Golf Club I D A N C E woman's liming 11.30" a 12.1111» -h IIOIIIMESSEIPS llllllllESTlIA Admission 75o if I §¢0{60%0t%®0{>0 3>%09%0®{>0 NOTICE . , a _ E. v HOGAN, Secretary. WILL OPEN FOI! BUSINESS FRIDAY, JULY 9th For your Strawberry reauirements- PHONE ‘l, MT. STEWART oQ-oo-t ifl>ee<3ee&>oe<t>eo<§m<@ssos>ileqsecs<qpco$cot>o s-mawaaruuns MT. STEWART STRAWBERRY GROWERS EXCHANGE l) The Regular Monthly Meeting at the B. I. S. will be lleltl l" THE DAUAORIAL HALL TONIGHT AT 8 PM. I I 01in I DAR/WORD. Kant. England — - A QBQ-Pflllnd pig, asleep on James llapolaosand Ilnele £11111 Ity c1111m1_ _111s=1h1113 m) PIG GOES BEBSEBK round Harryunsms led perspiring "nounauen-irlnwlrmruvuo-rm “Jaws: on 1Tb“: {IR-M's "l see weliove e customer-ore we ll Us again?" - hr sissy Garden path, leaped an eight-loot well to escape, policemen through several gardens and bowled two o! thorn over before being loaded into s. police van. I sing Guardian Want [egg from which When all the hidden iacts are had_ You'll find but few are wholly bad. 1 -o111 Mother Nature." "- They called him the Bad One.‘ Frcm almost the day he broke his, shell and was hatched in the nest. or ‘Little Friend and Mrs. Song: Sparrow he was called the Bad One by nil the nelflhbors in antl_ BTOU-nd the Old Orchard. Annongi them that is the only name he’ ever was known by. To begin with. he didn't belong in that nest or' ihat family. lt wasn't his fault i-hat he was there so for that he‘ shouldn't have been blamed. The biume tor this was wholly his. mother's. She was Sally Sly the: Cowbird. She had sneaked the' he hatched into' the nest oi’ the Song Sparrow be- cause she was too lazy and fond or a good time to be bothered with: the feeding and care o! a baby. Sally Sly is like the human moth-I er: who leave their unwanted ba~i bies on t-he doorste-ps 0t tender-1 hearted iolks who will be good tol them. 1 So it was through no fault otI his that the helpless little Cowbirdl was whore he didn't belong4l11 the nest of the Little Friends. But‘ it was his fault that he now had no little roster brothers and sisters with him in that nest. One by one they had disappeared from‘ that nest. The broken-heartedI little mother never knew just what‘ had happened, but some or the‘ neighbors knew. When (other and mother were absent hunting for. food (or the babies the latter had; been thrown out o1 the nest or; kicked out, one at a. time, by the Bad One. You see he was hatched first. l-le was much bigger and stronger than the others. Be- cause o! this he hsd. been able to snatch much at the food intended tor them. 5o they starved and failed to grow while he grew big- ger and stronger day by clay. l-le was so needy and grew so last that the nest became crowded. It was then that he began getting rid o: the others when he thought no one was around to see him. It happened that he was seen. Wei-i cuzne Robin happened along just as one o! the helpless ones was kicked out oi the nest. It was from that time on that the young Cowblrd was known as the Bad One. ‘ I The Sparrow babies were too' young and helpless to be properly cared tor outside the nest, so presently the Bad One hsd the nest to himself, and all the care ’ and attention and love 0t his fos- ter parents. This was especially true o! Mrs. Little FTiend. Not knowing just what had happen ' to the others she novw save all her love to the one leit. the Bad One. And how he did abuse it! I He came o! 11. Jamiiy, the morn-I bers o! which grow to be much bigger than the Song Sparrows! You know the Oowbirds aremnemfl bers o! the Blackbird family. Not. having to share the food with any one and being a greedy fellow he ate so much that he grew so last that before he was old enough to leave the nest he was bigger than the Sparrows and still grow- ing. To iced him was a task that kept bath of them hunting for food from daylight to dark. ‘Ilhey didn't have enough to eat them- selves. ‘Tll be glad when he can lee/vs the nest and can get his own toad." said Little Friend. Mrs. Little Friend sighed. "It will be a relief." she admitted then added. “But the poor dear is still growing and still needs s lot-oi! toad. liven alter he is out oi’ the nest and can fly we probably will have to help him get his food. Then one day when Mrs. Little Friend flow away from the nest attsr feeding the greedy Yellow she heard e cry behind her and turned to see the young cowbird follow- ing her. He was using his wings quite as it he had always known how. She waited for him to get ta her, then made e great fuss over him in the way oi mothers when their