rm: Uff-UARDIAN JANUARY 21'. 1949 ‘llllttlil? m ‘I’ ihflhm" Auction orty-Fve 8r Son OPTOMETBISTI ‘Qpiclllllll in tho fitting of glasses for tho correction ol Holy Redeemer Hall Friday, January Zl At 8J5 p. m. Auspices C. W. L. Charitable purposes ocular defects." 53 GRAFTON STREET KXW Dominion Drama Festival Tickets are available at The Abegweit Gilt Court, 72 Grot- ton Street. A limited number ol reserved seats are available at 75c. Other seats are available at 50c. The festival plays will be pre- sented for adiudicotion at The Empire Theatre, January 26, i949. The curtain rises at 8 o'clock. mama Jew» mmmw-xxmr Potatoes Wanted We are interested in buying carload lots, all varieties Seed and Table Potatoes, at any rail siding in Prince Edward lsland. We pay top market prices. Telephone 2102 — — — — — — — — — — — - 318 LAVITT POTATO CO., LTD. Charlottetown Prince Edward lsland [B6 Sills lust what and whom to trust, lThen do it no more than you must. l — Reddy Fox. l To be distrustful isn't a pleas-- ant feeling. lt isn't a nice feel- lns at all. Yet. many folk are, vdlstrustful, especially Woodlflndi lfoik. They have to be. Yes. sir. |Lhey have to be, whether they want i to be or not. Reddy Fox is one. Long ago, wheil he was young, he ‘learned that it is better. far bet- flef. t0 be dlstrustful without cause ‘than too trusttul when there is ,causc to think something may be wrong, This is why his hand- some red coat ls still his own, his very own. There have been many times when he might have last it had he been too trustful. Reddy had found a. young Fox, a stranger to him, in trouble. He was‘ in a brushy hollow a little below an old wood road, one that -was seldom used by any but wood- land folk. It was in a lonesome woodland. That is. it would have been lonesome to you or me had we happened that way. To the ‘woodland folk it probably wasn't lonesome lit all. The quieter and Contract Briclgei By Josephine Culbertson l0O<ZOO}OO§OO{OOQ_ I ‘l ax INTERESTING narm ‘, A hand discussed at great length in the December issue of The ‘Bridge World Magazine brings out ‘several interesting points. The hand actually occurred in last DAILY CROSSWQRD 16. Effervescent 4 nrinooa ss. aihsl u l 1. Stui! J4. Concludes drink , l] a. Portions of WN 19. Not n curved lines 1. Wrinkle dlmcult ‘is. Vex 2. Free :1. Marry ti so. i-lslr-liks s. nxprsssion 2s. Goltterm g growth of sorrow 16. Droop in m ‘ on sheep l. Reward the middle u l I11. Kind o! ‘B. Tool for 21. A novice mung gggg tree so. Attempt liun [JLIIIB '12. Feels holes I1. Wstertcrett I * ; dsvsusg. i s. Chamber s2. Sh" _ Yum-v I MW" i. “Wu-d ‘l. Sheltered out, as hair 42. intention ‘it. liixelsms- ' inlet or feathers 43. Specks " “an of , Q, Lgl-‘Q, B3. Weaken 45. Bud 0! B _ plump. , heavy _ i5. Blackheads Plani- lll. Aslighl l nsmnfu as. Canvas 4a. Soak lisx _ mu < 41. slsh shelter sorissurs r17. A native o! 18. Prophet. l0. Kind of tree (Heb) i, oncxlledel y ‘l8. Custom _ 20. Pullbahinl ' .21. tarsus a den lss/nlrssts flldsgus in. Pines ‘I0. Period of time in. Purelissorl’ ya. Ooursgo (lions) . Ahead Sweet ". potato ’ dmPosln Alflhrt _ _ H. costar l ashes as. At horns 41 Aroifllhll’ ' ' tsmlly at Inglsnd Mo. One who steers s. vessel 5s. Networi lid. Plunder DAILY OIYPTOQUUIE-J-lore’: how to work ill i I AXYDLBAAXB {MLONGFIJLLOW '.Ons'lstt.sr simply stands for mother. In this ell-ample A ll M04 ms two 0's, m. Single ietterl- oodl- e words are all hints. Each for the three L's. X for “h trophes, the length and tomllllflin 0 dsy the coda letters are different. ‘Agyypupusquotstion j-qrv vczxnsr rrkc K oxn OKN is, scan k JBOKR use CIYRL 1Y0 ‘out KRSPlb-CIKALPZKN. l Y“‘¢my'. CIQPQOQDOQO! A HORBII THOU i mm fmou DOST NOT KNOW-TENNYSON. u ‘ iDlll-rlhitofl a: m: "W" "Wm" °' winter's Vanderbilt Tournament. North dealer.’