Of mine may meet. another's need. Breeze is true of you and me and of everybody else. We never know how or when some seemingly sim- ple act of ours may help or hurt someone else. deed may upset completely the best laid plans of another. A Merry Little Breeze came Page 10. The Guardian ,Tues.. April 17. 1956 BEDTIME STORIES The Mischievous Breeze By Thornton W. Burgess YORK Mr J.B. Lewis, Freetown wu u recent visitor to York. Mrs. E.J. Vessy, York. was thg weekend guest of her sister, Mu. Laura Burtin, C:-.-.' s . Rev. and Mrs. Haslam, Mar-gnu, were guests at York Manse recent. Unkiiown to me some trifling deed. all. I still may have a cliaiwe ly visiting Rev. and Mrs. J.M. Spr -The Merry Little Breeze. Thai, saying by the Merry Little Some thoughtless dancing through that part of the Green Forest where the maple trees grow in a big grove. That is where Farmer Bron ii makes map- le syrup. it is made in a little house aiiioni; the maple trees. That little house is called a sugar house, because maple sugar .is made there as iicll as maple syrup. Happily the Merry Little Breeze danced arouutl among the maple trees. it tried to blow off Farmer Brownls hat. but couldn't. it did snatch the handkerchief from the pocket of Farmer Brown's boy where it had been hanging out loosely. Presently the Merry Little Breeze danced out into the open. The door of the little sugar house in the clearing was ajar. Of course this means that it was open just a lll-i le hit. The Merry Little Breeze. saw this and danced over to it.t For just a minute it blew. anti blew hard. The door closed with fel I hang and the latch into' of a chance." said Reddy to him-l self. Then he went to look for a hiding place not too far away. At first Peter was glad when the door closed. He had been afraid that Reddy might come in after him low he knew Reddy couldn't. The feeling of safety is a wonder- ful feeling. It was so wonderful now that Peter didn't think of any- thing else for awhile. Then little by little he began to realize that if Reddy couldn't get in, he couldn't get out. He was a pris- oner. There was no mistake about that. By and by Peter heard sounds outside that made him once more a badly frightened Rabbit. Farmer Brown and Farmer Brown's boy were coming. He could hear their voices. Would they find him in there? What would they do to him if they did? STELLA MARIIS SCHOOL March Report Grade Xll-l. Patricia Gauthier: 2. Basil Gallant: 3. John Bentley. Grade Xi-1. Phyllis Gallant: 2. Nollie Andrew; 3. Josephine Brad- icy. Grade X-i. Gregory Gallant; 2. Patricia Gauthier; 3. Marie place. Then the little breeze danc-; I.-..aSC,1.V ed away and disappeared amongf Grade lxgl Lionel Gaudin 2 the trees. Now that was a very simple act on the part of the Merry Little Breeze, yet it had affected two people that the Merry Little Breeze didn't know were anywhere nbout.'Wheii that door banged. it shut Peter Rabbit in. and it shut Reddy Fox out. It made Peter a real prisoner. It completely upset the plans of Reddy Fox. Peter was startled when the door banged. Then he didn't think much about it. Reddy grinned but it was A rue- ful grin. On the other hand Reddy F'nx,v when that door banged, was much upset. it meant all his plans were spoiled. Now he couldn't go in aft- er Peter if he wanted to, and at the same time there was no chance that Peter would come out. He simply couldn't. Grade Vlll-1. Urbain Gaudin: l2. Aeneas Gallant: 3. Sandra Gal- l him 1 Grade VII-1. Bonita Gallant; 2. , i-Eileen Gauthier; 3. Elizabeth l Gauthier. ' Grade V-1. Carolyn Gallant: 2. Mary Eileen Gallant: 3. Sharron Gauthier. Grade IV-l. David