babies take their tirst steps or try their wings. She NOTICE The annual meeting at the Masonic Temple Company will be held in the office at E. R. Brow 81 Son, I44 Richmond St, on Wednesday the 14th day ot July proxima, at 7 o'clock p.111. J. B. BROW. Secretary. Charlottetown, I’.E.l., June 29th, I948. “ (By Thornton W. Burgess) ‘ms nan on To feed him was a task that kept both of them hunting for {cod trcm daylight to dark \ I hurried to find a tasty worm with which to reward lliim, He was right at her tail when she found it. He swallowed it and cried for NOTE. “It is going to be a lot easier now tor we won't have to fly way back to the nest every time we tincl something for him.” she confided to Little Friend. Little Friend tossed his head. “It will be ‘lot easier when we don't have to feed him at all, and the sooner that is the better I'll like it." he declared impatiently. Meanwhile, the Bad one made r0 attempt to find toad ior him- seli’. It was much simpler and easier to watch his foster mother and keep near enough to her to rush forward and match from her bill whatever she found. The next story; “chased Out." TS i-AGE NlNi‘; Q sTzHToTy‘ SHOILEY WOIKS TIME I MET ‘ER AT GUNFIONS ARIADEJUST 1 SURE THINK SHE BEAUT WIT"ER BUT! ’5A oornr unrris " LOOK WHAT ‘l PICKED LIP "THIS NOON, MISS DOAKS--b~ RUBBER m suoorw/ 1 miomnrar 0N TPVBIO “THE BOSS-- m. STAMP rr ON i; " 1-1-11: LITTLE MEMOS 1 / r SEND mro ' MR. "Youb BETTER ' ~ra1<e 1r EASY WITH ‘THAT, I: DRIPPLE/ a111'1' ‘rm’ l (011.0 Jisr mars vsav WALSH A 517115115104’ mosorvoumwi LOOK AT ‘IA m’ ...u1-1...1>o11'rc1o\ nevus wma oo uxs romcs 3r Love omcm d" n» Contract Bridge ‘gig Dy Josephine Culbertson ' scsrcscsccasw EXPERT INEPTITUDI Peuliarly enough, it is only ex- perts who get into certain kinds ot trouble- Take today's deal for example. No "average players" sitting North and youth would pile up the griet tor themselves that the actual participants did. North deales _ _ \ PPUIJIdes vulnerable. ‘ K Q 10 T 5 Q Q 1o a s e a . 1.101 N WE S ease our §875 ‘use: along _#-T9 . K2 (Q A l. q J 9 6 2 I-aos _ This deal occurred in a v01‘! well known New York club. The tour players, while not masters, were near enough to that rating to be called experts-a statement that may be questioned in the light oi’ the bidding: : _ 149B North lest South West Pass Pass 2N'l‘( i) Pass 3 A Pass R N T Dbl. - 8 U (I) Pass Pass Dbl. Pass Pass ‘I Q Dbl.» Pass Pass Pass West cashed his top tricks, and North-South were paotfl‘ by i100 _poi.nts! It goes without saylnz that South had a very large linger in this pie. His vulnerable two-notrump open- ing was a gambling bid o! the iirst water. Nevertheless,‘ it would be unfair and inaccurate to at- tribute the outcome solely to that choice oi opening bids. As a matter o1 iact, South would have GGBCYWXI all the blame it West had stayed out of the bidding (which he could scarcely do, with his holding!) and North had reached a slam in one o! his suits, but In view o! West's double oi three notrump, the sit- nation was altered considerably. Later, North argued that he had given thought to westsdouble but had felt that it was based on e long minor suit, probably dia- monds, with a stopper outside. North pointed out that he had in reason to iear such s holding at a spade or a heart contract. ' This was all very well, but in view o! West's dc-ubie and the fact that South had not Blllmwtod spades. Nortirmight have acquired g healthy suspicion about the two- notrump opening ltseli’ and, term pering enthusiasm with caution, bid only iour hearts over three DOEIIIIDI). By Ales Raymond ov-MbsIu-nn-mv-umT-Ia‘ BRINGING ur FATHEI! I- wens aces elu. 1.20mi” we waver: sEEu HIM $141.5 BEFOQE- 1415's USUALLY MOMIIH‘ ABOUT >115 FAMILV , . .1" WIN ()4 A QUIZ PROGRAM f TIPPY AND "CAP" STUBB By Edwina I WANT A 308-4503 I CAN l-IELP MY DOD PAY Tl-I’ TAXES" TlLLlE THE TOILER so FATHER'S TOO -iF HE WANTED ro-- ONLY u; oozswr, AN’- WAIT A MINUTE l 1 The --r réséizar TO 11~11=or2~1 Y@U THERE.’ AT PRESENT-AN’, CAP, YOU CAN TAKE THIS BREAD HOME TO fiOUR GRANT/IA SHE JUST 1 .1 v ‘\\ - um;- M1111" A1111... Serum. 111,. 5N PHONED FOR! »-\ By Webster lT WILL BE VERY ONELY ON DOG- LEE ISLAND THIS EVENING PENNY SHE BURNED THAT By Harry Haenigsen , our nrmsrzpouw aroma-rive sum/oar "re car massac- w\-\A‘\"S wizard-Wm ME ‘ii-us w»! '1’ ‘A mm ewsAmci-ws as COMFOQWBLE IN HIS OUN HOME ASTEANIIHG NIGHT UKETHIS- sescawwuasi-isres AM‘! l_ MiNUTE-WE'\£ JUST‘ sums acsr T: NIAKEAGCII) 1v1n2sss1or~by maze insist/craze. Please moire 1-11 M. ( VFAT-IEIZ , 1'0 GREGORY LIKE VQJEMEET