face TEN l i- ~=~ w» y KIIIGIITS ii: For Foot Aliment d m: w“ ‘Q iionsult m‘ “III-W w you. snovnl, o. r. 2:22.: a y Nov- 2 Chiropodisr Mambo" omy 14s Great George street Adm, 35¢ cnansorrsrowu. 1am. N 44¢n¢aav an‘. l mllsoilsnllos tonnes EAST ROYALTY RINK HALL Tuesday. November 1st SPECIAL DOOR PRIZE Eastern Rhythm Boys Prizes for best Costumes (Heated Hall) Admission 50c. Free Check P' "m Canteen Service. L. vww-v EXHIBITION O F ARTICLES 0F HISTORII! INTEREST B L 0 ii E R 6 I. ii B THURSDAY and FRIDAY NOVEMBER s and 4» Admission Free qumlllis BY Kill REYNOLDS i Z c I‘ ' ia-z; -. "Eggs! Eggs! Eggs! - that’: oii I've heard since they starb- sd soiling ‘em with Guordion Wont Ads!" Wood islands-Caribou Ferry Service The Connecting Link Between PRDWCE EDWARD ISLAND b NOVA SCOTIA daily including Sunday-STANDARD TIME Schedule tnr Sept. 26th to Oct. 81st inclusive Malling 4 Round Trips Dally Ichednie for the present:- SEPT. 26th T0 OCT. l1li_ have Wood Islands- Prinoe Nova . 3 mm. 1 pan. Charles A. Dunning .. . . ll a.n1. I p.m. Leave ‘Caribou-q . Charles A. Dunning . 8 mm. 1 pm. Prince Nova ........ .. . ll mm. I p.m. NOV. llt to NOV. 80th Leon Wood Islands- Prince Nova l pun. Charles A. Dunning . I pan Leave Caribou- Chariea A. Dunning . ii mm. l p. Prince Nova . l1 mm. 8 pm. Tor daily lniormationtllsten to 7:30 A.M. EACH WEEK DAY-STANDARD TIME He loses i! he is too late. -Old Mother rlsture. Nlmbleheels the Jumping Mouse had said good-by to Peter Rabbit. While Peter's head was turned ior Just a. moment. he had disap- peared almost irom under Petcrjs nose. You see, Nlmbleheels is a very small person and he is very smart in the gentle art oi disap- pearing. He has to be, as do all his cousins and other very small folks on the Green Meadows, in order to live. He can get out oi sight in the winking o! an eve. He had an exciting summer. Every day he had sudden {rights and the excitement oi narrow es- capes. It is just so with all Micc. and with all other very small people in iur and leathers. Hungry neighbors are alivays looking for them. Nimbleheels had told Peter that he was sleepy and was going to bed, not for a nap but for a 1on1. long sleep from which ho wouldn't wake up until the coming oi Mk- tress Spring. That would be months away {or it wasnt yet winter. The very ideai" exclaimed Polar to Mrs. Peter when he told hcr about Nimbleheels "Why Jack long time yet. It seems silly tn me £toouoc<nczco> m? o O o Contract Bridge By Josephine Culbertson The Ploy was the Thing North's bidding in today's deal was somewhat unrestrained but nothing so mild can be said about South's play or his Siam vontraci! North dealer. Both sides vulnerable. K Q Q a 9 a s QK Q = ‘a x9 4 1o 1 s a é J 9 8 9K 4 2 N 1 gasas w E O~ll1°°5 ‘N5 S 5Q J 8 3 '4 A s 4 2 QQ J 10 8B Q0 7. 4.6 2 The bidding. North East South West t‘ Poss 1 Q P"! our Pa» 60 P“! 6 Q Pass Pass Pass Apparently, North ielt that if South had an ace, there would he an excellent play ior six hearts. This was somewhat optimistic w South would also need a pretty good heart suit and, it he didn't have the club queen. a singleton or double- ton in the suit. As the situation was, however. Norths optimism should have turned out excellently, West opened the diamond ace. saw the dummy, and shifted to a spade. The queen won, and pros- ahly with the twin object o! os- tabllshlng clubs and returning to his own hand lor a trump finesse. South cashed the top clubs. thou ruffed a. third round with heart queen. West. o! course, lost no tluzc in over-rutiing, Alter losing the first trick to the diamond ace, South could see vcry plainly that succcess depended nu iinesslng successfully lor the mlSS- ing king oi trumps. (lacking {our trumps, he could not harbor great hope or dropping the king!) It should have been equally apparent that the early lead o1 three rounds o1 clubs would be dangerous, pcr-' haps setting up an over-ruli 113-! sition for the enemy. Thus, t.he markedly correct play was to over-I . take dummy’s lpade queen with they ace et the second trick and inn‘ m. medlately to ilnesse ior the heart king. Observe that with the heart king on side, South could aiord to lead three rounds o! hearts and still Who ls in time controls his istdl "The idea of going to sleep non"! I Frost won't be here to stay lor , . mm.