P RAGE TEN ciiocitrrr a STOREY WILL IE OLOSEII JANUARY 31st and FEBiIARY 1st FOR STOOK TAKING lioly Redeemer iiall TONIGHT Riff) The prizes are the same as those prevailing at other Bingos in the city. For Charitable Purposes G. F. Hurciieson 8i Son OP'l'0.\lE'l'sllS'l'! ‘Specialists in the fitting oi glasses for the correction oi ocular defects." ll GRAFTON HTREECI‘ ROSA? zvzasraamo nuuurauss DWARF BUSH STRAWBERRY hints Iva-n- ~t-c\| the lint year: rasilr L;'i'\\'| iii-h ion-v about tint‘ flint M1- ,r\.. iil"iIkf\ iiuth perennial hears _.l..~...ii tr. NOR] mrlv ‘llmlnfl’ nil lulim i; _,., yQYFPKQ 1,-= m; "iv. .- rv |‘l- illll t-i wild rsnnriii. r...“- Nur tivmpflfl husby growth t Inghiy tirthllfiflilill as ueil u - shlc t... vigeiahlt’, fruit or flower ,....i.~... lnmicix. en‘. A ShUWY w! rl-v" i ‘rhhupl. (illliltf ih.t|l thmmentit t \\ ht-riiu Altair RiWLl is the largest fruit- l of anv \.ti'|(*I\' vit know from seed. sur- itunc iiir Pnliliisl’ sulemstlier and simi- Jr tyres it, unique bush form and ex~ ,., u... rm...- m“ n lfl n ti», by itself 11.. um iinmc {linden Seed ltlppl!’ ll l mired (lnlrr truly. 47kt. 251i t3 pits. 50st ponpaid. REE 232 551.1117»? " ' s I i» 145$ F Li - emu-i "a DO_MI HOUSE sztrletrovvlutll “DAILY CROSSWORD 52 Son of l7. dam DOWN . A mixture. as of colors 21 . Constella- ' tlon . . Constellation . Additional .F'r'iar‘s title . Eject . Muse of history . A stove or furnace . Lofty mountain . Movable piece in a screen ACROSS 1 Masculine A 5 Famous ’ French general 9. African antelopl 10. Standard l1. An opcn pie ‘l2. Largest continent 13. Mulberry wood 14. Land- measures L16. Carry ‘its. Guided , 20. Exclamu tiqn 22. Erbium tsym.) l 13. Funeral pile 2b. Speaks 28. Loose coats 80. $liaite~ spearlan i Pill)’ ;82. tizipe 35 Whether 86. Evening sun goti tEgyptl 88. Canton iSwitz I 3i? Journey 4'.’ Polish 44 Elevated train I"i1OT'lEil€tl' l9. 29. 30. 31. 33. 34. l0 Alf; l1. Vipers Birirr vatrli A band instrument Corroded 24. Old measure of length 26. Test 27. A son ol Isaac Clique Strlkfi A continent Circular band of flowers Nothing‘ 37. Mongrcli E H Efllil BO WEED HUNG DEE GDL-JHB DUB BEIGE] V ' IIH Elli] , HEEL-l GEE Yesterday's Aurel 40. Egyptian goddess 4 1. Fall into water 43. Disclose 46. Half ems 48. Adverbial particle DANA’ (iRYP'l‘0QUOTE-Here's Imw to work itt AXYDLBAAXR IALONGFELLOW tine letter simply stands for another. In this example A is used for the three Ls, X for the two 0's, ctc. Single letters, apoll tic-plies, the length anti formation of the words flit‘. nil hints. Plat‘) ‘lay the Ullilfl Icttcrs are different. A (Jrypiograiii Quotation F] TR JLOR“ F vnwMl-"O R\\' HRPWTRK ‘-'esi:-rt!r._\'-- (‘rgptnquulcz HE Dill! NOT SPEAF-E. PHH BOJFR UWRPFL LJ EHJB YJW EJJK-VJVR. WHAT A HORSE SHOULD HA LACK. SAVE A PROUD RiDER-SHAK Dlsilfhlllid by Kin: Features Syndicate. In mortar." ' ‘ v \ ~~ q / T 1 Lessons learned through grief and ' pain Often prove of lasting gain. -0ld Mother Nature. ‘Two folks with only six legs when they should have eight,” murmured Peter Rabbit as if he were finding it hard to believe. He was. He had followed an unusual trail in the snow, a trail in which there was no print of a right foreleg was missing. A little once that either that foot had been hurt so that it could not he. used or was missing. Tho trail‘ had led into the little swamp nt‘ tho head uf the Smilint: Pool niid there on the bank of Laughing Brook he saw the maker of iliosc footprints. a big Raccoon. His right forefoot, He Iutd known at