. "s:: ...s... -....--w - -w”'wg By A LIVELY FAMILY A little play in every day p Does much to smooth the roughest; mother among the Green Forest. ...Olcl Mother Natureland feathered children must learn way. shadow the Weasel and Mrs. Shadow had a big family. They had i nx I child, but liveliest children Forest. They children. some parents have hard time looking after one here were six or in all the Green - just starting AT THE BLUE HAVEN for a tender STEAK OR CHICKEN DINNER Hot Dogs, I-Iantburgers Hot or Gold Sandwiches Open all night on Saturday CHURCH TEA Come to Belfast Church Tea on Wednesday. August 5th to celebrate the 150th Anniversary of 'the landing of the Selkirk settlers. Thornton W. Burgess out in the Great World, and that i I Supper served from 4:30 to 6:30. i - l- Gharlottetown Golf club Dance TONIGHT AT CLUB HOUSE Dancing 9:30 PM. to 1 AM. Bountiful Surroundings - Good Music. Tickets-s1.00 per person is always the hardest time for a father and mother especially a folks. You see. all furred a very great deal in a very short time. It is the most dangerotm time in all their lives, for they have yet to learn the dangers all about them, nnd how to avoid the. them. Shadow the weasel is s good father. Now that those young Wea- seis were old enough to be out in the Great World learning its les- sons. he did his part in helping mother keep watch over these live- ly youngsters. and teaching them what to do and what not to do. From the very first time they hog?-Ti rivegoui-ACHIE it t A 4.3). poked their noses out of their homo underneath a big stone pile, they began hunting. The love of hunting was born in them. Father went along with them. He show- ed some. how to hunt while mother showed the others how to hunt. when they could not catch enough food for themselves, father always brought food for them. They never went really hungry. At first they did not know what. fear was. Of course this is true of many little folks just starting out in the Great World. They have to learn to be afraid. That is one of the first and mos't im- hortant lessons. They have to learn to be afraid, and then what sud who to be afraid of. The right kind of fear is a sort of life in- surance among the furred and feathered folk. one night the six young Wcasels were having it grand frolic in the moonlight, Suddenly what seemed like it drifting shadow appeared. There was no sound. It just hap- pened that at the moment neither mother nor father was right at hand. They would have known what that drifting shadow really was. The six little llvcly Weasel; play- ing tag-youlre it, hide-and-seek, and having a good time generally in the moonlight, paid no attention in that moving shadow. Perhaps they didn't even see it. suddenly something happened. It was a dreadful something. That shadow no longer drifted. It shot down, and sharp-claws closed on one of those playful furrv 1o1i:. There was a sharp squeak. 'Big wings be- gan to beat, and that small Weasel, clutched in cruel claws. was lift- ed and carried up in the air and away. so it was that his five brothers and sisters learned to al- ways watch out for drifting shu- dows lest one c' them prove to be I-footy the Owl . i That was their first lesson in fear. They knew how what it was to be afraid. Until then they had. without knowing it. been in danger of being caught. by one of the Owl folk at night, or one of the Hawk folk by day. Now they were in far less danger because they had learned of ii, and al- ways would be watching out for the feathered hunters to strike from above. I It didn't take them long to learn lthat they were without friends among their neighbors, This didn't bother them ,. hit. They had each other to play with, and they just didn't care what their neighbors thought of them. They grew fast. They grew very fast. Now. grow- ing children need a lot of food. It was 5. great. relief to mother and father when the children be- gan catching some food for them- selves. They were taught all about hunting for Mice. Thev were taken out on the Green Meadows to Mouseville, and there they had a grant. time hunting along the Mouse naths cut in all directions through the tall gram. It was fun chasing 'Mice. It was I. grand time for them. but a bad time for the Mice. They learned how to look for holes in hollow logs, and in stumps of trees. and in the ground be.