V PAGE 'rwiz1.vE usw YEAR'S minor AT THE CLOVER CULB MONDAY NIGHT, JANUARY lst Dancing 10 P.M. to,-1 A.M. Dress Optional. Tickets 352.00 per couple For reservations call 1222 Canadian Legion Clover Club Dance an-znv snrunnnv iAI Blanchard and the "Clover Club" Band Admission-75c Dancing 9:30 to 12.00 For reservations Phone 1222 Reservations held until 10:30 p.m. SATURDAY NIGHT IS YOUR DANCE ZZIGHT AT THE CLOVER CLUB E-eoere oeeoeevo eeecveeeoo-eve-o.g94..,. NOTICE Owing to the danger of Winter Oper- ations. the Rocky Point Ferry FAIRVIEW has cancelled all night trips until further notice. R. G. WHITE. Deputy Minister of Public Works and Highways. t Our best wishes to every one! to all our friends and customers . . . . do you nee drss ii. x It you do, then It will pay you to see your Trans Canada Credit Counsellor right away. Trans Canada Credit Corporation has. helped thousands of Canadians to purchase a car or truck. There are several lean plans to choose from, rates are reasonable, no endorsers are required, and re- payment plans tit smoothly into individual budgets. For eligible borrowers loans up to 31,000 are lite insured tree. It you need a cash loan up to 32.500 see your Trans Canada Credit Counsellor right away. 3. H. ROGERS, Branch Manager, Pickard Building tn, at 6,0, g;,..'(IherIottelown. P.l.':.l.-t'lIone I970 lg pay: in dell Illh this ALL-CANADIAN COIIIPIIIY BAD LUCK BECOMES GOOD LUCK 'I'hei'e's nothing that is wholly bad; That hard for some makes others glad. -Reddy Pox. That is a wise saying of Reddyis. But Reddy is a wise person, Were it not so he would not still be hunt- ing over the Green Meadows and in the Green Forest. He is naturally smart and has the wisdom to make the best use of his smiartness. one may be smart yet not wise. Recldy is both. Reddy was having a hard time. He had been shot by a hunter with :1 dreadful gun. Rcdriy had not been badly wounded. for the shot had been too small and the distance too great for this, But enough shot had hit him to sting badly and make him he quiet for a few days. His loft hind leg had suffered most and had become stiff so that when he began moving about again he couldn't use it. He would be able to after a while. but while that stiff- ness remained he couldxftuseitas he needed to. He was having hard work to catch enough food to keep alive even with the help of Mrs Rcddy who shared with him what she could get. He would have done the same for her. Both Raddy hm! Mrs, Reddy had been hunting all night without much success. Mrs Reddy had re- turned home to the Old Pasture at daylight. Raddy didn't get back un- til well into the morning. He had caught only one House. One Mouse in an empty stomach isnt much. Usually Raddy is an optimist. An optimist is cne who always sees the sun behind the clcuds. The worst never happens ymd never will. A pessimist is just the opposite; one who sees only the clouds and is sure .the sun never will shine again. No matter how bad things may be they sg&g3g;e9z3c9(&o3r;oM J. A. carruthers i'i.0. y OPTOMETRI ST 7 i yf&,; Complete Visual Analysis Supplying dz Fitting Glasses PHONE 28?) 123 Kent Street Charlottetown ') 7 363,9 r60-N ily Thornton W. luroessi are sure to be wrong. some folks seem to find a queer kind of plea- sure in being pessl-mists. Roddy was becoming a pessimist. "What use is there in trying to live?" muttered Roddy as he made his way home. walking on three legs to favor that sore. stiff leg. I've hunted all night and caught only one Mouse and was lucky to catch that one. It was hardly a bite. No. sir. it was hardly a. bite. How can 9. Fox live cn only a bite at day. Just one bite? What is the use of trying? There isn't any use." thought he. This wasn't like Reddy. It wasn't at all like him. But for the stiffness in that leg preventing running and jumping asaFox musttoget enough food. no such thoughts would have entered his head. Yes. Roddy was becoming a pessimist. Then just off the path at the edge of the Old Pasture he found the finest dinner a Fox can have- a plump Hen, plump because she was fat. She was dead and lay on a stump close to the path. Roddy