PAGE TEN DANCE Susysliis lallroon Ivory Mondsy, Wednesday, Friday and Ssturdly Eastern iillythis lays ADMlBSlON—I5o F” Meet your frieuilihsn DUCK IHNNER "liilbk 8 miles from Oh'town. — “"9"” 3°“ ~o++o+++o++o “"*”¢ 0-O- CLOVER CLUB DANCE EVERY SATURDAY AI Blanchard and the “Clover Club” Band Admission-fie Dancing 9:80 to 12.00 For reservations Phone 1222 . Between 5 p.m. and '7 p'.m. Phone 478-1. THE GUARDIAN, ‘Cl i.’ s“ '__ ___ K,‘ a, o. £22. ,' lBy Thornton W. Burgess) I ‘A willing servant every day; ‘A terror when I get away. -~l"ire. Folks often are lucky and don't know it. 1t was so with Buster Bear in the Green Forest up on the Great Mountain. He really was s, very lucky Bear. Yes. sir, he was so. But he didn't think so. He was sure he was the un~ luckiest Bear in all the Great World. He was running blindly, too frightened to see where he was going. He bumped mm trees and tumbled over logs. He step- ped in a hole he didn't see and fell head-long. picked himself up and ran, tripped over a stick and fell again. Never before in his whole life had he had such a fer- rihle fright. No wonder he thought himself the unluckiest Bear in all the Great World. Reservations held Qtii 10:90 p.m. sarvnoav NIGHT 1s YOUR DANCE NIGHT AT THE CLOVER cum §§Q§0OO§0Q00fiQfQfQIQ QOOQOO-QOQQOQ vooooooooowooomoo+eovewo4owoo+e+o 1' 7 o Q o Q e v 0 e o e o e 0 v 0 e o Q E § 0 \-Q-O4§"O-O§-Q0OO¥§ IILINIG SCHEDULE During October, Chest Clinics will be hold throughout‘ the Province as follows: i ALBERTONH- MONDAY, October 8 1:80 - 4:90 p.m. SUMMERSIDE:—- TUESDAY, October 4th and 18th . . .. 0:80 - 12:00 mm. SO["RIS:— TUESDAY, Ociobcr 11 .. . . . . . . . . . . . 1:30 - 4:30 p.m- MONTAGFIL- MONDAY, October 1'7 1:30 - 4:30 p.m., PROVINCIAL SANATORIUM:— EVERY THURSDAY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:00 - 12:00 rum. 1:30 - 4:00 p.m. EVERY FRIDAY 1:80 - 4:00 p.111. Those desiring to attend any of the shove clinics for the FIRST time. sre requested i0 consult their fslnily physician or the Pnhilv Health Nurse In their district. Appointments will be mode or- cordingly. Citizens who have neglected having chest X-roys b: the Mobile Unit when it was in their district, must not expect to be X-rsrfll It the above clinics unless recommended by the proper llliiwflflel- E. M. FOUND, Mill, C.M., Medical Director of Oli-nics, Dept. of Health snd Wellsrq l Tuberonlosh Division. O-O-O 0-0-04 O-O-O-Q-OO RAIL onus on uv: muss We are buying lambs, live or on n rail grsde basis. Should you wish t0 ship your lsmhs h) us rnil grade, contact our hog truckers In your respective district. A list of these trlltkfirl Will o found every Friday in your ioosi paper. Live lambs will be bought by any of our buyers. SWIFT BANAIIIAII 00., Lid. Nocvmvv‘ Wood lslands-iiaribou Ferry Service The Connecting Link Between PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND A NOVA SCOTIA daily including Sunday-STANDARD TIME Schedule for Sept. 26th to Oct. list inclusive Making 4 Bound Trips Daily Schedule for the present:- SEPT. 20th T0 OCT. 81st Leave Wood Islands- Prince Nova .. .. I s.rn. l p-ln. Charles A. Dunning ll s.m. l pun. Leave Caribou- Charles A. Dunning I IJII. l pm. .~ Prince Nova . .. .. .. II mm. l p.rn. g NOV. lat to NOV. 80th Leave Wood islands- Prince Nova . I mm. l p-In. Charles A. Dunning .. ll mm. ‘ I p.m. Leave Caribou- Charles A. Dunning 8 s.u|. l p.rn. Prince Nova . ll I-Ill- I pm. m. rlnily information. “listen o, crcv u mo an. nacu ween DAY-STANDARD rum iiorthumharianii Farris: limited ilightning and thunder jand rain and sometimes hail Instead of this he was just then perhaps the luckiest Bear in all the Great World. A tempest was beginning, the kind of storm with and wind He was running for shelter under n. naanszoy I Contract Bridge By Josephine Culbertson PUTTING LOW’ TRUMPS T0 GOOD USE The bidding in today's d?