farther along iiie hank a big old Muskrat Iiad _iust climbed out of‘ the vtziter. His left fort-log “H5 missing. "Hello. Three-legs!" said the big Conn. "Thai isn't. my name, but it t! what. everybody calls me," said the Muskrat in his squeaky voice. The Coon nodded. “Of course," " Contract Bridge ‘ By Josephine Culberllon . BIDDING POINTER Mg5t players have considerable difficulty in finding the proper hlds on stich North-South Iiands as are shown in the following deal. 2-1 South dealer. Both sides vulnerable. A Q 5 Q 9 Ii . g a K s 1 e 4 s *6 10 J1 1 x <2 i: Pl J I1 too» wg>> oaox W Mvlot-i ~l When this deal ocdurred in a better-tiian-average rubber game. the bidding proceeded: South West North i Q Pass 1 Q 2 N T Pass t! Q 3 N T Pass Pass it didn't matter what West open- ed-——South could merely concede a trick to the club rice and then have more than enough good cards to clslm the balance. Thus. North- South lost What might be describ- ed as a laydown slam. since noth- ing but. a 3-0 break of the missing East Pass Pass Pass notrump conLract. If we start off by analyzing South's bidding. we will find no flaw. His one-club approach hid. his two-noti-ump rebid, and his final call of three noirump over North's three diamonds, were uni- formly logical. North's one dia- mond response did not promise very much; hence South could not afford a stronger rebirl than two noirump; and when North then non-conimlttedly went to three diamonds. South had no choice but to bid three notrump (or craven- ly pass!) The fault, then ,for the partner- ship's failure even to investigate slam chances was exclusively North's. That player did not ap- preciate the potential value oi’ his diamond suit, to say nothing about his spade queen. If’ south, merely on the assurance that he would find some diamond strength 0p- Dosite him, could afford to con- tract for two notrump and slm. "liflneoll-ily urge a game contract at that denomiiintinii. stirely Norlhs trlck-ivinning potentiality over what he might have had de. served consideration and mention! North should have bid at least, four notrumn -— which probably would have been all the aggro“ “fl-‘uilfy- Six diamonds would ngt, b" 8 800d contract, since» North —TFLLIN' n5, no ocueit ‘ Tl-IEYD DPUTHEQ FF. ' T v ‘LT AH S-iOULD - WY SOMEONE AH DCNT LOVE ——'\IAI'“F_LV. DUMDINGTONT.’ MR. KiRBY, FLEASE *—< FORGIVE ME FOR M‘! HARSH WORDS ABOUT IAISS DOQIAN. AFTER ALL, I DO NOT KNOW HIR...I Wfii THINKING ONLY OF M‘! SON’5 WELFARE - FEELINES. M ‘A . I ., x can wzu. l uwosizsrma A moi-life's I5 A CONFIRMED BACHEIDRWAND I WANT THE BEAUMONT NAME 5T HART l5 MY “mud be exposed to a heart lead by East. ~|~\'a~~I- ‘ (s, Thornton w. some»! diamonds could have upset a six' “Hello Th reP-iegsl" said Coon iii e said he. "That is what they call me. Did you over see anybody ivilh three legs who wasn't called that?" "You are Lhc first. person with only three lugs I have ever seen- 1 thought l was the only one around. Did you have four once?" ieplied tht Muskrat. "What a tiucstioll! Do you think Old Mother Nature would have given me only three? Of course I had four," retortcd the big Coon. "So did 1," squeaked the Mlbikf rat. He sounded a bit znournful. Three-legs the Coon grinned, but it wasn't a happy grin. "80 you did it, loo." said he. “Did what?" asked Three-legs the Muskrat just as if hs didn't know. "Stopped vrhere one of those terrible things with dreadful Jaws could leap up and grab you by a leg and never let you g0,“ said the Coon. He meant 1t steel