stared as if he couldn't believe his own eyes. He felt like rubbing them to be sure they were all right and he really was seeing what. he seemed to be seeing. It looked like a Hen. It smelled like a Hen. But what was in fat Hen doing on a. stump at- the edge of the Old Pasture? Rcddys nose told him that what . ii (Next to Simpson's Agency) Q I91DN(tE)Ne09&rO3s&e0.")NO& liorotliy Dix says- and still for all that it is worth all ringc "us is” and so he is not shocked and horrified. over the household bills. One of pans. fries it to his taste. you have the themselves to each other. can say with Mr. Kipling's hero her"e-or men from him-thinking into doing it. does. the way to keep her husband at latch. Nor does she undertake to over. first marriages they looked for a Continued from page 2 oncl niarringcs are pr-nerally happier than first. One is that those who have been niarried (in not expect. so much of marriage as those who have never tried it. They know that marriage is full of bills and ills and tcmper and unreason nnd little ways that get on a man's nerves. And so the man and woman who marry a second time take mar- makp the best of it, and thus they escape the awful disillusion and letdown that comes to the young husband and wife when they discover that marriage is a working partnership instead of a dream walking. and that they have married mere, ordinary, faulty human beings instead of a cinema hero and heroine. Those who have been married before have the inesiimable advant- age of entering marriage a second time as professionals instead of amateurs nnd hence they have A double chance of winning out in it. The man knows from previous experience that no woman has the ability to conjure groceries. rent. coal. gas and clothes out of the air. such demand as husbands is that they are pruverbially good providers and generous in the matter of allowances. And on the woman's ilinri she knows, also from experience, that a wife's most potent spell is woven in the kitchen with the pots and Furthermore, she has learned how to cook and run a budget on her first husband's stomach and pocketbook. hlnrition of the man who brings home the bacon and the woman who KNOW AIIT OF ADJUSTMENT Then the man and woman who marry for the second time are bound to have acquired some inkling of the fine art of how to adjust, Marriage is a great enlightener and each "end I learned about women from and husband tries to drive his wife into doing his way. He lollies her He doesn't criticize her new dress because he knows from experience that she will go downtown and buy another one if he He doesn't tell her that the pie isn't fit to eat. marks that it isn't up to her usual standard. And she breaks her neck to live up to his praise of her cooking. No second wife is as monopolistic as ai first wife. She laughs off faults in No. 2 that she raised ructlons over in No. 1, and all is peace and harmony between them. And last but not least. second marriages are generally happier than first because both husband and wife try to make them IO. half. but in their second marriages they know that if 3 marriage 15 1 success the husband and wife must make it so. his eyes saw was really so. That was a dead fat Hen. There was no doubt. about it. But good as were his eyes and nose they couldn't tell - him how it happened to be there. Right away he was suspicious. Suspicioon is a horrid thing. but sometimes it is necessary. Roddy watered and watered, but he re- mained suspicious. He sat down and studied the Hen, the stump and the snow covered ground around it. Was there a trap hidden there somewhere? He made a complete circle around the stump. stopping several times to sit down nnd study the surroundings. of course he knew that fat Hen didn't get there by itself. It had been plac- ed there. By whom? What for? He suspected a trap hidden where it would be stopped in by one trying to take that Hen. He knew what would happen then. So he was su- spicious. very suspicious. But more ad more his mouth watered. What had happened was bad luck for Farmer Brown's boy. One of his Hens had sickened and died. Rigiht away he had