H1QAOYEMBER__Z.__I974s gar rroo Holy Redeemer llall TONIGHT 8.30 The prizes are tne some ll “m” prevailing et other mngoe in the cit!- For Charitable Purposes DANCE TDIIIGIIT WINSLOE STATION HALL Eastern Rhythm Doys Orchestra Canteen Service ADMISSION 50c _ nanomo eteo a» moo Haiiiax. Earl Conneryiil, o! nearby Spry Bay and Douglas J. Connolly oi Truro were Hlleci and Victor Hil- chey, also o! Spry Bey, received Ill dl 0 llllldllntellillaallliax Tgglyimygfggrhslgaiikgeaeg: cuts, bruises and concussion. A d “other injured an“, fourth man, Harry Murphy, escaped kmwinslit l: a car accident near injury when a former army Jeep $1}; vlllnze 41 miles northward o! 08-1116 $0 8PM- Auuounicmo TIIE SEIIDIID RIIIIIIAI. DRIIDE II . Morel! Memorial Hall l i l l l l THEMGLJARDIAN, _ cuancorrmtlwu _ xnTciolFrnsnovAt MOUNTED (Dy Thornton W. I ornans arson With Man or animal or bird The silent tongue is never heard. —Old Mother Nature. A iew iolks know and heed this flying oi Old Mother Nature's, but all too many don't know it, or have are the world's worst trouble- mlkfifs. H011 only ior their posses- HEPPY Jock the Grey Squirrel find Chatterer the Red Sqmrggl are cousins. Everybody knows this. They are forever quarreling,| as everybody also knows. Ii there] is nothing to quarrel about they‘ quarrel anyway. Some iolks are like that. Quarreling seems to be a curious iorm oi pleasure with them. This bright. Pool. lovely mornlngi in the late iail Happy Jack had remembered something that until 11°" "M! Slillped his mind. To say a thing has slipped your mind doesn't sound nearly as bad as to FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5th Modern and Old Time Dancing 9 to 12.30 O'clock Music supplied by Don Messer and his Islanders t3 Fmtnrlng Charlie Chamberlain and Margaret Osborne, Vocalists l Canteen Service x l ln-t-k ltuom I‘ . say you forgot it. Slippery-minded folks seldom admit they are 101'- getiul, although the results are the same. Folks are queer that wgy_ What Happy Jack now remem- bered was that in the spring when he had wandered some distance from home he had iound an oak tree more heavily blossomed than Bus Leaves City 8 o'clock. Return (are $1.00 ( Bus Leaves Soul-ls, 8 o'clock. Return fare $1.00 l Will pick up passengers. (‘omo to this dance and you‘ll have a good time Admission-Ml cents “Qn” ‘ time tp-Qiaw in», psy, i m, is” i -ary ~v-~ oifrlfi)? OLGNS BEAUTY PARLOR , I50 QUEEN ST. NEAR BUS STOP Regular $5.00 Permanents . . .. . .. . . .. 33-50 g PECIALS l S 2 <3 , Regular V7.00 Permonents . .. . 500 1 g? Regular 10.00 Permanents ....... . ... 7.00 5 Machineless Permanents $7.00, $10.00 and $12.50 l?’ No appointment necessary ior out oi town customers ' Phone 2401 l S/‘\\1§\‘RRR>Z'R'FJIQX"R‘D""’”““ ‘ ‘ ‘ RRM “YRRRRQRRQ- Customers ol:- ISLAND Funnnzns PLEASE READ THIS NOTICE As we have approximately 2500 fur coots in our stor- cge vaults to be delivered within the next laur weeks we must insist on at least 24 hours advance notice before de- livering your coat. It you are calling ior your coat the some advance notice must be given. This will avoid any contusion, and will assure you oi prompt delivery. THIS IS IMPORTANT ISLAND FIIRRIERS i’: i“ '55s“ 0i0 0ithi>00m00~i -\ >___¥ RIP KIRDY ATTENTION The Annual Meeting of The Milk-Producers and Vendors Asdn. will be held in Parkdole Hall on Tuesday the 2nd. November. A full attendance is requested. Meeting to start at 8 o'clock sharp. A. t. MacRAE President. "b-o uxoooao ociaw I948 SAILING SCHEDULE, SUBJECT TO. CHANGE NDRTIIIIMDERLAIID FERRIES LIMITED (Daily Including Sunday) Standard Time NOVEMBER 1-30 Leave Wood Islands- Prince Nova 8mm. 1p.