::.mV:5a-Iss.an.z.s".'. - . . . ..,. -.....--. .-. 2 .' . v. ..e,..-..-.aa.:'...-d-M . vr-..-v-..-'k i:E'"I'rHa.)&13s 4..--. -I: p.,.,-,;.. t gr vi, u-.'1-1-:.H A-z:-P-'.-:1-.,. , , as? an ." as . :a .'i.- .va-nail-tea:-'45 -4 4-4: c -iNs.i:,.;g,ng - iiiillnimi. . vHCYI(7iON IOR THE CANADIAN FAMILY TWEEL BUILDING, CHABIDTIWIOWN, P. E. I. WASHINGTON. Oct. -19 - um - The Air Force today quoted tight formation. and flewlnio a body of water in Ba.rous' plane Lieut. Luther C. Bnrcus, pilot who ”bounced" (mm the watgr, he was survived a crash of three F-83 quoted as saying. but the two oth- fighters yesterday. as saying..t.he ers.went under. pilots misjudged altitude in a hage Admission 50c & 35c. Send entries to- NOTICE OLD TIME FlDDLING.I& STEP-DANCING CONTEST IN HOLY NAME HALL, ST. PETEIPS BAY WEDNESDAY NIGHT, OCT. 25th DOORS O-PTNAAT 7:30 P.M. Excellent Prizes ROY MaacKINNON or HUBERT McISAAC EASTERN RHYTHM Admission 50c. REGULAR DANCE ' WINSLOE STATION HALL TONIGHT Dancing 9:30 to 12:30 Bus Leaves M. T. 9:45 BOYS ORC H ESTRA Canteen Service 1 DAILY CROSSWORD HE E E. E3 ACDOII 5. Wooden pin 25. shoshonean gmgg Emma I. Lively 6. Man's name Indian um mam nunu dance 7. Mists 26. River HE BEE Illll o. Toward the .3. Allowance bottom fllilllli Bgggillll Item for waste 28. Rub out Euggu ml": (Naut.) (Comm.) 30. Explain. as am mam mm 0. A diatonic 9. Flap A mystery nuns mam um run (Mus) ll. Biblical plot magma QEJMQB 10. Wind of the name a3.Anlrms.tIve Bliilllfl i'iI.'.llillll9 Adriatic 14. Plant of vote Iii-.1811 man 12. In bed rose family 35. Measure of "'" 13. River 18. River capacity Ye-tor-Iuw A-Iwrr ilndiat (Chin) 36. ADV NW?” 15 smgu, 19. Perform luldelty 41. Brain perforated 20. Exclamation 37. Cherished 42. ova (Biol! balls 21. On account animal 43. Pemalo 11, A ghore of 38. Arabic deer match 22. Diving letter 45. Female 18. Kind of duck bird :9. Hero of the parent 20. At a dIstance24. Perish Ramayana 19. Norse K05 3 23. Ahead i 24. Confer knighthood upon 21. Dwelling 29. A retlnus 3!. Noah's bod 32. Sun god 34. Require 36. A stratum 37. Capital of France p 40. Crippled 44. Excited 40. &aport town (Spnin) ('1. Duration 48. Retaliato 50. Distant 51. Declares for score DOWN 1. Mock 2. Scope 3. stocking runs 4. Hypotheti. cal force , DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it: A X Y D I. I A A X B IILONGFELLOW mm mm, ,;imply stands for another. in this example A is used for the three L's. X for the two 0'3. etc. Single letters. apos- trophlcs. the length and formation of the'words are all hints. Each day the code letters are diHerenL - A Cryplogrlln Qvolltlon OJWAA MK QPHKC JPXKJVKY. JMWBBKC uo VPYOK'0 RUY Unic KDK-JKBBDOPB. Saturday's Cryptoquote: WHAT A WORLD OF HAPPINESS 1-iisim HARMOltl3'E91jvFTEE13i-"P03- lI'y Tlisnitoa TI! GIIAT STORM ...-E However thrifty. none can be -Old Mother Na tqre. been av busy person. Chatterer l1W8Y8 is a busy person in the fall. For that matter he is busy most of the year for he can always find mischief to do when there is no work to be done. All the Squirrel folk are thrifty. of course. Every. body knows that. if they were not thrifty l fear some of them would starve to death in winter. But ; 533FVlYl8 Slluirrel is rare indeed Chaiterer was very well pleased with his thrift this fall. In a cer- ltain hollow in an old stunip he had stored away a grand supply of acorns, beechnuis. some seeds of which he is very fond, and a ff)" hiCk0I'.V nuts. He had a great ; pile of pine cones which he would 1 later Open for the seeds they con- ' tamed. There would be enough to x 'tOT.tO0(TOO.:i.;u;u7tr .- .-.r - jargylnr contract Bridge By Josephine Culbertson x-.-::c--'-r- -ucnooooooocuzscan THE BETTER CHANCE A Play which has a 3-to-1 chance for success is usuallylan excellent Play p but not when an even better selection is possible. . 10-23- south dealer. . Neither aide vulnerable. 5 Q 10 B . Q A as Q 9 8 5 i 4. " a 2 . 3 A Q '7 4 2 9 Q J 10 1 N v 9 8 0 K .1 o W E 5 2 4. 10 s 5 s 0 7 3 2 4 I .p Q J D Q A K J 9 0 5 Q K 4 .som Q A K ' The bidding South West North East 2 Q Pass 3 Q Pass 4 NT Pass 5 0 Pass 6 NT Pass 8 4. Pass 5 Q Pass Pass P88! West chose the natural lead from his holding: the heart queen. De- clsrer used his own kins to win this trick; then he drew the out- standing trumps and led a diamond to the to. West won with the jack and 1 d another heart. Dum- my's ace won. and South now tried a second finesse in diamonds. but this was not his lucky day. Down one! Understandably annoyed. South pointed out to his equally displeas- ed partner that "percentages" fav- ored his successive diamond fines- ses by odds of 3 to l, and he was right in that assertion - it was mathematically 3 to 1 that at least one of the two mising dia- mond honors lay with Easi.. But South overlooked the fact that even this 3-to-l chance could have been substantially improved! He might have given thought to ihe following: At the second trick there would be only the slightest danger in laying down the ace and king of clubs. (One defender would have to have a singleton, and the other, I seven.