“ warned declarer about a bad trump break. and instead of try- ing to draw the trumps in normal fashion, he put his own low cards in the suit to better use. South dealer. Both sides vulnerable. Hatch-point duplicate. 4am qqora 4x642 4.95 “(as QQJIOS yrs N s2 QQH W E Qsion 4.10816 3 59s z 4.1g g1 ‘K85 §A1073 gsqsu a This wss the bidding at one table of the duplicate game: South West North East 1 g Pass 1 m‘ 2 g 3 Q Double Pass Pass Pass - If North hnd responded pro- perly to the one-club opening _ with one diamond, not one no- trump-South would have had an easy three-diamond bid over East's two spades. As it was, South's rebid of three clubs was s, stretch -but a fortunate one, combined with his handling of the doubled contract! West opened the Dummy's ace won, and o, low spade was immediately ruffed with the club three. A diamond was led to the king. and dummy’s last spade was ruffed with the four-spot. Declarer now laid down the heart king. East won and returned n diamond, Dodlarer put up the ace and led s heart to the queen. South had token six tricks, and the blank king of clubs in East's hand solidified South's A-Q-J for three more tricks. The doubled contract was safe. Observe that declarer would have been very Ill advised to gt. tflmiit the drawing of trumps with the view or establishing the din’- malld suit. ‘Even if he could take thfti! dllmond tricks-g difficult, IQitI—l'i0 VIOUId end up with those three diamonds, the spade ace, one heart trick and three top clubs. This would leave him a trick short. The contracts fulfillment depended on bringing home all "V! trump! in the closed hand. And U16 only way this could he spade king. vviru» i.l_'L ABNER lssilliiii and lisgielioneysqcilielloiiun msh dkltnfisdbvvlilrtifillltafi “"““"""“” aotksgtII-fio mist o‘!£i*~$'~l'-°?i;="i~'~5'8l"éi ‘#1120 Nothln’ could be Monger. Mgrosr“ erg moi-maroon a I've??- . f . fgkgdf ‘s mad, all’; And there qo’ has the cause of all Trouble, and War. done was by using the four and three as ruffers. l: Uncle Iionsu u: in," ' .1: n fis.'i?.eh..n"cl laethvtfib. “W5 n‘ 31:35am; wl it. n lllr KIklY 4 big windfall the opening beneath which was at the foot o1 i tall tree, the tallest tree anyway around. He was almost there when there was a blinding flash. a thunder clap that shook the ground, and a crash. Lightning had struck the tall tree and shat- tered it so that the upper part came crashing to the ground. It all happened so quickly that Bus- ter didn't knuW just u-hat had happened. I guess you would have been as frightened as he was. I am sure I would. Yet all the time he was wnn~ derfully lucky. Had he been a moment sooner he would have been right. at the foot of that tall pine tree. The lightning coming down the tree would almost cer- tainly have hit and killed, him. There is no more dangerous place ln a thunderstorm than under s tree, and the bigger and taller the tree the greater the danger. The Green Forest folks haven't yet learned this and that is why Bus’ ter Bear didn't know that he was lucky. Looking back over his shoulder he saw something that added to his fright. It was the thing that the Great Forest and Green Meadow folk, big snd little. fear more than anything else. It was the Red Terror, which is what they called fire. It is a good name for it is truly a terrible thing when it gets out or control, eat- ing up everything in its way, the trees, the bushes, everything but the earth itself. Before it the ‘lbiggest folks, like Flathorns the jMoose and Buster Bear, are a; helpless as the smallest. Their only chance to live is to run or fly away from it before it has time to catch them, and nften they can- not do this. Fire is