JANUARY 3. 1951 - MULTIFLORA ROSE 'iHL liVlNC- HNCE. I ronchml LOZIIGIS SON. DOMINION SEED uionnilows CHASE COUGHS All UliUl. 3l(JiH3 CLASSES BEGIN NIGHT SCHOOL MONDAY. JANUARY 3 . g 7:30 To 9:30 r.M. Typewriting Bookkeeping Shorthand UNION COMMERCIAL COLLEGE . Royal Bank Building The final Sittings of the Public Enquiry into Fisherman's Loans will take place before His Honour Judge J. S. DesRoches, (bmmissioner, at the COURT HOUSE, CHARLOTIETOWN, THURSDAY, JANUARY 4th, 2 P.M. This Enquiry is open to the Public and any per- son wlshing to give evidence thercat is welcome to do so. J. O. C. CAMPBELL, Commission Counsel. DAiLY CROSSWORD DOWN ACROSS 18. Mountain 1. Upright !. Critical lakes 5. Riding whip 2. Biblical city 19. of digestion n 9. Article 3. A mere 22. Behold! taste ' 24. City 4. Sound, (E. Braz.) as a born 25. Glacier 6. Sluice ilssure for logs 26. Assaults 0. Kinsmen 28. Sun god 7. Verbal 30. Not any 8. A step I2. Employs 9. Become for wages cheesy 84. Southeast 1!. Spread by south grass to dry (lbblf-) 14. A small 35. Inside horse 36. Asterisk H i)EliIll3i D D J! B ofvirtu y 10. Fortlned 1. Ci i (Afghan- Ilillllllilil HIYJEIIII DEIIEHU l-!!.llll Yesterday's Answer 37. Old measures of length (0. Personal pronoun (4. Erbium (sym.) notice 1.1. The masses 15. Perch 17. summed up 18. Habitat plant form 20. Seine .21. Breezily 23. Penivian Indian 27. Spanish dance 28. Bellows 20. Otherwise 30: Cathedral city (W. Fr.) 31. 'apanese measure 33. River (N. Yugo.) 34. Chapel in . Vatican ' palace 38. Medieval 39. Wtiolly (2. Barrel piece 43. Pale yellow clay-like earth 45. Metallic rocks 46. Certain I DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it: A x Y D I. I A A X It - IILONGFELLOW One letter simply stands for another. In this example A is used for the three L's. X for the two 0's. etc. single letters, apos-ti trophies. the length and formation or. the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are dlfterent. A cry; g quotation CON GCYMB. CC-N HBPPEHDPCJB. HJN CGN .NEMl-lzB. ZCEM SM!-iVi:)PKVG ltcll IMPJW CGN HJN WCJM-GCAMGG. YesterdIy'I Cryptoqnote! WI: HUNT THE SWEET BERRY WITH PUEPLI:-3'l'.AlNlViD ARDOUR:LUCAS. i Dii IIB HIIJLIIZIIID Elli Dill!!! LllI'l3lIJEH DEHJJB LI'L ABNER THE GUARDIAN. CI-IARLOTTETOWN Noisy tongues are a.pt't.o be Never quite from misohiei irse. -'-Old Mother Nature. It is true. That i.s because noisy . tongues usually are the tongues of idle folk, and idle lolk like to hear their own voices so are not care- ful -what they say. Now in the Green Forest is no one who loves the sound of his own voice as does Chatterer the Red Squirrel. He never misses a chance to scold others and Jeer at them. When there is no cine around to whom -he can do this he scoids just tor the fun 01 it, to hear his own voice. The result is he isn't loved by his neighbors who like peace and quiet. You see, that noisy tongue too 0!- . ten gets others into trouble. Reddy Fox was quite himself now. There was only a little stiffness in the leg in which he had been shot. Mrs. Reddy no longer shared with him what she caught. he wouldn't let her. what he ate he found and caught himself. While he was hun- gry most or the time he was not starving. Hunger is to be expected in winter most at the time by the Green Forest and Green Meadow ioi-k, so Raddy was no worse off than many of his neighbors. Now that he could do his own hunting he was more or an optimist than ever. Sometimes he hunted at night. sometimes he hunted by day. it do- pended on the weather, on how hungry he was. and on how he felt. OU!:FDDDDUDClUDE":t-'30-3Ot:'U)?N' icontract Bridge By Josephine Culbertson V .OmQot-nnQ CRITICISM WANTED A correspondent requests an ana- lysis at his own and his partner's bidding in the following deal. south dealer. Neither side vulnerable. "IQ J D 8 .Q A K J 8 6 4 Q 9 7 Q A K A K 10 5 2 Q Q s 4 O 5 2 N 9 Q 9 7 e K loo W E 3 3 2 S Q J 3 . 4- J 4 .; 9 a 3 Q A 7 3 A V 10 ' O A Q 8 I g g L Q 10 s 7 2 g This was the reported auction south West North East 1 4 Pass 2 9 Pass 3 Q Pass 4 Q Pu. Pan ti) Pass The arguments raised by North and South were these: South insisted that with only two clubs in North's hand to "tit" Sc-uth's opening bid. North did not. have a. sound jump response in s. new suit. south further maintained that North's four-club bid-on those' same two clubs. however high-was wrong. North argued that his own bid- ding was right thr ' t and , that Scutlfs was correspondingly wrong. It should not be diiiioult to prove that North had much the sounder position in this disputei His first response, at any rate, was quite ac- ceptable; and his (our-club bid