JANUARY 3. 1954 4.3.. By Thornton W.. Burgess ma STRANGE! BEING! TROUBLE rroubie nster is all your own; - It is never yours alone. -Old Mother Nature. no is true. and it is too had that it is true. Whoever gets in trouble. makes trouble for others. were this not so the Great World pouid be a far happier place than it now is. Two young foxes, Too-Smart and gait-Eyes. had made a home for themselves in aneighborhood where here had been no foxes for a long we -jnj-1-juj-T-u SCIIARE DANCING Community Centre Starting Wednesday January 13 time. All that they had had to worry about was getting food enough in bad weather. But now tr6ubie, real trouble had been brought to them. I handsome stranger who said his name was Silver Fox. had come to the neigh- borhood. He said he really was a red fox even though he wore a. silvery black coat; and this was true. although Too-Smart didn't quite believe it. Silver Fox didn't spend all his time in that neighborhood. He was a wanderer. He' was alone and had no settled home. Sometimes he would be gone for several days. and Too-Smart would rejoice, thinking that he had left the neigh- borhood for good. Then Silver Fox would return. That in itself made trouble. Food was scarce, and hard enough to get when there were but two of them. So it was that Fox out of the neighborhood. Also. he was jealous. Soft-Eyes admired the handsome stranger. All this was bad enough. but how something worse was happening. Every Wednesday 9-12 TRAVEL CLUB MEETS AT THE "Y" TONIGHT a Jan. 6th-8:15 P.M. New members welcomed. Almost everyday a hunter with a dreadful gun would be seen some- ywhere in the neighborhood, and it was all on account of Silver Fox. It was that beautiful coat of his. He had been seen, and now he was constantly being looked for be- here in that neighborhood. This meant that Too-Smart and Soft-Eyes had conslantiy to watch iie it was! he wanted. he wouldn't hesitate to shoot them for their red costs if he had enough, but quite by accident they found something worse in the way of trouble. A pair of dreadful steel jaws nearly caught Soft-Eyes. As it was, she lost a toe. Of course. out for that hunter. Wh that silvery black coat that got the chance. This was Too-Smart wanted to drive Silver cause that lovely silvery black coat iwas the most valuable coat any- W THE Almost every day a hunter with a dreadful gun would be seen some- where in the neighborhood. it was a trap. It was the first experience of either of the two young foxes with traps. It made them suspicious of everything everywhere they went. By watching, they found that it was the dread- ful gun who was setting those traps. In that way. they found out where most of those traps were set. GUARDIAN. contract Bridge by Josephine Cuibertnon FROM PILLAII TO POST A correspondent asks whether it is not true that many squeeze plays could have been broken up by farsighted defense. The answer. is yes and no, some squeezes can be destroyed by shrewd defense, but it is possible for a defender to break up one type of squeeze. only to fall victim to a different type. Here isaclassic illustration. Of course it all made hunting harder than ever. They couldn't know that those traps were set especially for Silver Fox. All they knew was that a new and dreadful kind of trouble had come to them. That it was all due to the coming of the handsome stranger to the neighborhood, they didn't and couldn't know. But they did know no such trouble. so of course he had the same trouble. In this mat- ter they were no worse off than he was. But this didn't make the trouble any easier to hear. The two young foxes were hav- ing such a hard time trying to avoid