|n. ‘Charles A. Dunning ll a.m. 3 p.m. Leave Curibou- - ' CharlesiA. Dunning . . . . 8 a.m. I p.m. Prince Nova 11am. 3pm. cent chance to deieat the contract Chance, however. can be perverse as any oi the oak trees near home. Oh yes. oak trees have blossoms or there would be no acorns. Cer- tainly not,’ Many blossoms then should mean many acorns now. Happy Jark Vsct oi! for that tree in high spirits. l-ie hoped no one else had found ii. Now that veryymorning the very same thing had happened to Chat- terer the Red Squirrel. He had "R*\§R,"‘“""’”"““““'wi xocmmxxwrcxmz 1 Yememhered thal- VeFY 531719 I199 and the blossoms he had seen on it in the spring. So he, too, got an early start ior that tree. ~Be- cause he lived a little nearer to it he got there iirst. Right away he discovered that there were as many acorns as the blossoms had promised. Some were still on the tree. More were on the ground And he could not see that any one had been there ahead oi him. "Mine. All mine. every one o! them." gloatcd Chatterer, and hugged himssli. WVEIT; 4' - ‘ 9f Contract Bridge? ;f' By Josephine Culherlmls ’ v clwEL FATE t \ Perhaps the worst thing to be said against duplicate bridge is that legitimate boldness, either in the bidding or the play, ls often punished severely rather than re- worded. Observe this sad case: iorgotten it. Anyway, they a0 not! heed it. Noisy and unruly tonguesl sors but aiso' ior their neighbors. I urgess) " ~ / 1 l, h‘; » x I ‘l; w. V. that"??? ' 7H v It was a battle oi tongues. instead o! teeth and claws Just them Happy Jack arrived. Right then and there the battle began. lt was a battle oi tongues instead oi teeth and claws. Each seemed to be trying to outscream the other as they called each other names. They were not pretty names. Each claimed all the acorns and dared the other to take so much as one. Chatterer, though much the smaller, chased his cousin all over that tree, but couldn't chase him out of it. They raced round and round the trunk. They ran out on all the branches making flying leaps from limb to They knocked down a lot oi the acorns that had not already been shaken down. And all the time they screamed at each other until the Green Forest rang with the sound oi it. Buster Bear heard and under- stood what it meant. He knew that such a battle the Squirrel tongues could be er nohing but acorns or nuts, perhaps becchnuts ‘liwm were both beech trees and oak trees in that direction. He has a iondiress ior sweet acorns and even sweeter beechnuts. l-le shuttled oii that way. Mrs. Lightioot the Deer and her twins heard the quarreling voices and ior a iew minutes stood listen- ing. Then. moving (iaintly. Mrs. L-ightfoot led the way toward where those silly cousins were still shrieking at each other. “My dears.” said she lo the lawns. "when you hear two Squir- rels quarrcling like that you will usually find that it pays to look them up. They are lighting with their tongues over nuts or acorns or my