JANUARY 20, 195g THE GUARDIAN. {AGE N 1N E W834: B ii ii ii S Anniversary . CONCERT Wednesday - Thursday January 25th - 26th Prince of Wales College QUIOKIES NO‘! ICE ‘ DR. BEERS DENTAL OFFICE_ I20 Richmond Street (Over Prowse Bros.) mum"! Ollen as it has been (or ’ 45 Years. Dr. BEER specializes in Workmanship, Quality and Price Guaranteed. . PLATE and BRIDGE wom; Special Attention to Repair \\'ork . iBy Thornton W. I THE TWINS FIND OUT. All through life he better fares m Who for the possible prepares, bi’ Ken Reynolds f ,_--<—-»e i_.-“_ \\..§ _ i l-_ i ‘¥( _¢ /_ 2 ’?nr~ti.us-a_ "if it's a little brown dog you're looking for- theres one around the corner reading the Guardian Want Ads!" -—0ld Mother Nature; I No one knows better than some of the Green Forest loll: how im-' possible it is to know what will happen in clays ahead. All sorts of things. 200d and bud. are possible. So some of them prepare not only for what they kno\v will happen but also what they know ca,“ and so may harppen. She didn't know that there would bet deep snow, but she did know that there might be. So she prepared for it just us if Slie knew it would be. She look- ed about until she was sure of the best place in the Green Forest in which to spend the winter if there should be much snow. o, place where there was the most food to |et. There she started n yard 10i- the family. herself, the twins and Lightioot. since Lightfoot had lost his antlers she had become head of the family and he mcekly followed her lead. i The twins hadn't known what a yard “as and had wondered about lt. Now they were finding out. There had been one heavy tall or snow after another and it had be- come deeper and deeper. The Green Forest had become a new and strange place. The hemlock trues land the spruce trees and the pine gfitflflfilliilliliDOiUlltlllCvfii-LQQOGDDJZ- I l] Contract Bridge By Josephine Culiiertlon a DAILY CRO'SSWORD ACROSS I. A king and 22. Permit i. A desert lawglver 23. Appraise mammal of Crete 24. Disownl 6. Lean-to (Gr. myth.) 26. Reprieve l0. A pointed 4. Occurrence 27. Food in arch 5. Guided general ( Arch) 6. A slow, 30. Greek letter ii. Long-cared dragging 33. U. S. rodent gait president l2. i-lummed 7. Stop 34. To shout l3. Forearm 8. Sea eagle aloud ‘ bone 9. Costly 8B. Below Yum-day’! All!" i4. Work 12. Degrade tnaut.) (Physic!) 15. At a 37. Halt l2. God of i5. Following distance 38. Roman poet IOWCI‘ i6. Exist i!» Aloft 40. Secluded World l7. Cram 20. Little child valley (Rom-l l9. Division of a play 21. Cloyed ‘:5. Tempest 2B. Weave rope ttiaut.) 29. Regard 31. Convert into leather 32. The seilow 1 Scot.) B5. Measure 4 Chili.) 86. Take as one‘s own 39. Rascal 1i. Son of Jacob tBib.) 42. City (Tex) 43. Leave out 14. hore recess 45. road t6. Piece oi’ rock DOWN i. Amend! 2. Eager ‘- IuIHY CBYPTOQUOTE-Bere’: how to irork iti AXYDLBAAXB ll LONGFELLOW One letter simply at lei- theIthree L's. X trophies. the length tor and and: for mother. In this example A is and the two 0's. etc. Single letters. spoo- tormation o! the words are all hlntl. Each day the code letters are diflereflt- A Qfyptofllm Quotation CVHVQCM 8P KT CEY no UKMMYTMKPTM AMC HJT EJM CEY HPMS ZPSYA-CJRKCVM. Yesterday's Cryvtoquvtiv . DREL TO DECEIVE BY Eiirfiinrin IT l5 THE NATURE 0F A SQOUN LYING—CICERO. A SIMPLE POINT In today's deal, the only point was for the declarer to make the enemy "start" a certain suit. 501th‘ deaierf. _ North-South vulnerable glee 9193, ‘ass: Q. A K 4 . ‘ 5 s Q74 . e K a o 2 N y A 1o 7 ‘Qgzs “r E §l§108I 9 ‘Q- 5 a. a 1o a QAK mos vQ5M Q A $632 The bidding: South West North East 1 Q Peas 1 N T Pu: 2 g Pass 2 N T P88! 4 g Pass Pass Peas North. rightly feeling that his first response had left something t0 BDRYB. reheated the notrump suggestion over his partner's two spades. South might well have ac- cepted the suggestion instead of trying for i0 tricks at spades, but apparently he thought that the mn1or~suit contract would be saf- er, and more lucrative. West, on lead against four spades. selected the club five. dummy?- king won. and South promptly drew trumps. Then, apparently with the thought that he would ihare to find the heart ten under ldummys J-9, he led the heart four and put in the nine-spot when West Iplaycd low. East, however, won with the heart ten. and that. in effect. was the end of the mutter. South lost three hearts and one club. There was no need for South to search for the heart ten, or to hope for the favorable position ot that card! Alter winning the first trick. South should have cashed the dia- mond ace. led to the spade nine, ruffed n diamond. then gone back to tho spade jack end ruffed an- other diamond. .Now, trumps hav- ing broken 2-2, he should cash his other club trick. ruff tlummys last diamond. liliCl finally exit with his losing club. No matter which de- fender returned a heart. South would be sure of a trick in the suit; or ii’ the return Was a diamond or a club, South would get a heart discard and a ruff. n 91-31 W333.