at his pcharlottetownp llotel . ’ , ‘ I Meals Served in Main Dining Room Luncheon $1.85 -— Dinner $1.75 . spwlgl,’ arrangements for Banquets in Private mung Room at reasonable rates. The Charlottetown is a modern and lire‘-‘proof “om, centrally located. Excelient.cuislne ieatnring sen, foods, fine. accommodation and distinctive service. . Rates nom $8.75 and u - ' (including Room and Men s) ' ALL’ rooms with bath. ii cnnnnuu unmmn nom. FARMERS’ WEEK ANNIIAL so l.iEETIli(iS—%LEil|0N HALL cniniornsrown MARJCH 1st. to MARCH 3rd. WEDNESDAY--MARC}! lst. 2:00 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Sheep and Swine Breeders’ Associations, opening with iormer. Special speaker-—Mr. J. W. Graham. Ottawa. THURSDAY, MARCH 2nd. 2:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. ‘ P. E. Island Potato Growers’ Association. Details announced elsewhere. . FRIDAY, MARC]! 3rd. 2:00 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Central Farmers’ institutes. Special programme including discussions on “Marketing Boards and What They Have to Offer." 8 la! speaker—Mr. R. C. Parent, Superinten- dent xperhnental Farm. Subject—-"ls There More Money in Grass?” Also Federation of Agriculture discussions by the Secretary, Mr. L. P. Mclsaac. Take time out and attend these important meet» PLANNING TO BUILD THIS "SPRING? ‘We have two cars BRANTFORD ASPHALT SIIINGLES and SIDING. variety colors and types, to arrive first week of March. Also two cars CEMENT arriving April. Special discounts for early buyers. ~ Ii. |.. ‘ IIIOKIESON New Glasgow NAPOLEOIN and~llN0l..lil Y «by Clifford McBride. I'M %E 3=‘=“-’-+"'°A="”°-°“7="***...f....:.1..v' “CK ""'sLE':r5gcYKEu Hnmgaar II‘ “'59- ., ' . making his winter home high up or Thornton Ins war or use No one yet he provedby test His -way 0! iii tor all is best. i -Old Mother Nature. ‘The ttuth is there isn't any best way or living {or all. ‘there isn't and there never will. be. That which is best for people in one place is not best tor people living in another place, otten not possible (or them‘.-Danny Meadow Mouse. thinks the Green Meadows the very best place in all the Great World for a Mouse to live. Cousin Whiteioot the Wood Mouse knows that the Green Forest is the best place. And Nibblet the House Mouse, to be really happy. wants to be inside buildings. a house or a-barn or snyother building where iood may be found. Each is sure that his way of lite is best. Whiteioot had visited Nibblet in Farmer Brown's big barn’ and didn't like it there. With only’ Spooky the Screech Owl, who was in the barn, and Black Pussy the Cut. who hunted there ‘once in a while. to watch tor, lite was dull. Excitement ‘ had been part 0! Whiteioot’s liie every day since he was big enough to leave the nest I —- SS‘BEill‘i —_ hungry enemies. Lite was ‘exciting. in which he.was born. There had been hardly a day or night when he wasout that he hadult had to be constantly on watch for Mouse- I mnnnnnooooooooooooodmax UNDER. ran The defense vTs*not quite what it should have been in the {allow- ing deal. ooor,n:.n- . . - contract Bridge Ii: Josephine Culbertson South dealer. Both sides vulnerable O Q 4 O 7 3 5 9 s s 3 2 4. A 7 a 2 Q 3 3 Q K. 7 6 2 o J 9 2 N 9 K 10 5 4 6 Q 8 4 W E O K J 10 ‘R Q 10 S 59 3 A ll Q A .l 10 9 r V A Q 8 6 Q A 7 Q J 4 The bidding: « ‘ South West North East 1 5 Pass IN '1' Pass 2 Q Pass 2 .9 Pas! ‘ 4 a Pass Pass Em "'"South's leap to game. over North's mere preference bid 0! two spades. was a shade aggressive. but very often this style 0! bidding is rewards-d—as it was in this case. "Considering the two-suit bidding by South and the "preference" by North. West might well have open- ed a trump. but he chose instead to lead the club king. The ace was played. ’and South immediately took the heart finesse. when the queen held. he cashed the heart ace and ruiied his last heart with the spade queen, west wisely dis- carding a diamond. On the club return. Westcaptur-I ed South's jack with the queen and continued clubs. his idea obvi- ously being to ruii down the de- clarer.'l.'his. however, did not prove to be a good ideal East discarded ; “ ‘ while South gladly ruiied with the spade live and after. that the contract was be- yond attack. A It has already been remarked that west was wise to discard it diamond on the iourth heart- but he did not exploit this good playl when West got in with the club king he should not have con-l tinucd the suit. but should have THE__ GUAi?.i)lAN. CHARl.O'l"l‘E'l‘0WN A A tune or run nova]. MOUNTED W .1, ' W, lumen) lull iI|]' ‘.1 M NH ' la"/' ' N \\ ' "It must be nice not to be airaid. or anybody." said Mrs. lvihblet. Here in the barn he Iound life too easy to be interesting. it was a place to visit, not to live in, he told Mrs. Whitetoot.