£00m ORGANIZE TRAP LINES CRANBERRY PORTAGE, Mah- ..- (CP) - Trap line inspector H. Wells flew to Norway House re- gently u; discuss plans for regis- AUGUST 23. 1949 REGULAR DANCE EAST ROYALTY RINK HALL TUESDAY, AUGUST 28rd InAidOIRInk Music by Eastern Rhythm Boys ,Dancing 9:80 - 12:80 Bus leaving i. r. at 9:15 and 1o=oo Admission 50c — Canteen - Free Check Room tered trapping lines for Indians’ -, ms GUARDIAN, CHARLOTTETOWN King of The Royal Mounted iBy Thornton W. Burgess) No dinner‘: yours until ‘its eaten; N" flsht is won ’til foe is beaten. —B1lly Burefoot. Little Kid Surefoot was staring and others. He said the Indians“ the biggest person he w" h“ plan. Vernon Making 6 Round Trips Dally flhodulo for the present:- “Princo NOVB"—LBBVB Wood islands .. “Prince Nova"-—Leavn Caribou ........ .. "Charles A. Dunninf-Leave Caribou .. “Charles A. Dunnlng"-Leave Wood islands 9 A.M. Ior daily information, listen to CFCY at 8 [My llorthumlierianii Ferries Limited \ PilllLTllY WANTED BUYING LIVE FOWL &. CHICKEN FOR ll. S. A. MARKET Contact Us For Prices I. J. McDOiIGALL. . EACH WEEK DAY-STANDARD TIME big stranger below as calmly as if Wood lslands-ilarihou Ferry Service The Connecting Link Between PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND b NOVA SCOTIA daily includin Sunday-STANDARD TIMI Schedule for June 28 to Sept. 25 inclusive:- .DAiL-Y caosswoizo _ ACROSS 2. Subtle l8. Bofl slowly fl. Pall handls emanation l9. River ti. Spar l. Frozen t 8o. Am.) r9. An ' svater 20. A disguise armistice. 4. Guided 22. Jewish l0. \Vide- 5. A twin month awake crystal 23. Jog l2. Ventilated 6. River (Gen) 25. Evening . ll3. Lucid 6. River before a ‘QLGreek letter (Ger-l holiday ild. Malt 1. Observe 26. Sea ducks ’ "" . beverage 8. Visit 21. A lasso \""""'|""" '"'"‘" till. Nickname foreign lands29. Glorifles for Vivian 9. Weights 30. Short, 36. Unadultcr-' I1. Behold (Orient) simple air 519d ll. Location ll. Banal 32. Bottoms 38. Owing I0. Encoun-A l5. One trained of shoes 39- Gift! tered - for physical 35. Fresh-water ' name l. Grab feats fish l0. Slope 23. Story _ 24. Traded ‘ ' i, 26. Nail ;_ i8. Called forth ' l Rowing implement I2. Lei it stand (Print) .Greek letter l. Gold (Her i . Female deer . Gentle tap I1. Per. to the tides l9. Mature person Ii. A dressinf ‘ for meat or pudding Fl. Solled Q3. Little cones of esrtli (Golf) P4. Monkey! . DOWN Q. A native of Great Britain Z; t , DAILY CRYFPOQUOTE-iierifs how to work itzi A K Y I) L B A A X R is LONGFELLOW One letter simply stands for another. ln this example A is used tor the three L's, X for the two 0's. etc. Single letters, apos- iruphics, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code lctiers are different. \ OJ CBJ P Q .7 J Yesterday's a cpypusgrasn Quotation crypioquote: rzr KCBJLNV rz CFUOJB xr roxu acrPia-ocrxsv rovsn-rv, ran GREAT mi:- HLOACH, BlDS us no on SUFl-‘ER ANYTHING-HORACE. piririhoiu w mo; Ilaiima lvndsaw are in favor of registering theirllsem, but being not very much m," ‘mam Brow cm I 11M! 3nd he PM!!! i0 8511i ‘h! l" a week old he had seen few, and caught if he chases me?" bleated sent M part-lime troopers to the of these father and mother, Billy the very small sw- and Nanny Surefoot. Mountain Goats, were much the biggest. He bod IOOkBd up to and admired ‘them and wondered it ever he 1 would be as big as his father whom he felt sure must be the biggest person in all the Great World. Now’ here below him on the rocky lslope of the High Mountain was a person so big that he made mother and father seem small. Do you