,s-_....~a;, .,-_*.A,- . wwv-rvwvvvwvw-v-vvvvvv-vw . £5105 time 0”" It's funny how a lot of people take a chance when they build l home. 'l‘hey go to all kinds of trouble with the plans. 'l‘he_v want. everything in-rluding a streamlined kitchen, the last word in bathrooms, picture windows, and a landscaped garden. The IllOlIt'_\‘ arrange- ments are perfect. In ten, hf- teen or twenty years, the home will he really theirs. Just ri-uu- r payments, soiueu-lidt lllir‘ rent, only better, lll’\'\'lll5(‘ they get stun-filling nun-r lni" ilir-ir money than jll>l the prnllcga oi hung ill a house. But what is this chance they lake? It's this: If death comes to the money-earner, the home may no longer he a. place of refuge for the family, but a source of debt and despair.__ And yet, by a perfectly sim- ple Sun Life Mortgage Protec- tion plan-only a slight addition to the monthly cost of paying for the housc——thc total balance oi the mortgage would he wiped uni in the event of death. Here's lll\' advice, Mr. Homeowner: "l)nn‘t take a chant-e.” Let's talk things ovcr—todayl HAL BOHAKER llnit Supervisor SUN LIFE 0F CANADA 148 Richmond Street Charlottetown, P315. I. [By Thornton W. Precoclousness in those you see In {act may merely seem to be. —0ld Mother Nature. .__,__ Precocious looks and sounds like a. big word for small tongues. It isn't really. Just try lt—pre-co- cious. Doesn't. that roll oif your 11 ~ 2oA.M. l nalncemronl AND EVERY NIGHT MONDAY TO FRIDAY WHELAN MEMORIAL HALL Modern and Oldtime Marvin Burgess and His Boston Orchestra HT 50o AAAAAAAAAJI l -Q0-§§-§4§-O-§-O+O-§O§i OOfQ-Ofii BARGAIN IN Red and $3.98 Per ' D0 Yllll WANT A Sl-IINGLES VEE-LOK - ‘I25 lbs. - Asphalt’ Green” These Shingles Are SECONDS EXCELLENT VALUE Square m ROGERS HARDWARE twi- Agent at 144 Richmond St. E. R. BrowfifSon Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness And Plate Glass Insurance At Lowest Rates Summerside, D. O. Stewart ‘Charlottetown Ll'L ABNER (file's A-FDLLY/N‘ son-wanna ‘fill/V AAFN/S SATCHIL FULL 0' non/n wro ru’ wonsff-uz Tillman)“ _ \\.\\ A\\\ i f?‘ " s~\l\ . tongue easily? And its meaning is so easy to remember. It means to be extra smart, or able to do things others o! the same age cannot yet. do. Way up on a High MOUlllBlll, so high that no trees could grow there and little else, just a. low plants among the jumbled rocks. $0 lllflll that. there was still snow in patches here and there. and not far above the top was covered with snow, there was a new baby. Yes, sir, a baby had been born in a hidden place among those bare rocks. He was Little Kid Surelout. His mother was Nanny Surrfoot and his father was Billy Sureloot. They vrere Mountain Goats, some- times called ju-st White Goats. This is because they org (lftjisfld wholly In white. Curiously enoughl While they are called Goats and look like Goats, they are 11m, Goats at all, hut belong to the AllIElOpE branch oi’ the Bovaclae iamlly to BT Contract Bridge By Josephine Culbertson MORE DEFEATISM In yesterday's column the state- ment was made that the average‘ declarer gives up too easily when the situation seems hopeless. This falut is not confined to declarers,' by anymeansl Observe East's not. uncommon deleatlqm w“ "S deal. l‘ l West dealer: _ . Both sides vulnerable," Q K Q 3 Q A 9 4 . Q A K Q 9 7 4. 1o a Q 4 Q A 9 8 7 9 1 a N s a 2 Q J 8 5 8 2 W E Q 6 2 4. A o a 4 S 9 1o 2 4. Q J 1 Q J 10 I K Q J 10 8 I Q o 4 ‘K 9 8 The bidding: Welt North Inst South Pass l Q 1 Q 2 Q Pass 4 Q Pau Pass Pass West opened the spade four, the) three was played from dummy, and East won with the ace. There was no possible doubt about the fact that West's tour- spot had been a singleton. and, after staring at the dummy dis- consolately, East returned a shad:- to give his partner a ruff. West was glad to be obliging in that respect, but. after rufiing. hc was helpless! He did the best he could, laying clown the club ace to see it East would signal high in that suit. and after East play- ecl the lowest card missing, the seven, West shifted to a diamond in the remote hope that East could rufl‘, but successful defense was out of the question. The defensive problem ln a deal like this is so simple that It can scarcely be dignified by the term “problem”. East's immediate re- turn of a spade is a give-up play! Where are the other tricks to come from? Surely not in diam- oncls, and it can scarcely be hoped that West has either two club tricks, two heart tricks, or one club and one heart. The only reasonable hope is that West has the club ace! Acting on that chance. East obviously must re- turn the club queen at the sec- ond trick, and with the situation as shown, the defeat of the