Refreshments Admission sl.00 per person A weekly event throughout the Summer on Thursday orrimno GOLF c'Lun nllucr TONIGHT 9:30 to 12:30 Music by the Downiowners evenings beginning July 6th. Norton: The Annual Meeting of the Law Society of Prince Ed- ward Island, called for Monday, June 26th. has been uncalled, and will he held on a later date. A. H. PEAKE C. R. McQIlAlD President Secfelafy DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 45. Cutting 11. Ambassa- 1. Horse's tools do" loot 46. Method oi 14. Trees 6. Measures learning 13- F19SyhY"U"-5 of length DOWN 19. Play! 9, snake 1. Cavity boisterously ' (Ind.) 2. Comply Z1.liiakes over (0. Shake- 3. Gold 22. FIITSC letters 5 earian (HEFINFY) 0 3 Mm” , , Ta or 0' :3; mil "'3 A 12 Malt us ness . M: y beverage 5. Scope (N. Z.) Saturday a Answer 13 Rounded. 8. Grampus 21. Member of 36. Lure like inside 1. Face of the Senate 31.1-lautbq of a spoon timepiece 29. Rodents 38- Forbid 115p Tu,-km, 3-, Hanhnesa 32. Cries -i0. Present time mu, 9, Put of a C4. Malayan 44. Negative us. Children's loeomolm W" "Ply game '17. support 13. A game of chance 30. Radium (SYHL) gl. Hardships 4. Leave out 26. Foe 27. Hit 28. Small amount 29. Pays back 30. Close to I I1. Beautiful. web-footed birds Ila. Undressed calf hide 35. Greek letih lee. Cut men. as hair 39. sincere ill. Sleevelest t garment (Arab) .12. Sailing velul :3. Pungent vegetable DAILY CRYPIOQUOTE-Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXB is I. o N 0 F 5 L L o w One letter simply stands for mother. In this example A is used for the three Lis. X for the two 0's. etc. single letters. lipos- lrophies. the length and iormstlon oi the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are dtilerent. A cryptogranr Quotation M IMEYWT ALHY MDVOY MFR DVOFR BLYK EVH1-lVB,WLP'r M aUrww-- EBLFDOHFT. Satur-' 's Cryptoquote: WHO ARE A LITTLE WISE. THE BEST Fa. JLS ARE-HDONNE. HEEJEE EEEEE51 5:15; HEBIQ ii'.lElIi3 COMPLETE VISUAL REFRA(:Ti(IN and . sum. 5””, P9, um COWHIDE, per lh. HORSEHAIR, per lb. Gs F. BEER BOTTLES, cisrlnn Ahuva prim-s delivered our wim-holrae. Optometrists l p MAURICE BLOCK & 00. 53 (station 81. use Kent st. - Charlottetown IJ'I.. ABNER T OUR SALVAGE MARKET SCRAP CAR BATTERIES, ell. 51.25 88.00 ANALYSIS SCRAP CAST IRON. Per ton 3161.00 i -.... be we 3.50 & ll'NWASHED WOOL. per Ih. Iiir THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN .4& THE SMART ONE Happy living is an art; Those possessing it are smart. -Blacky the Crow. Everybody knows that Blacky the Crow is smart. If he were not smart. ii he -were the least bit stupid. he never could have liv- ed in the Green Forest as long as he has. Green Forest and Green Meadow folk who are not smart, seldom live long. So. when you see one 0! them around for a long time, you may be sure that that one is one of the smartest of its kind. Long. long ago. Blacky learned to 1159 his eyes. He learned never to miss little things. You see. it takes a lot 0! food for a bird as bib as Blacky, and he must find that food every day. "It is a bite here and 3 bits there that fills a stomach. Who overlooks little things is likely to go hungry." says Blacky. So it is that as Blacky flies over ihe Green Forest and the Green Meadows. those bright eyes of his miss very little down below. when he sees something unfamiliar. or something familiar that is out or place, he doesn't pass on until he has learned all he can about t. It isn't just curiousity, although he has plenty of that. He is too I- (tt:h?'IIj4f.;'K7'XfIFif'ar.lW:Ci(:.4Wr .- - .- - ,.. & contract Bridge g '5 6. Q 3 By Josephine Culbertson OQQDQDQQQQQDQDQQQDOQQQ3 STRONG COMPETITION Good defensive bidding. coupled with even better clefensiwa play, brought a just reward to East- West in the following deai' last dealer. Both sides vulnerable. North-South 80 on score. Q9542 963 592 QAIO743 9.11033 4K6 ggu N on? 76 J1o85 anon WSE .43 axes QAQ7 OKJIODBZ OAQ QJ5 As so often the case, Nortu. Souths part-score spurred the bid- ding. all around the table. The auction was; as-203 East South West North Pass 1 9 Pass Pass 2 Q 2 Q 3 0 Pass Pass 3 9 Pass Pass A diamond lead would have given South in laydown. but West was not accommodating in thnt respect! He realized that under the circumstances East might have had to bid a suit lacking the top cards-a possibility always taken into account by experts when partner's bid was iorced hy condi- tions-and so West opened the spade jack. ior the greater saiety it promised. (Actually. a