JANUARY 19. 1950 57*" '5: iiinuviooiur MEDICATED wooi Help SOOTIIE Plllllwy and ACllES*0lllClil.Y' rheumatic pains, drug store today! QTHERMOGENE MEDICATED WOOL sninnir nurses wiiirian The Restigouche and Bay Chaleur Soldiers‘ Me. morial Hospital School oi’ Nursing, Campbelltoii, N. B., offers a complete nursing education leading to Nurse Registration. Good living quarters, qualified teaching staff. Applicants must be 18 years of age, in good physical and mental health. Minimum educational rc- quirements for New Brunswick are-successful com- pletion of High School Academic Course 0r Junior. {Matriculation or completion of a course recognized by ' the Superintendent of Education as equivalent. Appli- _ cations are now being received for the February i950 l class.” ALSO:— WANTEDr A registered nurse as night superintend- ent, experience preferred. Good living conditions, 6 night week-attractive salary. Apply to Superintend- ent Soldiers‘ Memorial Hospital, Cainpbellloii, N. B. a ¥or those aching muscles, let the soothing heat g i-isiusoosus Medicated Wool help give you quick, clean relief. It goes to work a; °nm._nq¢ ‘Qflfiyfifflsy to use. For chest colds, sore throat, m“: ' "- "fllfllilfl. lumbsgo, sciatica and minor BY 5mm"!!! Tnuuioosus Medicated Rub, a COIHpIIHOII product, you'll quickly help Ol9ar up uncomfortable held colds. Buy at you; i6. Water (L) 19. A jellied meat dish 20. A color 22. Eflicaciously 25. Jewish month 27. Pantrles 28. Arabian chlettaln 30. Avoids 32. Ghost 33. Plural of pes. 34. A size o! W!” ACROSS i. Bundle > of straw i6. Flssures DOWN l. Calumny Rude dwellings Silkworm Ventilated Tentacle God of pleasu w (EKYPU Placated Core Taut Valuable ses mamms. (Siam) Discoverer ot radium Fencing sword Ridicule Reach BCPOIS Halt ems Guido's highest note ~17. Bitter vetch . Public notice , m- lIlfIE ' ' fllllldlgliil filfllflli lllliHhlI-i lilillfl. Yesterday's Answer 38. Exclamation 40.Distrcss i“??? 3° 11. 12. 13. 14, ‘ signal 15. I2. Wild shoe] ‘l. 8. 9. i2. (India) . White poplar , 29. Piece o! baked clays - . Round Dutch cheese Reflecting Music note Animal enclosure Drag Any fruit drink Cereal grains One ot Santa. Claus‘ reindeer Capital (Non) 44. Anesthetic 45. Parts of locks DAILY envimoQuom-nei-ss how to work it: AXYDLBAAXB ls LONGIILLOW One letter simply stands for another. in this example A is used {or the three L's, X [or the two 0's, etc. Single letters, apos- trophies, the length and lormstion or the words are I-ll hllfli lash dsy the code letters sre dlltsrent. Aoryptogrsmquotsflol an nan. ownxQYt 1r W BOYXIN on sv cvJon-oJonQY- an UNKNOWN WEIGHT or SIL- 32. ' 35. 38. 31. Ill. 39. 41.. 43. JP! TQRC HY TRORJ Yesterday's Cryptoquote: VIlR AND GOLD-—VIRGIL._ LI'L ABNER. xumsmns CARDS, WILL v0‘ READ rr Posrmlisrsas’ .... .- 1 rm: GUARDIAN. CHAR [Br Tliomro THE YARD snows 1 Things don't just happen. You 1 will find lThW first evolvt in some ones mind. —Old Mother Nature. For sometime Mrs. Lightfoot, the Deer‘ had had a feeling, she 51111 11nd it. _It was the feeling that there Ill“ Etulllg to be plenty of deep 51'1"“! l" the days ahead. She did- - n't know a thing about it. lt was "(filling more than e feeling. Why ‘she should have it she had no idea, land She didn't care. It was enough for her that she did have ‘it. Long H20 She had learned through ex- perience that such an unfixplained feeling can be. and often is, a warn- ‘illg to heed. 1 Snow wasn't yet deep on the ground. Indeed, there wasn't, enough m be at all troublesome in getting about. She and the twins [and Llghtfoot could wander where Hhry DIPP-Sed just B5 