'nI6':.vcv; "z?-I'R'IJq-Om 2,9... . , .. AD ' '11 PAGE TEN . A L P. u. ANNUAL MEETING FRIDAY, MAY 8 AT 7:30 P. M. IMPORTANT BUSINESS All intending to join requested to attend. L. W'. HUGHES. 4: Recording-Secretary. NOTICE ANNUAL MEETING Central Farmers Co-op. Association (Co-op Super Market) This meeting to be held in the. P. W. C. AUDITORIUVI. WEDNESDAY NIGHT, MAY 9th AT 8 RM. SHARP mviit are urged to attend this meeting. GUY RODD. President. All ll10llli)t'l'S and friends interested in Co-op Mme- THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN . I J In Thornton i REDTAIL is BEMINDED i j'1”he seeming little things we see iAt. times the biggest prove to be. I M Farmer Brown's boy. ' . - 1 'l'lizil sounds queer aiid.coiil.ria- dictory. but it is true. Over and over, all through life, you'll find it true. What Farmer Brown's "boy means is that things thaw ' don't seem the least bit important, perhaps not even worth noticiiiir in time niay have tremendous re- isults. yIEPl-W Jack Squirrel hides Ian acririi. biiries it in the ground. pthen forgets it. From that little, iil'0lVn BCOFH ETOWS A gI'Ci1t oak ptrec, the acorns from which year tnitcr year feed many Squirrels. Little deeds. thoughtless llitlc deeds. are often like that buried and forgotten little acorn. i Redtail the Hawk and Mrs rt;-ti-5 tail were back at their old nest in THE (ZONNISCTING LINK BE'IWVEh'N the return of the (lliiiries A. Dunning. (Standard Time) .. 'l n.nI.. ll a.iii.. .1 run. . fl n.nI.. I p.m.. 3 run. l.e.1rr- Wuurl lslnnils -. LPIIIP (iariliuu NORTHUMBERLAND FERRIES LTD. Head Office: CHARLOTTETOVVN, P. E. 1. For Yziriiciiliirs Phone '13, Chnrlottetowii. 'n tall tree in the Green Forest. i wood lslans s ariliouerry iserie l as bare as the sticks of which tliei PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND AND NOVA SCOTIA Thr I'lllll'P Nin-it will nor on the following schedule iuitii D'AiiLY CROSSWORD ACROSS 2. Metallic. 19. Stony 1. Complaccnt 3. Shnsliniiran meteorites llllldld GIIILIEI 5. Pierce with Indian 21. Drop a sword 4. Georgia 23. An order 9. Greek letter labbr.) or decree 10. Telegraphed 5. ll'capnn 24. Core 12. Cost 6 Vi mry '75 Trying 13. A rlinrher 7 Ciicft experience rcoiloq l 8. Bug Unit of BEBE 14. Man: name 9. Clan illumination mama 5393 15. Long-eared 11. Boring tool (CGS) rodent 13 Four- 27 Ared.fleshy V9'MrdI.v'- Answer 16. Music note wheeled fruit 17'. A wharf voliicin 28. Small drink: 55. Chinese post 15 Bonk (slung) dynasty 19. Entire clasp lit Classifies R6. The sun amount IS I.!l'l'i('l1ilhv 32 To study JR. Pennsylvaiuu 20 Enter fruit hard lslsngt (abbn) mlillilT)' lEl"s'lFP voliintarily 21. Touch 22. Misrthicvoua person 23. Distant 24 26. 211. S0. 31. notice 32. Kind of large tire patch . Measure n! B on capacity I Wurttcm- berg) B4. Recourse 36. Male deer 37. Jecr at 38. Bards 39. FaISCilO04ls (0. Too DOWN 1. Plain near Palestine DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it: A X Y D L B A A X R lsLONGFELLOW Oiic icttrr 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- tropiiit-s, the length and formation of the words turn all hints. Ercii day the code letters are different. A Cryptognm Quotation SKHS IAHXA VKWXK YE.VirIEV'M II-IWZYTN O'1'SpR VANN IAUYEULAO-.. M E 'l' S K A R. Yesterday's Cryptoquntei WHEN LOVE OWES T0 NATURE That iicst looked from the (.;l'll'. ' , to be nothing more than a grcaii mass of sticks in the top of a tree, oot.1t:rcrnroi;o:ic-0c- -;w-rrr-:on:: our contract Bridge E By Josephine Culbertson u.j.L'.-,.;r ,-'.-Qt; 't."ULlQl.'QV;ltJ'.".'C'CIk 'HI'(l KINDS OF REASONING The follow-inpz deal. from A teiim-of-four contest, pointed up the difference between superficial nnd thorough reasoning, as ap- plied to the bidding. North denier. Both sides vul- rcrnble. QK93 ones 9.4.34 41:11: goo , Q1081 9.1108 N 52 42 W E OAKQ3 .7532 5 69.19 gm 4.10 Q?J4 oinoo l gaeuse This -was the auction at the out table: North East south West. Pass IA, 2; Fun 2N'l' Full 3N'l' Pun Pass Pass East laid down the heart. kinL'.1 and when West showed his en- thusiasm by sigiialliiig with tho Jack, East naturally continued to lend hearts. The outcome was.' down one. i Discussing the--hand. South said: ' "Gee--iny two club nvercall uni ronservullvo. so when you tNn:'thi bid two notruinp. l hild every, reason to think we'd be safe at three notrump." The South player at the other table did not share this view. His bidding had been quite different at the critical stages i North But South Walt Pius 1 Q 2 g Pass 2 NT Flu 3 Q (3) Pan 4 4 Pan 5 h (min bid) Hearing North's two notruinp bid, this