man's willing servant, hut when it gets away from him it becomes the Red Ter- ror and often is his master, and a dreadful one. l As Buster looked back the Red Terror was just starting and it was starting fast. It was in the fallen top of the tall pine tree and even as Buster looked it started running through the big windfall and it ran fast because the long drought had made every- thing so very, very dry. The drier things are the faster they are eaten up by the‘ Red Terror. Buster had seen the Red Terror before. He knew what it could do and would do if nothing stopped it. It would leave the whole Great Mountain black and lifeless ex- cepting in the ponds oi the Beaver folk and such other u-ater as there ulas. The wind was already blow~ ‘Iiig hard and that was bad for it lhelped to spread the Red Terror, Ihurrying it along before it. And rail the time lightning was flash- ~ing and thunder crashing, It was lightning that had started the Red Terror when it struck the tall pine. for lightning is a kind of fire. Forest fires often are started in just this way, ni- though all too often they are started by the carelessness of Man. Now the Red Terror was running up other trees iind Jumping from top to tOp. It was running fast in the dry leaves along the ground straight after Buster. If only he ooulrl reach Paddy the Beavers pond before the Red Terror could catch him he would be safe. But could he? Smoke blown ahead of the Red Terror choked him. It was hard to breathe. Rain was falling. but it seemed not to check the Red Terror, now almost at Buster's heels. Right then it seemed to Buster as if a whole pond of water had been dropped from the sky. It was the clondburst that made the flood that threatened to wreck the dam of Paddy the Beaver. it didn't last 1on2. When it ended and the storm was over there was no Red Terror. The very storm that had started it hnd ended it. Such things do happen. Yes, Buster Bear was s lucky Bear, but he didn't know it. Ned}; am Arocrnzrs The Swedish daler coin issued in 1663 was a copper slab mess- uring l‘) by 7t inches and weigh- ing ll pounds. Iv AL CAP? ' ~—_*_— i People psi hslrflb hoemln. v Wm‘? sh beoueaths to qo’ the KIGMIES, In regqpfl“ ly Alex Raymond JOE, emu will: aw sung l- ee eoeceo 1o LIN! nus ‘nous, SCHOOL secause sue is so measures-rem: two ASKW mes ram war ~ro weir: nan saauoeauns vs-r MEI I'M GOING 1D RUN HAW/I CHARLOTTETOWN Kingfiqtlhg Royal Mouned Tfl65E 51/075 usvnvou sou one wrr ‘l , DAPHNE rune, w’ BEAUTIFUL - RED-HEAD room roaomo. 4 GONNA were rr r sunugflveu-tt srsv DONNIE o l CAN'T...1 GOT A DATE“ aur we KIN e11 MR. STRANPPSIHVSOOPERS POTTER "rsuv wnn ‘IM. 1 AST ‘IM.’ .. SAFER THAT 62w COMMAUDO OCTOBER 1, 1949 by Zane GreY . ma! :4 '1' " - no Auvnr/AII; m 115m HIM ,1 . Ho W~E~L-i.... Milli. ASK ‘ER T’ COM! UP AN’ I'LL INTAVIIW ‘El . YASA DOTTY DRIPPLE BAUY Y YER A REFLAK BITTER P ‘Iv Cori Ansrron Gnu.- Anoem a -— DUFFY DON'T YCU USUALLY WAG-i QJIZ SJMMER THINGS BEFORE ‘DU PACK THEM AWAY FOR THE WINTER? YES, HOQACE- ' BUT IF YOU HAVE GOME DIRTY CLOTHES, I'LL WASH THEM cum-ass: ARE some OFMY PERSONAL JUST v0 "rum MYSELF 1 suqgi- news rr lslcoms ON,BOY$--I ' MERCYIDONT l ' TEAQ up m’ . FLOOR - .- I _ George JACMOIIII ‘FHATS THE WORST OF ‘Ti-US SMALL APAETMENT- I CAN'T GIT AWAY FROM. IF WE HAD A LAPGE ARUPTMENT '1 COULD 6D TD CNS END OF IT AND CLOSE ALL THE DOO TILLIQ THE TOILER R11’ I WANT’ ‘I'D WARN bis-MIJIQQG "Tl-IE LAET TENANT MOVED OUT BEONJQE HE COULDN'T 6E1‘ AMY FROM 50M WONIANS $TRIPED GOWNS IN ‘IOUQSI l HIRIQ A SMALL WE HAVE NC HORIZONTAL‘ 2E. sPueuclmMRs. ewMP.’ rr m.» were 12M was ‘l -_-_. MAKES " ' Yes? wILi-flif m i-wr so M! i’ "F" -»' l-Io nmwb-Ilnmmt-uuml win»- ~ r» . .1 l r i"_‘3"“.fl nlv-muwec rues- u.»- UM-M MAM-WI‘ no w» INONO cinnamon aunir 1