ocgaaa‘ r,_ 1. 3. 5 infantry Divisional Signals Regiment novu. curious slams 5 Infantry Divisional Signals Regiment will commence their Fall and Winter Training program at i930 hrs., Friday, 'liOct. 48. All members of the unit will parade in unitorrn at the Armouries on that date. The following trades courses will be conducted throughout the coming training period: OPERATORS (Wireless and Line) 2. LlNEMEN. DRIVER MECHANICS Any persons desirous of enlisting in the Unit and qualifying in one of these trades should renortto the Orderly Room as soon as possible. Cheques for the 1947-48 Canadian Signals Association Com- y ,, nimsrora » lean 0- ‘ r @313 M, -. Lnuaqr/Mcmhistlvran . m . .- . my/a 4107547154750 m: may up arr DWIDIKI/TWDGWA’! W41’ Mara/r AM/fr IAIIII5OMIOL~IPOV7AWGU nu Jarrn/mmeior/Jwm wmrmus fllfl/Hflfillfillfli/I/E/Vllfl ma you k/Mrra oo/ I WHAT PADDY THE BEAVER l HAW l -Destruotion any one can do; lCreation is l never had seeri anything like it. He hopes he will never see any-, thing like it again. He and Mrs. ‘Paddy had seen the Red Terror; which ls fire, rushing along the; Great home pond, leaping from trce to tree crime up again it was inside their |house standing out in the water. -There they had been safe, for the Red Terror and fierceness them there. It was the only home on all that part of the Great ‘Mountain that it could not Ill! had been. Even these WEN did not reach. changed, They were more or lesi (By Thornton W. lurgess) the gift of few, —Old Mother Nature. What a sight! Paddy the Beaverl Mountain toward snapping, their] I h roaringul as it» {ff What so short a time b13101‘ i195 been beautiful green trees were black masts on mere stumll! all its strength could not reach for covered with aukes and black 5W5 After a while Paddy had begun of twigs and half burned lelivfls» to worry. It was not for himself or petitions have been received and will be distributed to the winners on Friday night. VDORKING, Surrey, England - gsn teaching himself, French, (CP) -- Archibald Barnes. 16, re- then Sanskirt and finally Chinese.‘ cently passed his Matriculation He has a working knowledge. Examination in Chinese — and he Russian, Japanese, German and. knows eight other languages in- Greek. filling in spare time with eluding English. At seven he be- s dabbling of Latin, DAILY CROSSWQRD ACROSS DOWN 2o. Cause air 1, irrlghten l. Resort to circulate B. The eye- 2. A kind of 2!. Free lashes jersey 23- wig" 11. Heathen 3 Maturcd 24. One of the 12 Antelope 4. Flowcd seven hills i (So. Afr) 5. Concluda 0! Rflme I13. Correct 6. Enigma 25. Give over "ll-i. Celebrated 7. Manacles 28. Half ems 15. Fish 8. ignited 31. ‘squib’! 16' Adjrlgy on i3 $113533“ s2 Fleuiwerlcss \'"'="'"‘" ’“““°‘ w _ A ~ ' '17 xenon gsglstgnt plants (U. DOCIOY‘ igym.) l6. Writing 34. Tax (hisL) inflection- \i8. Steamship implement 35. Dwelling ate term) lahbr.) 18. Box sclen- 37. Greedy 41. Topaz hum (is. Kind of titlcaliy as. Boy's mine-bird herb 19 Corroded nickname 42 Cirque l2l. Forctokon 23. Ferry-boat ( var.) 26. Foreign 27. Pass a ropO through a hole (nautJ 29 Aprimary color ‘80. Jeered a! 2. Companlcl 33. Northeast labbr.) 34. Shilling ‘ lsbbr.) '36. Antlercil animal l7. Close to 3B. Venomous snake A0. President of Confederate state! Isa. Catkln 44. Sheep-like 45. Taut l6. hfllitary student DAILY CRYFIOQUOTE-Ilerds how to work its A X Y D l. B A A X ll IILONGFELLOW i Ono letter simply stands for another. in this example A is used for the thrcc L's. X for the two 0's. etc. Single letters. apos- lropllcs. lhc length and formation of the words are all hints. Each sir-y the code lcttcrs are different. A Cryptogram Qllflifl" usa- M: LYZ XAFFML aw LSCFSXL czne PMXX KZ DJQ CD511»: as wnaavza "to: Kz us-oaxnua. Yesterday's Cryptoquotel l-lE IS A GENTLEMAN. BECAUSE HIS NATURE lS KlNDs AND AFFABLE T0 EVERY CREA- TURE-BARNFIELD. Distributed by King Features Syndicate. inn. RSBZ'X for Mrs. Paddy. They.were safe and they knew it. There is n0 It. made his throat and nose sting. more blessed feeling than that ofpgr away along the side of the being safe in time of great danger. Great Mountain Paddy worried about his neighborslraged anti the round face of jolly whose homes were on land. What bright Mr. Sun was hidden behind lhad happened to those homes and 5 to those neighbors? It could bE|5mQk9 roiling up. from the Red He feared it \vas.'Terror_ And in or at the edfle 0! his pond were neighbors whom he himself what the Red Terror never had dreamed he would ever .see there together. very dreadful, I Finally he had to go out and see, for had clone. He left his house through thel under-water doorway on the bot-l tom of the pond and slowly rosel to the surface, but was careful not- lo put his whole head out at once] only his nose and his eyes. He| ed to see. | He had come up a little way out. from his house and that was thei first thing he saw. He had planned; to