- North-South vulnerable QAD UAKQ7A QAQJS . #94 _. .. 4x012 410643 5 N we: zlo w E 995a" 4.14 oss S T Q u; ' Q72 9.79853 ¢K10643 ‘tcam-of-four contest. At one table itile bidding proceeded: 1-21 B North East South West ———2Q Pass "2N‘i‘ Pass 3 O Pass 5 Q Pass Pass Pass As may be seen, North easily made an overtrlck. discarding his losing spade on Dunlmrs (South's) fifth diamond. At the other table. this was the bidding: 1-21 C North East South West 1 9 Pass 2 Q z Q 5 o 4 e s o Pass 5 Q Pass 8 I Pa" Pass Pass The natural conclusion is that the pair which bid and made the heart slam did yeoman service for its team, and this of course is true in a limited sense. The more pertinent observations can be made, however. that both East- West pairs were "asleep"! Whether or not the vulnerable North- South team reached tile slam, the non-vulnerable East-West pair could make an excellent sacrifice. going down only one trick at five spades and two tricks at six spades. (If North, with remark- able shrewdness. led clubs very early, he could give his partner a club ruff, but this was not a like- ly defense.) Thus, the first East- at five spades and the second at against the vulnerable game; in the second case. and purely as s mat- WT 0! “Percentage”. it was a great deal wiser to take a small penalty (even 500 points is small undel- (By Thornton W. I West pair should have sacrificed six spades. In the first case, the save" would obviously be cheap "Where did it happen " asked Roddy, although he already knew less used a place is the better it is liked by most oi’ the furred folk and some of the feathered folk. They don't know what it is to be lonesome. The young Fox was fully grown. as bit! as he ever would be. He had been out in the Great World for himself almost a year, but he still had much to learn. Very likely he had thought he knew all there was to know, but he knew differently now. Had he known as much as he should have known as much as Reddy Fox knew, he wouldn't now be tangled in the brush of that hollow with the cruel jaws of a steel trap biting into one of his black front legs. No, sir, he hadn't known as much as he should have known. He hadn't known enough to be suspicious when he should have been. Now he was in trouble, the very worst trouble a Fox or any one else could possibly be in . Roddy Fox knows traps wllell he sees them. Ha knows all about them, where they are likely to be hidden; how they leap out to grab and hold on to a. careless or un- suspecting foot; how they bite through skin and flash to the bone; how they never let go. holding the one they have caught a helpless prisoner. All these things Reddy knows, though how he learned so much without himself being caught I don't know. Perhaps it is because he so early learned to be suspicious. And of course he ls smart. Raddy came elose.