Blacquiere; 2. Winston Peters; Gauthier. Grade lV7l. Gerard Gauthier; Gallant: 3. Janet Gallant. Grade ll-l. Cyril Gallant: 2. Fernadette Gaudin: 3. Edwin Gal- ant. NORTH BEDEQUE SCHOOL Primary Report Grade IV-1. Marion Stavert 2. liams. Grade III-l. Melvin Birch: 2. Gail McDonald; 3. Brenda Waugh. Grade ll-l. aid. Barbara Reeves 4equal); 2. Edward Lecky; 3. David Avery. do: 2. Duane Reeves; Beaton. Grade I Jrfl. John Lccky. Teacher-Phyllis Green. l-Clara Gallant; 3. Norman C. Gal- lant 3. Georgina 2. Paulette Doiron 3. Mark Gai- lant. Grade lil-l. Anne Marie Gau- din 2. Suzanne Doiicette, Anita Arnold Reeves 3. Barry MacWil- Florence MacDon- Grade 1 Sr.-l. Linda MacMur- 3. Harry when those two-legged folk comelule. back. That will give Peter more Mrs. Peter Proud, York, spent, Thursday, March 29 in Charlotte- town. Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Sproule and daughter Katy. Amherst, N. S.,wcre visitors to York Mnnu're- cently. the guest of Rev and Mn, J.M. Sproule. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lewis had as their guest their granddaughter Norma Gail Moore. Charlottetown, Betty Ann Crockett, has return. ed home. after being a patient in the P.E.lsland Hospital. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Cro- skett, York. Misses Gladys and Muriel Mac- Donald, Charlottetown, were the guests of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rosco MacDonald. 3 Mr. Lorne Vessey, York, is a patient in the P.E.I. Hospital. Mr. Edtlisoii l-iardy. Halifax, sp- ent his i'Ia.slcr holidays at his home in York, with his wife and family. Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Watts, Hai- ifax were neekeiid guests at-the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Watts York. ' Miss Bi-ity Aiulrcw. Charlotte- town, was the weekend guest at her home in York. Miss Rose Watts. Halifax. spent Eher Easter iloli(la)s with her par- lents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Watts. York. Mrs Vcriioii Rudd and daughter, Lois. paid a short visit to York on Easter S-uiulay, the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Crockett. Miss Aletha Brown. City, spent her Easter Holidays at her home in York. Miss M. Cliandier has returned to her home in Milton after spend- ing her Easter holidays with her cousin, Miss Fern Vessey. York. Miss Christine Proud. teacher at Brackley, spent her Easter holl- days at her home in York. Mrs. .l.M. Sproule was hostess to the W.M.S. on Friday, April 6th at York Manse. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Knox and family were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. George Watts, York, on Eas- ter Sunday. Miss Carol Hardy is spending her Easter holidays at her home in York. Miss Elaine Cooke. (.'hai'l0tle- town, was the guest of her mother Mrs. W.D. Cooke. Master George Knox iii the guest of his grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. George Watts, York. . . ACROSS 1. One who riigxfilldglrifirlqtrlldhcvlyrl dldesvltaos bzl X" Thmk 31'" '0'”, too sure of anything." t h o u g ht gay” Reddy. ”I never was more sure "g lulu. 'plelm" of anything in my life than I was Pp i that this time I would catch Pet- :3,p:vr:y 5 er Rabbit. Now ltm not sure at .13: Appordon. "ION" - - ed. as cards 6. Falsehood: 14. Before '1. A purplish- !5. Public brown s' notice: pigment Q 10. A depart. 3. City (N. merit Ireland) 6 ichin.) 