Jzasii TEN By Thornton was MITE caows rasr Body growth you often find Faster than the growth of mind. . -Old Mother Nature. This saying of. Old Mother . Nature's is very true. A body fully grown often has a childish mind that catches up after a while and keeps on growing while the body has stopped growing. But among some of the little folk in fur and feathers body and wits have to grow together. or their small own- ers will not live long. Wee Mite, one of the children of i .i , COME To The CHICKEN RAFFLE In The K. of C. HOME FRIDAY NIGHT Nov. -21 -- 8:30 P.M. LEAVE WOOD ISLANDS: LEAVE CARIBOU: Charles A. Dunning .. ..... .. Prince Nova where. by making application day from each terminal. For daily report listen to first New: Broadcast 1.30 a.m. Prince Nova ................... ............M.... Charles A. Dunning ................ W. Burgess Danny and Nanny Meadowmouse, was born so helpless that he could do no more than kick his small legs. and could not do this very weu. Not a sign of a coat covered his pink little skin. I-le couidnlt see. '!ie couldn't hear. Yet, by the time he was three weeks old he was out in the Great World all alone,,with no one to look after him, to tell him what to do. or what not to do. or course, that means that he grew very, very fast. By the time he was a month old he was almost as big las his father and mother. And he was less than six weeks old when he had a mate and a home of his own. Don't you think this was pretty fast growing? His wits had grown just as fast as his body. If they hadn't, if he hadn't learned fast, and remember- ed what he learned. he would have been gobbled up by some hungry enemy before he was half grown. when he first left home he had known nothing at all about the Great World. He hadn't even known what fear was. He had learned in one frightful lesson the greatest terror Meadow Mice know. It had come to the neighborhood in which he was living. It had been visited by Shadow the Weasel, who not only WOOD ISLANDS-GARIBOII FERRY SERVICE OCTOBER 23rd T0 NOV. 30th ii a.m. 1 p.m. .................. ll n.m. 3 p.m. ii a.m. 1 mm. 11 am. 3 pm. For full information contact Head Office at Charlottetown, at least 48 hours in advance, reservation: may be secured for first and second sailings, each CFCY each morning following CATCH AN EARLY CROSSING AND AVOID DELAY. N0 Tl-IUMEBERLAND FERRIES LIMITED. R CEARLOTTETOWN. r. n. 1. I The bulb: ihai light ihe C.P.R. and C.N.R. Hotels -when light mini be rigiif ihiiti kills Mice for food. but kills for the fun of killing. Where they can go, he can, and does follow. It was just chance and good luck that had saved Wee Mite. so he had learned fear. And it was one of the most important things he would ever learn. It life. and would keep him constantly on the watch for danger. No one needs to be more constantly on the watch for danger than does a Meadow ,Mouse, for no one has more hungry enemies, and few have as many. Of course. Wee Mite didn't know this when he started out. Shadow the Weasel was the first enemy he learned of. A grown Mouse had found shelter with him during shadow's visit, and to had also escaped. It was from him that Wee Mite learned that Shadow was their worst enemy. "He doesn't come around very often, and that is a mighty good. thing for us. But there are others who do come often, and it you want to grow up, young fellow, you must be on the watch for them all the time," said the big mouse. "Who are they?" squeaked- Wee Mile. and his voice shook a little. "That you will have to find out for yourself. So. don't forget to be always on the watch. and distrust everything you see. and everything you hear which is strange to you. Most of our neighbors are hungry folk who would gobble us up at the very first chance. Always keep under cover. See, but don't be seen," said the big Mouse. "Iili remember.” squeaked Wee