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Before you paint, whether a choir, a room or a house - SEE YOUR C-l-L PAINT DEALER GARVELL BROS. LTD. FOR SALE EVERYWHERE "do ‘c-i -L. PAINS used. cowss. Isle o: wlzht - *0!“ ~ l Oldest inhabitants here is Mrs.‘ ‘ Harriet Marvin. who celebrated her. wauailrfllfd 101st birthday. Kcnl, in. i902. ll’i Napoleon and llncle Elliy T0 REFORM YOUNGSTEBS The British Borstal system wasl Borstal Prisom; By liliiloni Macbrllle HOLY carrs/ WHAT A snow.’ n HOPE we CAN FIND ‘rt-t’ CAMP! He profits best with ready ear: To make the most o! what hears. —Longlegs the Heron. From the Smiling Pool rose the great spring chorus of love and hnppiness,'the (mingled voices oi many singers. Some were little more than a croaking, “therein. i! ness. But in that great chorus. the blending o! many voices, the sweet velth the harsh, tho loud with the soft, they had a par‘. in the song of happiness that carried far across the Green Meadows t0 the dear Old Brim-patch, the Old Pasture. the Green Forest and even to Farmer Brown's home. ‘Tiny Pecper the i-lyla’s high clear piping notes followed each other so fast that it seemed there was hardly time tor a breath be- tween. He had begun singing al-i most as soon as the last of the ire i had melted. ‘The first of the Prog' folk to meet Mislrcss Sprint: His, (‘OUFfP Stickytoes the Tree Fcog,‘ happily parldilinig about in the ‘ water now instead of climbing‘ about in trees as he would later! was triiiing. Cousin croaker ‘he, Green Frog. Cousin Rana the I leopard Frog. Coilsin Lnaper the i Pickerai Frog, and homely Old i Mr. Toad. with the sweetest voice o! all each had a part in joyous. expression oi their happiness. Nor were their: the only happy} voices. On the highest twig or? an aid-er at the head oi the Emil-- mg Pool was Redwlng the Black- bird singing "Oknlee. quong-ka- lee. oka-cheo.“ From the midst 0ft the rushes at the edge oi the- water came the lovely. iinlzling. silvery voice oi Little Friend the‘. Song Sparrow. On the Green Meadows. close by, Carol they Meadow Lark was singing w: love ‘- lo Mrs. Carol. Over the Green Meadows, coming i from the Big River. his head drawn I back on his shoulders until he‘ seemed to have no neck at all. hisi long legs straight out hehind him‘ like a. long tail, his great wings:- beatlng rather slowly but sending‘ him along taster than alppflaredi was a feathered fisherman. It was; Longlegs the Great Blue Hrron.‘ As he reached the Smiling Pool‘ the bright eyes of Peeper the l-iyluf saw him. Instantly the tiny ‘Free; Frog. tor that is what Pceper ls.. stopped singing. It was a signal; All the other singers in the water stopped singing. It tires i! some one ‘ had pulled a switch that controlled‘ all those joyous voices and shut- them oil’ all at once. It is under-i stood among the Frog folk that: it one of their number abruptly‘ siopssinging it. is because he has wing and Little Friend and Carol contnued to sing. They were un- alraid. At the edge of the water the feahered fisherman dropped his long logs and folder-l his great wings, He stretched his 11mg neck up to its full length that. he might better look over the Smiling Pool and is shores. For iJWO or three minutes he stood perfectly still. his keen cycs searching for one of those singers whom he had heard all the way from the Big River. 0r for a fish within roach of his spear- llke bill. l-ie had not yet break- fasted. Seeing none. he slowly and quietly walked along at the e689 of the water, taking cach st/ep slowly; putting each foot. down with care. At the upper end of the smiling Pool he waded out to the edge oi the cattaiis until the water was more than hall way u; his i0"! legs. He folded his long neck back so that his head was down almost to his shoulders, but not. a0 tar but that he could watch all about him. With his neck back this way he could strike like a iiash at any- thing within renclr, ‘ For a long yimc he just stood more without moving. Longicgs is a true fisherman, and only he who is patient is a true fisherman. He (By Thornton W. Burgessl he heard alone. there was little sweet- ; seen or suspects danger. Only Red- ' THE ounaoinm, r ‘IKE LISTENING FISHER-MAN I cnantorrarowu emu. 1s. 194s ' ,_ l 1.2 i i2? mus or m: tom. MOUNTFD A 8v 1m Grey ' p ,7 ,- um ‘my , r gag-m aqmmsozwfifrzz/{ya / - mom" '4 zaon/Irsiu! ‘- 1'- Your: awn/r. J00?! DAILDIIPMJ IIAR h-SOIIBOIE WALKMOT i‘ On the highest twig of an alder at . the head oi‘ the Smiling Pool was iRiedwiving the Blackbird. singing i Okaleequong-ka-lee, okn-chee Roda-in; the Blackbird and Mrs.’ Rfifilliflg. who irun the alders near, by had watched him wade ‘out there- YOPEO! he was there. Mrai Redwing fussed about. among the Pushes trying to decide just ‘WHEN; they should make their nes|_ rt-qpi lying San: in her. Between aungil the)‘ Ewflilbed. The ears oi long-l 192s were as keen as his eyes and. while he watched h-e listened. He! 10118 88o found out that it, olten PHYS l0 be a. good listener. "I haventseen Roddy Fox over here since we arrived, and not | i Hawk h" been near us. l wonder Whit" laid Mrs. Redwing "It i5 u" Wit’. my dear There "'3 5° many Mice on the Grren Meadow! lib“ Selling n. dinncr there is too easy for any tme to think of bothering us." replied RPdWiPS- Londless heard them Tim v0.3 story: “A Fialicrinan i‘urn:. Hunter." . ‘I Contract Bridge Dy Josephine Culbertson $5b~3>:_=_:_. : c"; ._ IT ALL DEFENDS! ,1“! "PYOPQF" method of draw. l“! trumps may become highly imPri-lpel‘ lmdci‘ certain circum- stances, Today's dcclnrer figut-gd thmss out m- himself. POW MAN NICE HE SEEMS LIKE THE 1N FRONT OF L5 ? QUIETTYPE/ ‘IVHATB THE MAI EQ WITH vouws ALL ' saucer: up!!! 5LW-TTEQIXJ' ATLT-‘S/ H L ' Cl JECIBV r.’ wLANLCK- HE LCOKT? LIKE ARGUMENT WIYH Hoeau! . Southdealer. East-West vulnerable ‘ 4x9 7K7 §A10965I @743 o‘ ‘Q63 Q1 Qqase N yAJlol $B’...;.“’ E .5; A i S 4.9652 gnaarrm , Q96 ' §QJ4 ‘AK Thebidding: South West North East 1Q Pass 2Q Pass 3Q Pass 4Q Pan Pee: Pan goutlrs- three-spade bid on‘ the second round was a shade oilimi!‘ tic, but was Perhaps the imi- "1 several not-ioo-satisiactory alter- nativea. West opened the club queen. South, winning with the ace, saw that if he lost a. spade trick to West, a heat-i. sihlit would be al- most inlfiVi""'l‘- since E15’. W playing the rluh deuce on the opening lead. had disclaimer! in- terest in that suit. Normally speaking, the best chance to wold the loss oi a trick with Sufih fl spade suit as South mntnollzd In the combined hands. i! t0 lead to the king and then to finesse hack to the jack. south realized however. that this trus a very good vrny to lose a trick lo West and although south did not particularly mind conceding a trick in that suit, he had a kccn ave!‘- siOn to letting West go in for thfi stood so still that alter a while MfllMli/ii‘ Even for double the price you can't buy anything better than dangerous shift to hearts. So Bouth decided to play the spade suit in such a way that if he lost n trick (as hr almost cer- ‘talnly wonldl he wonlrhlcse it to .Easi."who could niakc n0 danger- ious attack on the heart suit. At [the second trick declarer led a low spade and put in dummy‘: nine! That, an it happened. was the winning play. East won, but icould make no better relhrn ‘han .1. club, Declarer won. went t0 1M ispade king. then rulied a frillb ‘and laid down the spade m to capture West's queen. Now a dia- mond ilneue still keeping West uif lead-made the contra-cl im- ‘rognable. East, o! course, took “is diamond king. but. then nad zhe choice of cashing the heart tit‘! or losing it. entirely. By Alex Raymond ETTEQ NOTIFY 9: FACTORY! "AC3 YiWR QQDER now ran new OeuvERY _ _ ___ av trot: n7 T '1' "iliiliii. TQF-Fii .-.._.-_ _ ” MERGY!‘ wum" was Tl-lAT'i? t / ' do" .1 n 5 n- MUST Hat/é an... ins 111:2 so ON DOWNSTARS“ edit A Goon ‘THING ‘ti-lav THOUGHT IT WAB ‘m’ CAT SNEEZIN’, STEADDA ME C'M'0N--LE’s i’ (so NOW . y y‘; / lV/E'DBE Q 3c. '\_o../,/ f» own inhhu um 5min. I». 5,, w 4..."! MRSTUPFER, WHY DID You HlRE mm- WiLLiE "me woLF '. wi-to WANTS SMOKED TURKEY i