9. Observe: -i ; I1. Marked l1.Tricks ' with strain 15. Species of I N. Metal woody vino l container tMaori) u. Narrow I8. American .. .. i:::;-:. nor the I: i.,' A ' nfoul ” l t 3'0"” of church singers Good for Children and Advil: i "r f,:',;',';;, IX-LAX lav. Vcinliko The I dl Chou and laxative 1' Jo" l3I.0ld than --a --a- - -----: (Archaic) &. A Itrntt ,-O0.Mnn'n nickname U. Iovtna ntmal 0- English river MO ' Now .5 M or oldIiPOl ipoeuq uiouth MlllAIlD'S '”””” uuiunn '"""""' 68.PIacu D gulch and M. Orgnnsol hearing . I DOIM --- Cloth DAILY CIYPIOQUOTI2 TELEVISION A X Y D CKCW - Moncton Channel 2 Television Programme TIIESIIY I:M p,nI.-FM Concert ELI tn p.m.--Coffee Gutter r 4:15 jun.-Uncle Jack . so p.In,-Travelogue Sztn p.m.-Barbie's Scrapbook 5:! p.In.-Howdy Doody , can p.in.-Lon; John suvur mo p.m.-At Home with Iolon Croeke lame-vttiauaoiotunm INIDAN-AIWOB Iooturhro hqnoh: DAILY CROSSWORD 20. Lettuce (U. S.) M. Two- year old salmor Q5. Small wedge g shaped . - ialuiaiae blocks Elana union 24. Cavities 41. 25. Strange Yuterd-y'I Ann": 26. Distant 18. Part of 33. Jnpnneu the face coin 80. English ipou.) oet 3 . Wagon 31. stronger :3. Female 32. U. S. deer clergyman 39. Poem and biogrn- 40. Manhy pher meadow -llonhhowtoworkltt LBAAXI b.l.0NOFEl.I.oW use letter dmply stands for another. In this exunplo A in used In the three l..'n. X for the two 0'5. etc. single letters. upon- Irophlu. the length and formation of the worth we all hang. different Acqptogncnquohnol Dbl HID WNMI CD CWDA HO DOA QGANWNJMI. A CROORIID ITICK IAN EVER I! MADE STRAIGHT-PROVERB. CONTR'A'CT BRIDGE By Josephine Culbertsog MORE STUDY NEEDED South's bidding in the deal be- cause another strange fact is that Grandma low was overambitious. and seven clubs required in inspired strange in another respect. but it guess, whereas South should have was only his play of the hand that made seven spades without gues- he had cause to regret. sing- West opened the three of hearts. Non); aguer, g Declarer put up the ace and prom- Norlhusnuth yulnex-.015 ptly finessed for the spade queen. ; J 7 g West! not only took (that !l'(liCk'rli)(l:ll: .A6 5 g even ua y won a iamon g . A 8 oo, and so North-South paid I '.A J y 3 mo-point penalty. g h it .Q 5 .8 3 2 If declarer had studied't e s - , nation, he might have realized that 00843 N vxioei . Id 0 .3 Q 0 W E .0 9 5 a successful trump finesse won 3 4 3 3 gs 5 2 not do him any real good. because, 0 .7 S for the contract to be made. the g A K 10 9 5 spadtlz queenh woulld havebl toh lie I 3; , 6.; ti: ,3- g K Q 10 9 3 a dummy-reversal plan. and to x bring this off South would have to o The Ndd"'S3 use his own low trumps as ruf- " North East South west fers. Thus. he could only afford 2 1 Q Pass 2 5 pm to cash the ace and king of trumps. 8-Q pug 4 NT pan and the queen would have to drop 5 Q Pan 7 Q (l) P." so that dummy's spade jack could Pun Pu: draw the last adverse trump. Observe that this plan w o u l d South might well have content- have succeeded. South must ed himself with a small slam. but start off by ruffing hearts immed- since he did go the limit. it was iatcly. then cash the two top strange that he preferred spaiiesl trumps. then use the necessary en- to clubs. It was also lucky, how-l tries in dummy to ruff two more ever-or should have been-be-i hearts and pull East's last trump. Orders Already Woman Charged ; Going Out For With Murder Of 1957 Car Paris Foster Children CLEVELAND (APl - Amlollgll LONDO.V.0nt. tCP'- A 45-)'(-'3!” some U. S. automobile parts man- old woman Saturday was i-iiareed ufacturers are going out of busi- with murder in the clothes - line ness. the survivors already are or- strangling of her two adopted chil- dering steel for 1957 car parts. dren. SW91 Magazme 5333- , Mrs. Mary Ciiniplicli has held The pansmakerts are requestmg for questioiiiiig and