5'.l'l(ANl:'lt4' BU!) '1'lGUltJ By Thornton W. Burgess - iriio owns THE WATER - i l down to distant sea iliiii-:niruli,irliiiIngavsl'Iater should be free. " -old Mother Nature. ' .li-rry Miiskrat. was in a slate of mm. as the saying is. and Mrs. Jerry was no better. They were mm, mmugh and through. The Smuing Pool was growing smaller day by day. Laughing Brook which briiigs the water down the Great iitountain through the Green For- 9st to the Smiling Pool on the Green Meadows and on to the Big River. has almost dried,,up above the Smiling Pool. So the latter had grown smaller and smaller, and Jprry and Mrs. Jerry had wor- nod and worried. . Now Little Joe Otter lit-id come iinun from far up in the Green Forest with news. He had told them that despite the long drought Paddy the Beaver had plenty of iialer in his Dlmd Way UP in W9 Green Forest. Also that some mung l"-leavers were building a dam hr-low Paddy's pond. and that was what was stopping the water ironi rominil down l-Ellllhlllg Brook " ---1-hm "to stuloll our water! soiieiikrd -lvrl'.V H!1l3'.l'”.V- -ismi-9 when has the water he- i,,,...1pd to you'''' Little Joe Otter asked. -lOl'i'y preti-titled not to hear that question "Tiioxe youiig Beavers have no hll5li1t'SS to be building a diini." he t-ontiiiiietl. ”They've got a pond. and they don't need another. That water belongs to us. it is unit! makes Smiling Poul. something ought to be done about it ” . ”Tlit-y'vi- stolrn our squi-sited Jerry angrily. water!" Little Joe Otter grinned. "Why don't Mill go up there and do somethiiiii" he asked. "Of course, those toiks tilt there would tell you that the llJtttll' doesn't belong tn .,ij)lt Ttirr uuiiid tell you that it 2 belongs to them. "Well it doesn't!” sqiieaked Mrs .iri'igx "Fhui:ni'iiiii!" said a deep AWHFP it belonged to Grandfather .J'i-ni: ilr had been listening "Chag- '.n-riim' The water belongs to every- Jbody and nobody It is like the sir. No one has the right to take it sway from any one else." :1” "Who says so?” asked Little Joe ,;,0tter. . ”l on!" re-orted Grandfather "Frog. as it that was quite suf- ,.Jirient. 3 Meiinwhile, far up in the Green fforest. three young Beavers were What-ing a wonderful time learning rmjo hiiiid a dam. Young as they -;-were they had already found out Fmt naval vessel to circle North America is HMCS Labrador, which recently made its way """"Eh Polsrseas from Atlantic '0 Pacific. we're proud that the "we . ' l.,built' -' ,mr. W married to rm-y mg. ".4 .WtllU to Arctic shore bases VII! made ofweldod aluminum "Wt-I-raisin-oiob.' M-mam I active in in 1t'lH&hnudoum.g, zit ''''-dnorit--n.wm..son' !. . be-uaoinuomc....i.i. ., ""””"'w-It-nuns A:"--wan-Mon... H-I-ni-i-c-suns luau-us. Pbrieer Da No event recorded in Island Ihistory equals the destructive ef- fects of the great Yankee Gale of 1851. That terrible tragedy prac- tically destroyed the entire fishing fleet of this province. together with a h of ships from Glou- cester. Mnss.: New Brunswick. Nova Scotia and Maine. But the heavy toll in lives taken by the thzit work can oe fun. They were 59; was worst of an .. an e,. building I dlim 10!! for the fun iimated eighty-three souls perish- of building. it wasn't a very good ed, dam.'because they had yet to Friday Oct. 3rd saw the sun learn how a dam should he built. me in Q c1oudieH',ky- an wen. if there had been much water spill- the, signs Winged in 8' ml. day W3 "V" tmm the big P""d abtwe but towards noon the sky took oii 11”” Laughlllg Brwk "'9" dam a strange appearance as clouds. would have been washed away as fast as they had tried