i THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN PAGE savqgd FEBRUARY 29. 1952 By Thornton W. Burgess PETER. iagnarr IS WABNED The warning that is sadly needed 1; useless unless it in heeded. -Old Mother Nature. A useless warning is wasted math, and all warnings are use- mg when those to whom they H9 given do not heed them. It takes two to make a warning of use. one to give it. and one to heed it. The news had spread all through the Green Forest that Hooty the Great Horned Owl. one of the tier- cest hunters in all the Green For- ,,g, and Mrs. Hooty had already hggun housekeeping, although Jack Frost was around every night. and mug): Brother Northwindm breath was at times as icy as ever. You see. it was still winter. "No Birds with any sense would begin nesting as early as ms," declared Yank Yank the Nzitiiaich in Tommy Tit the Chick- adee. as they ate their breakfast at the feeding shelf at one of Farnwr Brown's kitchen windows. Most of the other feathered foil: agreed with Yank Yank. 'They ro::ldn't see how it was possible to. bring up babies as early in the year as Hooty and Mrs. Hooty would be bringing theirs up. They would be the first Bird babies of the 3831'. but they w?nildn't be the tirst babies. Alreadv Mother Bear had babies in month old. born in the very middle of the winter. But few know of this, for those small cubs had not as yet so much as poked their little noses outside the den. In fact. they had had their eyes open for only a few days. or course Peter Rabbit over in the dear old Brier-patch heard the news. Those long ears of his pick up most of the news sooner or later. or course right away Peter was curious. He began to wonder if it really was true. or just a rumor. You know, a rumor is a statement which is passed from one to another, round and round so Most of the feathered foil: agreed with Yank Yank. that it grows. yet nobody knows whether or not it is so, and nobody knows how it started. Now no one knows better than Peter Rabbit that Hooty the Owl and Mrs. Hooty are among the most dangerous of all his enemies. Many a night when Peter has been over in the Green Forest. he has shivered at. the sound of Hooty's hunting call. He knows that there is no one among all the smaller folk of the Green Forest and the Green Meadows whom 1-iooty and Mrs. I-footy would rather catch than a Rabbit. No one has ever given him worse scares. not even Reddy Fox, and Raddy has given him many. So the Green Forest, especially that part or it where Hooty make their home. is no place for Peter to be roaming around. "Of course it may not be true that Hooty and Mrs. Hooty have begun housekeeping." said Peter to Mrs. Peter. "I just can't believe that anyone would be so foolish as to lay eggs at this time of year." Mrs. Peter looked at him sharply. "You stay at home." said she. "01 course. my dear. I didn't say The ”H0lliiIi 0F'HEAVEN" St. Dunstan's College Dramatic Society HOLY REDEEMER COMMUNITY CENTRE MONDAY and WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3rd & 5th Curtain 8:15 Admission 50c Notice Change In Date I was going anywhere." But as soon as the Black Sha- dows from the Purple Hills had crept over the Green Meadows that night Peter slipped out oi: the dear Old Brier-patch when Mrs. Peter wasn't near and away he went, lipperty. lipperty lip. across the Green Meadows. his white tail bob- bing up and down in the dusk, straight to the Green Forest. Cur- iosity was greater than Petcr's con- mon sense. It is that way with a lot of people. And it is this which makes much of the trouble in the Great World. Peter hunted up big cousin, Jumper the Hare, who lives in the Green Forest. ”Is it true that I-Iooty and Mrs. Hooty