wonder he stared? I He didn't, like the looks of this Igreat stranger. Suddenly he was rfllril-id and fear was a wholly new ‘and most unpleasant feeling. Ia ‘looked at his mother. She didn't seem afraid. Neither did his father. Both were watching the ‘he were Whistler the Marmot or some one else smaller than them- selves. Still Little Kid moved a little closer to his mother. "That," said she, "is one of the Bear folk. He is called Old Grizzly. He is very fond of kids. He would like you for his dinner." "But I don't want to be his dinner,“ bieated Little Kid Sure- ‘l AM. ll A.M. 8 IKM. . 9 AM. l PJiI. 6 EM. ‘l A.l\l. 1i AJil. 8 RM. l RM. 5 P.M.\ g Contract Bridge By Josephine Culbertson . THE THROW-IN PLAY Today's deal illustrates the dead- 1y efficiency of the elimination- and-throw-in play, properly exe- outed. North dealer. Both sides vulnerable. a Q .1 1o s a Q K 5 5 Q 7 4 2 q. s. a a A K u 1 a 5 ‘l e 4 2 N 9 a 10 9 4. O 7 W E Q 5 , g Q 10 8 6 _v ggqoo‘ * 5.11085 Q A Q 8 2 g a x Q .l o s q, K ‘l 2 The bidding: North Eusi Soiilli west Pass Puss i Q 2 Q Pass Pass 3 A Dbla a n 1' Pass 4 O Pw 5 Q Pass Pass Dbie. Pass Pass‘ Pass North might nave doubled two spades, especially since he had passed originally. When he took no action at this point, South was later unwilling to accept a three- no trump contract. (That contract, incidentally, could have been beat- en two tricks, played from the North position, if Ea-st were in- spired to lead a club.) South felt that North could not have very much; so he decided to bid four diamonds and let North pass if he wished. South. after all. had shown a very strong hand by cue- bidding the enemy's suit, and if North had anything that. figured to be valuable at diamonds, he would carry on to game. North did just that-naturally, with some misgivings! Wwt opened the spade king. Declarer ruffed with the nine, . drew two rounds of trumps, then took the slight risk of cashing the ace and queen ofhearhs. when West showed out,a third heart was led to the king and the spade queen was passed, South discard- ing a club. This "fixed" West. [Whether he returned a. spade or a ‘club, South could control the sit- uation and avoid losing two more tricks. OLfhand, it may appear that East could have saved the defense by ruffing the spade queen, hut ap- pearances are deceptive. Readers may find interest and profit. in trying out the last-named defense- ‘ for themselves. L|’L ABNER StilClGP-Mfi-L lib Twin‘ r'FlNl> QR HDIITY alll BUT. WHO IS THEY ORFNII <vr-— W‘ V‘ ‘ its‘! ~~ foot, moving nearer still to his mother. "You never will be if you never let him get near enough to catch you." replied his mother. "But he is so big and l am so help being "By remembering your feet and that they can take you where ho can't follow." explained mother. "Do you see what he is doing now?" "He is just walking around look- llgg‘ for something," replied Little “And that, something is you," said Nanny. She chuckled way down in her throat, but Little Kid didn't notice that. "Wha-wha-what?" he stain. mered, and crowded closer to her. "He has already begun trying to catch you. Watch and you will an that without coming straight toward us he is all the time getting nearer. He hopes we won't notice it until he is near enough for s sudden rush. He hopes to catch YOU $11M way. He knows he can't catch your father or me, and he won't try. We too know that. he can't catch us, so we are not afraid," said Mother Nanny. Father Billy turned his head and looked at Little Kid. "Show him why he need not be afraid