name isn't Mrs. Lightioot. Both are sweet eating. Ii your father hears that noise he will be there too." Thunderer and Mrs. Grouse listened just long enough to make sure just where those Squirrel cousins were bsiore heading straight there. They would have their share oi whatever those silly Squirrels were quarreiing over. Sammy Jay heard, though the distance was so great that the Soutmdealer. f voices were taint. But to a pair Neitherside vulnerable. oi good wings distance means Meteh-polntduvlivlts- little. Sammy chuckled and swiftly Q85 . ilcw that ‘way. He knows how T42 good a sweet acorn or beechirut can be. m! As yet neither oi those silly QKJIO ‘E Q z cousins had a single acorn. 'A;E3Q WNE l z-lygioas; The next story: "The Price of ‘g s »‘QJ643 Greed." ‘roe: Q A 9 8 7 4 3 e J c l km gar , l _ ‘This wee the sucrose! m! u table: South West North III! 1 y‘ 2 a. 3 Q Pane a‘ p”, 4Q Pall Pare P!!! I n Every West opened the heart . king. and at seven oi th-e eight tables continued with the heart ace or queen. Aiter that the various declarer merely gave up e. trick to the trump king and could claim the balance. One West however, tried to de- ieat the iour-spade contract. l-le shiiied at the second trick to his singleton diamond. Then, when de- clarer played to the spade ace and returned a spade toward dummy. this West put up the spade king and nnderled his remaining heart hon‘ I . his hope being to iind East with the heart Jack. Then a dia- moud return would, oi course, let West ruii ior the setting trick. ‘In view oi the iact that there was a ility per cent chance that East held the heart jack — so minor a card would not have ai- iected the bidding one way or the other - this particular West de- served better luuckl A iiity per was surely worthwhile, even at duplicate, when the cost could be no more than thirty points ii the play went wrong. The Goddess oi LISTEN IN TO CFCY AT_7.J0 A.M. (Standard Time) FOR LATEST NEWS and INFORMATION | I aell as Tickle. and in this case im- agination and boldness were pun- lgned by a "bottom on the board." with mum The easy-action laxative for ordinary constipation Dy Alex Raymond OOME ou-r 0' H5125! z wanna m. 1o you: 7M7! CM l9‘ THEM/NS Jill/NP WE DEV/L‘ II I OLDl-OOAWIT “cozy 1/5? PAGE NINE . lv Zane Grey y’ a, salads u FATt-ii Darzoou» 512-- BLJT A LADY l6 ow THE DHONE v4 THE OLITEQ OFFICE-WISHING TO SDEAK TO $01.1- %l.i.' - THANK$- TIPPY .=-=ls=wnmi ' I relaxes; 5.1.1; f‘? You as A urrtz \ NEATEP? ' l 1 x JUST cueaueo E inns ROOM]! __ _ ilyalldnil-‘Elsiiel ONT WANT OURS Tl-E l2 ..~\l . MW ~ -i~‘\$S(/_/./r we CAN Jusr LOOK AT MTE.SN\TCI-I'S NEW nous FROM cQoss m’ STREET . we can’? a: A DIQRUPTIN’ INFLUENCE room THERE! "‘ 1 11-2 \é _ '1 f/ it"? SIDES, I COULD HAVE WON ‘Tl-l’ HOUSE IF I'D V/ANTEDTO" n "ELI-Zn H m; rum- spa-rm r LEG "BY BUYIN’ TH WINNIN’ TICKET STEADDA ' do LOOK m "r BUT G SAI WHAT DID HE LOOK LIKE- ‘_-—\ Ienbee u.- emu. lne. "r-‘r-r Iv Carl Andersot Amanda-s - Bv Westoi 2i ME A 6lII1L w. 1.; Lt s/q RFOUR TIME- THAT is ‘MJPER- AS GGODLOOIGBZ: HUMAN OR TOUCHEQ GET THE VQCUUM CLEANER ; GOINGTI-IIS MXNING, FATHER? MIELLJTOOKA Bossy Pm AND ‘ POKED rnuALuru nous sums SIDE AND rr wom- ‘TM. you I06»! uowvaamlmwT SAVNOMGKI l KNWJWIEQGST‘ SH AND IT SAID WHOOQX) STARTED momma swoon»: in- 5ND wtwooocSH AND LOOK i