'rwo nouns snrrsn man om: , sometimes the best thing that can be is when two people disagree. mid Mother Nature. it is out of disagreements that some of the best things in life hap- pen. Little Joe Otter and Mrs. Joe disagreed. Mrs. Joe had bft their . home in a bank bdslde a deep pool where the entrance was und- .' er water. It was what might had called a perfect Otter home.- The water of the pool was so deep that even in the coldest weather the ice.never froze thick enough to close that doorwaY- There was I nice long hall leading up to I comfortable bedroom where the ground was sandy. Lillie Joe thought it a perfect home. Mrs. Joe thought the same thing, but she wanted I change. So while Little Joe was away hunting and fishing for several days. she had looked around. And she had found the great hollow log in which she uas now living. She had moved in right away. She hadn't been back to the old home since. said Little Joe. ”aud I like the old home best." ”Stay there then," said Mrs. .it)i'. "You can be comfortable the-re and I can be comfortable hcre." So it came about that Little Joe and Mrs. .loe had two homes. one for him and one for her. Some- times they went hunting and fish- ini: together. They even went on one or two long trips together. But when they were at home one was over at the deep pool and the oth- er was over in the hollow log. It was a plan thht worked out very vieii. The fact is. they seldom were there excepting to sleep. Mrs. Joe was very careful in her coming and going. While there wasn't anybody she was afraid of she still wanted to keep it I secret that she was living in the big hollow log. It was nobody's business but her own and she want- Wo Carry A Large Stock Featuring: Bulova. Gadman Ind Longeno Watches. Also I con!- They even went on one or two long trips together. ed to keep it that way. So when- ever she returned to it she tried to make sure that there was no nne in the neighborhood to see her. When she left it to go hunting she was just as careful. So for I long time no one else in the Green For- ” ' " est knew that Mrs. Joe was living, We doni need two homes. Lh Winter was nearly over. it had been I hard winter for most of the furrod and feathered folk. It hadn't been hard for Little Joe and Mrs. Joe. Thcy largely on fish. They are good trav- elers and they don't mind going a long distance to get enough to eat. They are wonderful swimmers. While Laughing Brook and the other brooks were frozen over, ex- ceptlng where the water ran too swift to freeze, the two Otters went up and down them fishing with no trouble at all. Sometimes they would travel on the ice, running Ind then sliding along on their stomachs, just as boys and girls run Ind slide on their feet. So-it was that they got fun and not work.out of making long trips. They knew every brook and every pool in every brook for a long They knew which brooks had the most fish and which brooks had the best fish. They knew. where the most crayfish were to be found. They are very fond of crayfish. So it was that both were fat when other folks were very. very thin. They had all they want- ed Ind now they had two homes without refrgeraton. .w.c.r.u. Strange But True ll! F. It. MacArthur When the United States Govern- ment Ipnroved the building of the biggest gas pipeline from North- west f.'InIdI to New Mexico. it was .6 triumph for I curl-yhsired Can in who has come I long way in the world from I humble beginning. Francis '(F'rInk) McMIhon.- Si, fought through the courts for sev- en years to get Canad and 11.5. approval for the line. t lost. as will .l0on flow from his rich pro- perties in Alberta, Canada. to the rich u.s. markets. Frank has had many streaks of luck which have made him I rich man. But he can remember when things were dif- ferent. Home in Moyic, British Columb- iI.- he attended Gonzagn Univer sity. Spokane. Wash. where he got to knowrBing Crosby also I stud- ent there. After that. like his lath- er before him, Frank went ex pioring for metal or oil or Iny thing he could find. ,After years of work and effort, he struck oil in 1937 on an ll-acre tract in the Turner Valley of Alberta. This was a stroke of fate since Frank promised to pay 320.000 for the land even though he had "only 9100 cash." ' Then followed I fantastic string of oil and gas strikes in Alberta. . Included was the most famous oil well in the modern world-the Le- duc gusher. officially known Is At lantic No. 3. This blew in in March. 