., 'I‘HE GUARD%N~ CHARLOTTETOWN » JUNE t}, 1943 4 I w “"|'<|No'ol='rlir‘noYAliMouureo"' ‘ ' "Em " = ""'7"“a; 25.1. ti, . ’ v _-- r '_ ‘ " . D-DGWWXUIIK Ito/gill!) [ZEUS IIHUGI 54y‘ DAILY CROSSWORD A0808! ca. Let it stand 10. A drinking. rint ) (By Thornton W. Burgess) " soaallss eabnsns aromas... THE CHANGED ONE 1b judge by 3:1? alone. don't always more than meets the eye. —-Old Mother Nature. "Are you sick?" asked Péter Rabbit. _. ‘No, I'm not sick, and the soon- or you go away from rne the bet- ter I'll like it.“ hissed Blulfer the Adder, he of the upturned nosel that gives him his real name ofy Hog-nosed Snake, l "You look queer. You really do.| I've never seen you look like this‘ before. Are you sure youre not. lick?" persisted Peter. Bluffer was shaking his tall the‘ my Buutsil the Rattlesnake does‘ as a warning, but of course he hadi no rattle. “Go away!" he hissed‘, lngrily. That hiss “ms so loud.‘ and sounded so flcrle, that Peter? moved back a little and he did it hurriedly. "Go away’ and mind your own business. How I look and how I feel are no business of yours. Go away and stay away!" Bluffer struck suddenly in Peter's direction, although Peter was well beyond reaoh. He drew his head hack and struck again. "He can't see me," thought Peter. “There is something the matter with him. Something is wrong with his eyes, I've never seen any one like this before." Bluffer continued to crawl along slowly, constantly darting his tongue out. Sure now that Bluffer couldn't see him. Peter followed at a respectful distance. Bluffer went on l. little way before crawling in- ‘in the dear Old Briar-patch, where there was a big stone covered by a tangle of vines and brambles Undel- these he crawled straight to that big stone. He seemed to be lllnlliar with that rock, as if he had been there before. He moved slowly around the base of it as if trying to find a place to get under it. Peter moved nearer where he eould see clearly under the brambles. He wanted to ask Bluf- br what he was going to do in were, but wisely held his tongue Blurfer stopped. He ran his nose ha! and forth along the ground Close to that rock. Peter could see what looked like s narrow opening under the edge of that big stone. i i, Gradually his head disappeared, then his neck Bluffer began‘ pushing his nose into it as if trying to for-re his way under. He pushed and wonked Gradually his head disappear-Q‘, then his no... if: rested now an] then. Slowly his body disappearet under that big stone, it rune to Peter then that some- thing odd was happening. At the edge of that rock “where Bluffer had pushed under it there seemed to be something white that hadn't been there before. Bluiifer had started to squeeze under. Anyway Peter hadn't noticed it. Now he looked more closely. l-le gave a startled little Jump. That white substance, whatever it might be was just the shape of Bluffer’s head. In a flash it came to Peter what. he was seeing, Bluffer the Adder changing his suit, getting rid of his old one. He was crawling out. of his old skin, turning inside out as he did so. As Bluffens tail vanished under the rock his bead appeared conning out from an opening a little farther along. and his rather stout body followed until he was wholly out frc-m under. And what a P11111136! He didn't seem like the same person. No sir, he didn't seem at all like the person who had squeezed his way under that rock. He didn't look blind now. Far from it. His eyes were brlglht and aha-ring in the way that the eyes of all Snakes stare. His suit was no longer dull and old and worn. It looked fresh and just what it was-noun The colors and the pattern of them were clear and sharp. Bluffer was no longer feel- ing his way along. He moved quickly. That is, it was quickly for him. He is not fast-moving like afie- i948 SAILING SCHEDULE, SUBJECT TO CHANGE i "MAMNS BABY soy" A three-act comedy i 1. a blemish (a - W" (Film 5. Talk H. Dexteroualy 21. Dry. ll 9_ Pggn‘ DOWN, ehlmvllfli lo. Impoiite 1. Body o: :2. River 1L The meal r water (Swills) palm 2. Wh art 23. Kinld! 12, s‘ -- - 3. At one time Jude! 1t cigygg wflh 1. BQVQIQIO 25- BQIOI. w”; 5. 8111918 B‘. CLDDI‘. UQBU uuuu l5. Viper 6. Protuber- salad A. - 16. Mother once 27. Defines r . ‘"13"’! W07] _ (child's 1. oil-rs name 2e. Plflliillily - _ l mm) a. Inner east om. Chimney 81.016 coin 17, 5.“. 30¢ a seed (Bot) dirt (Gln) 18. Young dog 11. Measure 82. Overttlll I. Mo etsl-y 19. God of o! land 35. Leather l u pleasure 18. ’l‘he0rlent flask terfl (Latvia) 20. To go on 15. Little auke 36. A drop 40. Openings ghlpbolrd 18. Level- (archaic) (anat) 23. One‘: father‘! sister 24. Without rays W 28. Pass ovei lightly 28. Muse of lyric poetry lposs.) 