wanna s__ c? i naucn DAN¢E “IAPAUD mu‘ I Sunnyslde Ballroom THURSDAY’ MAY 12 I Every Mon., Wed, Sat. in-e-a- ---- » ‘ “w” by Eastern Rhythm Boys ' M 3w"! Whom nuinissloii 35c splmmd by Meet your friends there Grflpflllt] Athletic Club hnighl ANNIVERSARY IIIINBE- For Dominion Civil Servants TNE GLUIIER BLIIB MONDAY, MAY 16th Dancing 9:80 to 1:00 Leglflllfllffl Bald For Reservations Phone 1995 NORTH RIVER POLL MEETING All Conservative supporters are cordially invited to a meeting of the North River Poll to be held at Charles Lar- ter’s, Hampshire, on Wednesday, May II ot 8 p. m. for committee reorganization purposes, ‘DAILY. CROSSWORD t... .. “l I amass‘ sic-mi. n urge ugun u go V; _m ', “pam- , ‘asteryel unumiina uun ». ~ i _I'@Q'1 t" them"; um uunu um . °' ~ ‘3 i B", CiHLlE umuumn .2. m" " (PM, BEEJEIDHL! i ' conga) lPropoae Ififfhehearl gggggumgg ' .'i' IHQpitaI {Goddeu (slang) Hum Gmguumn - (Pei-iii Ofdelth ttCarcu BlZiIID mumnrsm ,. atheism: moi-m 21.8w"- unm in u i; nun g. ualnu n ‘ 3 ngo NW"!!! - , i y, I Bashan enamored: 29Vltalii! "gags-ml: ‘i 131b,) length 30 Shunned m; “d, v .Diaptltchod lPraiae 8i. People oi‘ 39 ‘Two- o0 ; 1. Garden imdl!!! 141m "m" .5 tool arm g ‘ i3. Ahilsluddiiist Tomes .Cl ta . en s n i “we ' C Ngmslra 36.'l‘own 46.017050011181101! i. ~ <, .Clt1 10a.) (Belgium) 4s. Born | . iiJjflYPIOQUUIE—llere's how to work its’ I Y D L B A A X B N 0 F E L l. 0 W /-a‘fitar amply stands for mother. iii this example a is used ‘for the three L's. X for the two 0's, etc. Single letters. apos- trophiee. the length and formation of the words are all hinta day the code letters are different. Atkypeogramfiaotalloa I‘.- Thc thoughtless all ice often gain Their ends by causing others pain. —-Old Mother Nature. How men! blbiel did the Little Brave One have? That l; whgg Farmer, Brown! My called little Mrs. Timmy the Mm gquu-mi because, although as you” u it was possible for her to be, aha still had dared to some so close to him that he could have touched her that she might rescue an. o; bar precious babies from the home she felt was no longgr “f, 1°; them. He knew she had taken three. Bhe might have taken one or more before he had come along. He had moved away from {he u“ stub in which Mrl. Timmy had been living this 5h, mum not b, so terrified as she had been when she had found him standing close to the tree and there was no other ‘way for her to reach hei- babies. He waited twice as long as he Inpeplalslae olaepeldalpelllim Contract Bridge By Josephine Culbertson TOO SUSPICIOUS Today's declarer lost his sla-m contract (which, incidentally, was somewhat optimistic) because he "looked a. gift horse in the mouth." south dearer. ' IIcriJL-South vulnerable. South West North East l Q Peas 2 Q 3 Q Pall Pass Pass South was out of line when he bid four clubs over East's three diamonds. A rebid of the spade suit at this point would not have been open to criticism, considering South's excellent distribution, but the club bid announced greater top-card values than South could produce. » North deliberately took a very conservative course over partner's four clubs, but when West then showed a disposition to have," North assumed, correctly, that the opponents had at least ten dis.- monds between them and that South, consequently, almost surely had a singleton or a void; hence, North now bid the slam. West opened the diamond three. South ruffed the second round of the suit, cashed three trumps, end- ing in dummy, then led a lo'w club. He took East's king, and, to find out whether East was "fooling." laid down the club jack. After that South was helpless—West simply had to discard properly to defeat the contract. South was too suspicious about East's play oi the club kingl Act- ually, south should have maneuv- ered differently from the very start establtshing dummy's heart suit by ruffs so that ho could capitalize a favorable club position if it was present; but, even as the‘ play ‘went, South could have squeened West out of the crucial trick by cashing two top hearts and ruff- ing a third round, then cashing the last trump. West would have to give up his club stopper or his heart stopper. , (By Thornton W.