gww. llx Says — r (continued from Page I) ‘ - A el so that we may retain our respect for each other in q 3e eep our love? ' e I certainly do. I believe that respect is absolutely the endurance of love, You may have a temporary in- tteg (or a person whom you know to be weak, unrnoral and avg vicious. but the love that lasts has to be founded on honesty and nyrlghtness. Also, it is a peculiarity of human nature that we seldom our fellow sinners, \Ve blame them for having led us astray. keep your love clean if you want it to last. IOIUIIY DIX cannot reply personally to readers, but will ans- QQ problems of general interest through her column. ~ EXHIBITION O F ARTICLES 0F HISTORIC INTEREST C L 0 V E II C L II I THURSDAY and FRIDAY NOVEMBER 8 and 4 Admission Free CLINIC SCHEDULE m Chest clinics will be held throughout the Province dur- lag the month of November as follows:- SUMMERSIDE- ‘ TUESDAY, Nov. 1 and 15 .. . . . . . . . . 9:80-12:00.a.m. LLBERTON— MONDAY, Nov. ‘I 1:80- 4:80 p.m. URlS-— MONDAY, Nov. 1a 1280- 4:80 p.m. MONTAGUE- MONDAY, Nov. 21 1:80- 4:80 p.111. ETOWN— EVERY THURSDAY . . . . ----.. . . . . 10:00-12:00 a.m. ' 1:80- 4:00 p.m. EVERY FRll/ra‘! 1:80- 4:00 p.m. I! you wish to attend a chest clinic for the first time, Idldly consult your family doctor or the Public Health Nurse i_n your district. , Dept. of Health and Welfare, Tuberculosis Division. ~ Wood islands-Caribou Ferry Service NOV. lst to NOV. 80th hove Wood Islands- Prince Nova Charles A. Dunning Leave Caribou- Charles A. Dunning Prince Nova . l p.m. 8 p.111. l pun, 8 p.m. “'0: {Axkxxxwcxxrvnm Ll'L AlNEIi THE GUARDIAN, LHARLOTTETOWN ily Thornton Afraid To Go To Bleep Life is Largely what you make it—- What you do and how you take it. _0ld Mother Nature. On the Green Meadows a very small person wanted to go to sleep and didnt u-ant to go to sleep. Perhaps it would be better to say that he wanted not to go to sleet). There is s. time for sleeping and d time for not sleeping. Queer as it may seem. this was a time for both, and the small person didn't know what to do about it. He was Nimbleheels the Jumping Mouse. Never before had he been quite so uncomfortable and so un- certain what to do about lt. He was sleepy, all the time growing siecpier, yet afraid to go to sleep. Were you ' ever afraid to go to sleep? If’ so you probably irere afraid somethir‘ might happen to you in your sleep. but I am sure you never were afraid to go to sleep for the reason Nlm bleheels was afraid. lie was afraid to go to sleep lest he never wake up. or i! he did, it would be when there was snow and ice and lie might freeze to death. You see the sleep that made Nlmbleheels so very, very drowsy n-as the long winteraleep sleep called hibernation. That ls just a name for albwlnter-sleep. And he wasn't in p, proper place [or §LUQDCG Cl Contract Bridge ‘V, B; Josephine Culbertson 4 i: The best that can be said about} East's defense in today's - deal is that it was "unimaginative? INEPT DEFENSE West dealer " Both sides QQQ§ OQ@I-IE D=IZKAIv< weang ,1“- 1a‘ 5 Z F] #0. O 2Hgu> u", 9'3 mo ‘ (I #000 >R>O new“ m t’ o in ~l Q The bidding: , West " North East. 1 Q Pass Pass Pass Pass Paea South could not be cnticized too severely for jumping straight to game at hearts. despite the fact. that sound defense would have de- feated that contract. West opened the spade king, but when East played ihe four, decided that s. spade continuation would do no good and might do harm, and hence shifted to the diamond lack, East put up the diamond ace and. slavishly following the "rule" of returning partner's bid suit, led. back his top spade. West captured‘ South's queen, but was now in Q hopeless position! It mattered very little what he led atthls point-— as it happened, he decided to play the diamond ten, South's diamond king won this trick, and when the ace of hearts dropped West's blank ten. affairs began to "look up" for the declarer! He led a low heart to dummy’: eight-spot and rurfed the diamond five with an honor. Just as he had hoped, this forced out West's 15st diamond, and that card happened to be the nine-spot, so the eight in dummy was now perfectly good! South