trap. "Yes," squeaked the Muskrat. "Yes, that is just what I did. 1 put my toot in it." “And you left your foot in it." said the Coon, Just. aslif he knew all about it. Three-legs the Muskrat shiv- ered as he nodded. "I had to," said he. "If I hadn't 1 wouldn't be here 110W." "Did you twist it off or gnaw if; off with your teeth?" asked Three-legs the Coon. The big Muskrat shivered again st the memory of what had hap- pened. "I twisted it off and it hurt terrible. You don't know how it hurt," said he. "Yes. l do," Coon. "Anti I nearly drowned while doing it," continued the Muskrat. He sliivered again. ‘Thai. dreadful thing grabbed you riszhi. in a place where you had been ever so miuiyy times be- fore and nothing hnd happened," said the other Three-legs. "Were you there when it hap- pened? You seem to know all about it. It was on an old log partly in the water and partly on hind. l have sat on the 0nd of that log and opened clams more times than l can remember. There never had been anything wrong there before. Everything looked as it aIv/nys had. And then it jumped up fllld Krtilibvri me and I fell back into the will?!‘ and I thought 1 never would got my nose out of We!" 1188i“ for air. I couldn't do anything to that thing to make it let go. I tried to bite iiz, but it didn't mind a all. All I did was hurt. my own teeth. Then I" -- The voice of Three-legs the Musk- rat raiirsd off and he shivered. "Then you pulled and twisted this way and that way until you twisted that leg off." Three-legs the Coon finishtf. for him. Three-logs the Muskrat nodded. That is how it was. It hurt fright- fuIIy. I don't like to think about it." said he. He shlvered again. "l know," replied the big Coon. "You can't: irll nie anything about u. I hnd in use my teeth before i could got free, and I left. part o! my leg and my foot behind. I've ivaichfld my step, every step, ever since." The other inzhx The next story: "Getting Along." By AL can growled the big nodded understand~ A VICIOJS I WANT S I WANT xow. / so 1 HAVE an». z Avi ALSO A?! '- —AH KNcMED THEYTJ 5E: n‘ MAN WAY!"- By Alex Raymond LIE, MR. KIRBYI WHY TUART TO MARRV! HIM TO MARRY Mill DORIANI r146." I D/DA/T (I . FEBRUARY 1, mar 100i /5 HINT)! OI‘ mam/l.’ ---_.___. ottifrtt mo: ‘in sen ir...vou A U’ “w” '“ “E NUMPHIEY AN“! SUPPOSE TOE NERI.’ ‘D01 it uitirrtt IASTEMUNY. W! imemv nail A assault! w! va 5am. I CARS ARE WAITIN‘ IN FRONT/l TN ,__W MAGE°WVHAT 0o WANT WITH fi A I coarse DIECE o: "toner? BRINGING UP FATHER THEY JIST LEFT. W! GOTTA GO NOW ,.OU7 TN’ BACK WAY-CMON. HORACE oiziwii. wu " ‘/ mow vou Dow-i- HA/E TIME FOR ALL "rt-lose THINGS! 1949 8v Ham I- .-_f_-_' l7,‘ MIG...» y D/DA/‘TK/LL £55»- I DID. crave, tutu: "’ FELLER. SAY, J5sm_ om YA ORDER MV By iiuiurd WELL. dfil THIS csuv BILLVLNAIRE t? QUEE ODD o-ufi SWIMMING Pool. i5 so Lanes HE use MOTOIZBOAY6 on iT AND A LIGHTHOUSE AT EACH END- ' '5' "11 L": 'S'“."‘_‘I’.“3'L!L'~_"": 91mg!“ A HENRY I'D LIKE ‘IOTILK "ID BILL YUNAIEE- HE KNOWS f HAVE AN ADPOiNTMENT VEQV WELir-BLIT H55 SPEAKING WHAT t5 Ti-iis I HEAR- THAT m; Bouettr AH OCEAN LINEQ AND you PEIZGONALLY WILL STEEIZ IT #02055 THE OCEAN? I ru. Pain-r mom; ‘TICKETS I union-s s- Kill mt..- Syndicate OHITHERE\O Ane-AiVrr/s Aaour was» t WANT sou "ro uNDERSYA D. once AN’ a ALL,YOU AN’ SAMMY s NOT sow m nave ANY PRIZE FIGHT-SAMMY? wri-iitz tat-tones us, AN“- l mus m: TOILER LEADSTO A S ievew eooFYs A KENT BR: I'LL IuST KEEP HIM 0N THE sTRmq HIINBNG, FATHER, %4 Fl HELP lT-e- A/qq MERCY! HE'S wiru NETTiE NYE O’? T E