- He saw that the paw held in the trap was badly swollen. There was nothing he could do to release it. He saw the chain that led from the trap into the brush. He followed it to where it was fast to a. short, thick stick. This was caught in the brush._§_t was caught in such a way that the young Fox was unable to pull it free. He was held there a help- less prisoner. He was suffering from pain and fright and hunger and thirst. and the dreadful feel- ing of helplessness and hopeless- ness. There is a. name for suffer- ing like that. It is called torture. Reddy looked up the hill to the road. He could see where the mat- tied leaves lhad been disturbed, some of them pulled over. in a long, crooked line from where he was up to the old road. He knew what had disturbed those leaves. It had been done by the dragging of that trap and the stick. A stick or a stone or a small log fastened to the end of a trap chain is called "drag." It is meant to be dragged and sooner or later became caught in brush or around a lcg or tree or stone, and so keep the one trapped‘ from going far. “Where did it happen?” asked Roddy, although he already knew. "Up in the old road," whlmpered the unhappy young Fox. “Didn't you see it?" asked Red- dy. The young Fox shook his head. "I couldn't. It was covered with leaves. 1t was in the middle of the road, where I have gone back and forth many times. There. was nothing to be seen. not a thing. And then it Jumped up and bit me. I can't get away from it. I can't even get away with it. Whatever am I to do?" whlmpered the young Fox. This was something Roddy couldn't tell him. He didn't know these circumstances) instead gambling that the adverse alun might be defeated. L|’L \INER WE CANT HAM/ST IT UNTlL T11$.%vl NICNT I m! loin -AN"I'I'IIH VARMINTS mws ' -SOTl£YLL mm WAL,WI'LL FOOLCEN f! WE GOES TSOFT-HEARTED of himself. The next story: "Reddy Goes Hungry." By AL CAPP YUHEARD W ME- rtoucr! bani/tom... AND si-ic Aeocoalzss-ouole: FOR My unniaooulisce " BEt-iAVIORlUNQLOTE- s mo ens |NV|TE§ PAEE__S_I'<IVEN ‘Bvv _Ham Fisher Janxwes can/M; up m: rf/LL ' LED! , CHARLOTTETOWN _ KlNGV orfriitfifovkl. MouFiTro q U m: nu 5k MK/i/"fiezr CAREFUL ra/r/oe/r/s RIFLE... air-air.’ mars n/Ar; 7'00 E45)’. “WELLJJKOLEEVERUFTED r STHAT ' rm: . "is ‘sacalnluan HUMFHREY mo SOMETHING snarreo... nie CHAIN BROKE mo summary Florrzo on m: see mo smteo ...n' ADJUSTED HIEIsMROIU-IPAG 'r ll‘ OIOIARHJS JERKYALLRIGHT... NE FELT MUCH 8ETYER WIS PORNWW DEAR DOCTOR BLEEVER l5 JUST WONDER: .. . HE BROUGHT IN A CRANE AND A CRUSHER HELPS ME WTTH ALGEBPA: BREEZY DOES MY LAWN, WOODY wRiTES MY BOOK REPORTS AND WALDO HELPS WiTH SCIENCE! .s. l Mil/rum N’ fifi_’ . "n-w-i BRI s , l l ' ' ._ 6 ,_ f »¢% F“ | ‘you / AQEHIT \OLJ comm’ NESOME-HE ewe {as m‘ ‘p~ q" ggEPQiEFEQE i’ wglfiggghhEosLfiEl-LJST AH-AN‘ l 00m’ Qh“; ' / 6° OUT- 7 _ _. i / Aw-u-LY <>~ has ~ "m. // / - I W'TSTY%%QT$VF§ SEggEiTSV/N "r0 MAesIE- i Wu ’ iii: 1F " . - 48s‘ / "U1- L’ M}? /2c‘s5g;5>" ’ ‘b I C4‘ N‘, ‘s 1"“ i T I ' f. i Cari T’ - ‘ m uwnwht... t. fir...» ...-..l ' Ash-encore ’- l-Zl i -. . ..-- .____ , . TIPPY mo "cAlWfiuTs By Edwina” YOU MEAN CAD AN‘ SAMMY MY LA i . -- — ARE sow‘ TO HAVE A ND WELLALL OF You aha-TA LJQTSQ uiicagklguscéis/QE PRIZE FIGHT ‘ti’? YEH! GAMMY’S UNCLE Bussvis TRAININ‘ HIM" veuu ALONG now, AN’-- l VEH, cruel. DIDN'T HAVE ANY MORE , TICKETS 1o SELL/COUNTTA so ' l MANY PEOPLE WANTIN’ TO so 1- A ~—I WON'T HAVE Ti-HS FIGHT} 1 WON'T ALLOW CAD-- W¢7m¢4 TMGnrp MIPhP-II-Arilfi s. . _ THEYWZE RlVALS FOR MY AFFECTION/ THEQE ARE NO MORE SHOTS as cAneFuL/A CIRCUS ANIMAL MAY 5e LOOSE ly Harry Hoenigsen WELL,MOtHEIQ, IGUESS vbu Au. AQE ii= IFQMAANO MITZI AND I STICK ‘TD out? DQESS SWAPPIMG DEAL. . BAQEHTS WILL. MAYBE r0 BETTE? r401" KEED n? 55E HERE,WHO'S Hostile R92 vbuR fivou REALLY LIKE mv NEW 02555 Morl-iER?