PAGE TEN PADDY GROWS MORE UNEASY Who is content, tor simply guess. His ignorance will thus con!-:55. .-Paddy the Beaver Long. long ago. Paddy the Bea- ver learned how foolish it is in be content with simply guessing about important limiters. He learned that gucssing seldom pays. and may sometimes be very costly. He learn- ed that more often than not a guess proves to be wrong. So. Paddy wisely tries to make sure oi things instewd of guessing. Paddy was feeling uneasy. -He knew of no reason for feeling un- easy. but that uneasy feeling per- sisted. He lilid Mrs. Paddy that he was uu:axy. "I don't know why," he coiiiessed. .......e ..,'v-- . ' s 1 By Thornton W. Burgess , "Forget it." said Mrs, Paddy. .”N0thlnK is wrong. There isn't a thing in the world to be uneasy my bout. Doiilt be foolish. See how. beautiful and peaceful it is this i(VEIIIIIK. I've never known s love- ller evening." I 3. It was a lovely evening. Tlieirv iliitlo pond. iniide by their own . Iiard Work ill building a dam across i la brook. was like ii polished sheet. .of glass in a setting or ire-cs. Not; ,a ripple marred its surface. They Black Siitidows covered a large port V of it. It was at the edge of this? darkened surface that Paddy and Mrs. Paddy floated side by side. They had slept-niost of the day in their big house out in the water. ysoon they would be going to work. liar it is at night they like best ' to work. alid they had much to do. WOOII ISLAND - GARIBIIII SAILINGS JUNE From each iermlnni where, by making application day (mm each terminal. For daily report listen in llrlt News Broadcast G230 T I4 T0 SEPT. DAILY (Including Sundays). STANDARD TIME. .. 7 and 9 a.m. - ii n.m.. I. 3 and 5 p.m. For full Information contact Hand Office at Charlottetown, reservations may be secured for ilrst and second sailings. ench .CATCH AN EARLY CROSSING AND AVOID DELAY. NORTHUMBERLANI) FERRIES LIMITED. CHAIILOTTETOWN, 1'. E. I. FERRY SERVICE '28 INCLUSIVE at least 48 hours In ailvimce. CFCY each morning following 1:30 I).S. Time. JOE PAUOOKA .,...--v- ----- -----v -.---w....., .. .. .-.....- ..-mE..dg- ' ...AND NOW, moves AND PALOOKMPOPULAK Awo w mus coRNeP.,me GENTLEMEN, THE . MEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPION or OUTSTANDING CHALLENGER, A NATIONAL ANTHEM. THE ,,,, THE WORLD,lN PACKY NARViNO,WEARlNl'7 .mEMENDw5 CROWD M V y WHITE Tkumxs, BLACK TRUNKS, .0” AS We :5 sense , WEIGHING 202... WElC1HlNG 209... comes-murs ”g””' 1 word ENYEK me mus "TH?" -I SIMULYANEOUSLY. me FAM ,lixE(TbrJ2cgLE';IJcCEE: -- EX-CHAMPIONS ' g 4 I "5 BEWG coorrTeHsE1Au1s "ii " i - '3 ;3' iv 3 maoouceo in THE " r ' .A””0””CER . REFEREE iii. so:-mw Arms... ,5 RUBY . , ,- 7 9A oowsiew... 1.. .. I Eh I 1 1 7: - . . 1.I'I. ABNEP. VFZS, SON mT)-lAR'S ONI. DOCTOR WHO'D FIX DAISY BUT. AH CANT RIGHTLY RECOMMEND HiM.'.' ' .1 .'u.v:.Z;v.7.. V. V M... i......i,....i. --A'.r...d.... n..u'.o. REMOVAL NOTICE R. T. Morrison Limited Plumbing. Heating and Electrical Contractors formerly situated at 91 Fitzroy Sr. is Now" LOCATED AT 39 QUEEN ST. Next to R. I. Murch Limited. Wholesale. make. him at all anxious. He lis- ltened. turning his head this way rI"Dc8E(iEiiiEd'dii'p?ze' if. MAFJS rACt, FO'NOTHIN '- He sat up and tested every little breeze that came along. 'riTey.xWiiiE1.E6i'i'(i'iiEiB?r."i:T'iiie i'HE GUARDIAN. C40sjG0&GO&OO300; contract Bridge , By Julephilll Culbertson -e&'0il)'M20l:?a0.9D0DQeOO& REMEMBER ALL OF THE - BIDDING! Almost all doc arers bear in mind the bids which were made by the enemy. but when it comes to the equally vital matter or remember- ing an original pass, the record is not so good. Consider this cue: East (iesler. y Neither side vulnerable. North-south 60 on score. night lumbering. for the Beaver folk are woodcutiers. They are log- gers. They cut down trees. then cut them into logs and float the logs to the place where they want them, just as human lumbermen do. "It is time we went to work." said lMrs. Paddy. i "I know. but somehow I don't like to Lave the water," replied feaduy. "Do you mean that you are :- frald?” asked Mrs. Paddy. i ”Not exactly sfraidcbut I have ii feeling.” i'3DIiEd Paddy. ! "What kind of I. feeling?" asked l Mrs. Paddy. "Oh. Just a feeling." Paddy. I ”Tliat doesn't mean a thing.” de- clared Mrs. Paddy impatiently. "Are you afraid or what? Who in them- y to be afraid of to-night more than on any other night? Buster Bear hasn't been around for A long long time. Neither has Tufty the Lynx ior Puma the Panther. Howler the ywolf left this neighborhood long 320. I