PAGE TEN REGULAR WEEKLY AGOLF CLUB DANCE T ON I-G H T Admission 75: each Dance To The Downtowners MORE MOTOR. VEHICLES OTTAWA. Aug. 10- iCPi-Faci- ory shipments of Canadian-made motor vehicles. which have climbed at a rapid rate in recent took another aha-rp jump in June to months, a total of 41.383. the Bureau of Statistics reported today. This was the second highest monthly figure on record and compared with 35.- 31 units in May. 30,090 in June last year and the record monthly total of H.901 units in April, 1929. M E E T I N G DF POTATO DEALERS A meeting of Potato Dealers for the purpose of nominating a panel of three persons, one of which to be eligible to become a member of a proposed Board for the marketing of potatoes under the ”Agriculture Products Marketing Act", will be August 18th at 10 am. in the agricultural room, Vo- cational School, Charlottetown. Kelowna. B. C.. will be present. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND MARKETING BOARD CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I. held on Friday, I... R. Stephens of NOTICE In order to enable our employees to attend the Exhibition our Office and Plant will close at 11 am. THURSDAY, AUGUST 17th LIVESTOCK WILL BE ACCEPTED AS USUAL Cl-IARLOTTETOWN l..l'l. ABNEB WELCOME TO THE FAIR Be Sure and See Exhibit of FARMALL A. C. H. Our and MD (DIESEL) TRACTORS also on display The latest models or HILLMAN 8: VANGUARD AUTOMOBILES Exhibit located next to Horseshow Ring Stand W.R. JENKINS Your Great George Street Wood Islands-caribou Ferry Service The Connecting Link Between PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND 3 NOVA SCOTIA Schedule for June 24 to September '24: "Prince Nova"-Leave Wood Islands "Prince Nova"-Leave Caribou ......... .. "Charles A. Dunning”-Leave Caribou ....- "Oharlea A. Dunning"-Lv. Wood Islands 9 a.m. For Dally Information. Listen to CFCY at 1:55 A.M. EACH WEEK DAY - STANDARD TIME IDIITIIIIMDEIILAIID FEIIIIIES LIMITED mun OFFICE: Catch An Early selling and Avoid Disappointment International Dealer 1la.m. I 1 pm. 11 am. 1 p.m. 5 pan. .- 1 a.m. .. 9 km. '1 am. Charlottetown. P. E. l. i In every day are lmaons tausht. Each one with needed knowledge fraught. -Old Motheir Nature. The little people of the Green Forest and the Green Meadows. the Old Pasture, and H10 5mm!!! Pool. Laughing Brook and the old Orchard. have a great deal to learn in a very short time. Boys and girls have all the years of growing up in -which to learn how to live when they are fully grown. The little folk in feathers and fur in-ow up so fast, in so short a time. that they must learn equally fast and they can't afford to forget. Boys and girls forget over and over again with no real harm coming to them, but turret! and feathered folks seldom can forget even once and live. From the time little folks begin to run cr fly about they are always at school. it is the school of me. They learn by seeing and hearing and feeling. And those who live longest are those who learn fastest ounuoigoogcloooc-:-rt-2--:-n-:or..r . contract Bridge ily Josephine Culbertson .ommmom RUBBER BRIDGE VS. DUPLIC- ATE Most players who have had ex- perience at both rubber bridge and duplicate know that different bid- ding techniques are called for. only a few players, however. realise that the play is also subject to variations. Consider this deal from the two points of view. South dealer. " Both aides vulnerable. .315 5 4 3 1 10 s. A Q J 4 6 3 9 N W E S A K 9 8 A Q Q 8 AK 10 7 5 At either rubber bridge or match points, South should reach a four-spade contract with some such bidding as this: ”N'-'0 9-009 "-0- 910 0w?Nh C km on .4 39 009 South Welt: North East 1 A Pass 2 9 Pass 4 4 Pass Pan Pass ut's assume that West opens the heart Jack from the top of his three-card sequence-certainly. tho normal selection. It doesn't. mat- ter whether or not Eastplays the king; in any case. south wins and starts to take out trumps. How should South go about this trump-drawing? The answer de- pends entirely on whether south is playing rubber bridge or match- polnt duplicate! At rubber bridge. he sees that he need lose only two diamonds tricks. and therefore can well afford the loss of a trump trick. Thus. his proper play is to cash no more than one high trump. then to lead a low trump toward dummy's jack. If either defender has four trumps to the queen-ten. this safety play returns high divid- ends, ' it will hold that de- lender to one trick in the suit. Contrariwise, if declarer