either," said he. “Show him what to do and how to do it." "Do you sce that ledge over there? Your father and I are going over there," said Mother Nanny. "None but surefooted folks like us~ ,can get it from here unless they ihave wings. You stay here and iwatch us go over and up there. Watch carefully just where we jump. None o! the jumps is loo ilong for you. When Old Grizzly gets to that rock down there you start over to join us. Don't hurry and don't be afraid. Old Grizzly won't come a step beyond right here. He can't follow you and he won't try. He'll be afraid to even try. After your first jump down to that little ledge you will be as safe as you are this minute." So father and mother left Little Kid Surefoot watching them jumping from rocky point to nar- row ledge along the side of a clif! until at last they were on the upper ledge and turned to watch him. Somehow mother didn't. seem afraid for him and so he d.idn’t feel frightened as he had. Presently Old Grizzly peered around the big rock. Such fierce eyes! Such a hungry looki Such terrible great teeth! Such awful claws! All Little Kid Surefootfls fright returned. He jumped down to the first point of rock, then up to a ledge so narrow that father and mother had had to crowd close to the wall. There he paused and looked back. Young as he was he knew by the look on the great Bearis face, and by his snarl of disappointment, that there was nothing to fear from him now. So for a moment or two Little Kid just stood there, a tantalizing dinner just out. of reach. Then with sure jumps he went on to join father and mother. THE HELPING HANDS AROOLA, Bask. —- (GP) --Whiie Albert Butt. was spending his third week in hospital neighbors pulled into his farmyard with hinders and combines, cut hi-s crop and turned his summer fallow in one day. The same night a. labor bat- talion from Areola stocked up the entire crop in a matter of hours. BINGO iloly Redeemer ilall Tfllililli’ ' 8.30 The prises are the same as those prevailing at other Blngos tn the city. l1 AL CAP? TlFPY AND "CAP" SiIiJBi I! 770s sit/FF m 10,116 's POCKET QIDPPFD THE BULLE T WHY /5 HE 4/4/- mus r/ous .’ ‘l’, KN L£6° WHY HOW M“s ' HEH IHEH.'.HE'5 oio THAT H-APPEN r ‘l 1“ z 00k 4 f m/s sum/a. 12; ssr 50/145‘ cow when’ ’ ;‘ HAW HAW... SOMEBLIDDY ” LEFTA KID lN Hi5 LAP men HE saunas ‘m’ KID HOME AN‘ TH‘ KID G175 MEASLESmHO no NOMKNOBBV sees srors on NISSELF roo AN‘ "reruns ifs NIVESsNA us, watt, 1a’ ooc comes AN it’ auzovrmv: a/PUZKK/AIG *- h’ ... t NL/K57 ls o”) _ _ mo: Nina; by Zane GI?!‘ HMVHIICAN _ sea 1" l’ YOU pom" REALIZE - MY MV TALK€ BACK T0 FATHE R EVEN MY MOTHER SOMETIMES! ANY PHONE catts ABOUT name, MOTi-iEQ??" 1 DiDN’T steer» ALL NIGHT-- r 0on1- LIKE TO WAKEN cap-- POOQ L|'|.i FELLOW l!" lF WE / l i no coo... Iniinw Adana 9min. m. - v __9,._-.r-r5_‘.q.- §L._ .. l. I THTlJiZ i SA“! MAGGIE LID ‘fl-E STCPEET- "I HOPE 6H5 DIDN'T 65E ME‘ Tll.LlE THE’ TOiLEk $72k @- mv. no rv-r- who iii r1.“ n»... Its-r A~rJJ€rT ME . L.i JCK '1,’ NOW rm A MILE F133“ DNTYQ PLACE- r}; . . ‘Eu i; -\__ “s; \ A$KlNG ME IOL TO o0 THEM \ \ \\ GLAMMl/‘S T00 TENDER- HEARTED ‘TO LET Hi5 MOTHER WASH THE ' PENNY WHY DiD YOU MAKE AN EXCEPTiON IN MY case ? BECAUSE A €iTS AROUND AFTER A BIG "AND i’M TOO TENDER- ' HEAQTED TO LET YOU WORRYABOUT ly Hon-y Hoeiilgsen g ' ma: Jusr Ibo FQESLLALFQEO- fiTASiLMEF ADATE “a; ,4. ivfi, I l-lEl-LHEi-i... , 4h hurl/mar“ /\ I'M aoiuvib MAIL Au. OFVOUQ Lifiiri; BAci< ‘ibVOJ- AS SIXTH ctass wit) isrusiz: Aw sum Thine ‘ $1, l, [IWL / I ‘ s ' *1 "W. "ufl/flllib, _. r/ calf. l