- tween roots, and under stories. In Imany they found nothing, but T I WINNING PLAN In such a deal I! the following. it is not easy to plan the play right do to the final phase. The declarer, however. adopted A line. which, though fsiriy com- piicated. was undoubtedly the best available. Northdesler. ' North-South vulnsrablen. Q1106 QAEHI QAJ10 ( , QAG5 . got)?! on .9xQto N 9.116 l logos W E :33 l iQQl07 S t AAKSBQ , Q9 . QKQ3 q.xJ42 , Thebidding 1' menu East South "wear 5 ;1N'r Pass 3; Pun” , l3N'f' Pass 4; Pan .4; Pass 0; Pass lPsss Pus ' West: opened the heart king, and decisrer studied the dummy for some time. He saw that even if he could run the trump suit with- out loss, he still would need good luck to get three club tricks. Rather than depend on two favorable fac- tors, he maneuvered as follows: After taking the heart ace. South ruffed a hurt, then laid down the ace and king of spades. He led to the diamond ten. rutied a sec- ond heart, then went back to dum- my by overtaking the diamond queen with the ace, and ruf- fed the last heart. Now, with the closed hand out of trumps and the lone jack in dummy, declarer put the finishing touches on the line of play he had adopted. He cashed the diamond king, then-entered dummy with a. low club'to the ace and led the spade jack. not knowing which defender would win. but in the certain knowledge that this throw- in play oiiered the best chance. Both defenders had followed suit to all the heart leads. and there was only one diamond sun out- standing. True. if the player who got in with the spade queen had the diamond he could cash it. but there was nothing South could do about that at this stage. When, actually. East discarded "the din- mond on the spade jack. South could relax, because with West forced on lead. the club return to sou'th's tenace was inevitable. there was always 1 chance that they would find someone living here; someone who would be afraid of them. but of whom they would not be afraid of. wherever the family went. they had at happy time. But they left unhappiness. That is the way of life. All too often the happiness of one is the unhappiness of the other. By Zane Gray rauzouzoyvpexvs gr arr4wz;4Ve'7xr: M41545; FOLK! IW7ll0U7!zIPPzIIf.' . V l' iii? (II! To 5414' six: mes:-mo w':Amm.r' (',4!.. ezsirfrp 51!; S m' av: 7' rumvx. 711' rdlsxil yes, Sm, Nut -3. 4)m;m;. , I kn'lKlU 234007.! I 500 ways ON-ntrwt MAW ' J VOLIJNTEE WORK iN.1'HE . '&iAT'i..L MAKE A BIG 5411' TH W RVILL save ME..' . I I ' wtssts oossntr ms 9'i'AR1'ED TD m.'f”&t HER--AND THEN THE MA6GlE'I FEEL FULL EP Y--ITH K OH - lsrrr THAT EAD- T'B GTARTED RAIN! NOW I vsoN"r BE ABLE To uokk IN T00 10 you: HOROSCOPE savs THIS wtu. II A vezv mow my son. you, HORACE! HMFH! THAI) ISN'T NEWS ..s....-,-.. Tilly The Toilet 4 ,. I : I WONDER. COULD 5?. GE THlMfNG OF ME i t it i l -on - mu mm-u um-mu 5. Napoleon and Uncle um I-um xnvlvn ustofson By Bob G r---.' MISTER BIMDKIHS our You waurs Q mow You PU THE Flu ESTIMATES N El by LON6'DlFi74 NCE - r FILE V By Clifford McBride . t UEJI hxgafg ,..4J V t . l . . WHY, HE TOLE ME HE'S HERE EV'RY K was! moon: THERE'S '5 5.5TEK5...HlV! 3' Lil Abner S. UH CAIIVTRUSH Haw: AAl'SAVE' '1:-axs YMAE. M4MMY.'.'- AH xs rsuapzp ., .. 2. V nri 97:6 ,5-,1? 3,; .- sq pxcx up sow: SCISSORS, ,4 NEEDLE .-w' rykszya -AN' PROCEED AS mucos- '4' .v , ,xI - ' AH Hiatus vo. 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