By Thornton W. Burtes-d CUBBY GIVES UP no play, Briar-patch. That was just to sta y. no business to be. He was over in ms. the Green Forest, when he should Plierets a time to work and A time have been at home in the deer slid e !'here's a time to riiii, and a timei Peter. Hal! his time he is where he has no business to be. This is be- -.old Mother Nature. cause or several things. He is full or curiosity, he has a big appetite Peter Rabbit was where he had that is always being tempted by DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 5 Cathedral 22. Italian 1 Out otdats city goddess 6. Smoked (Eng) 23. Exclamation pig side 6. Stripe 25. Shore bird ll. Bay window 7. Fuss 26. Symbol of 12. Maxim 8. Baililioiisesi indebtedness JR. Kind of nice 14 Garnicntri 15. Dancers cymbals .16. Roman! money (17. Sweet potato V 20. River (POI ) :l 22. Exclamation ii 24. Picture of aperson ' 28. Caress 30. Sign of the I - zodiac 31. French coin: , 132. Quakes 35. Guido's lowest note 36. Speak 7. Mother - iaffectiorir ate term: 89. Beast of burden 41. A wing hi. Simpletonl I7. City magistrate L49. 0? an area: I50. Visitors" book A g 51. Crazilyk .., : I52. Bamboo-liko, . grasses 7 0- DOWN, .0 S-shaped 27. Exclamation iiioliiing 29. Wrestledy 10.1-lcaziland 33. District i 18. April Attorney (abbn) - (abbr.) . 19. Covered -. 34. Thus with mold 38. Perhaps 20. Attack 39. First man suddenly 40. Short- iMil.) billed rail 21. Ls.nd- c (2. Noisy measure, 43. Fortiiler Ynterd-y's Annual 45. Dancer's cymbals 46. Cunning, 47. Dlsilgure 48. Malt " Jeverexo: M 1. Bodyo!I,- . ' salt water: . , IDAILY ckyproqcom-news how to workit: ' lianouoirsinnow ; AXYDLBAAXB. ; ”' 4 One letter simply stands for another.' In this example A is used " w for the three L's, X for t two 0's, etc,lsingls letters. apos- trnphias, the length and to ation of thegwords are all hints-' Each day the code letters are dii'1erent.T , ' acrypuommenomioni vxs ONE? xnvaanv-xoa 'uMaaMqan,' X3!-QXBE axe XOA QORGBH rennin -Puanavnvxj Yesterday's Cryptoqiiote;TWO woman FLA T Itaxzlecobn yvman-mite.-i5H...IqtnBE .,... ,,g.l .g4i-.ch i, 44 ,1.” i HENRY THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOVVNI something better than what he has. and he has what is called the wandering toot. one who has the wanderng loot never stays long in one place. Peter had found out that Busy Bee and some or her sisters had lelt their old home in a hive in Farmer Brown's dooryard. and had made a new home over in the Green Forest. He had watched them carrying home the sweetness of flowers. which is called nectar and from which they malre honey. And always they had gone in a straight line into the Green Forest. Right away curiosity urged Peter to try to find that new home of theirs. It wouldn't do him any good to find But, curiosity didn't care these things. about Oubby Bear began to back down that tree. Peter thought it he went straigii in the direction the Bees were fly- ing he would he sure to iind their home. That was his mistake. He couldnlt go in I straight enough line, and it was Just by pure chance that in wandering about he did find that home. He Ioiind it by means 0! his ears instead of by his eyes. He heard strange sounds. squeals and snarls and growls, also angry humming. They came from the top of a dead stub of a tree, and there he discovered Cubby Bear, one of the children of Buster Bear. Cu-bby was jirst. about half grown, and he it was who was squealing and growling and snarl- ing, Of course you know why. It was because, he had iound the home or Busy Bee and the others and was trying to break into it to get the honey, Every Bear has a sweet tooth, There is nothing they like better than honey. It was the stings oi the Bees and his disappointment in nnt bring aim; to get more