By, Thornton runny amps HOME. The wanderer though for astray, W. Burgess which he had come ashore. He didn't like to be away from the ;water. Sometimes he s)vam. Some- When home calls somehow finds times he walked or ran along the the way. mold Mother Nature. Jerry Muskrat was far from his home in Pool. He had left it to go out and Ice 3. little of the Great World. He was seeing much more of the Great World than he had dream- rd of, By accident he had been carried far away by the Big River. Now. he was once more ashore. the moat lonely Muskrat in all the Great. World. Right there a llillllv ber of Muskrats were living. but he wasn't welcome among them. They didn't want him around. Either they would have nothing to do with him. or they shoucd iheir teeth. and drove him out. Jeriy was homesick. Homesickiiess is one of those ills hardest to bear. Jerry made up his mind that he would go back hon." as fast as his legs could take him. But where was home? The Big River had twisted and turned. It had wound this way and that. How was Jerry to know uliich may to an. To begin with he start- bank. He felt much safer than he. could ever feel away from water. .There were not cattails up this; astrayvbrook He thought longingly of the! the Sntiling cattails where those other Musk-i ti-nts uere living. Though he qatsi imiiiy things. Jerry is particularly fond of the stems and roots of the it-attniis. But there were other things. He Ifallilili. I Crayfish ,and once he found a small fish uashed up on the shore. While Jerry lives most- - ly on vegetable matter, a great; variety of plants, he does like fish; and sorretimes a. little meat. He especially likes Clams, and Cray- fish. Once, he dodged in tinder some iroots just. in time to escape being iseen by a tough old Mink. The latter must have had something on his mind, for he swam right fpast those roots without even look- i hit: under -them. i It was his second day on that' ibrook that Jerry hail a out-er feel- linp. It made him inieasy. Tliei iarilicr liewent up that brook. the intern uneasy he felt. All of n sud- 0 Jerry decided to travel by night. trouble was. ”I'm not heading home," thought he. "I'm going the wrong way," This was true. lie was going in the wrong direction altogether. To go in the right direction he would have to leave the brook, He would have to travel over land until he reached water again. and there is nothing that Jerry hates to do more than to travel on land any distance from water. Jerry decided to travel by night. He felt that there would be fewer folks to see him then. That very night he turned his back on the brook. and headed in the right direction. How did he know it was the right direction? He didntknow himself how he knew, but he knew. He had ivhat is called the hom- iniz instinct. It was as if home was sending a radio message. tell- ing him wliicii way to go. Most of the Green Forest II the Green Meadow folk have that homing or! up the brook at the mouth of ident it came to him what. the imsuuch espechny the birdsp They Friday, October 9 at 8:00 der ”Village Service Act". SPRING PARK RESIDENTS ATTENTION 7 A meeting will be held in the Community Hall and sign petition to hold plebiscite to incorporate un- SPRING PARK COMMITTEE ! P.M. to discuss boundaries ; i New Six REGULAR DANCE i CLOVER CLUB i SATURDAY, OCT. 3 i Piece Orchestra.-The Legionnires Dancing 9-12 J For reservatiom call 6022 between 4 and 7.30 pm. 5 Danclngs every Saturday night. ' 352.00 per couple. Li'l Abner FhOJ'RE LOSING VOUh ' BABY BECAUSE EU FORCED IT TO WEAR A ', BRAIN vw:.'.'- . i . . -,,4'x'(g;l' y z W9 KIEBW WEN BY oouars, WALKS 5!