3i. Ignited 32. Shosbonean Indian 83. Note of the scale Id. Part of’ "to be" 85. Goddess o! harvests ilt.) 36. Extinct bird 38. Influences by exerting power 40. Path of a sphere 41. Strip of woven cotton banding (2. Uprising CBYPTOQUOTE-A cryptogram qualms JD HY. CEJOlQPGY MBPVQU _IY RVAJIQY IX T? lYAlMi-PGKU. Saturday's Cryptoqlaotet LOVE MOST CONCIALBD DOTH MOST ITSELF DISCOVER—DA.VISON. Distributed by Ring Features Syndicate. lee. ' some of his cousins. He saw Peter "Nothing at all." and made a long and glided bower-d bin. Pater Jump to one side. backed a-w-ay hastily. He knew “I'm hungry. Have you seen 01d Bluffer couldn't hurt, but some- Mr. Toad or any °f his funilll how there was such a change in around here lately?" hissed him that Peter felt less sure. Bluflfer. “What are you doing here?" msged 31u1lfer_ g The next story: "Excited Vis- "Nothlng," replied Peter hastily. 150113’ oQwoQoo-Q-cosw "w gPARKIIALE PLAYERS o 4 C t t B ,d e g Present i’ ~ on rac n g ‘i’ By Josephine Culbertson $ I ~2R5 v A BIDDING POINT i There are oases in which delayed mums ‘mom partner should be politely rebuffed. This point, abstruse so far. will be made clear in connection with the tol- lownig bidding problem, which we AT CANOE COVE i FRIDAY, JUNE iltil _ at B130 P.M. b<io Jamar were: saws mansi- ' JOE PALOOKA whom/v um ~. use. 134741.595: = XDONTVMIITTDSEEMSTUPID... BUT... BUT... ISIT THERE SOME- ‘INMG ‘IQ! CAN SAY , IIORTIIUMBERLANIJ FERBIES LIMITED mm (Dolly Including Sunday) Standard T‘ i ghroigglywoggtgsg/Izgiiiltitpa by The lmO ' ‘ ‘ MAY ‘lst r. JUNE zen. B I N G O m“ gf-mm." Leave Wood lsionds- H "8- Princs Nova .. . . . .;. . . . . . .. . . . . . 8 A.M.-i P.M. 0| ‘RBUBBIIIBI’ H QJ 10 8 Charles A. Dunning}............ ll A.M.--5 P.M. y a" OKQWV", L - _ TONIGHT A +64 save Currlbou ‘ Q m 1 5 ‘g g a \“ ‘y, H _ Charles A. Dunning ............ 8 A.M.—l P.M. 8.30 ‘p.54: "Q33 A2‘ Prince Nova . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ii A.M.--5 P.M. thThe prises ‘are the some as :4‘, . ‘ 5 $2 i usrru m TO CFCY AT 1.45 A.M. (Standard Time) m3». T3. '15,." “h” ‘ARM, ’ Q FOR LATEST NEWS and INFO RMATIQN For Charitable Purlwlfll ‘A Q 1 Q r5 , .3 5 ‘ i y . ‘KQ _ r OUR BOARDING HOUSE Mojor Hoople - whamudmmmsaae rub % I ' 1 -r W» ue LOOKS use 7 i‘ P" bmg“ u“ Mdsiliipmfiw Eeausltz BASCOM. LET'S 1 AGREE. HA 1._ some We" ° , _ NOT coucelan ourasewes RoAs-r eeee AROMA ; "me "type h; g3; i‘ $22‘, B, nth; Wm. My pAHQflNQ UNYHL ALWAYS ears M‘! ‘wt-lo MiGHT swr Pass J s... we HAQE DrN ED!v1-a~ WE NOSTQHS PVQUU/EQ. I LEAVE A Fill P!" west opened the club ace and shifted to the singleton dllrmond. East took his diamond loe Ind returned the suit; west ruffed and then led another club. The fact that this save dede-Y" l m“ w PAeoou ME ll= ¢’ Few veer 1 TAKE o» Tr-le BUTTQNS ~ AePec-r OF A steam/are WOLF , CAM BETTER ATTUME OUR SPlRlTs TO ‘THE EsTHETlc AF-Telz OUR PALATES I oom YOU wauranoulclz SPOiL HIM MARY BAiLEY r r THINK was BETTEA" > ~ mm“ a sells. “o” M°“"E‘2' T SEEIN‘ HIM AGAN" v ‘ traumas MORE eoorv SPOlL i-llM" _ IWANT SOME MORE c‘ ’ uu HE CAN CARQY! . NTOO . | . l ' ‘ire KIRIY ' HAVE 865$ APPEASED- TQkNEl-ERs PUFZSUING ' A 1°‘ SLED 5nd‘a difilifd ltriil maintain itlii control. , This unsatisfactory oilimm! could have been altered materially or the contract had been five dia- monds instead of four hearts. At the minor suit game the defend!" could win only their wto aces. Moreover. as The Bridl! W"?! makes quite clem- the contract n; . should have been five diamonds. I because South himself could not , stand a four-heart contract reached as this one was reached- lt was certainly obvious, when Nor-eh gelled to raise bwo hearts that he had no real liking for the suit; therefore, his takeout of three notrurrlrp to four hearts could not be anything but an acute dis- like for notrumpwNort/h had al- ready emphasiaed his own prefer- ence for a diamond contract, Henec sirlce South should’ have known that he could not count on any hand materially different from the one that Norilh put down, and seen that the heart contract would be unwieldy, at best. South should have declined North's support find carried on to five diamonds. By Alas Raymond ' "mum: omelfifiraxwes | rsmlaoyla, KID M l i” AA Iss olsanweaaso, since it should halve been fore- , Powcon _ a t eRAslMA-i u 4 Q Iy/fl ‘ ni- rm,‘ um»,- lduls Smlwnl . _ _ By Webster r ~11 EVER-DISAPPEAPED i WITH AN AUDIENCE YiLi-llh." fill!‘ IKORI! - \ §