to build it. lt.didn't enter their heads that water might belong to anybody but themselves. They knew nothing about anybody farther down Laugh- ing Brook. They knew nothing about the Smiling Pool and the people who lived there. Probably it would have made no difference if they had known. As for Paddy the Beaver and Mrs. Paddy. they would certainly have said that the water in their pond belonged to them. They would have said that they had made that pond. But for them there would have ,been no pond at all. And this was true. Still, did they really own the water? There were other folks who didn't think so. CONTRACT BRIDGE By Josephine Culbertson A QUESTIONABLE METHOD DO YOU. like many players final action on his own responsi- tbut very few top-ranking ones) bility. use "ace-showing in response to Proof that this me", . . . - .. . od is some- two bids '.'Then consider the fol- what abort of men n supplied lowing csse'-and you may change by the fact that with the bidding Vm" m"'hod' going as noted. West was told Sm"-h d"1"- how to beat. the six-spade con- Bmh Sid" V"'"9"m9- tract! Knowing that North had A Q1 1094 the ace of clubs, West was not 9 105 tempted to lead that suit-he 9652 selected a. heart. and in effect. Q A 8 1 that. settled the matter. As a mat- ter of fact the lead brought an : 4 3 N : 8 1 , extra dividend, to East.-West when . J8 ., W E . Q9 tfiectiatrerg niaigng audesperat: of- J' Q 9 5 i S T 106 3 2 th: tltiieslslggin ocnliiebs ct: aiirii 37: QAK85 jack. in order to set up s dis- A6 carding opportunity for his sec- -. A K 10 4 3 ond heart. ." KJ If W t h d t b gi es ano cen ven The b'ddmg' such accurate information by the SW” west "0"" 35” cnomy, he would have had a 50- 2. PW 35 P3” 50 opening-lead guess between 3 4 P555 5 5 P555 hearts and clubs. Note the differ- 6 Q Pass Pass Pass once it the ace-showing conven- tion is not used. North responds to the two-diamond opening with two spades, and South jumps to four notrump, Blackwood. North announces one see by bidding rive diamonds. and denies any long by bidding six clubs over the following five notrump. south then bids six spades-and it is East's turn to guess the only lead. a heart, that will defeat the contract. By J. R. Vwiiams North and South were using ace-showing responses. and so the three-club response to two dia- monds was automatic. Another tenet of the ace-show- ing method is that the opener himself remains the supreme ar- biter of the tint! contract. Re- sponder is in a sort of strait- jscket. throughout the suction- he must answer all "qiicstions" put. to him. but he must not take Out OLT Way tys In P.l. MacArthur accompanied by a stiff gale and fine mist, swept across the hen- vens as though pursued by some angry god. Towards the late after- noon, the wind had increased un- til it became a raging gale, sweeping the water into great white billows. Then the night dropped her mantle over the gal- lant little fishing fleet. a shroud so black and enfolding that not even the oldest salt afioatgcould recall anything to equal it. From the East Coast to North Cape ships of all sizes were caught in the mow of the gale and tossed about like chips in a whirlpool: all the while the wind increased and the waves grew higher. All day Saturday the wind fury of and waves beat hard upon the tats, and the captains of sum headed for the open sea. as there was no safe anchorage to be found anywhere. The Sabbath morning of Oct. 5th saw no change in the weather. Indeed, if there was any change at all, it was a change for the worse: and watchers on shore, powerless to