DECEMBER 7. 1949 fiLlillfl SCHEDULE During the month of December (weather permitting), (‘best (‘linics will be held throqhout the Provincg u m]- iowr: .»\l.lYi-‘.RTON— I l "a —>—- -. WHITEFOOT BECOMES CURIOUS In curiosity, ‘tis plain, ls sometimes loss, but often gain. Whitefoot the Wood Mouse. Whitefoot the Wood Mouse. he of the dainty white hands and feet, the spotless white waistcoat, the fuwn-cdlorea coat and the long slender tall, had lived all summer at the edge o! the Green Forest ivhei-e only a narrow road separated it from Farmer Brown's cornfield. It was the first time Farmer Brown had made a cornfield there. 1n the spring Whitefoot hJd pooped out. from his home and WElLCiiPd the field plowed and lharrowcd nnd seeded without knowing what it was all about. He never had seen land plowed before, having always lived in the Green Forest. So at night. a dark night. he had ventured to run over to the ‘CIiQC of Lllc lield. He had found two or three grains of seed corn that had been dropped. They were [By Thornton W. Burgess) So Olie night when the way seemed clear he scampered across. and brush between the field and the road. He is a very timid person. is Whitefoot. so timid that he prefers to sleep all day and come out only at night when it is dark, for then he [eels much safer. Few- er hungry Nlouse hunters are about then, and it is much easier to keep from being seen by these than it is to keep out of sight of hunters imNniiY, December 5 . .. . . . . . . . .. .. 1:30-.4:30 p,m_ good eating. m wished he had s! .YT!HCR:SIDE__ 1801f. He ran about this way and ‘ f. q . . _ lfi- wa on the b. tn, b t, H. iusDAL December 6 and 20 . . . . . . . 9:30-12:30 p.m. ‘ always oylose to the zfliqoeivrhere hie Silt HEBP- . ‘Icould dart into Safety in the grass JilUNDAY, December l2 . . . . . . . . . . .. 1:80- 4:30 p.m.? mmmwlmfifllliflwuflflvfimw‘ .\l(ll\"l‘A(il‘lfl— I MONDAY, December 19 . . . . . . . . . . . .. 1:30- 4:80 p.m. ciilllffllli BflligG i'lll)\‘l1\'(‘lAl. SANATORIlJM- E _ Eu-ry Thursday . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:00-12:00 a.m. g B! Josephine Culharmn xJQCUQJQDQJSLQIIQ 1230- 4:00 p.lii. 1230- 4:00 p.m. E. M. FOUND, M.D., C.M., Medical Director of Clinics, Dept. of Health and Welfare Tuberculosis Division. EVNZY {Friday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Red Gross Blood Donor Clinics JIONDAY. DEC. IZIh-St. Mary's Ihll .. 2-4 P.M. 1-9 RM. SUMMERSIDE l'l ESDAY, DEC. llith-R. C. A. F. Station .. 8-5 RM. SUMIVIERSIDE 'l'l‘ESD\Y. DEC. filth-Masonic Hall .. 1:30-51 RM. KENSINGTON ‘Wl-LDNESDAY, DEC. Him-Canadian Legion l0 A.M.-12 MONTAGUE RYEDNESDAY. DEC. Nth-United Church Hall 4130-8 RM. SOUKIS l‘lll'llSl).\\Y, DEC. ISM-Canadian Legion . 2-4 P.M. 7-9 I‘.M. CHARLOTTETOWN 45E A DONOR AND GIVE A CHRISTMAS GIFT THAT SAVES LIVES ALL THE YEAR THROUGH i PACK CAREFULLY i ADDRESS CORRECYLY i SEND BY EXPRESS SHIP TO POINTS ‘NI. TNOT LATER THAN, amid. Columbia . -. . . . ." . Doumlm I2 Mcnitohu-Suokclzhowcn—-Alboric - i. 9060111501 13 Ontario . . . . . . . . ‘.' . DuomBowlS l Newfoundland . I.‘ '. . . o: K-l ‘i. DICIMBOI i‘ Maritime Provinces and Quebec .' '- 980111501 l‘ CANjADIAN CANADIAN NATIONAL PACIFIC 61/2200 I. lo AVOID.“ ‘VQDISAPPOINTMENI 1 §l if’ flx/a/zeeo 117*’ "“ I HAND-EVALUATION I Hands containing more than 3% ,il0l’10l'~Ll'iCi-(S can usually be classed as "strong," but this is not always true-the factor of distribution is part and parcel of hand-evaluation! y The South player in the following \ deal was far too "honor-trick- y consclousl" South ‘dealer. North-South vulnerable. 1 ‘KQ Q A K U ¢QJmil 41084 J s a s 2 O A 1° T i :Q1()4 .3985 i . 5 2 Q 4 8 1 g, Q 9 5 S a. J a a z 4943 i I 7 3 2 » Q A K 9 I ‘ sax: The bidding: South West North Baal 1 Q Pass 3 Q PM! 4 4. Pass 4 Q P"! rs e Pass a o PM! Pass Pails l North's bid of six diamonds was not particularly expensive. because the salient fact was thflt S01E11 could not have made even five dia- ,monds! Thus, North's final “push” ‘cost only 100 points, whereas south had made a bid which was responsi- ble for the loss of the vulnerable lgamel I This far greater loss could be ‘attributed to South's quite unjustl- ‘fled and illogical rabid of four in daylight. He found a rain of corn partly [buried and this set him to digging in the soft earth. He found more of the planted seed. He didn't take much because he didn't like being out in tho open even in the dark. All summer he watched the corn grow. In thc fall it was cut and stacked in what are called shocks. the stalks brown and