1948. at 12,000 barrels I day. In six months the well earned S3 000.000. Finding himself rich Frank helped form a distilling y financed three hit Broad way shows. and got interested in horse racing. One of his horses. for which he paid 820.000, won the 5250000 Hollywood Gold Cup. There have been fdilures too. One of the worst was when his firm and several major oil com- panies spent 85,000,000 looking over half of Canada for oil in the mid-1940's. They failed to find I drop. When the doctor says you'd bet- ter slow down, it seems that the calendar goes faster. In one respect, 1956 is bound to be tougher thI last year. It has 53 Mondays. "We called it the Bottomless Pit," wrote R. W. Limbert. That was his simple account of I strange discovery an expedition made in Idaho's "Craters of the Moon" region. It was the first ex ploration ever made in the vast lava and cinder-cone wasteland. The year was 1924. When they wandcrcd upon magnetic crags that rendered their compasses useless, Limbert and his followers narrow- ly , d becoming lost. Quite by acident. one of the men rolled I pebble into I hole about 15 feet across. when they heard no sound of it striking bottom. Llmbert dir- ected that larger stories he rolled into the hole. Still no sound came out of the opening. Huge boulders were then rolled into the yawn- ing hole. The men sat Is near the edge as they dared and listened intcntly. Not I whisper of sound reached the explorers' ears to in- dicale the giant stones had struck bottom. Hence the name it still ...sxm-riwr utuct: MAN cu-r -u 5 6OLDMi&." Fr 7 CONTRA-CT BRIDGE By Josopliine Culbertson ROOKED SLICKETS... A' STRANGE HABIT There was no conceivable rea-beyond: when he brought in the 80! for South to hold 01!! hi5 138'-'81-ackwond Convention and IIIIIIU irllmll ill "I! i0i10WhIl deili-HIP leaped again. this time in spades. less one counts the hot that this The only reason that South had I i3 I SWEDKG hlbu Bmiclillx mil-'fair chance for the slam was that ' lions of bridge players. It is 5130. North put down excellent material. 3' habit-is it was! West opened the heart six. The acc won. and. after long thought. Souih decided to establish his dia- mond suit immediately. I-le cashed the ace Ind king and ruffed I third round with the spade nine. East overrutfcd-I questionable action-and laid down the heart AZNATION cam!-r i you Test. A PEZ-R '""'w"t "um" ' wkrsiz rot: vouz BATH, I.i'l. PAVYI . nu... w.:.X'1.-.-. -I. n draw East's cards in the suit. Now South led the club ten for tho finesse that was vital in view of the non-hreak of diamonds. West. who still had his original club hold- ing. was not so foolish as to cover the ten. and when South immed- iatcly took another finesse in tho stilt. its success did him little good. He could discard one diamond on the club ace. but this lcft him I probably never realized how close he was to success in ytins dcal. After the club ten held. Southls fstalierror. we must ob- all he had to do was lay down serve. of course. that South Wasihis last trump. That play would far from blameless in lhls.hi(l-lii;n't- forced Wcai to give up a stretched his club. unguardlng his king. or to values when he jumped to three discard the high diamond. in which diamonds over two clubs:,t.hcn licmse South of ctiursc could cash really went all out (and a little his own remaining diamonds. ant: Before getting to the play and STRIKE HITS CHRYSLER DETROIT (AP!-Chrysler Corp. Thursday closed the Mack plant of the automotive body division in S.C.. looking for handouts. From to time. the store-keeper threw him a wiencr. The third day. B.A. Schuler. who took a liking to the little white mongrel. let him; in the store As the dog sat on a box. two men entered and attack- plants. Some 8,000 workers were made idle because of the 4' lA company spokesman said 1.100 struggle and sank his teeth into workers in the trim department at 198. 30"! RSS8ii8niS Mack walked out apparently in protest to the disciplining of I United Auto Workers shop stew- The dog immediately joined the e dog in pursuit. Now Mr. Schuler serves the dog top- grade hamburger. 