- liirieu) had had to wait before and still no sign of Mrs. Timml- "5710 h"!!! have taken the last baby." he de- cided. "I would like to see what her nest is made of." ‘ He went back to the tall stub and shinned up until he could reach the little doorway. It was too small for him to get his hand through, but the wood around it was rotted. with his knife he soon made it large enough. Then he thrust his hand in and pulled out the nest, a soft bed of inner bark shredded very fine. He dropped it to the ground and slid down after it. Be started to pull the moss apart. His fingers touched soma- thing soft and warm and squirm- ins “A baby Squirrel! There is an- other, after all!" exclaimed Farmer Brown's boy. "I must put it and the nest back in that hole. He picked the baby up and it cuddled in the warm hollow of his hand. Its eyes were not yet open but they would be in a day or two. It now was wearing the little fur coat without which it had been born. Gently Farmer Brown's boy stroked it with the tip of a finger. "I'll have to put it in my pocket while I climb back up to that hole," he thought. Then another thought came to ‘him. What a lovely pet this little Squirrel would make! He looked for Mrs. Timmy but could see nothing of her. "I guess your mother has for- gotten you," raid he, looking down st the baby. "She rnust have lost count or something. I've often wished I had a Flying Squirrel for a pet. I can feed you warm milk with a medicine dropped until you can eat solid food, and it won't be long before you can do that. You're almost big enough now. Ii your mother was anywhere around I would put you back up in that hole, but she isn't around and I can't put you back up there and leave you to perhaps starve to death. Perhaps your mother can't count and thinks she has all her babies. Or perhaps she was too frightened to come back." Now all the time Farmer Brown's bay was planning what he would do with this wee Squirrel, and thinking that Mrs. Timmy had forgotten her last baby, she was the most worried little mother in all the Green Forest. She hadn't forgotten that baby. Nothing of the sort! She was tired, very, very tired. Three times she had made a long journey, each time carrying a baby weighing a fourth or more of her own weight. Supposing you had to climb a tree holding a baby by its clothes with your teeth and then from as high as Wu could set had to make a lens jump to the foot of another tree and land on the trunk without hurting the baby, then had to do the same thing again before you could put that baby down. Just supposing that. Don't you think you would be tired? Well, that little Squirrel has done it three times, and she was tired, so tire-d that she just had to rest before going back for that last baby. Then when she did start Recital] the Hawk spied her and swooped at her. She dodged around the trunk of a tree and clung there, flattening herself against the tree so that she seemed a part of it. Redtail perched in another tree and sat there a long’ time watching foi- her to move. And all the time she was thinking about that-last baby and worrying about it. As long as Redtall sat wivching she must stay Just where she was. She was sure the three babies she had taken to a new home were safe, but what of that last baby all alone? You see she didn't know Farmer Brown's boy. To hei- he was a terrible two-legged giant. What was_ happening to that precious baby. , Hank's Oryptoqaoea: IN FLANDERS FIELDS THE POP-l l PIES BLOW BETWEEN ‘Fl-E CROSSES. ROW VON ROW— ‘ XfiAlii. fllstributedlzLling imam Syndicate. m. "“'”“"”"‘“"° ' ANNUAL MEETING QznP no RFD ElZQBRD-IBOPTN. ' The Annual Meeting of the Prince Edward Island Fur Breeders’ Association will be hold at Birch Court, Charlottetown, at 1:80 o'clock 0n Tuesday. May 81st. Full attends Th,‘ .. . _, will I the , this Province to the Canadian National Silver Fox Breeders’ Association. i J. H. MacPHAIL, President. nco of members is requoatod. of Directors from _ w. n. straw. Secretary. "-11.5 . ' e By AL CAP? a, ;,**=i;K-:; a i€5€5es"'iiié.. I BECAUSE. SHERIFF, "THIS WAG I137’ A WELLJF Joe vvcuto oo THAT I IAINWMADAT ' Ji rm: m TiiRU wrm ‘in... Joe... l teem KIN mussel "U" o 4 YOU 60W“ STUDIO ‘i’ i'lPPY mo "car" srusi fi/‘h/IIIIIIIJ OF l-IIS NINE "AN' MY cousw ELiqEE/aw BIG COMPANi§ AELSiX un.’ ‘no ' l5 GOIN’ TO DO TQADIN’ AU SDEA ’ AN’ BUSBVE-SINCE MQ-Ci-IIQPLE- IZYS QUNNIN’ Tl-VSTOQE" ‘CUZ MQ. BUSBY GAVE HE HAS 70" "OP NOT EVER BE VICE- pnizizirytzu-r aNEQ-R AN’ QUE A ‘,, NO-“(OU DON'T HAVE TO WEAQ IT" BUT’ YOU'LL GAVE OUQ CLO’ES A LOT iF'—- ‘MR. NAYLOIIJM sonmr MAC DIDN'T MAKE YOU Peri. erreal WILL, YDU oo, "mus