' ally was very difficult to see. Wed., Nov 23. 1955 "Hie Guardian, Page 7 By Thornton L "was MOTHER oassnrmor Of Judgments made in haste be- .i . with Lest they shall prove to be unfair, MRS. GROUSE.i ...A hunter with a dreadful gun had found the thicket in which Mrs Grouse and her family happened totbc. She had warned the child ren to be sure not to fly until she took to her wings. That would be the signal for them to fly in dif- ferent directions. -One. more tim id than the others. had not been able to wait. He felt that be just had”-to fly. and he did fly.. Then the thing happened that Mrs. Grouse had feared. There was a report of the dreadful gun and the young Gouse fell head-long into the thicket. Mrs. Grouse took to her wings with a roar almost in the face of the hunter and all the young Grouse flew also. each in a different direction- Now the young Grouse who had been shot was in a way lucky. He didn't think so, but he was- He had been what is called "winged". That means. one wing had been so hurt that it could not be used for flying. Otherwise he was not badly hurt. As soon as he hit the ground he was on his feet and running, looking for a place in which to hide. In one place in, that thicket the brown leaves lay in a small pile. The young Grouse crept under those leaves. He wasn't. fully -hidden. but his coat and the leaves were so near- ly of the same color that he re- The hunter came in looking for him. The young Grouse lay there without moving a feather. He knew he couldn't fly and it was this knowledge that enabled him to keep perfectly still now. Once the hunter almost stepped on him, but didn't see him. find the hunt- er had a dog with him, it would have been a differeng story. so Fgain the young Grouse really was u C . Finally the hunter gave up and left the thicket. The young Grouse rontinued to lie there, not moving- lie didn't care move. That wound- :-d wing ached. it ached dread. fully. but the fright he was suffer- ing was even greater than the paid. He wanted ha mother. Oh. how W. Burgess But his mother waairt there. why didn't she come back? Pre- sently in the distance sounded that dreadful gun again. Had his mother been hurt or perhaps Eilled. For a long long time he lay there wishing his mother would come back. Perhaps she has been so frightened that she had left that part of the Green Forest. Perhaps she had been so frightened that she would never come back. And where was his father Thunderer? He hadn't been with them when that dread- ful hunter came. And where were his brothers and sisters? Why didn't someone come? But it was mostly of his mother that he thought. it was she that would know what to do now that with despair. And despair is a very dreadful feeling. It was bad enough to be all alone in the Great World. but worse to be all alone and hurt- if he couldn't fly how was he going to be able to set away from Reddy Fox and some of the other hunters in fur and feathers? All the time Mrs. Grouse was artfully leading that hunter fur- ther and farther away. She hadn't forgotten that wounded one. She didn't know if he were alive or dead. But first she must lead that hunter away as far as possible. Dominion Stores Judged Best Annual Report TORONTO. The 35th Annual Re- port of Dominion Stores Limited has been judged best in the field of retailing and distribution. in the annual competition sponso ed by The Financial Post. It is the fourth time in five years that Dominion Stores have won top honours. Judges included representatives from the Canadian Institute of Chartered Acountants, the Invest- ment Dealers' Association of Can- ads. and the Association of Canad- ian Advertisers. The November 19th issue of The Financial Post states: "This report is so good it is almost caviling to suggest any deficiencies." Earlier. the Dominion Stores' re- he wanted his n-iotherl She would tell him what to do. STRANGE BUT TRUE AMA? port was awarded two "Oscars" in U. S. competitions. Pioneer Days In P. E. I. By I. ll. MseAs-that Soon they drifted to safer ice 1nd they resolved to make a tryl 'nr the shore. come what might. Hazard. by this time. was a rav- ng madman and could not be )ersuaded to leave the ship. Un-- nindful of his