3,-d Rusty. a cocker spaniel flashcs I good tooth. His owner. Lynn At- 'TT"T-Tmm-'mrm'mr'm cided that the animal should have , the flashy tooth. Lynn's father L., The psmpns grass of the Argen- E. Attaway. operates a dental lab iytlne plains, supporting big cattle herds. grows to eight or nine feet. oratory. He made the tooth. Out Our Way Muggs and Skeeter By J. R. Williams I de tuned ii535"ZcZ.Z. '.7."..”.'.'..i...5 NOTES Burke's Jewellers 11! QUEEN STREET "Put I few drunk drivers in 0' mt 1-ll-" -VIMWIW Rm" 6- Meir Inger zles of Australia. "and it will re- .'i::'.."::..':::.i:.".::;;. Ci'.'.'.?.'2.f.l'; Daniels Heads Utlfllllllllll liitiill fun.-t. 4',Mp'”" 25: A3. Clark adds: "We've tried loin tun ulnui scnuv. thing to do now is to put the drunk- swnmmmmwrmwmumwmmwn The National Institute of Statls- Di u""'s"""”""'; tics reports that "deaths from Ch8l'l1inZ him With Wolmdihli I Inc - Ow hi. i look for I956. Send Tosdly .1 mm 1 11' g n I prizcfight trainer in I shooting in ” '"msEEn"w 3' r "K n "nu cu na mm Harlcm after-hours bottle club output by about 325,000,000 pounds 3 is 7.3 per cent of national revenue. la 1 TV & RABIQ of health services. Iies that. though 35 per cent ft-cl own mum but that income taxes should he re- maks no mis- take, in in. filmed. Only 5 Per C001 T001 ""9 pending trial on assault and weap- Mrm mm” 1. same about taxes on beer and ms chal-Egg. . my spirits. This I in 20 ratio might Don't have it Why Tnke ..represent the alcoholics and cx- sound Chan” M poor cesslve drinkers that the liquor 40. was at-cuscd of shooting James Like This, Rgcgplign, traffic has developed in England. R In Vancouver. Canada. one ad- in D. t:lii- - ult in every thirty-one over the age ; mverinsn of twenty is an alcoholic. In Tor- t., B0wLAN's TV & RAD") onto the rItlo is our alcoholic in Ind be sure. DIAL 004 every thirty-eight adults. ladii ""5 Wivooo k"”w" ”mh”uc" Beer production in Brazil ltus. W with 3tl.000.000 in M40 Government workcrs smoking while It work. One sour- ce estimates that tho number of addicts in government service is Ci "not mo Iran produces 750 tons of opium I year, of which 250 ions is ex- - bears-Bottomless Pit. outside I country store at Clover. fines and every other avenue open "N t G 1 u on Acousmrro NC to us--without success. The only 0 i I year." The French liquor bill '""'t 31' ' The crooner who rose to popu- ' . -- o 00 in 0 per cent more than expenditure ..6l':ly Egg R'1':gi'C'.'.'”:?l:e':,::,:': :5 gr B rd 9 H .use p . . cngagcment at a club in Pnlm Chm)” ya"! A poll taken in England uidlc- Springs. Cam” to my hen for his arraignment. multiplied seven times in the ;)astl”'””.r”5ed that .1" product ind ten years. The output for 1953 tot- ,'T'fm'c"l pmpem” duf. w "3 lied 275mo'oo0 gallons, compared life-giving yeast cells. which in mm I uc." in order to obtain his requir- . t ed amount of vitamin B. one have been ordered In mm "mm" uould have to drink four and I half gallons of this liquor. How- e than sevcral thousand." mm "Q1" b"”'d mnuhmd "0 yeut at I . ' ported. The George Washington Monu- Accnrdlng to the Ontario Alco- mum at Washington towers 556 hollsm Research Foundation. Can- feet and weighs 81.1!) tons. For two days I stray dog sat NEW YORK (AP)--Singer Billy auicis. dapper hut unsmiling. cadcd not guilty to an indictment Tilly The Toiler GEElMOM.'JUSl' To A attest ozwcc Wll'H Tl-IE GANG! Yo:vz- no mo MANV om-as THIS 8 PHEW.'WHAT GOES WITH DAD! HE sun! WEEICYOSUIY t-tlM.' E 2 ? -HARU"p'. E1-to Kent lie was continued in H.500 bail No trail date was set. The singer. who gave his Ige as Jackson. 33. in an Irgument the Harlem Club. Jackson is re- in England nne luquor company crc of "considerable dietetic val- icr. after analysis. it was found TELEVISION CKCW 8- Moncton Talevblon Programme f Channel 2 ii” sstrnnsv p.m.-I'M Pow :I0tp.o1.-,-Hopolon Culidl p.m.-Jule! IJIMIIO rn.-pxlos on camera .m.oVlld Itll.l:tchock I 8333 :20 p in -CKCW-TV News :10 p.tn -Weather . :45;p.m. ll I150 i :06 .i. A s;: cs Major Hoopie MY N020. FATHER! mtrr WAS THE st-bczresr mu rve seen 6lNCE Joe - 6AM5 Kuocitso our . FRANK sane!-e .3, WILL PICK Joe Polooko I21. M77 ask NV saw: 4 mt er a-ernve A new we 71:6 1'9 Iamaeztrmnraaw our 5Pt.i'i'A DECIGIDKIVI ,. Iwwgl .7 . I eomg IVOHH t&opl O10?"