are already nesting?" asked Peter. "I don't know, and I'm not go- ing over there to find out," said Jumper. "What. is more. Cousin Peter, I advise you not to go over there either. It you know when you are well ofl. you will go back to the Old Brier-patch and stay there. If those Owls have eggs now they will soon have babies, ahd I don't know of any worse news for some or us folks than that will be. If there is any one place I am go- ing to keep away from. it is that part. of the Green Forest where those Owls are living. It you've got any sense at all you'll do the same thing." Peter said nothing. The brightest word in home lighting x! Tllltl homo a carton today wow. WHEN UNCLE ewv t H 'i'HOLIGi-ITVI use” T 10165:, 5?: ii. I Rand TOLEZATE 9l.IPiAHO-7 I V '. contract Bridge i 63 By Josephine Culbertson (2:20.-i-&r00s&0i-.'s3-4stMei MISDIBECZITIEJ-OPTIIKISM !MOOfe00&COMOOCa0OM- It was understandable that North should have become very op- timlstic in the bidding of the fol- . lowing hand, but the least he could do was to temper his optimlsni with a small part of caution. Norm dealer. North-South vulnerable: Q A V A Q 3 Q A K Q J 7 q. A K 6 4 493732 N mos-sci U K 5 sv E Q 6 4 9 9 3 2 Q 10 5 4 3 4. J l0 s S 4.0 9 7 0 K Q J x o J 10 9 7 3 2 Q G 4532 The bidding: North East taunt West 2 Q Pass 2 Pass 3 J. Pass :2 9 Pass 4 N T Pass 5 J, Pass 5 N '1' Pass 6 9 Pass 7 N T (I) Pass Pass Pass It -East had been accommodating enough to open a heart. North could have picked up West's rig and run the entire heart suit. ut actually, East selected a diamond. and North was helpless. There was so North could not take advant- age of the fact that the heart king lay right. North could not be blamed for getting very optimistic when South made a. positive response to the two-diamond opening and later re- bid hearts, then showed 9. king in response to the Blackwood Con- vention. But surely North should not have incurred a double risk on the hand, by going to the grand slam at notrumn! Once North de- cided to play for the limit num- ber of tricks, the least he could do was to select the contract which might be brought home even it southis announced king happened to be in spades rather than in hearts! Obviously. that safer con- tract would be seven hearts. With South playing the hand at his long suit, he would have the tremen- dous advantage of being able to ruff a diamond for entry to his own hand, and then being able to take the heart finesse. KINE EIILE COFFEE I"irsI in riuruiu' By Walt Keiiy WEi.L,i-ET'6 LEAP . . ALoNe,eie1ia2..,. -. orvzsss-14251155.. You WANTS To Purl! PO55 To By Alex Raymond - .- -- ...---I no entry in the south hand. and ' FIJ UFLEDGED R DLUTION . THE RIOTING WAS GROWING TO THE PROPORTION OF A KING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED ' ms 7:155. s . zsowwsuks-1:? IT'S A ouss-non. r -' wow wow TILLTHEY - RADIO us IF we r r-new I5 cLeAa...oR , SURRDUNDED. . . - )'E5i..FULLY, )1! m4rz5urn.E g:4P7b.os1 . I I MIGHT AS WELL GET THAT CHUTE STRAPPED ON . , THE FIELD I5 TOO il DANGEROUS? TELL HIM .T0 PARACHUTE TO THE HENDEZVOU5 A5 IN PLAN TWO. - ul --2 see: TI-IE coxrr wowr . TTON I ll -up -an r-. Fur -. var: r... -..u ..p..-.-A .....::a.n:r.is r I owe THEM THEIR ALLOWANCE, I DON'T THINK IT'S FAIR! YOU'RE GETTING YOUR ALLOWANCE OUT OF MY ALLDNANCEII MY cuesr MEASUREMENTS IF Youiziz sou-V TO RARE BACK LIKE r''-”?7 in ". I ” sceoock OVER A BRINGING UP FATHER 4 w CAN x ”"xoDiNNEi2 AND scpoocg ovsrzl? 7:?-vvE2.ETsoi.i r WOULDN'T LEN MARK ONCUFFA BEUTHER, THAT CERTAINLY &O(E Z THANK SOL! FOR THE INFORMATION- HI2 JI565 - IT WILL SAVE MY MAKINSA BAD LOAN! VlWZ2.Min.mnfJfM.i'l BANOLE1 UPLATEI BABKFPOM somy. 55? vow: H'.r.Dt?ED Wm-I N'TEP&T,.'