-He had invited Cousin Nibbiet to go home with him and see for himsell what real living was like. Nibbict was seeing and not lik- ing at all what he saw. Cousin Whitetoors way at life didn't nit him at all’. In fact he thought it was dreadful. There was nothing dull about it. It -was exciting. too exciting. It seemed to him that it just one dread!-ul fright aiter an- other. When at long last he was solely back in the barn he told Mrs. Nibblet about it. - "Why any one should want to live the way Cousin Whiteto-it lives I can‘t understand,” he de- clared. "I didn't Ieel sale a minute. I don't know. Now that Robber the _Rat and his gang have left here the only enemies we have to watch for are that Cat, and at night that Owl who has taken to living here 0! late.“ . “Isn't that enough?" squeaked Mrs. Nibblet. - -"For me. yes replied Nibblet. “But Cousin Wliitetoot has to watch for both at these and a lot 01' others we never even see." "Who?” asked Mrs. Nibblct. ‘Raddy Fox for one." replied Nlbblet. “He is a bad one." “Never heard of him,” squeaked Mrs. Nibblet. "He never comes in here. And there is a‘ relic-av named Jimmy Skunk.. He sometimes gets under- neath here but he doesn't come up inside. He‘s the one we have smelled and didn't like the smell. He's very iond of Mice. I saw him hunting for Cousin Meadow Mouse. They say he isn't afraid of any- body." "It must be nice not to be alraid oi’ anybody.” said Mrs. Nlbblet "Are there any others whiteloot must keep his eyes open for?" "I should say so!" exclaimed Nibbfet. "There are more than I can remember. some in daytime and some after dark. and some in both. There urc Billy Mink. and Shadow the Weasel. and Bobby Coon to watch lfOI‘ on the ground. And to watch for up above are little Hawks and big Hawks, little Owls and big Owls. Biacky the Crow, Butcher the Shrike and-" "I've never hear or any. of those but that small Owl who~ls living here." interrupted Mrs. Nibblet. she meant spooky the Screech i. “it is a wonder to me that Whitefoot is alive, yet he thinks his way oi life is better than ours," declared Nibblet. "Know what?" “What?" asked Mrs. Nibblet. “I don't think Whiteioot is smart. 11 he was he would move in here and live the way we do. He doesn’t know how to live." replied Nibblet. "No. my dear he doesn't how." Over in his home at the edge of the Green Forest Whiteioot was thinking the very same thing oi Nibblet. ‘FREDERICION — (N???) —New know - DOTTY l)ii1’l’l.E u N“!- ‘.‘.'-n’ qf NEW STOCKS JUST ARRWED .90 it ,..ll,/.l;,/lazzim 49/F, ‘use HOME. out ' // mums u1..: MEAN- . / r n AIN'T Mv WINDA MoaE...I use , JOIK... I'LL 544:! MISS ‘ll-IA1 IU NO 5 WAS-A /1 /M é//‘/7%‘ 2. /nu BIOGRAPHIES D T ARE WILL HAVE ESE PANTS TN-D‘ GOTOTHE TAILOR BE TIPPN AND CAP” STUBS _ j-—-\ A FSNE DETECTIVE YOU -~! YOU CAN'T FIND MRS. BAILEY" AND NOW THE CHILDREN AND ‘rue 06 A oO_,__!RE LOST, New , _ LOOK HERE'- r‘§ ; F ‘V - . » K sww//V9, so yowu. luv: routs A mm. my rpm .4525. ms atam/775 All/Sf an/tvi 7/14 7570 TllIliI'.’ 1 can so up.'w (,4 ’////:u '0 'I’l"u.... "-' ..a mine “nu. he Ll. ASLEEP. no’ rooa by Carl Anderson ROMANCE 'n/ I // .\ fly‘ WA in r..... u-in un- V/9:’! LIKE THE OTHER ONE me 3551-- rr EET9 OFF \OU? L005 sci!»-1'9 IZEALLV MAGGIE II so-you THINK IT IS BETTER THAN Tl-llé ONE’ 1 *.‘r__/ -MADAME DE ZAMIDZE THI5 :9-M25. .1IGe5--o'¢.I‘.- AKE I-IAT .’ T X114 . D - rreeescséiatww shitted to the diamond queen. ob-, nrunswiclrs deer had a bad year serve the eiiect oi this play. East in 1949. The lands and mines de- naturaliy overtakes -with the dia-I partment said 19.690‘ deers were mend king and lays down jack. bagged by hunters, to come close to Now ii’ declarer rufls high. he must the all-time’ record at 30.007 deer lose,two trump tricks: if he rum: killed in 1933. Non-resident sports- with the spade live, West‘s over-men accounted for 3,285 or last ‘ rutfis iatal. year's total. . — ; u'L.sa'iaun “Y 5' CW!’ ' ' ._ . by ll/estover n’li'.i.‘i?I Ji'1§..L£.t”£u“.a'é’;l.8.K}*’.%‘.s'““”....:£"A'Loua"°’°'“«- ll’ HAPPENED NM =U=r cmrserra rr ru.Lv MILLTID TH‘ F0151’ mun CARS D£J>RMM' #._ |\/W4 A gguggg . REMEMBER 11-av . "fin _AN, ALL CONSOINED yui‘ of COLORS g'1'HEIRhEASON- ' ' ?ItlLLI’.8UI.I'lI$VlN , uiOlN'rI.' 3);»? WJ. 1,,- \ WIN.‘ @.L|tfl:EI%.Di All ' "more i . - . ’ '.....""°‘-...°~°--ii r"“*t'*=-.'I...‘.'i""s .