might have turned out very well (although three hearts would have been a better call.) South's bidding. however. was en- tirely bad! He should have started with one diamond. holding the club suit in reserve for his rebid; and he had no right whatever. alter Nos-th's Jump takeout, to drop the bidding short of game. Actually. the partners have landed at three notruinp. via the simple bidding: one diamond by south. two hearts by North. lly Thornton W. Burgess) THE NUISY BOASTMI Reddy. he .This.momlng the weather was line. he was hungry, and he was wide awake and felt fine. so he was over in the Green Forest hoping to sur- prise Jumper the Hare but not real- ly expecting to. or catch one of the children oi Thunderer the Grouse. He had long ago given up hope oi catching Thunderer himself. or Mrs. Grouse. They were too wise, with the wisdom or exzperience. to be caught by any Fox. Then there were Mice, always Mice to be look- ed for. A Mouse wouldn't make a dinner but would be a bite, and sev- eral bites could make a. feast. He had seen no one since he en- tered the Green Forest, but he hunted as watohiully and caretluiiy as it he knew just where some one was hiding. It was very still there. so still that it seemed as it the very trees were holding their breath and listening. The stillness was broken suddenly and noisly: - "Raddy Fox is over here! So look out! so look out; He can't catch you when you know I-leis about! He's about." ' That was Chatterer the Red 'Squirrel. He was peering down from high in a tree, Now he ran down ithe tree head first Reddy always 'wc.ndercd how any one could creep idmvn a tree that way, not to ment- iion running down. And run chat- ltercr did... Just a little higher than iR.eddy could leap chattel-er clung 'to the tree still -head down. i "You can't catch mei can't catch me! Raddy Fox can't catch me!" teased Chatterer, and his voice could be heard for a long way in all directions among the still trees. Raddy knew that hunting arcvuml there would be useless now..lle sat down at the toot or the tree and looked up at chstterer. "Do you think that is fair?" ask- ed Raddy. For a moment Chatterer's noisy tongue was still. Then he demand- ed. ”Do I think what is fair?" "Spoiling for another when he is very hungry his chance of getting something to eat?" replied Roddy. "It a hunter with a. dreadful gun should come along and I warned You. would you think it lair," re- torted Chatterer. or course this was so, and Reddy couldn't say a word. Then chatter- er resumed his teasing. daring. Red- dy to try to catch him. When he tired of this he began boasting. I-le boasted or his thrift; that he never Continued on page l2 NOTICE The Annual Statutory Meet- ing of The Island Guardian Publishing Co. will be, held in the Company's Office on WEDNESDAY, JAN. 17th, 1951 at 5 P.M. NOTE: As the company's ibooks do not close till Jan- shoumuary 31, the meeting will be adjourned to a later date. 6. M. BURNETI, three not!'um'pB by South-pass by - Secretary: North! V . uaN- i'I'T'HET'FEARLESS m F0SDIOT(?1BOOKFUM 0.Y.M.l. !.'MEBBE1HAR'lJ. - IFFIICIVL Brronm, & ' -ii By A! Cam: 7 wusrvou wmrroeo- . ;. "ii:'”i37.-ii" A" Ag:-.1; ;7'?, iliii .31, en. KING OF THEgROYAL MOUNTED ' 70 DPOPOV 7H' 9'4 new A 1 ova W! M KIN6 i 4xw?55D4LF.' PEAIIOTE RADAR 5771Tl6W A T ,:0l4E A”lVG.'o(19V&. SNOW I5 SOIN5 70 DEWEY POIIR 5AY5T4HOM..4iVD KILL 0547 7'!!! if W MEAN ME. I'M KINM DIZZY... WIT: BID BACK H PAGE seven By Zane Grey" mvk:a.0!7aPAate GZME 77445,, ix run was my mm mm 1... arm 4,-... on-as I DO'I'I'Y DIPPLE” HORACE. your , PANTS me PRESSEV! Z I -Huaitv. CHILDREN! 1 I I'M PUTTING voua AN” MV 5REAKpA5T on BRIEF CASE ? COOKS? V 2 rrppr AND "CAP" sruss Pi-lEWi women-6Hu1o ii ;Mmac.e-- THEN mew KEEP " me-irr on ausumo ,1: v A By lildwine 1.; ;'-AN' YOUR DOG TO i rm--m-----12 iouir T2AcKaN' MUD --AN' I THINK YOU ousur To ; JALL OVEI2 Ti-it HOUSE MAKE A NEW YEAR'S RESOLUTION --AN' YOUR CAT. To TO 651' UP EV'i2Y MOl2NiN' srop LlSiN' TH' FURNI- WITHOUT BElN' CALLED A TURE FOR A SCl2ATCl-ilN' HUNDRED POST, AN”- TIMES ii ' JASPURR. 22 WHAT NEW YEAR'S QESOLUTION ARE YOU sow TO MAKE. Gi?AN'MA?? --To set: THAT ALL OF sou KEEP YOUR RESOLUTIONS 2: OR-DEA?-I x-mu we unam- TOLD THE LOUDEQ5 wE'D CALL on THEM TONiGHT- I wiw-rso TO swwcu TELEVl5lON.' sovzoesz 'roNiGH'r!i '1'ILl.iT'i:.HE.TOILER I wELL.,THE oewnno is MINE! newness HIM FIRST! A..A..L.. A REY THE LU6, rs MIKE "THE DIP Ti S BlLL1H5 50-Z6 i f .' ."r51f&iiR" .,E,c' ::'.?i1a M i -'47 '4-:1?f&S.r::.A: V." fi - i IWMITEOTD n1b'I1-E L Ct-QJSIE BARAFTERTHE NI3IIE QWELVCDDDIDNT SPO-Ki-ELKIJGHNDQEY. 7OU'D'IHiH( HE'D BESMAPT. '1 LlKE Asom AFTERAMOJIE