...i i ' ..a By Thornton W. Burgs TINY l'.l'0AD IS STEPPED ON and they should be Able l0 do I1 well as we've done." And Mrs. Toad agrees. so Old Mr. Toad and Mrs. Toad turn their backs on the Smilhg Pool before their babies have out- Tiny 'road is truly tiny. -He was grown the tadpole stage and are so tiny that it didn't seem at all ready to leave the water on their right. that he should be starting! own account. Now while these little out in the Great World all a-( Toad are born in the water. the! lone. However. he was. It is that; are not true water folk like Frogs. way with sun! old Mr. Toads. Young Toads may venture short children. Old Mr. Toad and Mrs.l distances fmrlrli tine wavtxeg lbut thlei Toad have a very big family over)" water is the ome. er sml. year. Yes. air. they do so. They; cousins. the Toad children. leave have such big families that they the water just as soon as they never know their own cminren. have outgrown the tadpole static. This doesn't bother them ill lhcl and they do not return to it un- ieast. til they are well grown. and than "children should em-iv learn to only for a little time in the spring look out for thcniselves." says Old for singing love songs. None b so wispejie-.ca.n forsee All that's ahead and bound to be. -sold Mother Nature. iTHE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN H licmo or ms: nova. M0 World they start out into. so they cannot possibly forces the dangers they are bound to meet with. The best they up do is live from day to day. Perhaps I should say to liva from minute to minute. for things can happen in such a short space of time that one of these tiny (oil can be safe one minute. and in danger the next. so they learn as they go along. Tiny Toad was the first of old Mr. Toads children to leave the water this year. He really was a baby. although he no longer was . a tadpole. He was a perfect little Toad and I suspect he wouldn't have liked it at all to have been called a baby. so far he had had no bad fright. He had been lucky. Nothing had happened to make him very much afraid. However. he had learned certain important things. He had learned that the only time to travel was at night. or on a wet or very cloudy day. He had learned that he simply could, not be comfortable with a dry skin. and that was one of the most im- portant things that he could lesm. so he simply hid from the jolly Little sunbeams and kept out of sight while they were around Traveling at night he had at, last reached the dear Old Brier-patch. and at the edge of it had crawl- Mr. Toad. "We give them the same Now of course these wee folk start we had when we were little. knew nothing about the Great .. P. W. 8. ALUMNI AllllllAL MEETING will be held in the I P. W'. P. Alil)lTOBll'M 'l'HlillSDAI'. MAY 20th. 1052 AT 8 P.M. All fnrmcr P.W.C. Students rordlllly lnvlterl to nth-n(L Brrrpiimu with re-ire-xlimcnts In the ('ollv-go I l t- I ALPHA" REBEKAH "Lona: no. 10 I.0.0.F. Presents the Operetta "THE CHIMES OF NORMANDI” by Robert Plsnchette with a cast of twenty-six. EMPIRE THEATRE - JUNE 11 - 12 By permission Carl Fischer, Inc,. New York. CLOVER ciua DANGES The Dance held ovary Saturday old" in the Clover Club is cancelled until further notice. For Rentals Phone 1222. ghe lS0. 