- --an-5:: i I l '- v-5'-uq-c.v..,.. ....- J'A'GE TEN ' THE GUARDIAN. CI-QARLOTFETOVVN . DECEMBER is. im ONE APPLICATION MAKES FALSE TEETH FIT FOR THE LIFE OF 1'Ol'lt PLATE! 53.95 AVAILABLF. AT The -Yenklna Pharitiwcy: Rcddln Bros.: Hughes Drill: (tn. Lt(l.: Inhnsnn s-. .lohus'im. tthzirlntivtnirn. Mahon Drug: ('o.. )liiiil:I::lu-: Sem- ple's Drug Stori-. liciisiiuctuii. and III druggista. l('lKlKIl(lllIlI'4('Gll'l'K'vK"'.?l '&5l'K It'll LEGION nliicr W A dance for Legion members and their lriends will be held in N19 CLOVER CLUB Saturday night, 9.30 . Lunch will be served l Couples only aclmitledl llv Thornton W. BAD LUCK TURNS TO GOOD Who does his best with faith and pluck Will have no trust at all in luck. - Old Mother Nature. These days we read and molar a great deal about displaced per- sons. They are folks without homes. and no one to help them. Tl-ieie uas a displaced person in the Green Forest. He was a very small person. He was Nimbleheels ihe Jumping Mouse. one of the smallest members of ihe Mouse lanilly. Lilttle Nimhlcheels not only had no home, but the very niace where his home had been was completely changed. 1'95. air. it was 80. Nmrblehcels had had A home. From the point or view of a Mouse it had been a perfect home. He coiildiili. possibly have asked for a better home, and it had been only a frw feel from where Nimble- heels was now running about. It had been down in the ground under the roots of an old stump. There. in keen:-snehgriagigglgayggagyggggwho snuzizest and warmest of beds. -DAILY CRC-)'S'iS..lllI:.C)RDA jhcnoss 4. Anglo- 23 Calclun'I' 1. Ambition' Saxon (5)711-ls 6. Trihiitary murlr. I 24. Conceal of Amazon 5.1-Tnrlnsiirc 27. Seine '9. At one tima 6. l7'll)'l'lOSlE.I 29. The i y l0.3Vlcked drink (Old Eng.) 11. A dull finish 7. Addition 30. Flower. I2. Lowest i l to ahill 31. Retains . point 8. Similar 33.Abenlgn 14. Fuss .11.SiCili:ti.i1 35 t&u':1l'lol' 15. Toward . srcrc . . HGIG . . ,':i7. Piece out ., society silk ”""'" ' "'"' t .13. Fill Islands (van) 36- Not (abbn) . 13. Color . better 49. Gathered in 16. Exclaaelr 37. A hard. 42. Gulf i rows, as '3 firm valuable 44. Dlsnguro fabric :10. Vcx lwood 45. Mature 22. Measure 21. Qiizmtir, 38. A spur 47. wine a of length . of paper wheel receptadlop 25. Native l metal . x X 36. Once more, 28. Eskimo boat 32.Moistu.rs 34. Nothing but :35. More sweet E39; Exist 40. Goblin (1. Negative I re pl y 42. Drinking vessel 43. Fragrance 46. skin tumor: 48. Broken tooth 49. Oslricli-lilw bird 50. A Circuit 61. Mandates DOWN- 1. Il'lCll.inl';' 2. Upon the top of la. Pcrform D.”.lLY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work in X Y D L B A A X II is 0 N 0 F E L L 0 W F W '- 'ei- simply stands for another. In this example A is use! for inn three L's. X for the two 0'5. etc. Single-letters. apos- trcplucs. the length and formation of the word: In all hlntl.' ;Ea.ch day the code letters are ditrerenlz A Cryptognm Quotation I MS WMXW VBRSL EVSXLPUS. DR.LWi TBU EVSXLPU8 TXVV-DXUVBNL Yesterday's C1-yptoqiiotle: MY MERRY. MERRY. LERRY ROVNDELAY C0.l:rlCLUpES;VVI'ni CIJRSE-Pillnlo ii-000 OH, ms? HAN' ME THE MWW HARP, Awezmiie Fave 9:25 we HE C'N SING Fo Re wmilvti ""9 nore ht- -Fan l sogulfr O cesaed wi MAHJ THUBK if use A saiiiwioe. l mu zmwuosru J1 " may c "snow mm no Maatv.'cai:s POLICE ciiiei-. roman aosom rizicuo or emuss FOSDICK Armed 0 ml ees ol'-enrasi d itiz no.1: well as that?” L532;i.i:22ci.:.ist?z...32"fi.- 1::-midi: .. hie; in ";"5:.'.”li'. iii.-r "ii- i . . P 2'. ii: :i2ii.i"3"is”o.lno sec hm-l do bani iltio1ogo:?3':E'ii::EiaLirl.iimhf st rt Iurooul He promptly curled up and went to sleep. p Nimibleheels had gone to sleep rol- led up in a tight little hall. When he had closed his eyes it W35 9-1-1 some time before Jack Frost was due. He hadn't expected to open those eyes again until Jack Frost had come and gone. Now here he was, not only awake when he mi:ht to have been asleep. hul ' also homeless To make matl.i-rs worse. Peter Rabbit. who had betn ROSSIDIHS with him. -had just. warned him that Reddy Fox was coming down the Crooked Little Path. That was rnough to really wake him up. He forgot. that he was sleel7.V- He forgot. that he had no home. He forgot everything except Redd.)-is keen eyes. quick ears. and special fondness for Mice dinners. He had no intention or sitting there until Roddy should come and find him. peter Rabbit, who had been sit.