By Thornton . YOUNG, REDDY IS STABTLED scent left by the feet of those they Pr”, never think you know it all. sgtm-day,'Nov. 5. 1955 The Guardian" Pa k W.Bui-geaa gej9 are hunting. It was easy to hide from eyes. but hiding from a non Your knowledge It til! I110” 1' was a wholly different matter. 5”""' -Roddy Fox. Fox had had a V Yo:3ges?::ed.yHe Md been ch”' Egnby . Dog, and that Dog had been a Greyhound. You know. Greyhounds are among the mt- ; running of four-footed folk. It 25 S 8 turn in the road that had ii Fox. For a mom- 5”fe?,,'hft;,ioliiel had been out of 9" h. of the Dog. He had left the slgd and had crawled under a pile "gabrusll .3 little way back in the amods, The Dog had looked for ' ' ain. h'TN:v,vI know what to do when W8 I am chug.-l by 5 Dog," thought going off in the wrong direction to get far enough ahead to find a hiding-place-" I so it was that when a few days later he was sut'Pl'i59d by HD0919? dog the young Fox was not es- peclally frightened. This Dog star- tcd after him just as the other one llad the instant he saw him. But he didn't run as fast as the other had. The other had been silent while he ran. but this Doll KEN" lalllnlz all within hearing what he was doing. that he was chasing a 'm( iYniing Roddy soon found that he could out-run this Dog. He wanted to tzet rid of him as soon as he could. So he ran as fast as he could until he was so far ahead that the Dog couldn't possibly see him. Then he looked for a hiding place At first. he had been run- ning along an old road. He left the road and ran off to one side for quite a distance. There he hid in ii thicket. He felt perfectly safe. He lnv down to rest. He would wait there until he was sure that that Dot! had given up and gone off about other business. Elm could!” be blamed for he merely covered dummy's ten with the jack. South won and laid . "An I eed do. l, in the deal below, but his bse. down his three high trumps. then "'9 young (ox 1! quent defense, when it reallysliriab led 3 Club 10 ClllmmY'3 eight in the tered. was inexcusable. hope 0i d1”iVln8 out 8 hiBh h0D0T we" deal”. from East. tlncidentally, West) Both ml" Wm me. deserved credit for failing to split Eubwen 40 on Me. ivlvl:rdf:ii;?"nilr;)lI;0fS on the lead to- aqios ,, .J1o43 East. finding himself on .J82 with the tilli) ll'Il.lllf)W urec : E 4.AJ8 the iinlciisc tiv laying down t el . 9 . A J84 king and ace of ' diamonds. de- , .555 N 32 spite his partners discouraging . 10754 W E .7 signal. the three-spot, on the first 3 - S .AK6 lead of the. suit. Having estab- gxqgg g"m5g lilshed tbs: diamond fjalck tflort K73 carer. as now e a e :AKQ92 might as well give him that card. .Q9 South discarded a spad while .',97; he won with dummy's diamond 7'” wading: ; otmceiiibshe vifedsttheiharfivn aiild gal N035 E557 South had to return a club or a din: "5 pus 14 29 mood. on either of which South P"' P555 20 P355 could discard his last spade loser rm 3 ' P355 P395 while ruffing in dummy. Thus. the 9"” contract was fulfilled. Even with both sides on socre. ' Quite aside from East's play at West NOW. as the young fox ran, he was really frightened. What could he do? How could he fool that Do ? He didn't know. He had never be it chased by this kind of Dog before, He was worried. He had reason to be worried. srnnimn Charles Martel! val born ollllliu of Parts about 1790. When he INF up he came to Canada and settled at Malpeque, P.E.I. But hearini that St. Peterl. waa a Vlnl trading centre, he removed than some years later and carried on a trading business with the Indian! and white settlers. ' The year following his arrlvll It St. Peters. he brought his wife and small daughter, Lucy. to live With him in his new home. Charles Marteil was a cautious, kindly man who bargained fairlY and never broke his word to Ind- ians or white man, so that in the course of a few years. he became fairly prosperous and was well thought of wherever he went. Near the village was a well cult- "CONTRACT BRIDGE BY Jcgsefpiiine Culbertson INEXCUSABLE DEFENSE V couldn't West opened his afford to take any part in the auction-and wouldn't have had to if East had would have been defeated defended reasonably well. Singiv know that it was a singleton. so the first trick (which, to repeat, hel w a s excusablet, the if East, lafter cashing only the diamond ton king. had made the marked shift spade, of course, but East couldn't Ito a club. till” ' ii ii I. Ea , llr lay down to rest. lie could hear the Dog comln-. because the Dog was barking. when the Dog reached the place where the young Fox had left the road, he didnt run past as the other Dog had done. He stopped right ilicrc. He stopped barking. too. You see. when Young Reddy had left the road, he had made a long lump and it had broken his trail. Now. the Dog began to sniff ar- ound. He went into the brush and sniffed here, and sniffed there. In a moment his nose found the scent left by the feet of the young Fox at the end of the jump. He yelped with delight, and then Wa Y ii ll wuss: YOU'RE izierrr. em eveizveoov LIKES 1o - . I i snow vou WHEN vomze ll fill wtzoruel sot Pirr rr LP ' on WRONG DAYS so -ntev MIGHT our one UP ON RIGHT DAY5TO SHOW I'M WRONG- D. once more his voice rang through the woodland as he followed the trail straight to the place where. the young Fox was hiding. i Young Reddy waited only lnngi Pnnuizh to be sure that that Dog nos