+OO-O-OO-O-OO++OOO+OOGOQJ 6. F. lilltcheson & Son OPTOMETRlSTS “épeciellsis in the fit- ting of glasses for the correction of ocular de- fects.” 53 Grafton Street a acme NORTH RUSTICO WEDNESDAY, iulfv 2m Bingo, Dancing, ere. Meals served in the After- noon and Evening. I NOTICE l The Ioard of Examiners have been informed that | number of bird houses or lawn ornaments submitted as part of the llrince of Wales College Entrance Examina- tions were the property of residen‘ of Charlottetown, Anyone who has recentlyiliad such ornaments removed lrcm his property should contact Mr. Ralph MacLean at telephone I845, otter Thursday noon. l 0%0 fix? w. TILLIE THE TOILEI Public _, lllotico The Board of Examiners of the Prince Edward Island rhernrnceutlaal Association will meet at Queen Square School in Charlottetown on July 25th and 29th for the purpose of ex- amining candidates offering for registration as Pharmacists. Persona wh credentials have been approved will present them. selves at 10: AM. on that date. ~ I. H. JENKINS. Seoretary-Ruiltrar. Charlottetown, P.I_.I., July 14, 194i. ‘DAI LY‘ are SSW/folio l Atmtlll 83. 1n pinochle, 16. Anything l1. At a. declare for that whirls distance score 19. Jackdaw. '6. Mountains Ii. Movable 21. Male cet of Europe barrier 24. Head "9. A rail DOWN , covering 10. Ring, as ‘ 1. Surprise 26. Not many a bell 2. Conjunction 29. Norse god 1i. A leather 8. Sandarae 3i. Pilot mum B thong tree 32. Appears BEBE NEE I lslsl §i:.'3:.'.°.‘;;'° '14. Toward e. Jump 36. Public _ 40. Cut into cubes 15. Equip ‘f. Brightly- notice as. Extent of ,17.Malsyg hucd bird 8‘! Cigarette canvas boat 8. Boat (slang) 45. Fuse lhypheih 18. Flightless s’ 11. Platform. 88. Moliamme- 48. Little child bird 13. Perched danism '50. Bustle 20. Excavate :12. Make choice 23. Insect 25. Present \27. Editor I i abbrl .25. Close to 30. Exist. 31. Roman ,pound 33. Fresh-water tortoise ' 35. Flutter, ‘.37. Mcnd .39. Fabulouelrd 41. Perish 42. Vipers (4. lndehleceflt fruit 46. Part of "to be" 47. Look steadfastly Ill lvatercrefl 1. Largest continent 52. Root of the taro DAlL!t}|tY_P’1‘0QUOTE—llere's howtoworkltz. . AXYDLBAAXR ILONGFELLOW One letter simply stands for another. In this example All us‘! lfor the three L's, X for the two 0's. etc. Single letters. apes-l Vtrophes. the length and formation of the words are all hints. y Each 1 t, day the codeletters are different. A Cry,‘ Quotation HJL. DSJZRS HXRSD CXNN OYM. NSYEE LXRSD CXNN ALJHR {HO 0X16 HJth-NAXHUJZLHK. Jeeterdere Cryptoquoter HhRKhl-IARK AWl-llLl.‘ T0 vm- TUI’! QOUNSIILS CURRENTl-SYLVESTER. Dleirlputeil by King Features Syndicate. 1a.. we (8 m: DIDN'T " coins sacs Youth is headstrong, unafraid; Scorns the price that. must be paid. —-Old Mr. Toad._ Old Mr. Toad has lived for many Years. how many he doesn't know himself. He is likely to live many more years. "The longer one had lived the longer one is likely to live." says Old Mr. Toad. and explains this by pointing out that the older one gmws, the more one knows, and so is continually better airle to‘ look out for himself and avoid danger. It was. as a certain small Toad only a year out of the Smiling PO01: had mid, a perfect Toad day. It was dull, cloudy. damp nnd threatening to be damper. Every Toad knows that that means per~ fect weather to be aboard. Just outslle the Toad (b-opeaahfle Horne in a corner of Fanner Brown's Garden sat two Toadg One was a little fellow, a yearling it b91113 just a year since he had 1°“ the 53min; Pool and somehow ""46 his Way to Farr-her Brown's garden. The other was beginning h“ third year our in the Great World. He was no