dry. He became curious about those brown shocke. He saw them in the moonlight standing row on row. But Vlfhltefoot doesn't like the moonlight. Hc doesn't like it any better than he does daylight, or not much better. If he goes out at all while Mistress Moon is shin- ing. he is careful to keep in the friendly Black Shadows, the good friends of all the Mouse folk. So he waited for a dark night. a really dark night. You see he had got to run across open ground from the grass at the edge of the field to the nearest shock. To you or me that would have been a very short distance, but to one as small as Whitefoot it was -a very long distance, one to be run just as fast as his legs could go. Suppose l-Iooty the Greut Horned Owl, or Spooky the Screech Owl, should happen to fly low while he was running across there. He shivered at the thought. It certainly seemed a long way over to that. nearest shock and all the way there wasn't a. thing to dodge under or behind or around. He could be picked up with ease and there was nothing he could do about it. So getting over to that corn shook really was a great adventure. But curiosity had to be satisfied. You know how that is. So one night when the way seemed clear he scampcrcd across. I sus- pect his heart was in his mouth all the way. But once there. he was no longer afraid. Never had ‘he been where there were so many hidingplaces. It was wonderful. Anywhere he happened to be around or on that shock of clubs. over North's three dlamondsnwfn he 601114 instantly (104189 W‘ 0f Later’ in the postflmortem, sougmsight among those cornstalks. It qnalnflvely argued ma; he haqiwas a wholly strange place but it held a mu honor-trick over a mini-i “w: a friendly plan. {mum bid, and that this had givenloffllmOSbltlib once he félllridifiilthifl; 1. 55g corn. was wrappe up n c mm the fight m bid {our c“ husks. His eager little nose told him that there was something good to eat inside and it didn't take What South overlooked, however. was that distribution could not have been worse than it was! Ex- perts follow a very sound principle in this respect; They mentally de- duct at least one-half honor-trick from their holdings when faced with this utterly barren 4-3-3-3 hand pattern! Thus, instead of regarding South's hand u "strong." an expert would consider it. almost. y. minimum. and therefore would not dream of going past the three- notrump level voluntarily! When South, instead of vruwrlv bidding three notrumip over three diamonds. canted the auction to the four-level. North could not- be blamed for visualizing more winners in the South hand-—and in any case. the damage had already been done, since North-South were now committed to at least five diamonds. Continued on page 9 DKiiIWC‘E Sunnyslde Ballroom Every Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday Eastern Rhythm Boys ADMISSION-Brio Meet your irlnnils there Ll'L ABNER _ H _ “$52?” €m¢"e“r_‘o’§‘= w __ vowummn \ G11’! By AL CAP? mm eounos-vdAl-l-us ‘gwglffi-JET AH WASTH mo! eov 3N l’); WORLD F0 vO-- rmnunnvuaf-mqmsuavr- WIBHTIDYOLRMUIWQ AUQOON ASO-IICAMIINMOFCGIIOI OITICT was’ 11' HE GUARDIAN, CHARLOTTETOWN '-£i9.~f=.-<>.f..T.li.e _R9vaiM<> WELL-SHERIFF‘, LET'S SEE 711/5 j2Z/59%'/2792?/'277M" new Llssru. su PLEASE use 1r warns V: BEIENiA/A cor A COUPLA ‘M . mmsy-n-o». 1.41» oilrlli: unted ii i x." r.- r ..,.. n47 s, ‘T... m... m“ 5 TAKE w" xwiw? . 1 i . Ifivleud Nyliln! ulgfllnlr. IPAGE SEVEN by Z-‘in-“V (fro? Hk r/ss ' APE r00 éorr W/TH 1/4555 auvssn-rzu away m/FE , You w THE 5.4 (K FO/E’ I‘ ycue HNDA/ESS/ f. ' y FTR u sss i 7H4 171550255550 1- WAEM s/vouen < Foe m: 1241i!’ Li- ma» claAlé-Iroiar... wort oowr name - s .. ouesr IN nus House.’ NONE ATHEM BUMS AFPLE-BLOSSOMWONYI "(HOT- AS Jfig JA err ‘IMIHUH... ' ¢AnLQ ‘ Akbllkgfll - a.‘ B: Buicril "' HoiuceJi-als is THIS DAY r CHANGE "m: TIPPY AND "CAP" STUBI YOUR FATHER WILL TALK TO YOU/YOUNG LADY-- GlVlNG POOQ UNCLE WILEYS PlCTURE TO I MRs BUDGEAFOR I DON'T MY pop sows HE_\5l/l'»_‘- GIMME FIFTY cents lFl SEE ‘rum’ UNCLE outlaws . PlCTUFZE NEVER cows BKCK TO OUR uousaANI CAN ' STAY FOR E-UDPEQ" wumlzz YOU sow TO nave??? ens/n" i-egavizugtl ArEw ‘r GO NJ wonnv. TILLIE m SURE THE smarr some OH vAi. ’ i HAD w: MOST AWFUL DQEAM \.A§T M16141‘ I DQEAMEO 114E SPIQW Boano was STOLEN RELAX TILLIE I'M ‘n45 QQARD l5 51M. IN PENNY . Y anrsunom ME Jusr ran/tenses: I HATETD HAVE AW \\‘// mATvotlmluKLgF rr- YisMiTll-l- Ml‘- Elwin“ noel-man ,PEMM\I.SOJ HAVE FORGET FOQWE MOW“ HEARDMIHAMI-‘ofiwufi ‘n-uTlAMmE sci-loci. ¢LA5Q . PRINCIPAL - l‘ O “a165,, il-