i i vU "I .5 -...... ..,-g. ,. .. -. PAGE TEN Admission-l5e I s E l SATURDAY NIGHT IS YOUR DANCE ZIIGIIT AT E THE CLOVER CLUB O-O-04000-0&0-O-O Leave Caribou .. Head Office: Canadian Legion Clover Club Dance : "EVERY SATURDAY f AI Blanchard and the "Clover Club" Band For reservations Phone 1222 Reservations held until 10:30 pm. Wood isia.nds- Caribou Ferry Service THE CONNECTING LINK BETWEEN PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND AND NOVA SCOTIA The Prince News will run on the following schedule until the return of the Charles A. Dunning. (Standard Time) Leave Wood Islands - ............ .. IIORTIIIJMBERLAIIII FERBIES LTD. CIIARLOTTETOWN. P. E. I. For rarileiiiars Phone 73, Charlotteiou-ii. O-9'0-O60 0960 0 000990099? Dancing 9:30 to 12.00 -coo O4 94090-oo-eovo-oo4eo4.g.a O06-OOOQO&66064060-460006-0 .......... .. 'i n.m.. ll u.in.. fl DJ-II. .. I a.m.. l 1-.ni.. .3 pm. NINE MILE CREEK W. I. The Institute met at the home of Mrs. Norman MacDonald for April meeting. The vice-prcsitiem. yresided and the meeting npencil by repeating .the Lords Prayer. Roll call was answered by eight membe a. and three visitors were present. The minutes were read. approved and signed. A card of thanks was received from Mrs. Lemuel Gor- Gorveatt. A further took place on the concert; also for to have a bazaar and sale of lunch- es. It was moved and seconded Ml discussion buy Mrs. John MacNeili a gift. 11. was moved and seconded to rzivcl 52.00 to the Red Cross Campaign; Next roll call to be answered bvi an exchange of flower slips or' seeds. Mrs. Geo. gMacPliee invited ihel members to her home for the May meeting. Meeting closed with Ben- reatt and one from Mr. George edlctlon. Lunch was served by! vhe hostess. K om... ..ROS5WORD .. .. I Ueicnoss Down” is. Perished i i i 5 ” '1. Tibetan 1. Rabbit fur 20.Shleld : ' N 1. E ,, A ' priests 2. Egyptian, 21- Capably L A a I A g, nigggun god 22.Mimlcked IL u T E D I 9. Starve 3. Middle 23.Rlepresenta- E N T E I T I M I 10, 311-53, 3; tprcfixl Il0il of a :1” D P O :0 ' 5 cl”; 4. Roman person. I E u I T A I D (12, without pound 24. Infant s G I E 5 , O 1. may 5. Discharges. shoes ,. A N 1- :13. Flattined as a gun 25. Irrational E u b s r r at the poles 6. A shaded (mati-A.) '- ' 0- - (Georn.) 2'” 7 walk 27. Artificial leaterday I AII.'I5g),-' 15. clamor .FoiyncsiIn Wn EFWSW . ' 1.13, spirit drink 29. Copper 34. Fashiof .17. At home 51. Suite min (Buigh, 36. Girl's 1g, Hguan on 9. Lose mini; 30. Removed, nicknami. 19. Specks 11. Dispatcher as bones T7 Stripe 20. Finish 14. Omnibus .11. Pitcher -:0. Expression! 21. Trouble: Ishortcncdi with A lid of lnter- - 22. Chills and 16. Vended 33. Exceedingly rogation . fever ' i l 23. subsided as. One who i spies 24:. Band over 27.1-Ilnt.s 2!. Faith fobs.) 29. Rendered . fat of swino 30. Exist 32. Neuter . pronoun .33. Sell :34. Cut. as grass 135. MCECIHKC place of League of Nations - 37. Skeletal part 38. Period of time 39. Commander 41. Upward curving of ship's planking l 12. Fragment AXYD IILONG for the three L's. X for the I 'Er.rl1 (lay the code letters are NYSRJS TQC Yb Yestei-day's Cryptoquote: I).-SILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it: One lcltcr simply stands for another. In this exampir .'