‘ -¢“'f“--‘ ‘ease. They had to content them- selves with the lower bushes end_ paths could they move about easily. _____________d_._ trees no longer seemed like trees. They were white instead oi’ green, But in those and the snow had piled up on their broad branches so that those were bent beneath the weight o! it, and the trees had taken strange, glistening. white shapes. Before the snow had become deep Mrs. Lightfoot had led the way in what seemed like aimless wander- ing about among the food trees and shrubs, making trails in the snow that crossed and re-crossed, seem- ing to lead everywhere yet no- where. and without plan. However, had you followed them you would have found that they never led away from the food trees and bush- es and excepting to a sheltered place where they could lie down and rest in comfort. At first when there was only a little snow the twins wandered about as they pleasedwhile brows- ing. making little trails o! their own. When the snow became deep- er it became tiresome to wade through it, so more they kept to the troddcn paths. When at last the snow became so deep it was above their knees they kept in the trodden paths all the time. Had they, left them they would have been hopelessly stuck. But in those paths they could move about easily. By this time the paths wound in and out,~cross- ing and re-crossing, among the flees and bushes all over the place Mrs. Lightfoot had ciosen 1m- them to spend the winter. Thus they could get the special food they must have, and do it with- out too much work. It was like be- ing in a big fenced-in yard out oi’ which they could not go. Such a place made in the snow by Deer is called a yard. a Deer yard. - Because of their habit of snatch- ing a bite here and a bite there the four Deer kept on the move most o1 the time while eating, taking a mouthful oi shoots from a bush“ then moving on for some tender twi-gs from a branch of a tree. in this waypwith- out thinking about the matter, they kept the snow trodden down and the paths open While the snow tell ulld grew deeper and deeper out- side the yard. l-l-ad they eaten their fill in any one place the unused paths would soon have been filled. Instead o! staying together while browsing they scattered. They were never far apart. but still they were scattered. This helped to keep all the paths open. Of course the twins, being so much smaller than their parents. couldn't reach as far to the side or up as high when browsing. There were many choice twigs just out. of their reach that mother and lather could get with lower limbs of trees. In the early part oi the winter they didn't mind. Then tlfere was plenty o1 food they could reach. So it was that the twins found out what a yard was and ivhat it was for. And they erere glad to be in it. KEEP HOSPITAL OPEN HUDSON BAY_ Sask. - (GP) — Despite financial difficulties. this town is trying to keep the hospital here open. The council has asked tho Red Cross to continue admin- istration of the hospital until the financial situation improves. by Al Capp \i DUTTY DIPPLE aromas ms mews sssr TEA arse.’ UHARLOTTETOWN KING 0F THE ROYAL MOUNTED _\_ L-Pi rfimfe? E YOU EA/LED -—-— US 7O THIS ;- ~ ' CAB/IV. ..:_~ sP/csem. _ * Z M . ‘I. ma...“ THOSE LETHAL DORNICIG... THIS l5 Hi5 FiNlSi-i... It! pit iii‘: by Zane Grey sP/rsz. out Sroev’ I5 MIGHTY THIN.’ g L___.V//V5 EH5 . n HERE ...1 , ALL RIGHT... am": some». ‘ rm nor LET n so no _ ruamea... r rm earscnor rid ll Ruin _§~ ..-.. .... . You MAY HAVE ¢_>_~_E sues OF CAKE- i1 Mo” HAVE my “si-r-rerz“ TROUBLE ‘rowan-r, comma ? _Z\\ TIPPY ANI? “CAP" STUBS ‘, ‘ wELL/sAaAHJ NEVER KNEW n TO FA\L--i NOW WHERE mo YOU Leave YouQ PURSE Ti-iis 1 . . . -\ N. moot-rm N m: Tnliun smmn BRINGING UP FATHER A LOT or= rizousue) 1 HAD GETTING TAFFY Tn 60 i TO fiLEEwr-Z fr "I. BEGGEP HER, READ TO HER, 1 MADE FUDGE FOR i-IEK -~ AND THAT ISN'T ALL"- SAiD 1 COULD A eofiroot liL§%Q&-a~§_ \~\\\\-_;x\ -._;\L .. x.<> BULL -- I PIZOMISEP HER YOU'D TAKE HERTOTHE THiNG IN THE MORNING y FIGHTS -Ieur 6oKl'T’*?6D* UNDERSTAND??? ‘l f’ I Th: Crane Mnlhew Alain Srrvin. In. by George McMnnun TILLIE THE TOILER I'M GLAD HE WAS HERE - NaTEAD os= BEIN‘ HERE/V‘ l CAUGHT HER TAKiNEi. A DQESS PENNY EDNA sAvs HER AUNT Lois IS Mmmevw ‘me. SIMPD/ Most‘ WOHQERFuL MAM ,N.ll~lT ELLEN- STDCK ROOM, AND SHE SAID SHE lADRfiDHEFE sue SAV§ use warms is OH, THERE'S MR. lN THE MANI-Em/ HELL ex- //dafl K9“ OF POLICY (i; is? m‘ T UTFERLV MADABOIF HIM‘ HE'S SO KiHDANDTt-KLBHTFUL 3ND UNDERSTAHQI~$ "m"- AND C1 us: AuNT LOlS Access mm BECAU e HE'S so uussLFisu -