South, for from "rc1:i):- iiig". did some thinking. If Nnrlii had a spade stopper (this South reasoned). along with the other nuiterial he needed for ii bid over two riubs. there was good reason in fear a notrump contract, or- rause if East was that weak in spades. he must have considerable strength elsewhere-and wherewas that most likely to be? surely. in hciirts.South's singleton. sosoiitn Look the precaution of cue-bidding spades. thus implying in one breath that he had 3 very good hand and that he had some reason to dis- like notrump. North, while noth- my; in hearts, now had a clear course. South easily made five Cluil. even though West opened a heart instead of iv. spade. by strippiiig F I W. Burgess) Redtail ilir Hank and Mrs. Red- tail were back at their tall tree in the Green Forest. nest was made. To be sure there were Snltlll closely wrapped brow:i leaf buds on every twig of that tree. but they had not yet begun to swell and there was no hint of greenness anywiiere. They had been back from the Sunny South several days and each day Mrs. Redtail had spent much time looking the old nest over. This was the fifth year they had returned to it. Each year in the past Mrs. Redtail had spent a few days in the neighborhood. now and then visiting it. stand- ing on the edge of it. pulling i1 decayed stick out here, mid aimtli- or out there, tossing them away all the time pretending to be making up her mind whether or not. to use that nest again. Always in the and she had de- cided that there could be no home like the old home. Then they had become busy and fixed up the old nest, adding to it. building it big- ger. not much bigger but enough so that now it was perhaps twice as big as it had been that first year. ' Now it was just the beginning of daylight. They had spent the night perched in a neighboring tree. Like most other folk tliny are early risers. The Black Shad- uws wrre liiirrgiiie out or 'he Green Forest. back to the Purple Hills. Redtaii was thinking "1 hreakfnst. So was Mrs. Redtnil They were trying to decide where to go hunting this iiioriiinp. "Probably Roddy Fox hunted all night on the Green Meadows.” said Retail. "And whr-re he didn't. Jiminy Skunk did." snivl Mrs. Redinil. "And we mny he sure that Hooty the Owl caueht. his slnre of Mice iii the night. It is a wou- dcr to me that there is a Mouse left. There should be some your-ll Rabbits soon. but I suppose it is too early in the season to find any ct." said Redtail. :1 have a notion in go over in the Smiling Pool. A Fro: 0? W0 p;,"br'c;.kmst would suit me film to J; (coiitinut-rl on page .157 V4 BINGO lloly lleileamar ltall TONIGHT 8.30 The prison are the name II up... pnnllln. at other Blnxoo In the ct!!- . NOTICE Monthly meeting of Dark- dale Men's Association will be held in PARKDALE HALL. VVEDNESDAY, MAY 9th h -t. thi i din: three rounds u Ins CHARMS. HOW VAIN ARE THE LESSONS or AR'l'!- nf”;.;,,,,,,,;;, E2... mmwn ,,,,1,.d 3 0 CLOCK ”""'s i to return a spade. T Ll'L ABNER By Al Papa 'K'EMBLlN'OLE H&I."'ITs L3' WE KIREEU BUT'AH ALREIDI THIT WAS FO'5ELLIN' mount o' 1'll'OGlAOOI!.'-1Ei.L us WHAR'S musm THIS Docrre iwsv, on AI-l'LL KNOCK won: suntsetv can cm-r.'.' -rss:m ocwu voiur. um: suoo r '1 -WRNKLED oLz Hm! as aw x Tl-ll1OAT.'.' I HAVE DEODED... 1 we oizexr NEWS FOR mu. ou, JEFF, T1-tiff! You Msv wvrre ..'ERnI...1 AMTUE 555353 or : WONDEQFUU 2 AN mvrnmon To YOU i-non NOBODY 'THE ones? sw"uiM5Ei.s! END! iswr was nice. Money: z'M GLAD. mm I ma sum-is unve mo-so wowr LET JEREI Jenni won-rue west: E A WALLFLOWERI F THE ROYAL . . . osvxainszzizi;-A,-::xwc'1's2ir Jff raeuuug ME mmrr mar 574.255! paemps as boeszwrcwaass m Mswtiei MAY 8. 1951 .. -1... ” .97.? Will our Amnus 5 gogmgz A057 grrowxeyre M-. H CIR- 4 '-mn-A- -.,-um:--... V q- :1; anti: awe 140- v-.-..... t. By Carl Anderson DO'I'I'Y DIPPLE WELL. Lois:-V1534? look? ILL GET HORACE TO YOU AND I GO TO A i A WASH -rue oisi-iss. so we cm so V SIX HAS TO 60 BACK TO WHAT TO DO WITH HORACE, WOULD vou MIND ' WASHING Mme, -roo at WDU'VE COME AT C'M' RIGHT IN MISS Jami oNtII'is4 His ; EXPECTiN' MR8." Ht UIOPE You WON'l14 A NOTICE 1'1-ills HOUSE- Sl-lE'S Tl-1' MOST EXASPER HE OD M CAPS TEACHER-r N O I WGHT AS WELL DO Tl-V WORK MYSELF--A-71?? OH I CAN'T STAY our A MINUTE--! By George McManus i'D LPKE 10555 NM JUST oucs MoI2e- nu. NEVED rrorserir wt-iAT us DID m 13NiT MAl-JANA!-IANII on (Dung; Movv IT'S Iw TUQN To DO SOMETH - . um, um. -..i... 4.. x-HI .1... ....-4 J TTLLY THE TOILER f V. by Westover Nddifrd-iE7Jews , T DON'T1El.t.Ml L--soicomoaemwonsor e NON---AL'1l-lO&H A DFELLOW5 TTSALMOST ' . i it - in ...”n:'