'l Library following the meeting. lw" the Great worm he mdnll g Hills reached the dear Old Drier- ed under a small leaf to wait for the coming of the Black Shadows Peter Rabbit had seen him crawl under that leaf. Then. out of sight being out of mind, Peter had for- gotten all about him. There were other things in which Peter was more interested. Tiny Toad nspped under his little leaf, and site- gether was very comfortable. He didn't know where he was going and he really didn't care. some- where in the Great World there was a place for him. He was sure of it. And be was sure that when reached it. he would know it. small as he was. and big as worry. It was just after the first of the Black Shadows from the Purpfc patch that Tiny Toad awoke from it long nap, He was just getting ready to crawl out from under his sheltering little lost. At that very same time Peter Rabbit, seeing that Mrs. Peter 'wasn't watching him. stole out fmm the dear old Brier-patch. He was going to run over to Farmer Brown's garden. Looking behind him to see that Mrs. Peter wasn't watching he did not pay any attention to where he was stepping, and he put one fares Cacotoo3o0sanvsem-out contract Bridge by Josephine Culbertson QOQWQQ Till roacma I-ass North mould have given less thought in his own had hand and more to the highly significant bid- dinx. in the following deal. :5: 1',?.'.".:un...mo. J :1ou l '53:!” O ...AKq,. QWIIBI ” N '1”: .T W E .Q5". one 5 4' saw: .14 l. QLKQJDQI . CA0. .' QK9 1 Thebidding: Soil is" '.i:.':" 51: gut '. Pug FIJI P. ya. Pass 40 W 1:”. Psssil) south meant his pass over East's four spades as a forcing pass which vmuld draw a double or a five-heart bid from his partner. and when North simply passed to four spades. south was not happy! Diecuesin the hand lawn North. asked how he could pouibly take action of any sort on such I. "horr- ible holding," but he ignored the real point of the situation: that in declining to double four spades or to bid five hearts he was guilty of a breach of partnership. Had North taken the trouble to review the bidding mentally he might have realized that Souths pass to four spades was forcing. Let's analyze the auction: East's pass to one spade was s confession of great weakness. South, by first doubling for a take- out and then going to four hearts sin ' ” nded. announced a power- house. West at no time showed great strength. East. having passed one spade. was obviously sacrificing at your spades. Thus, when South passed to this bid. he was very obviously leaving the final decision to North. North's distribution beinl what it was, he should have laid five hearts; but even it double TOIOOIIJ TOLE YA! . ,4 pz..aAmxom use DEM WIISTS DOTTY DRIPPLE would have brought his side 500 foot right down on a email leaf lying in the grass. There was a. faint squeak that made Peter jump. He stared down at that leaf. and saw a very small Toad crawl out; from under it. ' "Oh!" cried Peter. "I'm sorry. I didn't mean to step on you. I for- got you were there." Tiny Toad said nothing. He wait! trying very hard to get back his breath. He was lucky but he didrrt know it. He was lucky that Peter had not stepped on him with one of his big hind feet. That would have been iust too had. It might have been the end of Tiny Toad. going?" cried Tiny Toad at last in a tiny voice. "Why donit. you look where. you're ) points instead oi only 200. THROAT For common ordinary son throat is . oweuclrrwuose l renews:-rs totntnimtst... 35' Cllffo rd McBride -r mwN,caAcH-'THIo ow: is '-wrists" tumour We-Jvsrnowiatimeivtcuiz t. acm-en: wear: 'ru'sYAR o”TH' l IHMOZZLAND BALLROOM” SHE'S up THAI, now. wE.AaiN' A Nlw GONN EV av MONTH- m' IN 1194 CENTS A DANCL on status.- WAL TONIGHT--AN'WE KN RE- zoom wHicM,iNcIDEN'ri.v. WE NEVEE G HIV MAH HIDE"-VO' EV SATISFIED! .THI.N.'!-5AM'I.L' PIER WRK. . OUR MARRIED LIFE. E. BE. UN.'.' DOTTY, W was is eivme a POKER PARTV ecu: THE FELLOWS 'l'ONi6HT-- AND W LIKE TO GO! 1 in it see n(AY 7.1. I952 ALL ll6HT HOKACE " BUT DON'T LOSE VOURc ' . i new -AND "CAP" . smash - Vougf I WAs Ttaviar To Lu-r SAMMY-- Aw. GIJME ei2Au'MA'5 BOOK" HOIVESTJI DIDN'T THROW rr AT I --We cos-rmv si2AN'MA FIVE cs-'zvr.s A DAY 1! ETHEL l --Pelt-55:5 J! ms ai2AN'MA'a LENDIN' UBQARY aoox --i 'i'iLLY THE TOILER ........ , - ...,.-.............-'--- H6rVOU Tl-ll ' CAN'T POINT