. l. r -: l :ti-ophics. the length and formation of the words are all hints. A C.,,tograna Quotation r rci'::M 'rQc cYo.I'r V1 ZJUWIS. AND THUS I-IE BORE WITHOUT VABUSE THE GRAND OLD NAME OF GENTLEMAN:TENNY- LBAAXR FELLOW wo 0's. etc. Single l:tlcrs. apos- different. if JLJCP-MYUJSI-:Q1'. :1 I i l I I lmost players. because of their mis- ' observed all the spots in hearts. Tl-IE GUARDIAN. CH l l Alas, that it should be that Men Are ofni silly as a I-fen. -Farmer Brown's boy. . . . HEN8 ARE BILLY "Cui. Cut. cut. cut. cutaa-cut! Cut, cut, cut, out. cutaa-cut!" Jimmy Skunk stopped to listen. He was on his way home for it was broad daylight and he had been out all night. Jimmy likes to bc theme and abed before Jolly. round. ibrlght Mr. Sun gets more than; lslarted on his daily climb up in' the blue. blue sky. "Cut, cut, cut. out. cutaa-euti Cut. cut. cut, out. cut, cutaa-cutl" " n egg." said Jimmy Skunk. talk g to himself. There was no one else to talk to. "That silly hen is bragging. She is boasting. she had laid an egg and she is telling all the world what she has done. Hens are the silllest folk I know." ”Cui. cut. cut. cut. out, cutaa- .;i:t! Cut. cut, cut. out cut, cutaa- cut!" '.lODDQQDOO-'.-Q0 -TN'.x'l-'U'L'1QOr1s2ti)t'g contract Bridge By Josephine Culbertson :.".C".- . . -.-Ow-itch.-Ououi.-uuC'Ql&L (.;-........!E...... lly ,Thorntoa W. Iiirgau) xkfbdoov . Jimmy Skunk stopped to listen. "Listen to the silly thing." can. ilnued Jimmy. still talking to him- self. "That doesn't mean she has laid another egg. If she had it might be something to boast about. But she hasn't. It is the same egg. Any Hen can lay an egg. so what. is there to boast about? Birds can lay eggs and do. but I don't know a single one who boasts about it. They don't go about telling folks about it. Turtles lay eggs too. and they are mighty careful not to let anybody know when they do." At rue SUIT-PREFERENCE SIGNAL . Experts know what lesser pin;-I crs often refuse to learn: that the! more valuable a convention of bid-l i aim; or play my be. the greater care is required in its use. Take the "suit-preference signal", for example. This excellent device has actually been expensive to use of itl Essentially, the suit-preferences signal: When partner leads or fol- lows suit with a high card, he wants a shift to the high-ranking side suit (not trumps); whereas :1 low card from him command a shift to the low-ranking side suit. The great trouble with most players is that they try to use lhis convention all the time! It doesn't always apply! Observe this case: soTitii'aaiIo"i-?S3ota'nde'i 'vul-' nerable. North-South jopon score. K414. QK105 Q.l9g& .35 some ass: 3 N QAQ6 'I,(275 w.E Q:03831 O Q - goon ” 57 QK-HP osarv 0'-49s quurono The bidding: South West North lacs 1 Pass lN'I' Pan 3 Pace Psu Pan West opened the heart nine. Dummy played low and East won with the queen. East cashed the heart ace. and then. realizing that his partner wanted to ruff. led an- other heart--the six-spot. West duly ruffed. and, having carefully felt sure that his partner could have returned a lower heart than the six. hence jumped to the con- clusion that East wanted a return in the higher side suit. spades. so West led a spade. That was exact- ly what south needed to fulfill the contractl - ft is obvious that East was help- less if his partner was going to read any heart East returned as o suit-preference signal. If East led the heart six after cashing the queen and ace. West would lead a spade to declarer's tenace. If East returned the heart three. West would exit with a diamond-the lower side suiti Actually. West should not have l'ead "suit-preference" into East's forced return. but should have ex- lied safely with a trump! south might still have made the hand. but he would have had to do some the thought of rtle eggs Jimmy licked his lips. e is very. very fond of Turtle eggs. very fond in- deed. And he is clever at finding them and digging them out. "rur- ties bury their eggs. you know. "Only folks who can do things no others can do have any cause to boast, and even they don't do l.'