- ting Lip. sudden-ly made up his mind that this was no place for him either. Away went Peter. lippcrty. lipperty, lip. Reddy Fox saw him and slarted after him. My. how those two can run! Nim-bleheels ducked under I leaf. dodged behind a little bush ducked under another leaf. jum- ped behind a little tree and stop- ped. He was trembling all over. There was no one in all the Great World whom Nimblehee-ls feared more than Red-dy Fox Just. know- ing that Redidy was in the neigh- borhood. and that he. Nimble- heels. had no safe hiding place close by. was enough to make him shiver and shake. Being so small. he couldn't. see over bushes. He couldn't. tell whether Reddy was coming this way or not. Reddy wasn't: he was following Peter Rabbit. Nlmbleihecls keipt perfectly still for just as long as he could. Then he moved on in fear and trembling. He ilelt that he had had just about the worst luck :4 small Mouse could have. Without any fault of his own, he had had his home torn from him. and had been leti. homeless and without food. And now to cap it all Roddy Fox uas hunting in the neigh- borhood. What worse luck could any Mouse have? He repi. along fast. not knowing where he was izoinir. but thinking only of getting away from the neighborhood where so munh bad luck had hap- pened to him. He wasn'I even really watching out (or in hiding place. It the truth be known he was running away. He was run- ning away from trouble and dan- gar. Then all of a sudden here was a'doorway open right in front of him. He didn't know whose door- way it was; he didn't care. It was an open doorway. He darted in. There was :4 little pasage just blzi enough for him to move along easily. it led down in the izround. cuzum msav wnmu, ANDICANTIIL aw ma, now! 4 ZIP my ivrwri-25:" M In AN'Will7I AN'!zus W ...a2e::is.:l7.ir ryas ?O9m0 Contract Bridge By Jouphtno Culbertson 0 .rv)Q603091e0O&et0&(9u. PREMATURE The declsrer-'; error in the fol- lowing deal consisted of making a discard before he tried to find out which discard would benbesi. south dealers- Neithor side vulncrablea OQ7 okxsvs .554 gQ42 A54! A9 oqosz N :Jmli oxma W E QQH2 nkrio S 49863 AKJ10869 on oaao gavs Theblddlng South West North Fruit 1 A Pass 2 C Pan :1 Q Pass 4 Q Pisa Pus Pan . West did not ifeel like guessing between the unbid diamond and club suits. and soled his top trumip. The seven was played from the board: East put up the ace and (for some unknown rea- soni continued with the spade inine. 4A diamond lead up to dum- my's weakness was the obviously correct retiirn.i After winning the second trick in dumn-iy with the trump queen. South cashed the ace and king of hearts. Exactly why he did mi; is hard to understand. and per- haps he realized a. moment Later that he should not have done so, because he spent a loniz time in trying to decide whether to dis- card a club or 5! diamond. Act- U&ll.Y since -he had taken out dum- my's last sure entry, the proper discard was the diamond. but he decided to let go a club. After that he was helpless to avoid the loss of three more tricks. The correct play. on winning with the spade queen, wag 10 lead a diamond from dummy and test out the nine-spot. If this lost to the ten ias it would have) South's future line or play would be marked for him. He would know now that he could not a- void two diamond losers by con- tinuing with the suit. and thus would discard a diamond on the hell” k”l3- After that he would be forced to play (or the club km; on side. If. contra:-lu-ise. the diamond nine forced out a high honor. the club on diumn1y's second heart. and. then to finesse in diamonds against the other hich honor. H9 kelll on down until at tho er.d 9! that 19112 passage he came lo a snug little room with a good warm bed in it. He didn't stop in ask questions. Sowiolhing mid mm that no one was using that home ivl'iesc'days. That was enough for lximb.eheels. He promptly cu.-. led vp up and went to sleep. but luckily for him he did not go into HIM 1011:. winter sleep. You see. there was still the little matter of bedding and the food supply to be U10URht about. He must have A warm bed and some food supply to be obtained without going out. side to hunt, for it. Nevertheless, he was A lucky little Mouse. KING l.'lllE TEA. I)('pmuIul)It- Quulili l By Walt Kelly r y fin. ' xuiiifmis -"rile imeantuwlwiiu A K vou u was war MN: m mum - ” ''”,f.ll'''iv',.l..”.1E.G - ' T” W i 55il'scy3"i3lii'x"l:l”'iJo5z"" ""” l .sur crime 5! LET By Alex Raymond KING or THE ROYAL MOUNTED A Y AIAIWONQ JIIACKI T-4 l BY Zane Grey I1-ll best plan would be to discard R ' coME BACK uaa: WITH Tuxrgz By Carl Anderson Di-QYKILI. NEED 6 ALLYGJCANGET FOR - ii OUR , ' cs-iw.ia-rmxs Paeosmsl .. .BRINGING UP FATHER By George McMaiiu:s , ,(......- wf ..- . 1 , ' 33- i ii I U wrn. I ted ss1'Ep,;f . llyyizl: V. h .,ll665-DEAR-WllJ.3OU ASK THE COOK NOT To MAKE-GO MUCH NOISE .7 gi-iE's inreasenwe WITH y WA6 BAKING FELL- MY SI 6 ' Ha: 9NIv- mm: ”bc'GAul:x ', .. . I s 4 ,7 ,ui2..Jiees-7.i-is DINNER is PUINEDI THE MEAT I5 SHRIVELED Liv-Ti-is MILK CUQDLED AND THE OWE I NHERED TILLIE GO wm-I THAT NovELisr . ear MATERIAL FOR A KlSSlNe sEaulNCE.