longer little but neither was he yet big, nl-i though he felt big both in size and in knowledge of the Great, wonky That feeling was especially strong . one spade on the first round is whenever he was with those Ttniulliiroetnglwshyinlgser hhvilrihhime“ so - - inner-i folks. n be "iieme on. Wllnlster. We better b! 0X1 0i" WHY if we are to get mir share of gbod eating this fine him“!!! dlyf’ mid Mr. In-beirween "I'm not. going, Anyrwgy, pm not 20in: now." replied the littlest Toad. "Why not‘! Don't tell me you are albrald! All but us have al. 2,35’! started." said the bigger "Old Mr. Toad hasn't. He is siavltnis hcme. told me 1 better e same in ." re ll littlest Toad. g p ed the "Why?" darn-ended t-he other. Just. then Blacky the Crow be- gan to cew. He was on a post of i119 28rd"! fence. They couldn't see him but they could hear him. He sounded much nearer than he was. "He is dangerous." said the littlest Toad. ' "Who told you that?" demanded ilhe other. "Old Mr. Toad went back home when he hoard that fellow so near. He didn't think it safe to go hunt- ing." explained the yearling. “Pooh! ‘Ilsat old ‘fraidy! Have you ever seen Blacky the Crow in this garden? Do you know any y Thornton W. Burgess) H, m; on g, post oi’ the garden fence Toad he ov r has caught or OVER tried toykatcho." yetorted Master In-bet-ween. The littlest Toad grinned. “No" Said he. "but I know some Toads he hasn't caught and I know 0n? he isn't going to catch. That's me.’ "Silly!" retortod the other "You've never seen a Toad that bird had callaht." "And I'm not likely to." inter- rupted the littlest one. The Othel- went on just as if there had been no interruption. "You never have seen him try t0 climb B Toad. You don't know that. he even hunts than. You've only heard that he eats Toads. You can hear almost anything these days. I've been around since I left the Smiling Pool and no Crow ever has tried to catch me. I'm not afraid of that noisy fellow over there. ll! he can catch me he is smarter than I tihink he is. It isn't often we can hunt in comfort in the daytime. Come on! Delft be foolish." But the littlest Toad had the beginning of wisdom in his small head. If the biggest and oldest and wisest of all the Toads was afraid to go out. with Blacky the Crow around then lie was afraid, too. "You'll be sorry when I ccnne hack and tell you of all the good things I have.had to eat. I'm not afraid. That Crow isn't. smart enough to get me if he tries, and 1 don't believe he'll try." boasted the other and off he went, hop, hop, hipperty-hop. That was the last the littlest Toad ever saw of Moster In-be- tween. He didn't. come back when the other Toads did and reported the fright that Blacky the Crow had given some of them. They knew nc-w, all o! them that Crows do eat Toads. The next story: "Old Mr. Toad Makes Long Hops." Con tract Bridge g j By Josephine Cralberleon 5 ‘<32? xaxxaz- A SIGNIFICANT PASS ‘There was no "guaranteed" way of playing the slam contract in- today's deal, but declarer could have drawn a fairly sound infer- ence from the bidding. North dealer. d‘. ___ ., flgirer aide vulnerabiei , ‘ 44g; Holding the a-x of diamonds, , , Q7543 which he had shown, he almost , g Q 1 certainly would have overcalled one __ _ ‘AQJ 1o f club with one diamond if he had Q4 T held the club king on the side. QQIvQ N :J 8 ll Thus, South should have finessed Qé 10 9 6 W E o; K 8 4 clulg, the other way, through We . Q K 7 6 4 s Q 9 6 3 2 --_-i-- '““ 4 K J 1° 9 9.6 3.1 coupon _ (cm-The King 3 _VAKQ has entrusted the writing oi the i '0 5 official biography and history of .1} ‘ the reign of George V to Hamid 7M bkidmg. Nlcolson, 62. authgarilh Cfétéfic and North East South West for!!!