heart lend would have been best of all, but West could scarcely be expected to know that! On the spade opening. East played low, and South won with the queen. The heart king was then laid down; East won and shiited to his top diamond. South played the queen; West won and returned the spade three. south took East's king and led the heart jack West won with the queen- and now came the critical point anything except the card he did lcad. declarcr either would have established a spade trick in dum- my or would have made two club: -but West laid down the slum quenn! That was a little more than South coulrl Cope with! It -wmilvi do no good to hold up the club are cinre west would certainly lend a second round: and when the cluh are was played. South found himself with one loser too many. lly Thornton W. Burgess) ,at the water's edge. You see. he or the play! if West had returned V . Then he lighted on a tree where he could see that clam. -.m smart to let curiousity, or his in- terest, get him into trouble it he can help it. He doesn't ily head- long into trouble. the way some boys and girls rush into trouble. He looks things over careiully be- forehand. This day Blacky was flying over a. part oi the Green Forest which he had seldom visited. Below him he could see a, brook, a small brook winding among the trees. It wasn't Laughing Brook. but one some distance from that. As he flew. thcse sharp eyes oi his were watching the banks on both sides oi that little hrook. You see. long ago he had learned that often something he can eat can be iounrl isn't a fussy person. No, sir, Blacky the Crow isn't iussy ”It doesn't pay to be too fussy," declares Blacky. ”Fussiness and an empty stomach go together." Now. directly below Mm was I small pool and on the shore a lit- tic way from the edge of the wa- ter was a iamlllar object. It was familiar, but it wasn't where it should have been. Right sway, Blacky was- curious. What he saw was 3 Mussel or a Fresh-water Clam. Blacky circled. looking down and watching it. Then he lighted nn a tree where he could see that Clam. Now Blacky knows all about Fresh-water Clams and how good they are to eat. Many times he has em-iously watched Jerry Muskrat bring up Clams from the bottom or Laughing Brook or the Smiling Pool. oprn the hard shells. and feast on the contents. But a Clam had no business to be out on the bank. Blacky could see that the sticks and leaves had been very much scattered all about where that Clam lay, What had happen- ed there? He -wished he knew. Had he been just a little ear- lier. he would have seen a young Kimzrishr-r caught by that Clam. He had seen it lying partly open and had poked his bill in to get the Clam The shell had closed on the tip of his bill and held him last. He had ilapped and flopped and flopped and flapped on the shore until at long last he had gotten free, a sadder and wiser young Kingfisher. That is how that clam happened to be on the shore instead oi in the water. Blncky cocked his head on one side as he studied that Clam and the surroundings with his bright eyes. He cocked his head on the other side and did the same thing. It didn't matter which side his head wns cocked, that Clam ins: didn't belong out on the shore. Why was it there? Was it a trim oi some kind? I-ieewas sorely tempted to fly down and pick up that Clam. but he didn't. He was too smart for that. He just waited and watched. For common ordinary sore. uurrsp srA'r:s.'.' '1 I'D llfltll as msiomr vo'A-r rwnrxr cow p sear IN I-vsw mam .x l ” " cons mo-av IN. V ha. I'M ! I' 5 10 HI o . - -T vau Adam. - I Ni'LL NGIH7-NIPI VENS5-iUNmAN'AH LL THROW 114' DKWATCH : an . 4 hp 5' x ch .-.-.-:-.. l-. KING OF THE ROYAL . '7T'v?- ,. 7r7E6G A ,:;..-...s...( zzavsnllv var uollab now on arms: meow II 77vlAT5PEC7ACULAE H SEIVS4 SLIPPED . .. HENRY ...,,,. .,....,... IN ir.;l .......i rrrev AND "CAP" STUBS N'T so PRETTY -Pi59E'LL was THE waoome ENTIQELY! l I-"tut lsesunlu Q) a I L Meczcvz we CAN'T LEAVE -( MIZZIE comes To LOOK A TH' CHILDREN! WA W cm as KEEDIN HER"? oi Cari Knderson BBINGlN(LqP sigma ISN'T IT WONDERFIJLTO THINK THAT MY GPAHDPARENTS LIVED ON THIS FARM ? HERE'S AH OLD BOOTJACK OF GRANDDADSPFHEQE MUGT BE MANY d.D H RELIC6 BURIED i-iEQE.. TILLIE HIE TOILEB OH. MPGGIE ;QOME HEQEII I Ti-(I I'VE UNCOVEQED EJOME OLD 2ELlC5 THAT YE? GQAHDDAD TREAGUEED 1' 1&9-o-.' B"; I end. she! oorrws ii A BETTER COOK! 1:5-rr ill YES, I Hazel) YOU Because. DID I HEAR YOU SAY WHAT I THOUGHT I THESE TWO LOOK HOMELIEQ ex coNTRAs1'