the hunter, keep out of traps, and get enough to eat, that they began thinking of looking for a home somewhere else. They hated to give up that good home, but living in that neighborhood was be- coming more difficult every day. ......:?... MERCY FLIGHT EDMONTON, (OP) -An RCAF Dakota carrying medical supplies Monday began a 1.300-mile mercy flight to Spence Bay. about M0 miles north of the Arctic circle, where an ROMP constable is re- ported seriously ill. He has been identified only as Constable Ox- NIGHT 7:30 to CLASSES BEGIN THURSDAY, JANUARY 7 Typewriilng - Bookkeeping - shorthand IINIONL COMMERCIAL COLLEGE Royal Bank Bldg. -- Phone 3285 SCHOOL 9:30 P.M. hoim. PAINY A ROOM ssaufuut waits sue csumos Rip Kirby J swwr. saws. as we PIAAIIWI msruss-asvmo . 1'." pr 7Iv':Ho5Ixr4U V . ( , Pawns OPP-ER-AWSHUM W! L cos? TEN no LLAHS-Rlsurf that until. he came, they had had, South dealer. W. .BothsidesvulnerIb9'- , QAIOG OK164 QJ43 ' 25632 562 Q74" puns N to 32 W E QA1086 QKD7 S 52 QJ98 QQ1074 QKQJ983 VP-Q8 OQ QAK5 Thehidding y Sontls Wilst No I East 1; Pass 2. Pass 3; Pass 35 Pan 4. Pus 59 Pass SQ Pass Pass Pap West opened the heart Jack. South won with the ace, drew two rounds of trumps, ending in dum. my. and led a diamond toward his singleton queen. At this point East made a brave (and what might have been a brilliant) play -- he ducked. He figured that if he put up the diamond ace and South had a singleton. West would later be isqueezed between hearts and dia- lmonda. and this was actually a sound analysis. But even after west captured the diamond queen with the king and returned a diamond, with dummy ducking and declarer ruffing, the "different type" of squeeze proved inexorable. South cashed the heart queen, saw the heart situation. then cashed two more irutnps, discard- ing a club from dummy. Now, when he laid down the last trump, West had to surrender a club to keep his heart protection. Thereupon, abandoned the low heart. The heart eight was led to the king - and it was East's turn to be squeezed! He could scarcely give up the diamond ace and promote the jack. so he too had to abandon his club stopper .and South took the fulfilling trick with the five of clubs. ..h..h........ The 2,000-mile-long Appalachian Trail in the eastern United States winds through 14 states, eight na- tional forests, and two national parks. says the National Geo- graphic Society. CHARLOTTETOWN PAGE SEVEN The TOii.OI' By Gugfgfggg r mess! m1'i.L new you we LMNG room: you we 9UE5T5l :.'rzz.'.-; W - 50,5021:-naaaw er, Mme Your BRAIN YEA2,YOii I5 .055 ivnwi aw: . ALONE WM 55 eatvlwo EBA KEEN ewe EYESI5 we BICYCLE I WOITH MM? , swam? smote Penny. .7 THING 6009 AN'wrrH was ever CAN our AWAY A5 we FEI-LA, FASZ 9A5. , WM. By Alex Raymond rIt.4mw I s4rnvaaz.w:Axrsarm:s: my 7IM:,JD.":fA';BEIlK:.i ' B Ed oowoe4rrs,ws'V:carm.wsxu.vawa-- - meow 70 K 144.. - ' -- H l ' zgrwxnxrtozprwpsamwouemmi mresu-'49,! , Tippy and Cup Stubs y w y A 7 . ”go T Wlnl ' i - e- D TAKE A I.l'l. Aw. GEE. vozx HAT ".2 DYg'iqJ-r5'i'(giJ2lfrHgNEiiNB'EAFX-ORE J33 '(i:'8LilLll2lTE vousz FOG. ME. GRAN'MA!i ,, Q . iGTMA8 THANK-VOU . , v LETTERS ?? News--I . 1 ea; ' I -(0:. . . av BUT LOOK, COMMISSIONER... THE FIGI-W5 A WEEK OFF... H401-VO'SAVES ICENT A WEEK - AN'AH SAVIIS 10 CENTS AWEEK-RIGHT? veaa ow us soM'sn-ch; I cAN'T...n4s sears ARE ALL sow CLEAR OU1'...SEE YOU ' Tomoaaowf DEFINWE... . 4..- . i By Ge orge McMenusi vy I-Isrry nlserugwlv X .436 as uAsA vsLLow CONVEQTIBLE. Rj""E'1X I HAVE AN ANGELIC DISVOSIWON wELL,i Sam 6 GOOD, BUT FOR AND A WORLD OF HATIENCE -" HOW DID 5(1) FIND IT N ,....s.:.:m... EVEQBODY SAYS XTHINK HE'S HE'S A CREEP. pivlus, AUNT ELLEN.