‘ y THE GUARDIAN. Ui-IARLOTTETOWN loin iBv Thornton W. Rurgess) Nimbleheeis had jumped just in time to go to bed for the winter while things are so nice as they are now." "It seems silly to me to go to bed lor so long anyway." said Mrs. Peter, and Peter agreed with her. “Think oi’ all he misses," contin- l ued Mrs, Peter. “What's the good o! being alive it you don't know you're alive?" ‘ "That is what I asked Johnny Chuck. You know he is getting ready to do thf same thing. lie goes early like Nlmhleheels. All he said was that he dldn". sec any sense in bClILg cold and hungry just {or the sake ot being awoke when there , ivas nothing worth u-hlle being i awake Xor," said Peter. As (or Nlmbleheels, when he had said good-by to Peter and dodged out oi Peter's sight, he had kept perfectly still as long as Peter was in the neighborhood. Because his l coat so nearly matched the brown l grass and leaves around him Peter [had looked right at him without seeing him. I suspect that the little Blouse had laughed to hlmsell down inside. Wouldn't you have? Not until Peter gave up looking tor him and went away did Nimble- lieels move. Then he began to creep lhrough the grass. That. ls the way lie usually travels. With those long hlndlegs n! his he is a wonder- lul jumper as you know. For his size he is one or the greatest jumpers among nil the tour-looted folks in all the Great World. But long ago he learned that no one can jump and not he seen by watching eyes. But one may creep when in tall grass. or under other cover, and not ' be seen. Now he was really on his way to the snug home he had pre- pared for his long sleep. i Perhaps because he was sleepy he ‘was a little careless. Perhaps he thought that because he had only e very little way to go there was little ll.’ any danger. Anyway, he wasn't as careful in his creeping through the grass 1s he should have been. He pushed through places i where the grass stems were too close together, places it would have been wiser to have crept around. Push- l ing between the grass stems caused ithem to move. Unless wind is blowing it. moving grass usually means that some one ls moving about in it. and in doing so is mak- ing it move. All the hungry hunters of little meadow folk know this. Just what warned Nirrlbleheels that he was ln danger I doubt lr he knew himself. Perhaps he caught sight of n moving shadow. Anyway something prompted him to use those long hind legs o! his as Mother Nature intended them to be used and he did. Like two strong springs suddenly released they sent him nut or the grass in a wonderiul long jump. his long slim tail straight out behind, keeping him periectly balanced ns he sailed through the air to disappear in the grass ten ieet from where he hld jumped. Behind him there was an angry scream or disappointment u Killy the Sparrow Hawk beat his way up in the air. Nlmbleheels had lumped just in time, with none to spare. \ x NORTH AMERICAN I-IFI L. S. STEVENSON lroneh Manager I40 RICHMOND ST. establish the club suit ii the lattc? AIIPmfIla Northumherland raffles umltad broke as well as 4-2. since he would {or PoIicyhoIdor-l -.~Q\. 000x70» retain two trumps ior rulilng. By AL CAP? LI'L ABNER o aura Aflllli FATIKK Alb SKRETAIW AH-Hff-YOLXRE A CUTE ONEI.’ * Ill Kill‘! I CLNT LET HIM K O now I v rut-l Nazi: THIS Join-I'D 5mm: IUIISI‘, IF rr ' wziasm- ma your» ‘I00 I811 il-OPIY IlAlf/F- OH, , WHAT A RELIEFKV- ismv. DRESSED LIKE Hzn $055!! MESTONEI KNOW MISG I-‘AIN N”! K%W FIR 5C>@Lm ULIII l5 IN GOOD HAN$ VALE l .3 I <1 y , . t» O Y A u,“ .\ x : I'LL TELLYOU WHY I FORBADE AGQBDI VIBITO%I I'M AFRAID YTI-WI’ FfilNviéi-‘Y, 7'41 ' I I m: C/GAQ-ASH warm/anus aura NOVEMBER I, 111g, b)’ Zane Gr.‘ — 1* sour ewe/Doc awry new macaw ,1 SHES MAD ABOUT IIIM AND HE SEEMS TO BE WILDABDIIT ~ HER. HE'S A WONDERFUL CHILD, KNDBBY. " I wouoea wiurs u!- come 0F ms Mdlllltl. now i KNOW. ‘um LITTLE 00ml! M51401’ ONLY wouuo sunsets Anemia BUT OURS, THE HAIIDE MANAGE ST couto ANOTHER LEAVE A CIIILDMTPS sevouo mv UNDERSTANDING. , ,1 some out- use ANN... weu. res nodules sane. _ .1 cilfi Antfrmv fir. lfllKblt VIIMI! spm- w 1-way 4-4 \ camp. A1498 on -_ DOTTY DRIPPLE YESTERDAY ON MY LUNCH l-l TIPPY AND "CAP" STUBI yes. sue-r MADE rrouw" "rt-lav JUST zsrulzneo THE CAK‘ CRI.%‘8 you WITH euceoseo THEIR CONTRACT/j “l n toe-n‘ __ __.._ ... w- ,__ _ _ M WELL, FOQ GOODNESQSAKE" DON'T TELL ANYBODY MlLLlE ISN'T SPEAKIN’ '1?) U5! "TI-i’) SO MAD" u l‘ h ‘I /\ L non-Inn s, u." not". w» n» l wisu r0 NEVER SEEN run-r FOLDIN‘ BEDb-IT romeo us: once on FATHEQul-IE wAs YOUR WAAIETHEL $AV$ IF YOU'QE GIVIN’ FIVE DOLLAQS €to$€$%€3EA§/%J“EZE“' MLL 00in: . 4-1 WANTED TO CUT l1‘ UP WOO NDLIN’ BRINGING UP FA ri-IEI was. JIGGE-WI-IAT vou clue/l I'LL sHouLo DO l5 EXEKZCIGE wrru DLIMBBELLS- TFEIZEB NOTI-ING BETTER ‘lo use? ONE |~ TIZlM 1/! By Wesln/ A SPIRIT DESIGNED ‘OUR $WNL€) WHAT'S HE PROVING rue‘ SUPERIOR ” I ALL E was mi? w’ ' ESJHA wAlflll merr- T