thou charged. June delivery, with most orders she was n,pUl.md ,0 mm, mm for strip and sheet and some for earlier M take hm. mm me by bars' me metalw0'k"'g weekly slashing her wrists Doctors who ”ys' Most of the mnnage win be treated her in hospital. said her glsgess 2 ya? pmd"'"t5 "f new de' Injuries were not st-rious. She is ”Orde:l"ini:lglmisst-eel for 1957 mod- to be arrmgncd "may." els was stimulated when one of the Paul" .H' mm M””'"a' 9' We” big three auto producers advised glmmd l'V";gf1c"dlll1 the fkflmpben its partsmakers to cover on steel fmet flu", P” '13", rfwlllved 3 against contracts- for accessories vim”: ml fmm " ' ' , e”na."d which are being placed in growing l?1:'g-litjiatnhe C am 9 h ens family volume. . , . - l ' ' , "W "We "is W" ”"'l"0k” s.'.)if.i”",iiJii;S."liif3."li.3".2il'.g.K3.2i' some pans make” are dmppmg said the children, believed to have out of business and more are ex- . . L d t d . - g died after eating breakfast, were Dec e O 0 so The move is 1" strangled with two pieces of tributed to integration policies of . autohmakers and a price squeezey lctlpltghes-line rope. each 20 inches T e steel production rate in the i U. S. h 1 1 t k . FATHER AWAY cam of erglegscagfcenygahaz 5mg: The youngsters' adopted father. azine says capacity operationsvare Charles CamPb9”'3 clerk in 3 assured for as far ahead as pro- L0"d”" law m.m' was out ”f.the ducers are willing to book orders. . h”rl,'(5,E at "had m"el.”r.the s1'.””"g' 5 d g d . b k 3 . ce sai prciminary inves- me,f,',;'f 3:; 12:9 g:0:;:K.c,.:o8:.e :3: tigations indicated Mrs. Campbell ginning to open third-quarter may haV9 Sufremd 3 mama) books. b rcakdown. Next-door neighbor H. H. Camp- bell, no relation. said he had Tornado Kills 0 I 15 And Injuries 100 In Alabama known the family for five years and always considered them BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) - A: tornado killed at least 15 persons; happy and well-behaved. Eileen Kelly, 20, who lives with and injured an estimated 10 Sun-i day when it smashed through a the Campheils. was reported to have been in the basement at the rural area near Birming mah. Many of the injured were time. brought to Lloyd Noland Hospital. She said she "heard a comm tion upstairs but thought the chil- which called in all available staff physicians and nurses to handle dren were being scolded and per- the overflow of patients. haps given a spanking.” The tornado was one of two which struck Alabama. Another small twister lashed Huntsvillcln north Alabama. causing heavy -MTG-'l damage but no injuries. E An” Most of the dead and injured R GULAR n I l l Em Keri Tilly The Toiler Muggs and Skeeter tions were lashed by violent blasts of winds which blew down or darn- aged heavily a number of homes and buildings in East Birmnigham and near suburban Tarrant City. The Huntsville storm partly un- roofed the First National Bank building. battered other buildings, and blocked many streets with fal- len trees and live wires. were from McDonald's Chapel. Tile pulfin birds of Labrador, at about 12 miles northwest of Birm-sea most of the year. return to Hllzham. iland each spring to take up nest- Several Birmingham area sec-fing duties. Joe Pulooliu The Lone" Ranger Secret Agent X9 F-&?7-R C ...'TH'KID5WlLLFl PON THEM AN' WON'T Ml-(KIN T' LOQK IN Ti-l' PLAN JAR ON TH UPPER SHELF... X HOW x VOU LIKE THE ENG-llLADKS...7 TOO MUCH CHILI PEPPER , HUH? ..-n-4...t-..a- m-.wu ' TD) mxwxbikwa g 3 9 -In x.,v......?s...i .. i... -1.... .,..' ....,.. d 4.417;: 7 i'lli'mt'Ii . Mvli W N; .t'.'iiii 9:11-.5 Tuisaoociiviiih racuvau HON OF THE MOMENT'lN VOUQ LlFE NOW? p ;