con- tract must follow. If South cov- ers, East gets back on load with the club jack for the spade re- turn and rut’; l! declarer docs not cover the cfub queen. East gives West the ruff immediately, and then West can lay down the club ace. Burgess) which Cattle. Sheep ‘we and true miiniopvs WIN“- ,whicli Pronghorn docs n01 ialthough called Antelope. this got. you all mixed up? do “than they are missued. Little Kid Survive! "as l1 We‘ cocious baby. bu! B5 5 Mmmtaln Gout kid he wasn't P1'P¢°¢l°“5' Newly born babies are sulllwsed w be helpless, unable to do little iifore than lilt their little heads, l1 tllPy could do even that. But there are cxcepllons and Mountain Goat kids are runong these. The bnblfl of Paddy the Beaver can walk and swim the day tile)’ are born- Lime Kid Sun-loot was that kind of a baby. He was up and jumping about in his rocky nursery belore lle was a day-old. As a baby that ccriniilly was being precocious. biu. as a Mountain Goat kid l! W85 lltl more than llll Goat kids (‘l0- S0 lle was and he \v:i.sn’i precocious. ltltist babies are wobbly on their Icet when they lirst walk. Little Kid wasn't. l-lc bounced around as _-.1 11mm was rubbed-In his stiff little legs. Bu] nmuuh llC could use his legs tso well mother didn't allow him lier nulslde his rocky Goats but t0 belong Does Names to follow ‘nursery for several days. Not that |ho didn't want. to go. He did, but ,mnthcr said "n0." When she said "no" she meant no and somehow he knew she meant no. So that was all there was to lt- T1191‘! ‘was no teasing and there was no ldlsobeylng alter she had zone- LLlveIy as he felt and really was lhc kept quiet; kept as still as the lrm: n; around liinl. He didn't know lwhy he must keep so still, except- ‘lng that mother made hlm under- lstaiid he must. That. was enough. He wasn't like some children we all know. Isiispect that had you or I pooped into that hidden nursery among the rosin; while his mother iwas away we might have thought I there was nothing but a very small heap o! snow there. I am sure We would unless we were looking {or a baby Goat nnd knew Just ;V\'l’l(‘l‘e and what. m look tar. But when mother returned Lit- tle Kid Suretoot was up in a twinkling. jumping about and hut- ltliig her with his small head to let her know he was hungry. And iwheii. after he had nursed, she llnid down to rest, he jumped about lhcr and climbed on and over her ‘as other babies love to do with ltheir patient mothers. Nanny never rlrlt him ior very long at. a time. ‘She would rather not have left hlm at all, but she had to eat. {Oi course. And up there so hlgll mi tllt‘ mountain she liad to do imuch travelling about and looking l to find enough of the green things that. were her food. Often it was a bite here, a bite there and look for the next. bite. For those first few dnys she was sure that lively and precious kid ‘wasn't strong enough ln those live- Ily little lugs of his to iollow her for ns loiic as it would take her to get a good meal. Ho wouldn't. be as safe as he was in that. hid- -dcii nursery‘. Sc the two things [Little Kid Surcfoot learned were (Jbetlit-nte and patience. Mother didn't worry much while she was away from him. Probably she worried some. All mothers worry even when there 15 no “use for wiorryi. But; up there among the rocks there was small chance of a hungry enemy finding hlm. And at nrrtlme was she out o! sight or the place where that, nursery was even though she wal quite a distance away. Like all her kind she had wonderful eyes. So she didn't worry much about her precocious baby. Sumiyslde Ballroom Every Mon., Wed., Sat. i Eastern Rhythm Boys ADMISSION 35c j Meet your friends there tonight 80 ‘H4573 WHUT YO’ ONE FALIIJ‘ IS. ‘ONE-FAULT?’ 01.00»? HENSHUN I-‘euss m: Irv-Au is a DOIN’ THINGE ITHE GUARDIAN, CHARLOTTETOWN ‘ ourafi s/a/IZ l SHArES/JFAQ... L‘ - - ' {iii-hill i§","F-"‘"u-smh " “mm-a - ~ - IOi-L ‘iarooxs i - err w.’ vs com i ' en ‘nus FOIIMULA READY. cwioN! aflr .12 ie/FLA/rfgr’ c a ms scktsuebmeov! i . AUGUST 17. 1949 by Zane Grey gflf/T/fi. - l5 WILL c4 m/rw m" autos :25? ruP I ARE vs NUTS... ‘ - WHATSAMATTEII ‘wnu YA P z TIPPIE $1uBBS~ QLACK AW ‘n; ween] \ t 906/ x t lmmonlhK-Mlfi-"Uvlll RINGING UP FArHEI S-MY DE HAPPY TO COME FROM THEM 5 vs A2 -I'5ENT A LETTER’ TO THE ‘LORELY HEAIZTE’ CLUB AND ‘mu? TI-EM r0 BE vet-av wee AuD 51:46.10 THEM-I 5HOULD i-ieAcz fif"— . THE comely tenor-f,” \ _I_S_URE MADE TuA-f C ITY GAL BELIEVE I'M FER FAIR PLAY ITMUST GE WUJXRHfi-t % Q ' (‘GR LIKSWJ- SUCH A . g . »- LAMMY Sir/S PULL ‘TRAIN DOWN R sue HIM GLAMMY YOU OUGHT YER 1o NASH ‘ma-r APPLEJT RIGHT - GERMS nevee ooue Mi no HARM. way SHOULD 1 Do THEM Aw; "at ‘on nominal? ismwooi, uér cam-rev"...