haven't seen in sign of Old 1Man Coyote for a long time. so ithere you are. who else is there - to be afraid of?" Paddy admitted that he couldn't think of any one else. and that all i Mis. Paddy had said was true, Still .hc continued to reel uneasy. The itruth is, he was feeling more and lmore uneasy. and he couldn't give gone single good reason for such I 3 feeling. "Come on." sold Mrs. Paddy. "Ills time we went to work." she vsi.a.rted swimming toyvard where l the brook entered iihe pond. It was 3 up the brook a. little way that they iwere doing their logging. They iwere cutting aspen trees. Aspen lbark is their favorite food in win- lts-r. Poplar bark does very well. ilzut they think aspen bark is bet- ter. They had discoyered a little clump of aspen trees back from the water s short distance. They ,were growing not very far from .the writer. Even so, it was farther . than Paddy liked, Tonight he liked i it less tihan ever. That uneasy feel- iing persisted. For no reason that ; he could think of he hated to leave , the water. He stopped at the edge or it. He sat up and tested every .Lltile Night Breeze that came a- ilomz. They told him nothing to replied we mnzw HIM our 0' 114' PRO-FESHUN -AN' wz ALL TOOK A OATH NEVAH 'r' MINIMUM His NAMI- v. u l V. n-,........... v.. i..m....,-.,....... Bis STAR. ARE wuz wuzrzss Miss LEE? BI6 STAR! THE Mwstsizis 5:21 NOW... HERE BY NOW! SHE SHOULD BE BACK -AN'-SO AH WON'T MENSHUN IT-AH'LL MERELV WRITE. IT Qua. .i.4Mc: Mraovu I!- .4763 QQ104v V QJ882 IA52 QAKJIO Q5 :K.,;,-; N 32 1 Q75 W E V175 -4.Qio76 S 09 3 .4934 Q94 i vase QAKQ1043 . . .LKJ I The liidiling: I East South west North y Pass 10 Poss 2. , go :1. Pass Pass ii 3. 4Q(finalbid) i West opened the spade queen; iEast overlook and continued the suit. South rufiied the third round high. cashed the king and jack of diamonds, and then "huddled." As he evplalned later. he found it hard to decide whether to play for a favorite break (and guem) in the hrart suit. or to finesse to his own jack of clubs. If the club queen was ri2'IlI. he would then be sure of s discard on dummy's club we. South's decision was to go out for the hearts. so he led the four to his ace and returned a low heart toward dummy. West, who was not inclined to make his enemy's pro- blem easier, played low on the second heart without hesitation. and South went wrong -- he put in dunimy's ten, hoping it would force the king. Obviously. how- ever. the defenders could now take two heart tricks and (latest the contract. At the third trick, when South saw that East had is six-card spade suit headed by A-K-J-10, he should have realized that there was a very slim possibility of East's also hold. ing the king of hearts. Few play- ers are so conscrvstlve (or. more accurately. so shortsightecl) as to passnvitli such 3 spade suit and an outside kinoz. Thus. unless South knew East to be an extremely timid bidder, he should have I8- sumi:d that the heart king Wu held by West, and all he had to do was follow through with this 35. sumption when it came to the play in the heart suit itself. DRINK Hunt mu. nu. SHOP REFRESHED WI-3y Ham Fisher y CHARLOTTETOWTI rmuav THAT UJCLE OE MAGGIEB WILL DQNE ME "BAA -8AA" WITH THOSE WEIGHTE AN' DUMEBELL5 l-IE THROW6 AROUND” ISMT we wivius I'LL SAY- I wouoeaeui. WEAIHER wouoea MERE PE3icEFL:L. somu 0N His we I5 naautr , Or some G.ilET now . . STRETCH OF OR MAYBE H535 IN SOME l&DE GLEN COMMUNIN9 WITH NATURE .- I CAN'T Flu) MV ONE HUNDRED-AND 5EVEN'TV-FNE 'POL'KJD DUMB8ELL- vou A Ml6GIS'5 K1151 DAN" - BUT I THINK Tl-06 DLNB- BELL waist-is AT LEAST . -rwo HLMDRED.' By Edwin YVE TOLD YOU A ' HUNDRED TlMES.YOU CAN'T TAKE TIPPIE ALONG: BECAUSE" --YOUR GREAT-AUNT LULU IS 'FRAiD OF D065”! Now, LESSEE-- i eves-3 VoLi'VE GOT Ev'r:vTHIN6.-- DO'I'FY DRIPPLE FOR eoo'NEss SAKE!' Do YOU WANT To Miss TH 23Al4AI0h;v?3?! " "Ass; Riiiord WONDER WI-IV 77-(EYIS ASHAMED r'ME;vSHuN ms NAME 7- - worvaile KFAH ouaur r PUT DlV5Y MAES FACE IN HIS HANDS P-"-J WITIIA IOLD INITIAL in T11! POGO ' FINE? Din you FINISH DARNING Mv SOCKS? y NO, X FOR-BUT ALL P50UT wow, wm COULDN'T 1 iceevl mi Bio mourn sour FOR -ran MORE MINUTES?! IT--I'D BETTE! DO THAT NON INSTEAD OF HELPING WITH rue visues; ,- M By Walt Kelly 2 ; , Q As sure As Mv NAME I6 IIOUN BEAUZIGAII7 cHAuLMoooizA :5 Von FZONTENAC DE MONTMIN6LE BLIGLEBOY, I if! I 1 M KNOWN A9 I I - i IJCK STIJPY col BOAR? : l l l l l iii .. J , H 3 iii: vouimow AUNT ELLEN,l'D olcios oei-mi-r:i.voNA ou2ssn..., . . I Amp GIVE UPALLTHOUGI-ITS OF MARRIAGE, A HOME AND SUCH...