MARCH 4. 1949 _,. ___‘_ __ _, ., .-._ Quarterly l CITY P. E. I. l-‘islillnd iiarne Protettlon Ass’n. Meeting HALL FRIDAY, 8 P.M., MARCH 4 Open seasonal dates will be discussed Gould This Happen My Child? l-jvcry your some children uich roninble because someone-a mother or father or diseases thli. are now proven pre- guardian-either through ignorance or neglect failed to have them profigctg1 you can hr", ill avoid such a tragedy in your family by Investing in disease prrrrrziioll as curried out by your own Department of Health. mphihvrlu and Whooping Cough are two well known enemies to irculllr particularly l0 Yfllllll children. It is also a proven fact that U... can be easily prevented. Children need this protection moat ur- gclliiWllt sis months oi age. Don't gamble with your children‘; health. Gel them protected. The Department oi Health will iu (he public schools of Chariot‘ ‘ be conducting their annual clinics n commencing March 1th. to Muir-h all nruiiu-rs with young children are lequested to bring their children for this triple protection against Diphtheria. Whooping cgugh and ‘fcrnnus. The . ,' ‘P initial pr ‘ “ ' ‘ of three ' my; fl0§05 given at intervals oi [our weeks and will cost you only twenty [lye center. (‘hildren oi‘ i"-t'o _\:-'_-re ti‘ 115:2 and over are protecte against lliplriIu-rois only. School children having already received their initial prplrrriivll against Diphtheria require o further reinforcing dose every m... _\r;\l’h u! u nominal coat oi ten cents. 1:. sure" that all who require protection receive it on these 00133,. slim . 'l'iu- place and time oi thcso school clinics will appear in the pfgsg, “atria for ihflm. DR. B. C. KEEPING. D-PJI. Chief Health Officer Mount Allison Presents Play Al‘ Fawoett liall N. B" hiarch —~ The Mount Allison ry will present "The ivimpole Street" m .9 in Charles Firwcett m‘. iinll. Miss Margaret Faculty Advisor to the will direct the ploy. Skinner, second your ~li.i‘lli from Moncton. and u Knox, third year Science from Sackville, will be \.<r nirrlvnt directors assist- ,\!:-_ Manon n1 the presenta- ' ,~"\1 uvrtru. I gkwvbfl!‘ .il fr! the play. . \ .l_.\'rr‘ Woodward, second .\l.rlr~ student from Boa: liffllllldli, will play the i--m.\lc role as Elizabeth ‘will! TcnfPiekard, second student.’ as -Rc-b?rt . in the lending mule Olhcrs m the huge cast. r-hcsrl‘. ns much us 1mm hitherto unknown rle Freda Mac-Lay. sec- Arts flutlent ircru To- .r< Henrietta Barrett; Mrs. ':ccrit-B:1rv.'cod, lhlrd =" r: Econnnflrs student. ' 'ille, N. 13.. as ArubPl Rog Gunn. third year ‘nt from New Glasgow. 7"?" ANNUAL Bo‘! Scouts’ tionoerr Prince iii Wales College Friduy and Saturday Mdrsh 4th. and 5th. Curtuin-—7:30 P. M. All the Troops ond Packs in Charlottetown ore tok- ing port Support your Scouts and N. S.. as Septimus; Charles, play. ed by Walter MacDonald, fourth Year Science student from Wood- stock. N. B.: Henry, played by Ralph Webber from Dartmouth, N- S». fourth year Theological stu. dvlll: George. by Don Cameron. ihLrd year Arts student from lifcadowville Station, N. 3,, and Billiard by John Farmer. first yrear Pro-Med student from Perth. . S. Mr. Ellis Roulston. Director of the Applied Arts Department. is in charge of the siagg 5mm; again this year. New curtains in the Charles Fawcett Memorial Hull are now on order and m, N_ A. l-lesler. Chairman of the Board of Regents, stated that he will do everylhing possible to obtain them in time for the play. Beatrice Heine, third year l-lrrne Economics student from Norton, N. 13.. and Jean Brown, second year Arts student from Wesimount. P. Q, are in charge of costumes. The Players will get these costumes from Me/lbars this year and hope to have the ones made especially for this play when it was presented by the Montreal Repertory Theatre in a drama festival last year, CADET SHARPSIIOOTERS’ \VIN HAGARTY PRIZES OTTAWA, March 2 — The army has announced names of 10 cadet shurpshooters who won 194B Galer Hagarty