Paize 10. The Guardian Tues.. April 10. 1956 IEDTIME STORIES A Noisy Tongue Is Still By Thornton W. Burgess Then.-is a time for speaking if you minded their own business and W," stayed where they belonged, there And 3 time also for keeping still. would be a lot less trouble. What gold Mother Nature. are you over here for anyway?" Peter pretended not to hear. lie The noisii-st tongue in the Green nan known Cnnnerer as long as . Forest is the tongue of Cliatterer he could remember and cnaggcrer the Red Squirrel. He dearly l0V95 was always the same. He scolded the sound of his own V0iL'e- 1 5115 the big folks as well as the little Pect that it old M03191: Niitufe had folks. He scolded his enemies and given Chatterer a singing Vmcev he scolded his friends. So Peter such as She has EWEH 50 many Of didn't mind anything Chatterer the feathered folks. 3” Wm” be said. Truth to tell. it was good to singing most of the time when he hear his voice at this time of year. is awake. n Now Chatterer was using his eyes But Chatterer's voice IS 110! I all the time he was following Pet- singing voice. My goodness. no! It er. He was more careful than Pct- ls a scolding voice. Chatterer dear- er was. perhaps because he was ly l0VeS 10 St'01d- H9 500”-5 9V9l')'r up in the trees he could see farther b0dY- ll FPBHY (100501 "193" 3flY' and better. Chatterer suddenly thing. He does it. just to hear hlm' stopped scolding. Without that sell. Perhaps it makes him feel noisy Voice of his the Gm”, ym-. a little important. You know, he rest seemed Very sun is 8 WSIZV Milli” D8130"-gBU1 50""-' Peter noticed it. ”I guess (flint- small persons can sometimes ma” terer is tired of following a n d a great deal of noise, and Chatter- scolding me. I guess he knows er is one of these. what he says to me goes in one Chatterer hail Iollowed ?9t9i' ;ear and out the other.” said Peter Rabbit tliroiigh the Green Forest .10 himself. Then he gave no more as Peter was on his Way Y0W3Td lthought to Chatterer. He was all where the mail! Inapie W965 ETEW4 curiosity. Ahead of him he coilld Chatterer was following by Way Of see Farmer Brown's sugar camp the treetops. iuinping "Om, "99 W among the maple trees and he was tree and all the time scoldini P9” eager to see what.was going on or. there. Meanwhile. Cliattercr kept his tongue still. lie was lying flat along a branch of a tree so that from the ground he could hardly be seen and he was watching a certain place some distance away, He thought he had seen a flash of red over there. Tliatis uhy he had stopped scolding. lie was watching for another glimpse of a red coat. for he was sure that was what he had.seen. He was paying no at. tention to Peter Rabbit now. Per- haps he would have a chance to scold someone who deserved to be scolded. He would keep quiet until he was sure. Peter Rabbit hiitl forgotten all about Chatterer. lie could see Far- mer Brown and li'ai-mer Brown's boy hanging pails on the trunks n of the maple trees. He watched "Yon hat). no business over her them full of curiosity. What were in Green.” screamed Chatterer... they doing that for He had for- Are Released - -e-m -. e - 8011911 that he had seen them do "You have no business over here that very thing in other years, In the Green Forest." screamed -we Chatterer. "Why don't you stay at lhamniarsliiold Hurries To Middle East ROME tfteutersl -- United Na- ltions Secretary General Dag Ham- marskjold decided Sunday to cut his Rome stay so that he could hurry directly to the Middle East today to begin his on-the-spot sur- vey of Arab-Israeli tension. At the same time. Canadian Maj.