reason ___,__ . __L. .-_ . . ~94; ._........._..... . gas-s-.. ~_ ...~. _ - --:::.=' *3" ’ I11, ~ o illiirsii: n GEORGE DREW Leader Progressive Conservative Party ' will speak g Thursday Night ' JAN. on rue suoiecr “The Nation’s Business” CBA 6:45 p. m. ’ Progressive Conservative Party 27TH l0-9 l’ Chime. i"; ; For Font Ailments CONSULT i ii. ti. ll. Biiillllll, B. P. Orthopedic 11S Grelt George Street CHARLOTTETOWlN. PEI. ,0-Q-Q-0eooeoo .<¢vo»eoee+e< 4v4o000e0e4-c-fl oooovoaoomoeo-ooooevueo. - t Monthly Meeting Charlottetown Branch Canadian Legion, Q i l l l Only those who know they're free Can __ THE ouAatru-uj. (By Thornton r-ver wholly happy be. -Young Fox. Farmer Brown's boy had found a Fox held fast in the cruel jaws of a steel trap. He was weak from starvation and suffering, for he had been held tn that several clays. He. was frightened and hopeless. Farmer Brown's boy had taken him home. carefully bathed and bandaged the paw so painfully hurt by the Jaws of the trap, and had put. him in a pen in which was a sleeping box with a comfortable bed. Every day he bathed that hurt paw and treated it with ointment until the swelling had gone down and the paw was healed enough to lt-aw off the bandage. The Fox Wns fully grown but young. Under the good treatment he was receiving he recovered rap- idly. He no longer knew what real hunger was like. Each day he had plenty to eat, all he wailtod and more, and he didn't have lo hunt for it. It was always \\';lf‘.‘\' £00K . Contract Bridge By Josephine Culbertson . FASHIONS 1N BIDDING B. E. S. L. At 8 p. m. Tonight ‘Qooeoeoo-eoeoeoeeeoooo» §P~Q-OOO§Q§QQOQOOOOQQ'QQ This is Election llay in Ward 3, Moy l say to my friends and supporters, that if you wish my election, it con on sonol attention of each one ly be brought about by the per- of you. Kindly therefore be sure and vote. Should you desire to be driven to the poll, phone 89. Signed G. R. KEEFE A: o property owner, l om b Hll the vacancy in the Council w very sudden demise of the late Samuel Doyle. Time will not permit lne to coll on you personally I hove had previous service ot t you elect me as your representative betterment of the City as a whole, and Word 3 interest. To The Electors of Ward Three offering as o Candidate in Ward 3, hich hos been created by the to solicit your support. Yours very truly, GEORGE R. KEEFE it l om elected, l wil the citizens in general. Candidate for Ward Three“ Having been requested by o number of citizens, l have ‘ decided to run for councillor in Word Three. l do my best for your Word and E. WARREN HOUSTON Grocery Business For Rent Going business in residential orco with o good trade complete vith fixtures and equipment. Present stock to be purchased" in loch, long term lease on building. Apply A. W. Gouclel", Solicitor Phillips Bldg, Charlottetown he Council Bound, and should I will use my energies‘ for the will be my chief i It may seem odd to speak about “fashions“ in bridge bidding, but actually lt is an appropriate word. We have gone a long way since the first few years of contract bridge, and what would have been an acceptable bldclin: decision in, say, 1939. is perhaps a discredited choice today. Let's examine this point in connection with an actual deal: South dealer. Both sides vulncraiu. Rubber bridge. U122 B] FOOD AQ A83 62 0CD square This was the bidding in a quite "i\'erage game: South West North East 1 {s Pass l Q Pass 2 Q‘, Pass 2 Q Pass 2 N '1‘ Pass 3 N T Pas! Pass Pass West made the shroud opening of the tliarnmtd king. his thought. living that his holding in the only unbicl stilt. spades, was too weak for possible development. Dc- clarer hold up dummys diamond zit-o. but East signalled vigorously with the nine, and West continued the stilt. Declarer could not estab- lish enough tricks without losing the load. and the defenders ended clubs, and one heart. reason for his failure choice for remains. however, that HM cnslly made the contract W. Burgess) he could help himself. home. to cab-what more could B FOX want to make him food would have tasted better had he had the fun and work of hunt.- . . f r it. Hap m‘ llihgd fess of it and had the fun Of hunting for li.. That would have meant freedom and independence. two of the most precious things in all the Great World. So. while not exactly tinhaPPy. happy either. all this. “I know lust how you real," he would say. "I don't blame you a bit for feeling as you do. I suppose I would myself were I in your place. v young Fox. You don't know it, be- cause you don't know how well off up with three diamond tricks. two ‘Thus, the contract was defeated two tricks. T0 30i- hack to the theme of t.hls pdzicatedi) on the theory that he ‘must have four trumps to raise a suit that had been bid only N191?" "if! Perhaps that was tho t0 give a _ hearts, instead of launching into notruntp. The fact, X South's land was not patterned for a no. failed to support hearts previously. A warm safCly, comfort and plenty happy? Yet hc wasn't truly haooy- we He would rather have he wasn't truly Farmer Brown's