than a smell of the honey that were causing him to squeal and snarl and growl. Perhaps you can guess how excit- ed Peter was as he watched what WM 801115! On. Those Bees were VGFY. VCFY 31127)". of course. Who wouldn't be angry at seeing some- body trying to hreak into their home? They were in a cloud around the head of Cubby Bear, all try- ing their best to drive him away by stinging him. Some of them did sting him about the face, but his coat was so thick that they could not hurt him anywhere else, Cubby was trying to tear open that tree. At the same time he had to EXHIBITION . SCULPTURE TODAY la APRESTJ 574rVD WIIEPE V01! Coniiniied7n&Vpnge it! it, and it was none or his business, , seem-co-mooe-so-30030 contract Bridge I 5 By Josephine Clubertson 6 Isaotsoeoaseoeoooceeses SAFETY PLAYS safety plays are not very popular at match-point play. even among experts, because they may easily cost an overtrick that is important in that form of bridge. But at rubber bridge. or in total-point team-of-tour contests, safety plays come into their own. Smith dealer. East-West vulnerable. Q Q 10 6 '5 I v cat 0 A )”N Ci"cu 4x73 'd... 910763 2 S 4.10975 3 Here, tor example, is a hand that returned victory in a national team -ofeiour tournament to the deciarer who figured out and applied the safety measure. The same six-heart contract was reached at both tables, and the same lead was made - the we or spades. Declarer No. 1 ruued and proinptiy led a low trump to the king. That. in eilect, was his doom. He had to get out the trumps or incur an adverse run, but when he led an- other heart to the jack. West took his queen and forced declarer with a second spade lead. New West was sure to make the nine or trumps. The declarer at the other table was a more seasoned and careful performer. This was a total-point match, and the prime objective was to insure the slam contract - not to bother about a possible over- triok. so, alter ruffing the opening lead at the spade ace, this declarer very deliberately led the ace of hearts, and ivhen the 4-0 break was revealed, he was in no trouble. He iollowed up with the heart Jack. smothered West's queen with the king, and drew West's next-to-last trump with the ten. Then South simply ran tricks and West could use his heart nine whenever he wished. Observe that cashing the heart ace would also have been effective if tr. had been East who held all four trumps. In that case South would next lead and pass the heart jack, run the (best) spade return with the heart eight, draw another trump with the heart ten, and enter dummy with it club to cash the heart lmg, drawing East's last trump. iii III Ii ii-b u.s GOVAMINT is OF PAPER, GONNA EXECUTE OR i.i'i.AaNER E .'.' woui.i:M'1' TENNYI saws. as A-H51: supra ks-'0! Vy t V webs suvmssoio as sows srsaov AND iboixrr BELIEVE RDOTBALL, Foc'rBAL.L.xou vbu EVER EVEN THINK on MS, HAVE R)SI'TIVELY NCIT1-"HG . ELSE on vow: MlND' r 2 RIP KIRBY BACK... ALL RIGHT. I'LL MEET g YOU IN THE PARK IN TEN MlNUTE5...ATTHE CARROUSEL Napoleon and Uncle Elby i,- I I . A V are 9. -is I SUPPOSE YOU KIDDIES WOULD LIKE TO GO OUT... DON'T MIND ME. I ,, ' HAVE A DATE . ORCHESTRA AT THE g ,. DE LUKE... I HAVE A OI-i.' HON WONDERFUL. THERE'S A WONDERFUL rHEP5! Now Go AN' LEMME A o ...'iiMN mosey WALSH .oun. own name mil aov... Give em A iiAuo...is ' THAT MR5. WALSH... gul llifw. WITH us NONE omea... , --r FORGOT 1 LEFT MI.( sues: on TH' won: If ua--ug M Bob Gurlc. (so! I DON'T SEE I-OW HE CAN REFUSE VOL! sf - WHAT I5 IT. I'VE GOT TO GIT TD GQOGAF-i'5 51-IINDIG TONIGHT- SO I'LL THTV ME CLOTHES OUT ON THE LAWN - U THING FOR PDGOTO 90 I5 KEBPON f izumw roiz me NEYTADIIR YEAZ9. LOOKS LIKE POTTV HAS IIEN HERE" - By McManus o-i!.ius-r To 55: i: we EVENiN' mean Aeeiviq ti-h my FOR Attjruis stow: