Star of Radio and Screen will be at the v KINSMAN CARNIVAL‘. Next Week ' JUNE 2-3-4-5 He has starred in the screen hit, "MEET THE NAVY" and his latest hit is “SINS OF THE FATHERS” Remember the Dates J U N E 2-3-4-5 Qeo-QeoQeoQooQeoQe- Give a e BULOVA - the ultimate in tine wotchmoking. I \ till IXCllllNCY "8" 2i Jewels l4 Kt. Geld Case Expansion lreoelar $7150 The hour onii the gill of %Zmm No other watch olers so lnnohln beauty befitting the occasion. B ova . . . lai In] on her wrist as u»! dia- mond on her finger! At bet- ter Jqrreliers everywhere. an lXCllllNCY "d" ll Jewels l4 m. Geld $6500 Canada's Greatest Watch Value BULOVA World's largestk Manufacturer ' olFino Watches THE CHARLOTTETOWN FIRE DEPARTMENT - ANNUAL TAG DAY sarunnlnr ‘MAY zeta ' Don't forget the local volunteers who are at your serv- ice night and day. Meet the Tag Girls with a smile and show your appreciation of a great service. GIVE GENEROUSLY Rocky Point service. — as AAAAA a a a ,‘ HDTIC I _Fro|n_Wednesday, May 26, until further notice the M. V. ‘Fu|rview" will_ not be operating on the Charlottetown- - During the period the "Fairvlew" ls In Pictou for the > annual overhaul, a motor-boot will operate the service tor the accommodation of loot passengers. P. A. MURNAGHAN, Deputy Minister at Public Works and Highways. Charlottetown, P.E.l., May 2i, ‘i948. " r liaooleou and Uncle Ellly . . ' Who could it be? At last Black!’ DREADFUL BUBPBNSI tense ~ ’ ' As those when wsltifll in sus- pe e. l‘ —ivlrs. L-ightfoot. Blacky the, Crow was cawing Mrs. Lightfoot listened. She had been lying down. Now sho 30f t0 her feet. Her ears were set for- ward to catch every sound. Biacky W55 quite far away, for his volc’ was faint. But Mrs. Lishtloflt could hear it plainly enough to knew that Blaclry was calling a warning to all within hearing who might listen - "Blsclry secs some one and it must be some one big to get him so excited." thought Mrs. Light- foot. "It isn't any one he is afraid of himself or he would be holding his tongue. so it isn't any one with wings‘. But it is some one other ioiks have reason to be afraid of, because when Blacky caws like that it ii a danger sig- nal. Whoever it is, I hope they won't coma this way.” It was a vain hope. Bucky's voice grew louder. Of course that meant that he was coming nearer. Mos. Llghtfoot became anxious. The louder Bucky's voice sounded the snare anxious she became. Blocky was following some one; there was no do-ubt about that, cams in sight. He perched in the top or a tall tree. He was watch- ing some one. "Csw, cslw, caw!" screamed Biacky. "Cow, caw, ca-s-wl" .4. dry stick broke with a sharp sound. It must have been a. stick of good size to make such a noise That meant that it must be some one big w-ho had stepped on it. "Buster Bear or Mrs. Bear." thought Mrs. Ughtfioot. and it seemed as if her heart stopped beating for a. moment. She wasn't afraid-for herself, not in the least. chase. No Bear would even try to. "toned to various sounds that she .knew no one but a Bear would No Besi- could catch her in a so it wasn't for herself that she was now so frlghtenecf as she lis- make. Sure enough, in s few min- utes Buster Bear-shuffled. into sight. ' Mrs. Lightfoot seemed hardly to breathe as she watched from the (By Thornton W. Iuraess) Thu-a aka n9 moments ‘quite l0 _ wonder that once again Mother thicket in which she was hidden from Buster's sight. which way would Buster go now? Under a fallen treetop only a little way from where Buster was standing swinging his head from side to side as if trying to decide which way to go, were two little fawns, her babies. What‘ i1 he should go over there and poke about under that treetop! Do you wonder that she could hardly breathe? Buster grumbled to himself. He likes to grumble. He seemed not to know what to do with himself. l-la is like that. He starts to do something, then changes his mind and starts to do something else only to change his mind again. He started off as it he had made up his mind to go somewhere in particular, stopped abruptly sat up beside a tree and rubbed his back against it. He scratched himself lazily with the claws of one tore- foot as he sat there looking around. Just outside the thicket in which Mrs. Lightfoot was, grew a lone tree. Buster shuffled over to it. He stood up beside it. He reached u-p as high as he could and dug his cla/ws into it. No. he wasn't getting ready to climb. He was making his mark on that tree so that any other Bears hap- pening that way might know that he hsd been there and how big he was. There were other Bear marks, old ones, on that tree. but none as high up as his. I-le dug out s couple of roots and sta them. He "sat down beside an ant hill and dug into it. Of course, the ants came swarming out and Buster licked them up. He saw a Mouse run under the roots o! an old stump. He spent a lot of time trying to pull that old stump over. When at last he ‘hunts nesting so eIIll "land's. It “tall held"- Aaalaeptle, eeefilng, baalfl- Glves quick sellet I ,7 X-na detllililn s". ~ on" a.» - _ . s “Oew, eaw, cowl" screamed Blaclry succeeded the Mouse wasn't there. He started ‘to clisnb a. big tree, but backed down before he had climbed. more than a. few feet. All the tkne he did. a lot 0|! whining and grunting and grum- bling. V Finally‘ he shuttled over straight toward that tree-top nursery with. those precious babies. Do you Lightfoot almost stopped breath- ing? Should she make some noise that. would bring htn ever to her there to find out who was there? If she did he might guess her precious secret. It was better that he shouldn't know she was anywhere about. Now he was close to that fallen tree-top. What if one of the babies should move? The suspense was dreadful. And there was nothing Mrs. Lightfoot could do about it. '1'-he nextstory: a Nap." "BUSH! TIXGS Dy Josephine Culbertson f NON-STRATEGIC DEFWSI 2 Contract Bridge t. In today's dell, as in countless other similar cases, the best de- fense consists simply of putting the declarer to a difficult guess. Thlfi. IWWWQY. can rarely be done when a defender (West, below) thoughtlessly collects his high cards as soon as he has the chance! i soamacsrer; . Bothsideavnlsiarala." . zgzqnn-soumsocneqtge aaxs , , goose: ' [on ~ manganese ‘-»Q--',’ ‘s5: NE 91:6" 1 . Sh“ ws e18. not - ,. .. 4-14.81 ~49: WK lgsrqsoeas QAQJO ‘Phebidding: South Welt _ aorta mast 19.; Pass nx-r 2O _l_._l:-‘ On the 8i part-score, loutilra jump to (our écc-nd round was probably as logical as any action he could take. West opened the heart seven. East put up the ace, and even after the fall o! South's heart king, he could find no better continuation than the heart queen. Declares‘ ruffed, led the spade deuce to the king, and then retllmed a diamond putting up the king from his own hand. West took this trick with the ace and led another heart. De- clsrer ruffed, and now had the choice or going to dummy to fln-‘ ssse for either the club king or the diamond jack, He logically da- clded that the jack might drop, and that in any case East was fairly well marked with the club king for his bid, so he laid down the diamond queen, then went to dummy with the spade and led the club ten through East. The latter ducked, but a second club lead to the jack settled the entire matter. Declarer lost, in all. we trumps and one heart, thus making his game. West was in too great a hurry with his diamond ace. If he had unhesitatlngly played low on South's king, deciarer almost surely would have placed the ace with East and, Just as surely, woulc have used dummys one remaining entry in spades {or a second trump lead toward the closed hand. ‘than West would spring his trap, col- lecting both the ace and jack of diamonds and deciarer never could return to dummy for the club finesse. \ o ' ‘,'¢'c s‘. g 0's‘ 0‘\$ o?» 0'0 Trliflfi S'SECOND.Y'MI "' D-DOIITKIOWDHUI i GIATELML-J // 4111]". diamonds on the . l-‘EO LONG-TIMMYI/I EHJOVED ME V1511‘ NQJ -$EE YQJ - A6454 SOON! nuns, n’ re A BEAR l As-lmaomuvure-nuaw ruoanmAeou-rn-iaum Hranssww BIINIGEQNQ- DOESN'T LOOK KE A BEAR i resonates/catamarans m-rrsalwrumoauiuesm HTBIESMOWNGS 1.17".‘ . .._.._..-__..__ ... i n10 YDLl i puomz ||= ioorrrsavsrua i HELP. i - l5 A ' k i<iD,i'MAPQOREXCU< I JJSTTPEINSFI . I MiN-lfllkiTF-E DiGEST