coming straight to his hiding- lliH('fl. Then he crept out of the iartticr side of that thicket. and inco more began running. He was t it-'Idl.v startled young Fox. H! iari bccn so sure that once out of Izfit of that Dog he was safe, hat he really didn't know what; 0 make of the Dog. i This one wasn't chasing him at iii as the other one had. He wasl ggrning that there was a dlffer-- ttceln Dogs. The Greyhound hunt it with his eyes. That means. that 0 could chase one only when he fluid see him. This Dog hunted ith his nose. He was a Hound.' no all Hounds have wonderful ”j9:.mnt:ses that can follow the 820ueHT IN LAST NIGHT Zu HE ems HE 61'AtZTE Ausuetz 0035?? l0tsl6 BEFORE I ASKED Mona HEAT ran GALLON PREMIUM "KLEEN-FLO" TREATED THAT - Motzeissev cam you .ME A CHiLL WHEN & Y M To To QUIT READ-wTt-IEY 5AY THINKIN6 6HALl.0.W MIMD5 T0 FOOL I .4 I Pioneer Days in P. E. I. 11 I. I. Ilaelrtliar lvated parcel of land with neat fused to sell at first. though Mar- tell had made him more than one tempting offer. The smart trader did not try to force the deal. He sold his warea to Sampson and cultiv- ated the fellow'a friendship as he did the other folks. In a crafty manner, he made himself necess ,1 to the Sampson clan. Then when the family was hard put to it for money, they ac- cepted hia offer, moved out, and Martell and his family moved in. The years went by (ten in fact) and Sampson was once more on his feet financially. Naturally. he coveted his former home. but Mar- tell would not sell the place -that is. he would not sell unless he got considerably more money than he paid for it. They bargained for a long time: at each conference Mar- tell added more to the price. Pat- iently Sampson argued that the fig- ure was too high. At last they agreed. Sampson got the place back on condition that if he ever decided to sell again, Martell was to have the first chance to buy it. Sampson now built a frame house, the upper part of which he furnish- ed as a club-room where the fish- er-folk could gather while ashore I died. and their only daughter. (liar- contract and pass the time playing cards and telling tall tales. b Two years after the club ililfi had I its first opening. Mrs. Sampsoni ie, now a young handsome .!ii'i, kept house for her father. The young woman was a general favorite in the district, and both whites and reds sought her hand in marriage. Was it not true that many French and Indians had gone to the altar to become man and wife? Had Marie not played with the Indian children when shc was a little girl? The young Indians of the district admired her white skin, her rosy cheeks. and her quick wit. just as much as did their young white neighbors. Marie was the sort of young lady that any youth would have been happy to Girls A: Boys mar TORON'l'O.'(Cr) - The tables were turned at a auhurban New Toronto high school Wednesday. The girls played football and the boys were the cheerleader: in a game that attracted a bigger crowd' than attended the boys games this season. Trolanettes-played so enthusias- tically that coach Alan Sivell says he's afraid to let: them play a second game for fear they might get hurt. Eight members of the boya' team led the cheering dressed in short skirts and wlgs.' The score ended in a 0-0 tie. Money collected from the 500 fans will be donated to the Junior Red Cross and the High School YMCA Association. One day Martell and Sampson went together down the Bay to ex- amine some fishing tackle. While they were gone, one of Marie's Indian boyfriends came to the house Opening the door without knocking an Indian custom -- he walked bold- ly into the kitchen and ordered Marie to follow him to his home in the woods. For the first time in her life, the young woman was terribly frightened. However. it would never do to let the Indian lad know that she feared him. so she pretcndrd in be considering the mallrr seriously. At length. she liftori licr smiling face to his and said Uliiliili). ”All right. Isaac. me go with you anywhere” Just as the Indian boy entered the nearby woods, Marie rushed back to the house, entered it, and secured the door. The frustrated Isaac came back on the run. tried the doors and windows only to find them all securely fastened. Then he picked up a stout stick and start- ed to smash the window-panes. Meanwhile. Mario got hold of her fatlior's gun. ran-ti upstairs. open- ed the attic wiiirlou. and fired a shot directly over Isaac's head. Qnickly the youth fled from the place, plenty frightened, you may be sure. When the story spread, the settlers and Indians alike made carry off to his wigwam or log- cabin. it so hot for Isaac that he left the Island. never to return. ACRD85 14.Sociai 1. dog insects 5. Large DOWN bundle l. Menace 9. Metal 2. Shower mounting 3. Goddess of of a harveata acabbard tit.) 10. Haranguo 4. Tellurium 12. Flower tsym.) 18. Money 6. Watercraft (Am. Ind.) 8. Fortlfy I4 Writing 1. Licka up implement 8. A It Mom) ease for 10. Little girl email 1'1. Exclamaa articles tion 9. zero: n. A coerce. II. Type atrongo ' measure! scented 18. Gains both 16. stripes 10. Anesthetics 22. 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IT'S o-r TIZUEI c.-AizczviN' our MV A5GIGNMENT.' .:i43NillNi7i' ARl.E'5MANA6ERmIlJ'EA HCAYARYCANTAIEWIATMNTI TDMTMMUWNOAGANBT PQESl1'...IIWA&.lTlY. ...'l'HEOU6l-I Tl-l' CPOWIQC Afi W5'"WHIH; By. f'aiil Robinson - By Wally Bishop