thought cf Roddy Fox and had taken that Hen to where he was sure Reddy would find it. He was making his bad luck Red- dy's good luck. it costs. as the inexperienced bridegroom is, the reasons that wldowers are in And given this com- real basis of domestic felicity. of their previous spouses. No see- He merely re- She knows thy home is to leave the door on the reform her husband and make him In their miracle to he wrought in their be- TNE ROXY Full Course Dinner of YOUR NEW YEARS DINNER PLAN TO ENJOY YOUR NEW YEAR'S DINNER AT to 7:30 p.m. Extending Best Wishes for a Happy New Year to all. N1 OPEN 11:30 a RESTAURANT lggast Turkey or Goose ;t OOC--3'-.e"-?'3C '7 ur- South had a. close choice (at the 30 score) between a raise to three spades and I rebid of his own good six-card suit. His decision was cer- tainly not open to censure, but the result would have been better if South had let his partner play the hand! Three hearts been a comfortable contract. but ace was played from dummy. and a club was South logically intending to his own third card of the suit in dummy. West. back on lead. now made a shrewd shift.-to his spade! He felt that as long as he retained control of the spade suit, whatever diamond tricks might be- long to the defense could not get felt that it was now. his mcuth ?;1':Y-hi:"gu';l:;"lf3gf- right cards. the spade shift might do wchders. contract Bridge 3: luseptnae Culbertson "..0J3lxCtL'rQ0.CtDClCtClOQOQCtQDDQClClx nus GULLIBLE DECLARIB south was too easily hooclwinkea in the play of the following deal. lint dealer. - Both sides vulnerable. North-South, 30 on scare. gxnoss QK10 gxns QAC W. N tiz" :3", WE QAQBI nKQJ5 S QIOBSZ 832' OAQJOIR 10 Q97! Thebiddinr but South West North p." Pay Paee IQ pg. 29 Pass 70 Pass 89 Pass Peso, After North rebid his spades. should have something happened! West opened the club king, 'Iihe returned. ruff immediately low CHARLOTTETOWN MRS. DOROTHY ROGERS J. A. MOORE W. D. YOUNG, SUMMERSIDE The following Representatives of the Sun Life of Canada in Prince Edward Island will be discuss with you any matters relating to liie insurance or annuities, without obligation. , N F Ky J-' tit?) I nevi.-..ILdt.;.. glad 1.4 J. ARTHUR CAMPBELL R. C. Shea, Klnkora; H. M. Chisholm. Tryon; R. R. Burns, Freetown H. C. BOHAKER -- Unit Supervisor Charlottetown, P. E. I. It did! Deciarer put in dummy's through dummy's formidable suit. spade ten, only to see East wi.n with Thus, South should have 80110 Ylzhir the queen and promptly return a UP 'iV'Wl the Spade kins. because spade to West's ace. West now there was a fair chance that West shifted to his fourth-highest dia- might be underleadlng the ace. mond. Declarer put up dummy's dig king in a frantic effort to control adds zest to the hour the situation. but East won with the ace. and, -reading the situation Perfectly. led back his third spade. West ruffed for the setting trick. -Declarer could be almost sure of one thing-that a fine player (which West was) would not have led away from the spade, queen . N Y. 7775555 V0 7744! 70 IIZIM7 UP 50975 EON," -1 ll BRINGING UP FATHER ' Soothe tltem with ' KING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED By Zane Grey TRADKP, IVHATHAVE )Dll DOVE 7D .SEP6!4Al7' K4V6?.' KMIS hi 7 I . Alf. . ' , ..'....... ..i.....,... s Z4....,...... ..............a.....i -suit”-n-4 wxilmtrumlrsvm Jyzgsmzwzapitww AaL.4e7:e1P,P . 7 BY GOLLY-Tl-lE5E WWOOWS ARE 60 DIRTY CU CAWT SEE OJTT 'EM- lT'LL BE QUITE I'LL SHUT THEM AW GOOUTGDE A 5UQPRI5E To Aw cm A eooo CLEANING IMAGGIE miss: MHE I! y I EM CLEAN. uy I t '. ; era ': o i U90 v 3, . soil. . - - rqIi9sunu;r.-A-sue:-I-i.v-ado:--v-e Li'L ABNER NA.yy mfg l l.I'i. ABNER ARRNES IN THE . A . immj n:x1-mwn -NORTH Nos:--mo ”30””5AW 7'45" DO THAT 'wA'":D ”ERE' FOR "'5 WHAT um, Mun” wONDI:l3'Fl.ll3SABER omcr 3,';,l;'9AEjgAL';,”.;. I;jE,;'4A'-'- CILME . ..ygU W 7 ? our-m' WATCHMAN SAID ”""wT BUS TMN” . J. TH' snows oven -AN' our. WHO is supposeo TO '1” Ti-iEY'S con:--?? m3xg:.i-ins HEAD curorr IN a”. . 0' X”. . 5”. 's 4, i si3'et'3.ia'Iu ' -i '. ' 5.4 er of . -(:v n . . 5, r I, U V . mi it .1. C a.n-in-trait:-.:.: i