-IT LIAPED OUT AN' may go almost half way around the world and still find their way back. Largest type of living hears. niale polar bears sometimes weigh as much as 1,600 pounds, . If you feel liI:IN' Then day: mint penplu work under preuure, worry more. sleep less. This Ilnin on Isody and brain make: physical Iilneu easier In Inte-harder to regain. Todny'I lenu living, lowered resistance. overwork. worry-any oI these may elect normal hidney nclion. When hidneyl get out at nrder. extent acid: and wants: rennin in the system. -Then backache. disturbed rest. that ”lired-nut" heavy- hended Ieehng oken ioHnw. Thllh the lime to hire DMId'l Kidney PiIIl. Dodd'l niimuiaie the kidney: lo normal nciinn. Then you IeeI Iseiier-aieep halter-work better. Ask Ior Dodd't Kidney Piiil at any drug counter. 53 contract Bridge A By Jauphlno Culbertson THE WRONG CAR Many enci-plays succeed only be"- cause the defender thrown on lead selects the wrong card of the "must" suit for his exit. Here: an example: South dealer. - Both sides vulnerable. more comfortably by starting with spades, so he chose that bid even though his heart suit was longer. North's two-club response wu simply n fancy effort to show a, fair hand - I. too fancy effort. since I. simple raise to two made; would have covered North'- vaiueu. The final contract, how- ever, was normal enough, though optimistic. y West led the king and (cg of diamonds. Declarer ruffed. drew three rounds of trumps. then 3 low club. It was obvious that two clubs and the diamond would have to be lost: hence the fate of the contract hung on whether or not South would have to concede a spade trick. This looked all to like- ly - but declarer saw 1 oertiin chance. . East won the club lead with the jack and returned the club four. South went up with the ace and promptly exited with his last club. East was now back on lead, with the club king, and was in precisely the position that declarer had hop- ed for. -The club suit had broken 3-3. so East had no card left in that suit with which to exit. A diamond return would let South ruff in his own hand while dummy discarded 8 spade. so East decided to lead the spade six. South put in the eight. and West had to sacrifice his jack. The king won, and South flnessed to the ace-ten, against East's queen. If East had selected the spade queen instead. of the six, it would have been a different story. At the end of 1952 proven oil rmerves in Venezuela totalled :- GRABBED THAT pdxcuxn OH, New DID vo- EVER THIN h o'1't0tl'. EDUCATED -JON ES? kW .4. :. :.-, ::.:t1.:i:::..”:1: )1--S3I5?'e? round iii billion barrels. ...B.v.N.,Cavv r;-rs srnssrs 0: NEW veer av Mam it sritl. Tuu7i( gaeqwooo - no LLED PIIOOIY. AN' I WAS A ioE!Lisr.' FlDMY...NMi6,60i' No l!HMUNT...(0i.O...SILFI5H. I-HM KY 7lME I l0ATt5i5...NEVEl seam... Mama! Mama: I , was rnrwptgm. nit you Amtusrwc Pltlfffzlz 11:1: In most ' ON. an .. is MA. LIEMY AT mi DOMICILE. I M MANY QUESTIONS THAT I CAN'T ANSWER. IIDEMIII" ' U 7 0 um an wens EAILINSDA K ' amaze, TOO. IF w oowr iziyicu roar, NOTHING WILL av: y szovce HUNTER. MY . Mu will? In. IMP IWIOVAIAUD xumrv W4; my mtmw .9 I on TN-ANK-9!!-oc... we mwzo so MUCN QK32 QAJB7 .106 .J Q9872 Q9. 75 .543 N :5 QAKA W E QJ931 2 S 53 5Q63 4.K.H QA1084 VX0109! ' OQ 4..It1oi5 The bidding" . South West North Eu: 1; run 24. Fun 2' "355 39 Put 4' Pass Pass Pu! South's hand could be shown THE GUARDIAN. criaa LOTTETOWN OCTLOBER 9. 1953 Bvtiiluiord Dotty Dripple .,.v my (Au. THE wens: ARE . WEARING H M ' x HM--IF rusr-s wan -ran women All wiziuzmc-., 1 KN w wmclrgae Mag WELL, SINCE AUNT i.ieBv'N'1 PLAN To XTENSIVELY WHEN 1 s2eru2i-:-- 7-TH' soirru sea iscaiios ---n-4' --so POLAD REGIONS. AN--t WELL. BETYEI3 FOR HARMONICIL - MES I'D TTLE A .-... ...-1 p By WaItA I(elly, Koo-ran: mo'.'OIt." Jar in ' 7-pf "mm coms owmezouN'c-iuwc, 5.. ..E...iit".t.'.'.';t.- it ounffcSu":ivt.'t.'F' MAKE GIIJNPOON Give EM.-Y1DloVf.' -rmuybuu. ems-.5. . , FMK THE BALL -.. Napoleon and Uncle Eiby T37 N 235' I T x z ;I."l)'l ,r y r i at i r By. Clifford McBride armors mum Yi7il'lE SOAXED! IIIVIAI Y0il60l' SIWSE EAOUISH T0 IWDIIF... TIIEAWN ,7 eorgo , McManus - 'rGwiy&1 .