Memorial Prizes in milit- ary areas across Canada. The prizes. copies of 10rd Rob- erts‘ book "Forty-one Years in India," are presented annually by Surgeon Capt. R.J.E.; Hanson oi Corner-all, England, to the 10 cad- ets holding the highest aggregate in Empire miniature rifle matches and Dominion oi Canada Eriflc As- sociation's small-bore rile winter competitions. Names of winners and location oi’ their respective cadet units are Cadets C. Theriau, Liverpool High School Cadet corps. Liverpool. N.S.; L. McIntosh, Bath High School Cadet Corps, Bath. N-B-J ELK. Price, Bishop's COIIEBG 5°h°°l (Mdet Corps. Lennoirville. Qllfl-Z C. Bilodeau, Si. Maurice Cadet Corps, Thetiord Mines. Que-i C- Jamos, Hamilton Central Colleg- iate Institute Cadet. COTPQ. Him‘ ilton, Ont; G. Mr-Cturrln, Breck- ville_ Collegiate Institute and Vo- cational School Cadet (301118. Brockvllle, ' Out-i RA 531°5- Queen's Own Cameron llishlflllfl~ ers of Canada Cadet Bu. wlmll‘ peg, Mara; S. H8891. Sl- Thoma‘ College Cadet Corps, Battieford, snug, w, Taylor. Coronation 14th Armored Regiment (KOCR), Cor- (BY-fflllor Persistence sometime! good to gee A nuisance other times ma be. —-Oi.her Mother Niture Nvlilllls is more persistent than fllrlwlty! 1r is not easily an. couraged. Peter Rabbit was full o! curiosity. He usually ‘M. 1t h“ Bot. nun into more trouble, much more trouble. than have 511 other airings combined. Just now Peter was curious to know who was singing in the dark over there in the Green Forest. He hm h. kiww- H? Just had to know. though what good the knowledge would be to him he couldn't lznve told Y°u Ii You had asked him. »Whiteioot the Wood Mouse had just come out of the darkness where that sinzlnr; had seemed tn he. I am sure nobody is in there." squeakcd he. He always squeaks ulrren he sneaks. “There has to be some one in thsre." declared PM”, Hon-boo. hoo, hoo-hool" L“ . , Contract Bridge By Josephine Culbertson {03003003-00300‘ I A QUESTION OF BIDDING Following up the "theme" of ills week's columns — here is an. other much-discussed deal from the recent Masters‘ Individual Tournament. ' East deaicrm North-South vulnerable. 4 5 . 9 1o 9 z QJ53 .7. Q‘J 8 4 2 4 A J e 7 6 v1 ‘ N QAKIO Ws 764 51o 108 AK Q9 53 N ‘*0 0 9.:- q u E #040 ~>@0x “IIOC-D Na” e- 'I‘.he eventual winner of the iKJlIXTIEmQIli. George Rgpeg, o‘ New York. did not have his match-point standing flattened by this dean Hilwevel’. as will be observed, it was not his fault that the bidding went askew. Hts partner oi the moment failed to give even an up. proximate description of his hold- ing. This was Lha ruqqmg; r . 3-1 B Iinai South Wear North 1 § Pass 1 Q Pass 1 Q Pass 2 l, .. Pass 3Q Pau SNTU) Paul Pan Pass Mr. Rupee. sitting East. know that his partner had a strong hand when West bid two spades over one heart. but when West follow- ed this up by bidding three no- trump, East naturally could not visualize anytlrng like the 6-5-1-1 distribution oi iLe West Hand. Ap- parently. West nad five diamonds and four spades. Since East did not fébl ton confident about a spade contract based .on only (ap- parently) seven trumps, and since in these match-point games there is usually an advantage to be goin- ed from playing a hand at no- trump, East retired from the auc- tion. West made only four-odd. losing a diamond and two hearts. A far more. desirable contract was reached by Wests who paid the proper homage to their distri- button. 3-4 O ' lint South West North 1 j 1 Q 2 Q Polo 2 N r Pass a A Pass 3 N T Pass 4 Q Pass 5 Q Pass 6 Q (final bid) Even where Sou'n did not over- nton W. Burgess) Hootyks big blood wings moved without haste and without sound if by magic. He seemed to sud- denly melt into the darkness back oi him. He had ‘been sitting at the edge of the moonlight. Peter Rab- bit dived headiong into the same darkness and crept beneath some brush there. Jumper the Hare crouched close to the snow on which he was sitting. his long ears laid back along his shoulders. He did it in o. flush and then kept p fectly still.. He didn't so much as twitch s. whisker. He also seemed to have disappeared as if by magic. He hadn't really. He was right there where he Had been all the time. but had you happened along just then you probably would have walked right past without seeing him. for in his vlite coat, crouched so close to the snow. he looked to be u little heap of it. "Hoo-hou, i100, hoo-hool" Whitefoot the Wood Mouse was sure his fast-beating llttlrheart skipped a beat.