-Gen. E. L. M. Burns. chief Palestine truce supervisor. who had been due here Sunday to con- 'fer with llammarskjold was urged to ”rt-main in Jerusalem tor the time being." llammarskjold who arrived here Saturday on his survey mission at the behest of the UN Security ('oinn-il. had planned to remain in Rome until Tuesday and to tiold llll't'? days of conferences with (Jon Burns. Instead he will leave for Beirut, Lt-haiion. today to begin his tour ot llittille lias capitals. The change in his plans came after he had studied reports from Gen. Burns on the new flare-up of violence along Israel's frontier: in the last 36 hours. Pmsoiii plans call for the UN head to he received in private aiiiliciire by the Pope this morning and later to meet with Italian Pi":-siiteiit Giovanni Gronchi and lunch mili ltaiian Premier An toniu St-gni. old ilfoycige For Sealing Crews S'l' .ltlllNiS, Nfld. ICP)-Crews of the three scaling ships which ili.scli:ii'v.-cit ti7..'itltl pelts here during the lust luo necks, made twice as min-ti lllttllt')' as they could nor- mally expert for three weeks work on the it-cflocs northeast of New- ftlltlltllillltl. , Men of the llalifax-owned Arctic; Prowler led lll(-' list with 5258: 'dl)l('t'('1 mi-ii ot the St. John's- owned 'I't-rrii Xoia received nearly Seven Titoisis Bl-;l.(.iRAlJl-2 (AP) e The Yugo- slav Communist party newspa er home in the dear Old Brierpatchl when you belong? Nobody wants vou over here. If people always - Refrigeration Repairs To All Makes ell The pleasant APPLIANCES SALES & SERVICE Bnrba says seven former ul- izarian leaders have been freed from prison. All had been purged as ”titoists." 'l'he iiewspaper reports the re- liabilitation of Deputy Premier Trait-ho Kostov. executed in 1949 for alleged Ttioism and high trea- son, is expected soon. Borba says among those re- leased was Petko Kunin, former polit-bureau member and industry minister. who was sentenced to 20 years in prison in a trial in 1950. Ex-finance minister Ivan Stefanov, also was reported freed. Morons hewmq Rewinding and Repair: ELECTRICAL Repairs Palmer Electric Phone: 8543 8544 cHEVYi IS YOIII Clllll F--- C . helps polish off dull while it polishes yoursmile! , wluoleirs chores NG GUM CO'N'l'R'AlCT BRIDGE By Josephine Culbertsong BOUND BY RULES Most players are lirauch oon- than persist offensively. The spade fltlaiit titles; 01' Eliifiil all-iallnst Wlml: contract would have been beaten ey.. .' .”e "195 ” pay' Sun 500 points. whereas South should ” .f"'.e55"lg agwlst pa.m'er' have been defeated at the five- gat it is virtually mposlsible for heart comma eln. to rise to "nus" oppor" Westopenedthe deuce of spades giniues: That, perhnpsn was why 8 low club was played from dunk ast did not ma.” te winning my, and East automatically put play at Trick 1 in the following up the spade king..1.hm'ofcOnl.se' dealt was extremely pleasing to declar- sonth deal". er, who won with the spade ace d omptly cashed the queen Both aides vulnerable. ggd Eek. discarding two more 5'-" clubs from-dummy. The heart ace VKJIOT was knocked out, and after that 9 KJ9 35 South had clear sailing. since the IF Q 9 5 3 diamond queen accomodatingly tell Q 8 7 6 2 Q K 109 5 on the first round. V A52 N t3 Aside from the fact that the de- O Q W E V 6 3 fenders could have taken two club 5 Av, 3 5 3 S 9 7 4 3 tricks and a heart before surren- ixm dering the lead. the contract still O AQJ would have been defeated if East U Q 9 3 4 had merely thought things overnbe O A 1063 fore putting up the spade king. & 7 4 Obviously, East was alraidhttlliint 9 i d,n play of a lower spade mil; . 