they hfld been id0iflg_ It would be so all winter ii there was no more snow than this on the ground at any one time, [Even if there should be twice as imuvh it wouldn't he too hm, But it would be a very different ID‘ Contract Bridge ,, i ' ZIJSQDQQODUIQQQQQISQUDEQCGIQDL ji-zzooncsoiiz- r0 T By Josephine Culbertson 1 NO canon‘ nun! 1 The term "bad bid" is decidedly ‘relative. In many cases a player has only a choice of evils, and he cannot be greatly blamed for miss- ing the best way out. In other cases, however, his choice of bids may be so obviously wrong, andlhls opportunity so obviously clear, that. =hc deserves a very black mark. ‘That was what South de=" ed in the following deal! i South dealer. NrirllvSoilth vulnerable. , Q J 8 6 5 3 2 Q 1o 7 4 a 2 Q G *8 a K 1o a o s y Q 5 N 9 J 3s QK J 104 W 1-) o? ~ .1./\i<io ,3 sages T ‘l -' Q A Q T QAK6 Q A Q 9 8 5 r. 1|.’- l The bidding: South \\’est Norm Ens! 1 Q 2 s], Pass 3 Q 1;‘ 4 s]. Pass Pass 4 Q Dhle. Puss Pass Pass West led the club king. saw the singleton in dummy, and shifted to the queen of hearts. South won. and he managed to avoid the loss ni any heart tricks by establish- ing the spades, but he still had to piiy a SOD-point penalty. . This outcome was in significant contrast with the contract o! four spades or four hearts which North- South could have made so easily. in the post-mortem South said that he had hoped to be doubled st three of (our diamonds; that with n hand as strong as his, such a contract had appeared very de- sirable, In view of the result, how- ever, South WAS not u sound "hoper." ’I‘he plain fact of the matter was, oi course, that South “abused" an excellent hand! He should not have rebid his diamond suit even once-to do so was to ignore and waste an outstanding opportunity! ills right action, obviously. was to double three clubs! This would be a takeout double-North not yet having "spoken"-and of would strongly invite n response in .1 long major suit, if North had one. Surely, the pattern and strength of South's hand made such an invita- ,tlon logical-and North, with his distribution. would have found it easy and pleasant to cooperate! course‘ n W. Burgess) have it she had no idea and she didn't care. Why she should matter it one storm should closely follow another and pile up the snow on the ground. Yes, indeed, that would be a very different mutter. They wouldn't he able to get around much then excepting in paths they kept trodden down. Out side those paths they would be helpless in deep snow. Some of their neighbors wouldn't have 11S hard a time as the Deer folk be- cause none of them have hoofs to out down through snow as Deer lmofs do. And Deer must get s- round or starve to death. This is because the food they must have is more or less scattered. There yare no large quantities in small space. You see, in winter they live on tender shoots and twigs of young trees, now bare of leaves, and the leafy sprays of some ever- green trees, such as hemlock. Of course, they can eat only what they can leach. Young Deer like the twins, just entering their first winter, cannot reach nearly as high as fully grawn Deer can. So deep snow can be and often is harder for them than for others. They starve to death sooner. This wasn't going to happen to her precious twins if Mrs. Light- foot could prevent it. If there was to be a lot of deep snow all through the Green Forest she would be ready for it. She would plan a big yard and begin making it early if ~there should be no need of a big yard, or of any at all, it wouldn't matter. They would still get their food from the some