boy understood But you are a luclLY you are. If I hadn't found you, thanks to Roddy Fox. who led me to you, you wouldn't be alive now. No. sir, you wouldn't. You would have starved to death or the trap- per would have killed you. One or the other surely would have hap- pened. But, of course, you don't know that, and you don't. under- stand a word I am saving. All you know ls that you are a prisoner. and I suppose that no one who is a prisoner, even a prisoner of kind- ness, can be wholly happy. But lf that paw keeps on healing as fast as it is doing now you won't be a prisoner very much longer.” said he. "That is a promise. but of course it doesn't moan a thing to you. You will have to wait and see,” he added. When the bandage was taken off the young Fox licked the paw often and this seemed to do it good. For a few clays he was so lame when he put that foot down he walked about on three legs most of the time. But. day by day he used that paw more. 'I‘.here was a scar where those cruel jaws Trad bitten into it, but no bones had been broken and in time the paw would be as good as ever. But the better and stronger ll: got. the more (hscontented and unhappy he grew. Discontent and happiness irever go together. They just don't mix. Two or three times at night he heard Roddy Fox bark. Roddy knew where he was and those were friendly barks. But they made the young Fox more unhappy than ever. If. would have been better if Redtly had kept away altogether. At lnsLcame a day of strange happenings. Farmer Brown's boy brought him an extra good break- fast of things of which ho was specially fond. Afterward began the strange happenings. Right away he was a badly frightened young Fox, more frightened than he had been at any time since he was in the trap. First. he was put in a box just big enough for him to turn around in. Over the top was wire netting. Now he really was a prisoner, and it wasn't a happy fer-ling. Then the hox was lifted and that was a strange and disturbing feeling. It was put in a strange monster with a most. tin. ploasant smell, and that made a 551111189 noise as it carried him away. Ho crouched close to the bottom of tho box and I suspect Farmer Broil-it's boy as the young FOX ironed out and darted away. Ho ran with only a slight limp. Sudzltnly he was filled with such llfllllilncss as he never before hatl known. lie was free! Ho could go where he pleased. whcn ho pleased! Once he stopped to look back. Former Brown's boy was laughing. f‘ - — a ' . . - . . Sagllrpnticfiglntfihés drill“ will? Dos- Fe was sharing in this happiest i 3 o having the r1 1'. for had not he helped to mukrg spa” l9" "f? it'd 11D to. Having it such " The next. story’: "Watching 111;. it was vital that S th d " this stage, after Norlilh‘ liadobiilotii: step‘ diamonds. North would not he “*- l Qirrgflslfggmt ‘flddlng "Olrumo if nanny. England - (or) _a “mum h“ 0- Actually. North beer tankaitl, stolen from a hotel i c gone in four hearts for a bet. in 1928, was recently re- turned anonymously. By AL CAPP ' event sootsrr- ooco ‘ BUT (s°°-'~') THEWLL GiT HELP FUN THAR , GOOD NEIGHBOR$ NEARBY!’ +1‘ IT'S s-l-LrlART-"HE | wmrs to was»! ue...i~o z cm’? HONEY» DEW/VON by Alex Raymond OKAY BABY-s-TELL HE? I'LL see ab: on Tl-li "sovsaeiou ' tbvoiuzowi UNCLE HORACE, I mAnauTTETOWN KING or THE norm. Mouurso 5* fi/EMOL/Nr/E Ms GONE/AND ma! L/V/A/G P0044, 4/50!’ s =// f? E AQZA/E 77/5 2 a... Mar/imam A own/c: 1H1: om than: oer? m: AtHuMPHREvS m m: <' r sasrmunr... P? l ll JANUARY 21‘, 1949 0y: use.‘ no?‘ soon. w sarmssmov m: ‘aw mu ma: ws/us/wr vwe zaus. wan/rm ,1 t-m-‘m r12. ly Z __t..... . Gill Grey Asstoorztr ! romat f . w; ' “lay/i I l musr as IN LOVE! eveiev TIME r 'l"l-iiNK oi= MARY ANN 1 TlNGLE ALL oveel/ BRlhlGlNG UP FATHER I'M GLAD ‘QJVE GOT BOLZF-fé MIND OFF RACING -NOW HELL DOWN AND PAY ATTENTTON TD THE HOU5EWOQK- an’ rut MAKIN‘ HIM C0014 MY LUNCH 5O HELL HOT HAVETIME TD THINK OF HORSE RACIN’ - usicu CLOSE. our WHICH IS FIGHYIN’ LIME-Mouser!» x '1 \\ ~ uiwllallllm . ream otootcna‘ l l l ly GGOIQC-Jgldfltllll YESSlQ-JTS A SHAME TO DiSAPPOlNT EVEQYEODY WHOT; BOUGHT TICKETS TO AN‘ GiVE BACK Ti-iEiQ MONEY, Too»! “'2. 471/. TILLIE m" Tons: - HEAvcNs! DON'T TELL ME ONE PE-RSQN can 5A1- ALL THAT FOR BREAKFAST/f is “Hick?” 5mm‘ “'35 811ml! 0! hmwhlmpored solilv to himself ' “Whale bidding! H15 ‘evening bid at long last in» monster sto '4 o"; ' and his first rabid were sOtllltl The hox ivas taken out and pihiheed " “‘ (L i enough. but he went far astray on lhi‘ ground pom-me;- Brown-s (- w- i ~ -.w-..-.~-< exit!“ (“'17 when he bid two liotrump over boy grinn (l d w t hl A North's two diamonds. Perhaps hox was “fillclltéfll, ‘xldwtlmlilllfll-ltll‘; UPFY AND ‘CAP,’ STU“, BY Edwll" Scum had bee“ educamd ‘badllf and ROW out of traps!" cried n i 1 AN THEN GPAN MA ., COULDN'T STOP IT, ElTHER" f l ~ n. . . . ‘It-I ¢mn Manhu- Ail-ar stain. WON'T YOU H i». i‘ i: in. AVE A one " t‘ wim ME, BABY? By Wcsiovl‘ wncaokAvJLsA-ftt eoto m sotzorzrrv Msenuo n= ‘ea sum JANET wiu. a: -< ioiowrmouwiweneso Fouootwmanreauuv-