climb up on the roof. a splendid‘ place from which to look all over his pond and the surrounding i shore, Now -as he looked up on‘ that roof he had a complete change of mind. Yes sir, he had‘ a complete. change of mind. In- stead of climbing up on that roof he came very near diving and going back inside his house. You see, there was some one already on that roof, some one with a. tail so short that it. was hardly worthy of being called a tail; some one with ears from each of which stood up a tuft of long hair; some one from whom all his life Paddy had had to watch for and whom he was most. afraid because of his salted-footed stealth. It was Tufty the Lynx, own oousin to Yo\vler the Bobcat, Tufty was crouched on the very top of the house. his stubby tail twitching. He looked down at Paddy and there was no fierceness in those greenish-yellow eyes. In~ stead there was a look very like fright and worry. All the usual fierceness was gone from Tufty the Lynx. Paddy had the strange feeling that should he climb out on that roof beside Tufty he would be in no danger whatever, However he had no idea of _trylng it. In- stead he swam over to his dam and climbed out on that. He closed his eyes and slowly opened them again for it had seemed to him that he must be dreaming, and the dream was a. bad one, the worst he ever had known. But when he opened his eyes again he knew that this was no dream but something real and worse than any dream could be. Here was a new world. That is how it seemed anyway. Instead of the lovely world of greens and browns and yellows and reds that he had so often looked at from this very place on his dam, and that he so dearly loved. he now saw only a black world with no living green thing beyond the water's edge. What so short a time before had been beautiful green trees were black masts os mese stumps. still smoking. Only the pond, the brook entering and leaving it, the house ln it and the dam on which he was sitting remained at all as they must have fresh air and he \vant-: g, The air was hot and still smoky the fire still white-edged black cloud 0i The next story: "Desolation." vvvdsAA l 5 Contract Brrdgeé f) p, Jmephlne Culbertson 4 sfw A SUBTLE POINT A subtle bidding point. 03°" overlooked even by 800d Players- was involved in the deal Show" below. iWaat dealer. _Bol.h sides vulnerablg The bidding: West North asur 1 Q Dble. Pass Pass Pass Pass South 1' s South made only four clubs, but his side could have made three notrump Just as easily, East deserved a good mark for his part in keeping the opponents out of game! This may seem a re- markable statement in view of the fact that East did nothing but pass; nevertheless. the statement can be barked up with a sound argument. What we must consider is: what would have happened i! East had bid as so many players do bid, that is, if he had tried the mild shut-out oi’ a two-heart bid directly over the takeout double? This is s common practice—but consider the outcome in a case such as this. When East passed South's two-club response was Bnythlng but encouraging to his partner; but ii’ East had bid two hearts South certainly would have overcalled with three clubs on his seven-card suit, and then, encour- aged by that free action North surely would have ventured to three notrump. A very aggressive South might have jumped to three clubs over East's pass, but this was s questionable action, and at least East did not force an opponent in- to what would have been a suc- seccful bid, It is subtle points like these that have far-reaching implications in bridge. a.__ RIP KIRBY By Alex Raymond WHAT‘ S M‘! FRIBUD LORD ' , NOW iVlfiBfin. KNOW TlLLiE (AME ‘D TtE MAINLAND, AND MRJMADULL FIR! HER,’ “" WINTERBROOK l5 ml . AlLl THEY THINK HE MURDERED THINK YOU CAN MAKE YES, BUT THIS HEAD WIND MAY DELAY ME A COUPL - 0F $l¢OND5 ANQTI/ik Mame srurmrae fir! r . mar wsrumr! " {gab a”, Mata... . HM- gafihb LJIQBIAL, I?‘ “ ly Buford APP-THAT wAs A soon neat! oglaate IS MARRIED -ro THE BEST COOK l EVER MET]! WITH ME. ME. _ JERKIMER" UGl-t-MRS. JERKIMEI? ‘ iS MARRIED "ro The REWDEFT HERE COMES CASSIDV-J l VLONDEQ ll’: HE'S BTILL A5 ABEEMT-l ‘JNDED A5 EVEIZ- a. I l-‘AVEUT SEEN HIM lH up. ms. Kln| Fennel lyelrtil, m. ‘all “an nus-II TELL ME-WHO BEAT YOU UD LlKE THAT? ME-THIS WlJZ YJLJ i-fbOW TWAT MO GUY IN Ti-il5 YOlNlJ KIN LICK A HOME JOB- s1 r A GOOD / , twat-toe s, a." rmv mo "can" STUBIS watt, I'VE NEVER HAD suéé THOSE PEOPLE LOOK WHEN MILT JUST TOOK OUT Hi5 CHECKBOOK AN'~' WE CERTAiNLY NEW Q U G TlME! DlD YOU S I'M GLAD RENTiN’ our: M TO MQS.SNiTCl-l HURT i-llS CREDiT JUST ’NUFF-~ DID POP BUY TH’ NEW MY LAND! E AUTOMOBILE -- } . not." Syalvule w. n- s" w... 3 n». -~.,v..n ..,~.. ......s lO-l l ly Harry tiesnigsen wwl oomwfli"! Qagggs $9 A WHILE, sacrum? 01w 9112119 5 ‘c, s Maureen/GU HOW CANW-‘w’; D‘ - EST ALwtIEQAZEQaQIELL SE60“ ‘s sun-re HKE rl-wr . vou vr- QA‘|_F 0on5".