9 nqlhwbdw 3' N In East declarer win with a minor honor-- W 9” 0' but what of it? Surely. it would 1 V 2 IF 4 V 4 9 two nat- Dble. Pass 5 0 Pass ggalsogzdgo tgmsiuttfreclnn dis. 93” Db” P3” . Pa” cards from dummy Could SPBFCCIY Pa" benefit him. The great danger North should have accepted his . from East's point. OI vicw was that partner's double of four spade;declarer wonld be able to discard South had licard N'ilt'lll.S pre- lthree of dummy's clubs-a danger emptive raise and still hail chosen jthat materialized into an fact 011 to double the opponents rather the play of the spade lung. s250 and the (-row of her sister hiinlters will conceiitrate on mature ship, Algerlne, rt'i'cii'r(l S197. 593 5- . N l born seals are tlir objects Most years between S100 and 5150 of ten”: yseanmm Wm," ships no ko is considered a good take, and as-me from early in March low as 520 is not uncommon. 3 M The usually successful seas0nN"C"””' has perstlatlcd Bowring Brothers BAD OLD DAYS Ltd.. the ouncrs. to sand the Terra' n . . ,, Nova to the from again Tuesday. Sir John Haitklllsnlll l.ih2 was By this tune the white coats ohprobably the first Vlnir.'lInhiii8ii t0 rapidly in-miiiig rouiig seals have visit Sierra Leone in Mi'Ita. Oil I turned iw-lloii znut raluelcss, so the slave-raiding expedition. --orNif?l . W75 l hi uM:tt3tud R Canada i V(!l'. '7. ? m uearoem. ROCIK mczmnou um: Submitted am”-v. ENVELOPE .2 msrrowziteo NEW YORK cm! (W I-'EB.30 5obmitted by IRVING sucllmut Los Angelesnilif. IA 8 V in TIIO IASY-Aellnj KAI You the Sula: HAGED A FULL D3555 5UlT AND HNT6 AT 5TQUTTtN6 UP THE AISLE NITH A BRIDE-'t-' HAKrl(AFF.'? r"'MEANNHlLE H95 I(lCl(lN6 UP His HEEL-5 Good for Children and Adult I X - LAX The Cliocolatod lnxntlvo rive out Acne Our Boarding House E6AD,TNlGt35.' i Mos-r SALLOP WNKEV N A Mm” TONER-' lwro Action! FATHER HA5 PUR- , LIKE A veAI2i.iN6 in The FAsToRe! Maior Hoople He's nmme MORE FUNTHAN A M ----8m Don-T REAR UPAND THROW A -SHOE. MAJOR! HANNl6Ai:5 Bee:-r.l AROUND A FEW PLACES 6lNce H5 TOOK Tile Boy Scour OATH- AND I'D ALMOST LAY 9 TO 5 HE SHIE6 AT THE 3ELL5.' '12-)ut Our Way By J. R. Williams I 3 ll ll' IT'S FUNNY vou NEVER seen 10 see ANV DITCH DIGGEBS. ( I HOBOE5 oz PLDWHAND5 I GLASS! IFI WERE A Boy rr it woui.D5cAl2EMelr.rroA ll BOOK so QUICK iv NEVER Look our or A scuooi wmvow ' J l I THROUGH THAT R05E'COLDRED 1 Win ' .;; .1: ea ' i'-lbw: do l " BORN1'lr1t?l'VYEAR5TDO'5&l 7' ' J? an--mi-.4-n i TELEVISION CKCW - Moncton Television Programme Channel 2 TIIESIIY p.IlI.4-FM Concert Hall pm.-Al and Aileen : p.m.-At Home with Helen Grocker 3 : "pan.-Uncle Jack . - pg--Magic of Music 90 pm. p.ni. an : p.Ii.-People Are Funny : p.m.-Adventures of Robin ood 55?!!! arenas!!! 322:8 33333833333 28 9 t 4 i wei.t'.,n.i. aiiwmen 1-uxr ow wow 9: WRMNG us my Mona nunmms LETTERS! POGO Scent Agent X9 Grandma Iiicliey Mouse Henry 5""! K9" Tilly The T0310! Muggs and Skeeter The Lone Range:-T Joe Puloolin AN , i.i'i. DAW DIZESSLPIN CLOTHES I 0' NICE TRINKET5 LIKE THAT lFl HAD A GOOQBHARP KNIFE J couto MAKE A C D H.-LIAGI HAVE THESE NEW FOR 7t-IE CHUXH 5 PPEZI em. n..,r.....n..a-,n..u.u-o .-A we've ear A noon; BELt.."HE'S mo LAZY 70 ENG IT UKE A ' GENl'LEMAN..' AND HE'D . - BETTER Nor sir males 4' AND BLOW HIS HOl2N.' .3. i-n,DoLL.' LETS GO.." ”? 'i f cs-1! um tli cmmooou! new muse mm more imiu. 1 give in: amt! DAVEY" Bousl-if AN OLD TAXI .."- lr HAS A 1'wo-wAv 3 RADIO-PHONE 9' f 1-