“ governm- o e ‘ 1 j, Pass I Q Pass 2 4 Pass 4N1‘ Pass LONDON -— fCPl — ~01 WW s Q Pass 6Q ' Pa." 1.000 chlldrend in Bgitain. d one is Pass Pass born deaf an dum an one ill every six has some hcarin defect. ‘South's restraint in bidding only worthy o: notice Ho did not have the honor-trick values for a two- spade takeout, especialLv since he had ‘only one ace, and it would be ._ highly injurious to slam investi- gation if he lumped to three or four spades. Thus, the straight one- over-orle was best, to discover North's voluntary response. After North raised, of course, South had so many potential tricks that'he could fall back on the Blackwood convention to determine whether a small slam or a grand slam should be reached. West opened the diamond jack. and East. lost no time in over- taking with the king in an enthus- iastic effort to cash the ace as well. Declarer rllilied the second. trick, drew the trumps in one lead, then, after pondering for a long time about the proper method of establishing a second club trick for the discard of a heart, he led to the club ace and returned the queen through East, hoping to coax a carver. when East failed to produce the king (for an excellent reasoni), declare: ruffed, then went back to dummy with a trump tOeI lead the club jack. This time he had no choice but to depend on the club king's lying in the Blast hand, so when East again played low, South discarded a heart. West won and that was that. South should halve considered East's failure to bid over one clubl says the National Institute for the Deal’, ggwggf . 1210mm... 2| tablets . . . . Do PIICIS loo amen . . . he HéEL-QTIETOWN rAGE NINE - - r: ' ___ --I JOE PALOOKA , ~ g, H", 53M, -' n i— . ‘ usswhelta». vuv was weususlsn rots l, NOWAMIGONAGEP nowlcwrmceioroeev mmvzasrukenwuourz. l , con T'KNOW rm senw souuwncows eomw’ vs: so uusemsusml "mo" l KNOBBY mcsamavas mil/menu. sum cor ALL DAMBS W45 SELFBH - . IF ICALLED warren rneces .' l wmcueu. use Run i rr was cotvw. \ ' I 5 . \ \ *3 . . f - , v r i " W f 4 ' . - ' si l .. r \ .__/ SlT U’, PEFPER" I HAVE MADE AN APPOINTMENT FOE I HOPE X NAME LUCK —T “OPE $.14) HAD-ALL RlGHT- AN‘ TOOK fT- THERE'S NO DOUBT ILL NAFTA DC A LOT OF WHLKN“ HE DiDN‘T EVEN LEAVE ME _= A DIME F} CARFARE!!! ~\ WALKING - - FIFTY DOLlJQS-PLEASE '- YOU LOO S ‘x x A "RED ‘Sinfrlfitifil. EFEN mam ALL pg}, DAY! u STAY HOME -.<., MERCY! ‘Fl-Imus ETLIEL AGAIN! CAN'T SHE EVER‘ i’? 5L was a sew us Slfisfiw“ LAWN NE D5 CAN'T KEEP nus "Tl-VGQASS ls FOOT , ulsu- ' AN EVEQ s OPEN "AN FIND NOU! NOW I WANT YOU ETHEL. NEVER KNOWS TO 6o 1'0 BED EARLY. ' WHEN "r0 GO HOME- Ic TOMORROW- .. . V/ELL THIS IS APQETTJl-UJITD BE . Cor/line l-DMEMQJHG lADY- ' y/uAT IS 801R EXCUSE ? J Y UZIVING l-DME Brzuz sore FLAT- us. FIXED mwomzu WEGOTUANUFHEQ- E r '- aurwolowravlsmem wlsmwassunz Aeglcoow BTHiNK! MNQAGEBlb%T‘IEQTT-IN~ATLWT '7 INSPECTOR RJRSYTNE, Tl-llS ls RIP KIRBY... I HAVE SOME IMPORTANT INFORMATION m ‘ll-IE arm BAN-MISTER DISAPPEARMCE. HOTEL THE SECONDTiME IN i HER Brlllllllfi SUIT.’ v/wca-s MM ~v|9 wrzae-xr. _ -_'1 an: o A»; $\-4>W-' ~59 “yd. -. e, ~ ‘ff x-n. um‘. *5‘ légrlered u rm. om 76.! By illltforrl MaoBrlde W1C“ MIGHT HAVE COVERED AWNING. MR. KIRBY, I BELIEVE 3Q! IRE RXGlU-"Nd, WERE MMES S€RGEANT BURKEWIE MAY NEWS hi’ Quiddes By Ken Reynolds / ’ /. 2/9/04, (//// I, / 4" l) fiancee-am "We mutt be oven-working the new girl we got with a Guarfi ion Want Ari-she's typed this letter ea the adding rnachine!_ I By Alex Raymond " ~ - -_-:-.<~.~i:iv=:r-.-1':" ~ _ o.__-L_'__L__I,._ 7.... ..