reentered dummy with the trump and could cafih the spade jack and the diamond eight. for club discards. Instead of possibly losing two club tricks. along with two spades and one diamond, South lost no clubs! East's return of p, spade did not deserve applause! The situation, and the dummy. made l] Club shift highly advisable, rind therefore East should have returned his club ten~the top of his incomplete sequence. Against that quite normal defense, South would have had no 49 ‘been driven there by W. Burgess) Ninhlaheels was tat. Yes II’. all-wintersleep. No indeedlIt-iuas anything but that. . The trouble was that the pretty little Mouse was in his summer home, and a summer home is no place to spend a winter. It v-s in a hollow under an upturned snd and so just a very little below the surface of the ground. It was safe froyn the keen eyes of Hawks and Owls and other Mouse-loving hiin- tera, but it wasn't safe from the pinching finger; of Jiwk Frost, l-Ie would freeze the ground solid much below that little home under the old sod, and of course he would freeze any one foolish enough to be caught there. Nirnblehcels had Killy the Sparrow Hawk, whose favorite din- ner is a Mouse dinner. At the time Nimbleheels was on his way to the winter home he had carefully pre- pared, a home into which Jack Frost c ldn't possibly poke his pinching fingers. as had been lucky. very lucky, to reach the safety of his summer home which he liad thought never to see again. Three times Killy had lust missed catching him. Three times he had escaped by one of his famous long jumps, Yes indeed, he had been lucky and he knew it. Now he wanted, oh so much, to get to that snug, comfortable, safe home and go to sleep. but didn't dare start for he wasn't sure Just whereKilly was, Besides, he had made a frightening discovery. Just out in front Mr. Blacksnake was taking a sun'bath. or resting, or perhaps waiting for a chance to catch s, dinner, and MLBlacksnake has always had a taste for fat Mice. Nimbleheels was fat. Yes, sir. he was fat. He could hardly have been any fatter without splitting his pretty brown coat or his white waist- coat. which he kept so spotless at all times. Getting fat was part. of gettting randy for that long sleep and Nimbleheels had done just as careful and good a Job getting fat as he had digging and making; ready that. winter home he so wanted to gel. to now. I-le was getting more and more sleepy. It was hard work to keen his eyes open. He yawned. He kept yawning. If only he dared close his eyes and go to sleep. But it he did he might go into that deep sleep and let Jack Frost catch him there. If only Mr. Blacksna-ke would go on about his business. He hardly dared breath while Mr. Blaoksnake was so near. Mr. Blscksnske was worse than Killy the Sparrow Hawk. Killy couldn't follow him into his underground home, but Mr. Black- snaka could. Yes, sir, Mr. Black- snake could do just that. What Ninibleheels didn't know was that Mr. Blacksnake wasn't hungry; that he wouldn't be hungry again until spring. But so it was. You see Mr. Blscksnakesalso goes underground and sleeps all winter. It was about bedtime for him too. and he was simply resting on his way to his winter home. If Nimble~ heels had known that he would have felt ever so much better, He might’ even have ventured to go around Mr. Blacksnake. But he didn't know and so w afraid to try it. And he was sfr d to go to sleep. What a. fix to be in! PHOTOS FROM LIBRARY LONDON~(CP)——Siudenin now may obtain photostata of any book- page, picture or document in the Lambeth central reference library. Iv AL CAP! ly Arlearloymoird _ Eros scam aamsiw King of The Royal l , , Mounted alililllfiwvenhelhnnlwnvntlannl DOTLY DRIPPLE _ u, 1e by Zane Gre 77f a, I I067”! l5 HUUDPED 800!!! I1 Cori Andmq $- . 2?9s'a=§'....-_ i I 5mm"; a, n“ 7mm Syd-me. BRINGING u? rs m: I I I MEAN» i“ S0 GLAD you cams AN‘ so SORRY YOU'RE i MEAMMILLIE"! 510p BElN’ so PEQvEQsE! ou, sAnAi-o-wswe BEEN cousins AND FRIENDS -- FOR SO LONG;- BOQ-HOO‘ " BETTEE THAN MAGGiEG PIAVINE MIN MAY! INPIRIOR B s~_r oom- wsema Al MUCH IFI BITINCTI-ER NAIL!» AS on." \ i.lluvll'u -ulat<'ll w-uvlllfli