render any assis- tance. wept openly as they saw by one - dash themselves to pieces against the rocky shore. One eye witness of the terrible tragedy describes the disaster in the following words: ”...What uproar. what disaster! The wind was truly terrific . . vessels by the score being pound- ed to pieces on the shore. their crews clinging to bits of floating wreckage . . .Mountainous waves. rioting in their mad career, dash- the brave little sailing boats-one 9' . over the export of technical data Two Air Force Trainees Killed COLD LAKE, Alta.. (CP)-Two RCAF trainees were killed Thurs- day qight when their CF-100 figh- ter crashed and exploded just af- ter take-off. Air force officials said the two officers. the crew of an all-war ther fighter. were on a normal night training mission. . 'Dcad are pilot PO. J. R. R. G. Desliochers. 20. of Montreal and radar-navigator P0. J. M. J. Y. Roberge. 19. of Adamsville county. Brome. Que. Both were students on the CF- l00 operational training unit here and recently had received their wings in the normal RCAF train- ing course. Their aircraft struck the ground about two miles from the end of take-off runway and exploded. An official board of inquiry was be ing assembled here to investigate the cause of the accident. ed their feet against the land with a crash that sounded like a thou- sand voices of thunder all rolled into one mighty voice." The last paragraph tells the grim tale. No further words are necessary to give the reader a vivid picture of the Yankee Gale 1851. GIVE DATA TO FRIENDS WASHINGTON tAPt -- The commerce department announced Thursday it has dropped controls of strategic value in friendly for- eign eounlries. Rigid control of what information can be sent from this country to Communist coun- tries continues. DNCI-Ei8UL6V HAS TAKEN OVER ONE OF THE FOOTBALLS ChJl'l:YEL..tNcp ou-r THERE -- LL as WELL.HOPtTUPI WE'RETlRNIN' - Bt.uEA5OVERALL5t , -w'sa..icau.na.rr V ,- ,( aizoaoseemetss x oeewr-rueaumr M ueizvous Asour (-1555 i Youuesraizs TACKLN6 Me! --oiim-r Our Boarding House NELL, WELL. I-tisi-t-i-isi-i.'--- Maior Hoople r E G I , A .. ' . I- :.; ..ii20.i&:ra s T:.':.Y:J.':..useo To 3: : If D. 3 U .5 U I Joe? LEGA sens: nus ME nos t-'lGHT is-out"!-Nor ENTlRELY FAlR.'.'- au'r-- -tmtr own. (mm mmoar oasnw-01L) GIVES ME .I.'.' err is , u I 1WAL WAY GOY MEI we-" A LOT 0' WORK. L'il Abner Tl"u Tho 705.0? Muggs and Skeeter HGLD AMIN urn- .3 r wwr campus to see How iw y ff 3 T5 NiCE- t t Ft! ...uow SIT UP PQOPEELY AT TAsi.5...wt GONG 70 START 1'RAiNiNG , some AROUND PEPE: g MVSEt.F.'.' g "um Ihttqfe-chub-II..UoAl: CARL. A;-nnzn Bri Grandma Mickey Mouse G2iNN:o DOWN" BY A LITTLE GIRL! SAMPLE THE CAKE ON GRANDMAS WINDOW Sti.b -mange vazv Mua-i,Mt2. GOLLY, I'M GLAD 1 so sou TOOK AND I'M c-owe To IMMTE l-ti anAci(ETT, BUT--ER" . TOOK THAT CALL! A Box For: THE MRLAMD M26. Ht aRAc WED I-IKE 70 FWE VDU AND mess: I6 our 0: ruwuz MAGGIE wouu: HAVE opera -iouieur, - yo. CALL THEM izour Mi2s.JIGe: As OUR ouesns JUMPED Ar 1-we MOTHER? NOW! Ar THE open wmeuif (A iNvrrA'rioN! o B” . )- :53 g jg, . g Q i a-Q gh . M e e ' 0; ,, -. 9 3” V it J 3' 9 o H. K t? o . . E ,t' I I-. m '0 o .. ) 0 D GOLLY. WHY WE'RE GOtN' OVEE AN' ...oaANDMA.wi1-i-t use NEW i-'iNGitI,- l DEINT OUTFIT. WILL 1-mam us . oowu IN NO TiME.' . NE DEVOTED MY un: 10 PROMOTING MERGERS! -I'VE NEVER FAILED?!-I'M OLD MAEsTRO,i PROMISED VOU AN 8-DOLLAR wEDDiNG.'.7 - THERE'S Going, To BE 0NE.'.'- NATURALL ' YOU'RE EVERYTHING i ADMiRE.'.' VOJNL3 LAD!-IAM OLD, FAT AND UGLY- AND I'M WORTH I7. MILLION A DOLLAR3 l WILLVOU A0! L - CI(- 012!