‘ Peter Rabbit's heart seemed to him to stop for just a. moment‘. As for Jumper. his heart came right up in his throat. Anyway it felt so to him as a mo- ment later out into the moonlight flew l-Iooty the Great Horned Owl. called "great" because he ls the largest oi the Owl cousins. although in size ‘Jtere is little difference be- tween him and Whitey the Snowy Owl. who sometimes comes down from the Far North to spend the winter. Hooty’s big. broad wings moved without haste and without sound. His round, fierce, hungry yellow eyes searched the moonlit opening and buck into Jze shadowy darkness. “He's looking for me," thought Jumper. and shiverecl inside his white coat “He's looking for me," thought Peter. and shook. but not so that. the Making could be seen. “He's locking for rue." thought little Whltefoot, and both shivered and shook, and held his breath. ‘ It was true. All three were right. Hooiy was looking for any one he migl : catch. for It was his dinner time and he was hungry. But none of the three moved. so none was seen. and f-looty flew up in the top of a_te.ll Lreo from which to watch. He hooted again. “Hoo- hoo, Iroo, hon-hoot Whoo. hoo- hool" Then he leaned a little for- ward. the feathsred flaps over the bl openings of his wonderful ears 1 d a little that he might not miss the faintest sound made by some one startled into moving. But Jumper didn't move. Peter didn't move and Whitofoot didn't move. Tltere as no one else around there to move. so after a while Hootl/ flew away to hunt elsewhere. Sure that he no longer was near. Jumper sat up. Peter joined him in the moonlight. and little White- ioot cautiously peeped out from the darkness. "I guess he has zone awar for tonight. I don't like lust fellow." said Peter. "Who does?" squeaked the little Mouse. "So now we can look again for that singer," persisted Peter. "Maybe Hooiy caught him. We haven't heard him singing since that Owl came around," said Jumper. Cubs onuilon Alta.‘ and D. Goose. Rnyal m“ Wm‘ it heart. the same result “Ma b . _ - ' 1d b b . y e. but it wont do any asxarlrlialrlicsea Codeii 001115. 331"" :31“ o: 5281:5195 by W95" PWP" harm to look-again." replied Peter. Ll'L ABNER go. AL CAPP VAN l-UMPI! RE REASON WAIJ! wAL! WALJ! ourtmfbtl m‘ v0’- l nus surname-warmer.’ ZOCIMN’ UP IN NSTIMRTI I W008i IF HE'S GONE ‘Tl-I LlTTI-ll‘ FHE ' FUADDI-l‘ N, CH.‘ kl ')T'I'ETOWN Tries or m: xom. MOUNTED 1oz PALA PAGE _Iv.l'lom Fisher 7U 4'7” "Vfilf/MWTPSI/Dll/ 60/46 C4050‘ 71/5 YMME IDAMK/A/GA lrflffi/BLI‘ Iii/STAKE.’ v . GRIMES RUSNED u ‘IHE CROUCHING SEE CNAMR... HE D TRE56EI7...NE'5 TRIED A HARD ' COVERING UR. RIGHT...“ HE BROUGIH GRAIED THE TOP HIS GUARD OF JOE'S HEAD. DOWN ‘IO PALOOKA} I PROTECT HIS CROUCHING. ~ BODY AND SENDS A RIGHT AND LEFT TO GIZIMES ’ .5TOMACN... ‘ P \ i DOTTY DRIPPLE become A MEMBER “srrrags CLUB" F0? TWO DOLLAR$I JJST A IMJJENT- M? JIGG5- l-LM flt/HKTS "ll-E TTEI?’ NOT AT ALL" I5 YOUI? l HAVE A VALET SICK? LITTLE "TULKZH KEEP KEEP SMILING SMILING’ I I ‘ By Edwin! WELL. BEN. TI-I’ Fl GOT TO WE'VE DST THING ADVERTISE. TOO-- our rr-rr; MONEY? m-rser BUY NEVHAND WELL NOV/r DON'T \OU WORRY ABOUT MONEY! JUST YOU LEAVE IT TO HORACE Z- EUSBY TO FIGURE rum" our u TbnGuovpInnLouAh-Savkltfa. - THEY'RE BIZZY" BUT WE'LL WAIT ON YOU" lid/MPH! IF YOU CAN YUU REALLY, DON'T MEAN TO SAY KISSlNa VVELL, NOW, MR. MACDOUGALIWMAYBE HAS DOUBLED MR. MACDOUGALLS EFFICIENCY sue ooeswf mow I F IT WOULD INCREASE MY EFFICIENCY IF-