By Thornton JEBEY1 QUICK wrr Never give up come what may. success ne'er is won that way, -Jerry Muskrat. Down the Big River drifted Jerry uuskrat on a box. when he had 'iimbed on that box. it had been dose to shore. While he.dozed, it and floated out and the current wad caught it and had taken it out in -mid-river. Now Jerry vr-; really out in the Great World. see- lllg a lot more of it than he want- ed to see. All the rest of the day he drifted. when the Black Shadows came W. Burgess creeping out from one bank over the Big River, Jerry was still out in the middle. Presently he heard a sound that made him shiver right from the tip of his nose to the tip of his tail. It was the hunt- ing call of Hooty the Great Horn- ed Owl, largest of all the Owl family. and one of the fiercest of all feathered hunters. Many times at home in the smiling Pool. had Jerry heard that fierce hunting call, but never had it set such a shiver of fear along his backbone. You see. there he could keep out of l-Iooty's sight with no trouble at all. "Oh dear, what shall I do if he comes out here and sees mci" thought Jerry. ”I can dive if I see him in time. but what will I do afterward?" Once more he heard that hoot. The first time it had been from- the shore on his right. This time it came from the shore on his left. liooty had flown across the river. For some time l-footy did.not call again, but Jerry did not once forget to keep watch. And so it was that just in time he saw what seemed like a moving shadow. He dived. and he dived He took Jerry": place on that box. clutched in those great cruel claws of Hooty's. What do you think Booty did then? He took Jerry Muskrat's place on that box. There he sat, turning "his head this way and that. and watching for Jerry to come up. He made no sound. Jerry stayed under as long as he could. He didn't swim far. He was afraid to get far from that box. He feared that he couldn't swim to shore. that it was too far. As long as he could climb out on that box he couldn't drown. When he could hold his breath no longer he carefully put his head out of water Just enough to have his nose and eyes out. He didn't really think Hooty would be near for of course no trees were near for him to light on an'd he doesn't circle the way members of the Hawk family do. just in time. Had he been a wee tbit slower. he would have been Continued on page 12 fhere Ought To Be A Law DR51i'l 9 3””: .. .. .. . .... ...,.k .- ..........::L?:... J V canmaav. i. 1 12541.12: me em .. DENTON cl-ULDLES5 AND PETLESS , THE WEALTHY VAN GOONS QATTLE AROUND IN A HOUSE WITH 'lWENTY- SIX ROOMS- 1txa. mtapipz. 'rt' :24-15uz:9-rxn -u:0i2.cJn.Q3n)u.uaus. titut o2;oM-Mil'mMf-om om)-4 uguii ha, by Fngaiy And Shorten 7...-a-1: . H WHILE THE KIDUEK CLAN L rs re 1:) LAUGH ) squeeze A BASEBALL TIAM IN A Room AND A HALF! - . E.i..':;':l:;.-.:: .. it Juan J '41 , something, By Josephine, Culbertson '.l'I-IE BETTER CHOICE Oh the surface, it was simply I toss-up whether south showing make 'one bid or another in the following hand, but surface indica- tions are rarely adequate. a South dealer. Both sides vulnerable. North-South 80 on score. QJ1063 c132 OM4- ' 4.1os2 494 .9372 pa N ones gxiosz w E 4 sgaxo S .353 W3 . --I-.7 paxs oaxqm gas-I 4.194. This was the actual bidding in a rubber game: South West North East 1 Q Dble. Pass 1 Q l NT Pass Pass Pass West opened the king of clubs and ran off his six-card suit - and South had to do some un- pleasant discarding. He gave up two diamonds and one spade. (Dis- carding the heart ten would have been tantamount to surrendering, since West certainly would have exited with a heart.) East let go all his diamonds, and now West could count the suit. and safely lead away from his king. South won the blank ace of diamonds, three hearts and two spades. but was still one trick short of his contract. Thegnotriinip rebid chos by South appeared safe enough, with his powerful holding and with only seven tricks needed for game at the 90 score, but this was super- ficial. view. West's vulnerable take- out doubla had to be based on and what was more likely than that he had chosen that course to conceal (at least temporarily a long club suit? The far better rebid on South's part was a takeout dor” of one spade. This would have "smoked West out" in a hurry! Not being able to stand the one-spade double, he would have bid two clubs, and when North and East passed that call, South would be strong enough to double again - still for a take- out. North would bid two hearts as the least of evils, and expert play by South would bring home that contract. If West elected to compete further. with three clubs. he could be doubled and punished adequately. The continuous current dynamo was invented by the Italian, Picin- otti, in 1860. ' ” 3V?3-"V-sly 1.” H '.il I&llIInIl 1 . as some. - I 2 mm In) i vmgiil On K: Ex THERE WA5 MORE. "775 was s Asouuo...un,ooNj1' OttMV...ti' SAYS HE IS BUING HER roe on-Sea!-Au oom- KNOw.'.'-WE'LL. uavau FIGURE rs-us our in ; man: To save: our: c m:-;::- By Alex Raymond R FATHER HALF THE CL M5 N6 GAVE . ... Al aw Emu lb - i stop s. HELP HERS... LAU8-IING SO iNAE&hHLMEAKAhII. PAGE SEVEN By Ruford rrvwasioue OF A MY WIPES sgscm. i GOT WU IN THE STOMACI-I, EH 7 NO--GOT ME ON me new; ' By Edwina --MEBBF ue woulb TRAVEL FOR AWHiLE-- BUT i-lE'D BE BACK! 1 'MEMBEI2 wueu MAC MILLER HAD ONE" To PQ ESE NT ,ue-pay! A E'pAYDPt-IONE --'sIDES.rr'D (:05? mo Mucu-- oi-I. THAT'S REAL MCE or You TO comuieurs A DOLLAQN ANS 'cous2sE,You'i2e INVITED NOW, IF 8 N SPEARS COULD Tl-ii K OF A NICE, QUIET INQTCZUMENT-Al . in Irllolmus us no HOP: vou vowrmmo ME naic- " 7'I6ll('MY Ramodoluucte saw: gave! t't.s't552'x24”.i:'-tn: . WW ---TNNTNOOKIWP VET. BUT--u FARtiiuI-IAR,-rue curvaceous mm! AN'a::-zrcrms 1'60-TOO DIVINE---up -ms-r euow sums 'rxuvt::, emu-evso laclrl-7PI5'Ell.' THIY ATE Mv Errrnas BAG OF PEANLITS IN one MINUTE '. my 2141- wuuavb '3"s'fn'v'5:a”3a"25' wrm A cam-rat Ll! tit: my ngyaagp '52:: mfsgr ilillatiiil By Bob Gusiafsou new-r THAT ELWOOD You 1' MADE A DATE WITH. .. Plzwcess? ,, l vs Bur NA1'ui:'ALLV, l GAVE HIM THE LISLJAL Ttvo VUEEKS