-card suit. for this to in- cur a ruff.) After getting these clubs out of the way. South could lead ii trump to dummy's eight and ruff away the last club; then lead to the heart ace and ruff the last heart. (The second heart play. before drawing trumps. would also be about 90 per cent sale.) Now. with hearts and clubs strip- pcd, it would be entirely logical for South to lead another trump to dummy. but when West showed out. South should leave a trump at large (with East) in order to take a diamond finesse. West, upon winning, would either have to return a diamond from his other honor. or give South a dis- mond discard by returning a dif- ferent suit. in short. the stripping process would succeed. even though . the trump suit did not break. From chance disaster wholly free. Chltterer the Red Squirrel had - ”' mi: GUARD! W. Ilirosul By.and By, Chatterer crept out from beneath an old stump last him all winter. In certain trees,he had a supply of mush- rooms drying out. They were nice- ly hidden in crotches of the limbs. Altogether Chatierer had a grand supply of food. more than he could possibly use. p Then came the great storm Just after he had finished his harvest. The wind blew. My, my, my how it did blow! It roared and howl- ed through the Green Forest. It tore great branches irom some trees and blew other trees over. Theregwas test all through the Green Forest, fear so great thnt it was terror. The wind can be very terrifying at times. All the little people oi the Green Forest and the Green Meadows. and the bigger ones too. sought shelter. The wind blew and blew and blew. It roared and howled and drove the rain before it so that it” was difficult for any one to move about. But no one want- ed in move about. The wind blew and blew and blew. and howled and howled. and roared.'and roared, and the rain fell and fell. But there is an end to everything. The worst things and sooner or later. The storm ended. By and by. Chatierer crept out from the snug retreat beneath an old stump where he had been all through the storm. He was hun- gry. While the storm lasted he had had nothing to eat. He headed straight for his nearest storehouse, a hollow in an old dead tree. The tree wasn't there. No sir. the tree wasn't where it had stood so long. It had blown over and split open. All the nuis and seeds that had been stored in it had been scatter- ed and beaten into the ground by the heavy rain. Brush and weeds had been blown and piled over the fallen tree. Chattercr wasted no time there. He ran straight for another store house. This too had been blown over and broken so that all it con- tained had been scattered. So it was with many trees and old stumps all through the Green Forest. The Green Forest didn't seem the same at all. Chntlerer. running about frantically. felt as though he were in a strange place. Nothing looked as it should. Noth- ing seemed the same. The mushrooms he had so care- fully placed in dlflerentplaces had - been blown away. It seemed as if all the hard work he had done through the tall had been for nothing. Only one at his store- houses had been unharmed by the wind. That one was underground. but was a small one and there wouldn't be nearly enough food to last all winter. He met his cousin.. Happy Jack. the Grey Squirrel. Happy Jack didn't seem to be worrying. Happy Jack is a thrifty person, too, but he and Chatterer never have agreed as to the best way to store tood. Happy Jack works just as hard as does his cousin to gather nuts and seeds and hide them away. But he doesn't hide a lot in one place. He buries them, one here. one there, where the earth is soft or under leaves. The great storm hadn't scattered his supplies. He wasn't worrying. , N0 PROFIT TORQUAY. England - (GP) - Twelve cream-painted telephone booths were erected at consider- able expense for an international trade conference hero. After A week the booths were dismantled and a total of 77 cent: was found in the coin boxes. , LPL ABNEB HE ISAT Th” ESARVED , t Atllll. IV o'w (1m'nws.'vIII'u'z. nAr.e' By AL CAP? 1 . AN. caAm.crrrs'roWN unit on an aunt. C0i.l.IN5,1'N' OWNER or rw uoo VOIIK YANKS no FOUTIALI. TEAM. IS on 'm' WAV UP. ' llY...TED P55 -T -' HORACE SHE'S GETTING FUSSY ABOUT HER HAIR! IT'S MICE--I”-UT WHY COULDN'T YOUK MOTHER DO IT ? DAVVY .7 VINCENT THE HAIR 5TYl..IST rn-rii snnuuucagji srvnsgg. . ma 'soaav,viaiwi.e i B E Guwuoi G&i.i.A:oAsC'i'Er5iTi' vow. w.Ai'iv Just because ””i'-twica as MUCH vow. DAIJGHTEII use REACHED FROM New 0,... 114: sewn PARLOR AGE I! A I cnrrbou L Oi-l,MY LAND! WHAT IF THEY GOT Ti-VWPONG DAY I JUST CAN'T: UNDERSTAND E OF TH' - 'PHONE"! GEE! WISH I COULD mo ETHEUS MlU'!Tl-V WQEE I1; TlPPiE??D! ECTIN I-IA TO MIL 9--l R BROKE WALK EIGHT Oi-1,100 BAD--l no --r G xout-Noun DOWN?!" SUADE HER TO GIVE LP PANTING ?