trees. But she was sure that they were going to need a yard. so sure that she had planned it, and with the help of the twins and Lightfoot had al- ready begun it by tramplng an ir- regular trall or path up hill and down dale completely around a large area. wherein was growing what she hoped would be enough browse to last them as long as the snow was too deep for them to t/ravel about outside. “I have looked this place all over and I am sure we must," she confided to Lightfoot. "There are a lot of young maples, the kind we like best. I know of nothing better for winter browse, do you?" “No, my deal‘. I don't. Give me plenty of soft maple, and I'll ask nothing more." replied Lightfoot. “But there is more. There are |two or three thickets of young aspen trees, and aspen twigs are very good eating," said Mrs. Light- foot. "if I can have plenty of those I never drill starve," replied Light- foot. "For green food there are some fine young hemlock trees," con-t tinucd Mrs. Liglitfoot. “There are many young shrubs of different. _ kinds, some better than others. but 'all good food and within reach oi the twins. We'll visit some of these tonight making paths from one to another, and then we'll keep those paths open." p This is whatithcy did that very night. The next night they visited other eating places, following each other through the snow, treading it down. After ii while the paths crossed and recrossed. Each night they went a little farther, but still within the space of that boundary path that was the heg- Jnning of the yard. so the yard was growing. Mrs. Liglitfoot did- n't care n'ow how much snow there might be, or thought she didn't. liymAly Capp sumrl- sr can: H! est-r LOVI’. LOTT ETOWN KING or THE ROYAL Mouurnn f‘? so ;. ' Y!" A , 9 I f’ < ~- éfil i n ~ '1'. / up. m ts our». l»: .,PAGE SEVEN by Zane Grey (w/ry-se-sevou .V MILES or; Ol/E course.’ \,_ were 919/ m 701w 11”’ i ‘.111; OUND ElGHInEVERY- LEFT AND BODY THOUGHT A RIGHT PALOOKA AND WOULD SLOW ANOTHER UP BY NON LEFT T0 BUTmAND THE HEAD... 1 THERE'S A LEFT A RIGHT . BY RUSSELL... TO THE | PALOOKA BODY. . . PICKED IT OFF WH OOO AND SHOT THE A $116M... CROWD i5 ' BUT STANDING M15589.- AND IZCARING HENRY J r~.--.~.r-,r..-.o1-1... 1- by liiiiorrl NO" BUT SINCE MY 11= we oowv START e across TENAY/E WON'T isniivomo or l» Yvzusrm usso TO MY LUN AT TWELVE S/l/IPD" AND THE TIME YOUQE READY-AND 5 'i’-- WHY YOU'RE ~01 THAT ow]; o1-1, » WIFE REACHEV 29, 51-1125 ' e124 ADDlh-lé HER canvass To MY CAKE _r_l LOOKS 1.11<e A vEP, 71-. 1.0T 0F CANDLES, OF T.-11=_r.~. MR. WEAGLEY/ » L h w. s. -1 a ‘fiIl-{MIVWI »-..‘.‘-§. -. . .. . _ , by Edwina MEQCY! ETHEI. ALWAYS l APPEAQs Jusr WHEN»! so TO TH’ madcap-- . Lw MY LAND! WHEQEs MY POCKETBOOK-t? HE MAKES ME so Nefévous-ALWAYS IN sucu A Humane- Cl-l BY MRS. mews, AEJ/ GOT FT THQQJCi-l A LETTER’ C; RECOMMBJOATION F379" DD WIJ KNOW MOTHEWé BHJTHEE DNNY WENT TO WOQK FOE’ ML‘. LLJM EEEMAKI 9? HE GOT THE JOB HiMéELFl-HE 5AM) HE 1-119 Law mas/l’ BEEN DFAD FOL’ _ FOQTY vEArv/l i <4; <5 HUH/ A LEFTEZ mom >115 trier BOSS/JHVQ LAGT B055 HA6 .2. 1-1.1. BE!‘ TlLLlE’S 5 NETD s1141>1<1us g, tCofiroFiub our . WHAT'S HAPPENED , . -- ..' is d. 1 ‘in i [Z -.;'.'f 1-; z v f 4;‘, f’ ¢% /. lssinnusmwssis-rsmeimi-umuissmimsumm ‘n-ns e11=21_ EAYS v-tgcfvinfv-is HERE —7/ Jaw-I, s LET NE SEE M12. s11~41>1<1fls 012 MR smcc 111m seoo PENNY \} 1 I aurocrmrie omccpsuuv- CEDRIC CQLDNTGET HS FKTHERB @166 HIS ALLOl/NCE ' l %~I'TI<HOH WHETHER Tb G0 -'-1-' 11:1 EHM IFAMAN cmTima 111s owl 12> wow FATueQotnjorA MERE rows: 1a ON BEI N6 ENGAGED ALlQA/NJCE Cwfiic y o2 lJOT- M414 r401‘ TFHMKG: 11' , 1