and plight. he fan- :ied himself talking with his moth- er about his progress at college. But every now and then he would point in the direction of land and shout: "See! the lighthouse warnlng.Ba came indistinct and he passed to the "Great Beyond." Leaving the student's dead body boat. the others set out for land. About midnight they came ashore - not on the island. as they had expected. but at Wallace, Nova Scotia. About four in the morning the exhausted wanderer: came to a litls shanty. where they were given food and shelter. Not until the ice had melted from ha. ha! If only we had heeded u..' ll" mm d” "" m" l'''""' l'”""r lighthouse warningl " Later the body of Hazard was ex- Soon after this his mutterings bs- ggmed End """"g"' back "' "" , me. Richard Johnson. the other stud- ent, had been born in England. and came wi Edward his parents to Prince sland in 1850. They set- tled in Charlottetown. where Rich- ard resumed the study of medic- ine. Some years later the young man became a Methodist minister. All members of the party were severely frostbltten; and Mr. Weir one of the three passengers and a resident -of the U. S. A.. did not long survive the awful experience of being sixty-six hours on the bay. .m.ZmA..m...m.... your taste.. . S yet kind to Your waist because never rich or filling! For Big Port Ln: HAVIUJ. France. liteutorsl -This Channel rt. which was almost completay destroyed dur- ing the war, now is becoming one ' of the most modern ports in Eur- ope. But two threats mar the picture. Both are economic. The first is lack of people to live in its ultra- modern blocks of apartments wlhlch are a model of town Pill!- n ng. The second is a threat by Brit- ish railways to give. up their Southampton-Le I-lavre f e r r Y which brings 55,000 passengers a year through the port. & Two Threats Mar Outlook 1:? In France Le Havre has become a busy trans-Atlantic port only 10 years after s committee of experts had expressed doubts about the possibility of rebuilding it. The port, over 400 years old. was heavily bombed by Allied air forces during the war when it was a German submarine base. Later, the retreating Germans ex- ploded one-ton land mines along every N yards of its docks. Reconstruction of the port was largely due to the port director Pierre Callet. a small. alert man." under his lsadersitlw .0 W" has tripled its pro.-WI! twill" traffic and doubled its vl""l9i' traffic. The amuse throulh ti" port of its one-millionth post-war trans-atlantic passenler VII "tr corded this car. The port, inked by pipeline to oil refineries in the interior. band- led 10,215,312 tons of fuel oil last year. The city itself was rebuilt from rubble by a team of architects headed by Auguste Ferret. Blocks of apartment bulldlnts it storey.-2 nigh. set well apart In live max- imum sunlight for lower build ings. line spacious boulevards. But many apartments are unoc- cupied. inhabitants who left after the war have started new lives in who devoted himself to the red- aiasance of Le Havre. LIMITED NUMBER OF PRIIES everybody with & million wins! at r'Bll0lJIE'S g S Q PLAY MON other towns and show no inclina- tion to return. - 2.5 E? W-":':3'A'.3' a? 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FEET? gait T S ”':..- p re A... g" niNi'xlll) &' "NW ' 5 Liriir-8'” ClJ'l'lOUliN6lUBl!l!Y toeionye-rbymvote-0014!. LONDON (neuter-s)-'1'he House The government ' tends ultimately or common, Mom-1.y night en- to abolish the subsidy. At present do;-ggd the 5;-itish Conservative housing subsidies given by the gov- government's plans to cut the sub- ernment and the local authorities gidy paid on new houses from 222 total i73.000.000 a year. Basement Specials at MOORE 8: McLeod NOVEMBER SALE Store Closed This Morning - Sale Begins 1 p. m. 98c 3 for 2.75 IANGIIBLP NEW YORK (AP) - Gilbertl Bondy. 44. cartoonist and illustra- tor. hanged himself in his hotel mom Monday. His body was found such: by several a door hinge in his , tbenflllotel Le Mans; , .001” 1! 'Id . Build, contrltutid cartoons on azine squire. ' r MEN'S HEAVY ALL WOOL WORK SOX MEN'S WINTER Work Shirts 1.97 "' Repeat Special-Smart Designs "' Pre-shrunk. 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