the cathole. Bob- ” explained privately to his partneridoor that covered the cathole. He North was the aggressive sort of'poked his head in. The smell of bidder who goes to a slam without food tickled his nose. but there fair assurance of success.) But although there is no assured Drocedure for a player in West's position. there is such a thing as a policy which, in the long run. pays dividends. That policy is to outbid the opponents' slam when two conditions exist: when no penalty double of the slum is logic- al: and when the sacrifice will obviously not run to many tricks. of course, vulnerability, along with an appraisal of the cpponents' Solmdness. also plays a part. but simply as a matter of policy, it is- 01'5" Wise 90 "my insurance" against the mere chance that the opponents can make their slam, was more than the smell of food. Vllhere was the smell of loving hands that had prepared that food. Slowly Bobby dragged himself. He looked up at Aunt Sally. who was standing still -watching, him, There was gratefulness and trust. and there was no trace of fear in those eyes. He went straight to the pan of milk and began to lap it im hunsrlly. You see his need was very. very great. It was the first time he had ever been in that viuodhouse in broad daylight but he had no fear whatever. H-is nose told him that there was nothing but love there. r by lane Grey l v rrnurmouaxrze zsnrr l, ' DEAD, HE IIIMIIIZ 1(5):. IZL GET 7n'55I.e1..f . H (,oc'roasa-,'1,I. 19501 aw . K h Carl Andersol . eat;-..C...- -JCGJNTTA CUIPNY CG4lN'-- AN' U5 I-iAVlN' ICE CREAM; AN' SI-IE - . YEl-I!- AN' Maw rcAN'r FIND HER wA'rci4,AN'-oH.PzEE-EZE LET HE12 STAY 10 DINNER" Y DOTTY DIPPLE s iir:.'.::---........ V PIEEEZE 1'" VWELL, r em see mines ARE STARTIN'OUT Josi- D! Bllforu 7 I I l I I w.lD!1Ic:e'-nQI1Il.IV'-IlciJ:.nc'Iv-I. TILLY THE TOILLER Ml ' II-l6GSl'.'l-I Nihtwm A I Gonna- lsltg ..-.4 - nu. -.