lays down the ace-king of trumps and gets the mentioned break. he will lose two trump tricks and his con- tract. At. match-poixits. however, the fact that a 3-2 break of the file missing trumps is probable. strong- ly depreciaies the vslue of the safety play, because now. the spade queen in irwo leads becomes of considerable importance. By using the safety play, South might get a bad match-point. score even though he was insuring the con- tract. and therefore many experts would deliberately give up safety and. in this case. lose the con- tractl -WEEL BE IKE TO chance that south may drop the i Ily Tiioratos W. luroeu) LITTLE BILLY IA! A Llsssoxllnd remember best. v Little ailiy Possum. out in the Great World au alone, had already learned that on the ground he was likely to meet enemies. All the irights he had had so far had hap- pened on the ground. Although he had spent much time in trees he never once had had a bad fright there. That was one reason he had chosen a hole high up in an old dead tree in which to sleep. It hadn't entered his small head that some enemy he might meet on the ground might be able to climb as readily as he could, or even better. So up in his new home in what had once been Drummer the wood- pockeria home, he not only feit very comfortable. but also very safe. while he was up in that tree, or in any tree. he felt no need of watching for possible enemies. He sometimes sat in his doorway. his head outside watching what was going on about him. He was do- ing this one day when Chattcrer the Red Squirrel appeared in a neighboring tree. It was the first time he had ever seen Chatterer. Now as you know. Chatterer the Red Squirrel is more at. home in a tree than he is on the ground. Little Billy just didn't know what to make of it as Chat- ter ran up and down the tnink of the tree, ran out on the limbs. and jumped from nnc to another. He himself could climh. but he was a slow climber and he certalniy couldn't jump like that follow in the red coat. He wasn't afraid oi Chatterer because he dldn't'seem big enough to be afraid of. He had yet to learn that danger is not always to be judged by size. Then right while he was watch- ing an astonishing thing happened. That is. it was astonishing to the little Possum because he had never seen anything of the kind before. A swift moving form shot past him. so fast that he didn't see what it was. It shot straight past Chatterer. If Chatter- er had moved fast before it was nothing to the way he moved now. He dodged around the trunk of the tree like a little red flash. There was a scream of disappoint- ment. and anger. Then Sharpshln the Hawk checked himself before hitting that tree. turned and flew up to the top of the dead tree in which Little Billy had his home. Little Billy dodged back out of sight. This was something new. He had seen feathered folks before of course. Most of them had been small. He hadn't. dreamed that any nf them could be dangerous. But unless his eyes had fooled him, and he knew they hadn't. that feathered person had tried to catch that lively red-coated stranger in the neighboring tree who now was scolding as fast as his tongue could go. You know Chatterer the Red Squirrel is one of the greatest scolders in all the Green Forest. Could it he that there was dang- or up off the ground as well as on it? Must. he watch for enemies in the air as well as on the ground? "Ah reckon Ah better." said Lit- tie Billy in himself after a. long time. ' He had another lesson without knowing it was a lesson. Never again would he feel sale just be- cause he was out. of reach of an enemy on the ground, Also he had learned that there could be danger from the air, He would never forget what. he had learned and for that he would live longer. P-A-PER nisccrvgen Papermaklng was invented in China during the l-inn dynasty. 206 B.C. to AD. 220. .. -4,-. - in 1 E s Tnaed. make. or animal . . the hen minimum is plenty IHI I II 0lICIu 80 soothes. heals and cleanses. Draws out the poison I "TNmtD'"S I I-JJi'LIME.l:II. 7117' EL VABASCO AIR mu , Do rws!-) . 74'-v"2. 5 --. . POLICE WI 1 HQ? 09 VIC I KING or run auras. uouuirsm auousr 17. 1950 H ms Imp: rl'ItExn1.osIoIv ' . M gffick Tm! ; items ggistgafy 5' . ” I all uses Grey jam-'-s-T-T gmr,-ir?FfsT”r' 22' Mauizgot wags-"44;v.4v54f5'rg'zp 'YAiJtN' 123...! N08 PAl:A'I':I1E.NSNt.IN M 'lM...IC'S TW INDIVIDJAL roksam muses A sa':e...Jssr unev seo... , -. ma. r.. rm... ms.-. w. 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