Mite. "Anyway. I'll try to remem- her." ."lf you don't. It will be just too bad for you," said his new friend. "And let me give you a bit of advice." "If you please," squeaked thel little Mouse. ”When you sit still always have something behind your back so that no one can steal up behind you. We Meadow Mice have such short necks, that we cannot turn our heads easily to look behind. So when you want to stop to rest, be sure to have a rock or a bunch of grass at your back." explained the wise old Mouse. "I'll remember." said the small Mouse. "Yes. sir, I'll reniember.' ”If you don't, you won't live long." declared the other Mouse. All the time he was sitting with a big stone right behind his back. Wee Mite noticed this. and backed up against a bunch of tall grass himself. He was learning fast. He was learning as fast as he was growing and he was growing very fast indeed. geww EM-GLO (lie most ecollarnical enamel would stay with him all through . THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN i..I'L ABNER 0&O Contract Bridge 3; Josephine Clubertson 309M0ii&0ikQO9MODM TWO BIDDING TECHNIQUES "Approach bidding" is excellent when there is nothing to fear from the enemy, but it is not rec- ommended for hands of the follow- ing type. southdeaieri Both sides vulneraole.. QKJ953A . V74 O82 MAQU3 essa. . PH osqsa N OQIOIH W 13 :11Eg:g: 6" S axioe 4.401073 .1061 QA5 A9842 This deal occurred in a duplicate game. and at four tables this was the bidding: Sotiihi West North Ease 1 5 Pass 3 Q pus 4' Q Pose Pass Pu. No South fulfilled his four-spade contract, but all four of these North-South pairs received excell- ent match-point scores because the other North-Souths did much worse! At the other tables the bidd- ing started off as follows: W , name 3 south” West xonii Eng. 1 .23.. 2”? zen 2v x ' A 59. it did not make a great deal or difference what South did at this point, because the opponents had "found each other." A couple oi South players doubled five dia- monds -- which was not a very good idea. Another South passed. and West went back to five hearts This contract was also made. one Ngrtli saved at five spades and paid an 800-point penalty. It goes without saying that it was the response to the one-spade bid which made all the difference. Quite a. few players, including some of expert ranking, prefer the slow approach represented by the two- club response, but surely this is a questionable technique. What happened in this case happens with great frequency. When North res- ponds with two clubs, he extends an invitation to East to enter the auction at a reasonable level: whereas the tliree-spade response makes it extremely dangerous for East to "move." And the plain fact is that North in this particular deal is not so strong that he can afford to give out "invitations." EARLY EXPLORERS The French explorers Groseilliers and Radisson crossed the Port Ar- cg, POGO: .H - E. T v - . Mamie menu 3 oeeuuae TMfPOl2KYPiNEWA6 l53W...i-ll M 6 ti lPAh"9IllF MloiiTYNl6l PICK"-V GOTAGOOO '- DA TPWB'50NlE Mumesos w H: wanna: . I DON'T LIKE THAT..JE5rSICA GOING OUT AGAIN! 5Tii.L. A 6000 WALK IN THE NIGHT AIR . me any . . amoaospx , thur area in 1654. By Wait Kelly ' wxu cttx .?srz5viv,v'cMrz.s---- FIE: sursszf How FAKAWAYI6 . 1... AH, wai., mousu or: 1-ms INFEFlNAL eucxemns. A sou-r . wm-I BACH row. MY - , was aeooaomes . . ,, suouw SETTLE MY weaves. NASTV I-ELAT CN THAT HUN, I'M H l-JON. ELLO, JES5iCAE wuos com; in? run vou. I SAY, wHo's our THERE? fir TIIAYLL BIA? I15 727 LCWEAIIZZAPD ' 1r Aae'5AI'no0kA we wtmvlm sip! 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PEARLS! M l . a. non: -mm -ovum A By cum a McBride I MM" WHO HAVE A FEW CENTS MORE EVERY WEEK IF THEY WON'T TAKE SOCIAL SECURITY OUT OF MV VAVJ YOU'D NEVER ADMIT TO BRING OV ERGSI ,uI'o BIAL Dwool.v.' Me 6659 BEAUTIFULLYAND .....-. .. -.b5CAIILr.-..10x.-vv