. if they have any sense. No others can do what we skunks can do but we don't go around boasting about it. No. sir. we don't do that silly things. I-lens. I have half a mind to go over to that henyard. Probably I can't get in there if I do. and if I could I couldn't get that egg. But Robber the Rat or some of his tribe are sure to have heard that silly Hen and go look- lng for that egg. Hunting wasn't the best ever in the night and I haven't had so much to eat that it tender young Rat wouldn't. be we!- come." said Jimmy. still standing there Ill decided what to do. Over in the Old Pasture Reddy Fox grinned as he heard that.)-len "Listen." said he to Mrs. Redd,-'. "To hear that Hen you might think no one ever had laid an egg be- fore. And every Hen in the hen- house has done the same thing over and over again. Somebody will get that egg and .ihat will serve her just right. Yes, sir. it will serve her just right." "Perhaps she doesn't care." said Mrs. Reddy mildly. "She'll just lay another one. Who do you think will get that egg?" "How should I know?" replied Reddy with it grin. "It wont be either of us. that's sure. Not that I wouldn't like the egg. but ue can't get in there. But there are those who perhaps can. If I were Robber the Rat I would try for that egg. and he probably will. I'm told that he and his tribe dole on eggs. And if Uncl Billy Possum hears that Hen he may try. The old rascal can climb that fence with no trouble at all. Once inside it wouldn't take him long to find that egg. And there" is Bobby Coon." "He won't go over there in broad daylight. He isn't that foolish." declared Mrs. Roddy. "Cut. out. cut. cut. cut. cuttin- cut! Cut, cut. cut. cut. cut. cutan- cutl" That was another Hen. "if Bobby Coon hears that he will be over there trying to get in tonight as sure as my name is neddy Fox. Of all the silly folks I've ever known Hens are the silli- est." declared Reddy. "Boasting is always silly. espec- ially when you've done nothing to boast about." said Mrs. Reddy. "Cut, cut. cut. cut. cut, cutan- cutl Cut, cut. out. cut. cutaa-cutl" cried the silly Hen. LONDON:.(CP)-A total of 493 persons were killed in accidents in British coal mines in 1950. a. recent report showed. This is an increase ARLOTTETOWNI I rum: or THE ROYAL MOUNTED A. .. -.. -.--.. --...-... .. ... HENRY MAY 5. 1951. :'?:.'m . - .-....-..a.--...-.....: gr '.ii 5.5 ..-. rial; n.ua.-Ina: lu,V-It-EII-I lg, oo'i'rY" I DIPPLE" ” HORACE, I cor me some on mo 55 REDUCING PILLS NEW MM" THESE THINGS ARE AWFULLY EXPENSNE. AREN'T THEY ?.' on, THE PILLS ARE Noreo EXPENSNE" WE'LL CLIMB oven E-- 'TH' xrrcneu ROOF FOQEVER--! LAUG AT MY N' Er T-- BABY PICTURE IN lT, GRAN'MA'LL . Ti-iINK-- .--Ip-u-.. .. .. -:eu'r l'LL HNIE To Buy . NEW GIIDLE EVERY v FNE was!- I YES-HOW 5EHD ALI. & Tl-IE PACKAGES COLLECT-YES-AND BE CAREFUL N THE HAT BOXES! i WELL-F ME DALGHTEI? HA5SAN,,THI'. U KWONXR IFICAN FICKLDA HANDMIDE D11. A9... CHI: win. as: wAn-me. , cos: you THERE. BUT-A MAHAaA..w-rs BRIDE. suouuaurr TIIAVEL Ateuar ' yon... excellent guessingl of 30 over" the previous year. 4' en. ABNER By Al Gm? I an is i ueazsnzn-a:ncx:Ts:ro BAD. riifu Tl-IE 1011.123 ca? ipgniru run-sun-I. vuu .L.. . Au MAGGIE Tl-INK I'M GONNA BE HOME AW WV F09 THOSE T1-iNG5- ruew E P Vii-IO?! Y LAND! wuehe 15 H --'2? ,ii.4!r mu 5;; . 'n-E55 DACKAGES WEQE THEM -- sasrr HERE cou.EcT 5END!N' THE av menses sock! tutu?! THINK YOU ARE some To win THE