PAGE TWEIJVE .2- ,THE GUARDIAN. ACHARLOTTETOWT4 SEPTEMBER 24. 1952 keep him so buy now? By and by. when the nuts begin to fall from the trees. he naturally will be busy. All the Squirrel folk will be busy. Just watching them then some- times makes me feel tired all over. Put there are no nuts yet, so what :can he be so busy about?" If Peter had followed Stripe-1 Chipmunk he probably would have been even more puzzled. He would By Thornton T00 nosv TO TALK Keeping busy is the way To quickest pass the dullest day. -Striped Chipmunk striped Chipmunk hasn't I lazy bone in his small body. There isn't a lazy hair in his pretty striped coat. when there is work to be done he does it. Long, long ago he learned that keeping busy is the neat way of getting things done and being happy all day long. Thus doesn't mean that he works all the time. No one should work all the COMPLETE VISUAL REFRACTION AND ANALYSIS G. F. HUTCHESOH 8: SON Optometrists 53 Grafton St. ANNUAL QUEEN'S in every day. Striped Chipmunk had lived well and had taken it very easy all through the summer. Now, summer was over, or almost over. It was time to look ahead to the coming of winter, and Striped Chipmunk was doing just this. Peter Rabbit" met him at the end of thenold Stone Wall beside the Old Orchard. cried Peter. "H1!" cried Striped Chipmunk, jumping from one stone to another on the top of the Old Wall. but not ”Hl!" stooping. "Wait a minute!" striped Chipmunk did stop for a moment. ”What for?" he asked. "Why. just to talk a little," said Peter lamely. Too busy W. Burgess time.-' There is a time to work and a time to play, and a time to rest. cried Peter. reported Striped have thought that striped Chip- munk didn't know his own mind, lessly. He wouldn't have noticed that those bright little eyes were looking on all sides. this way and ready the seeds were on certain plants. He probably wouldn't have noticed that Striped Chipmunk was visiting all the hazelnut bushes and all the nearby nut trees. Striped Chipmunk was finding out for him- self just what plants had the most of his favorite seeds. what trees and hazelnut bushes would have the most nuts on them. Striped Chipmunk was ahead and making plans. He was finding out for himself where the most food would easiest be gathered when the time come. He knew that Happy Jack the Gray Squirrel. Chatterer the Red Squirrel and Rusty the Fox Squirrel would all be looking for those same nuts but was just running about afm- i that, looking to see how nearly 5 looking ' Chipmunk. "Too busy to waste time talking." T "Pooh!" said Peter. ”Talking a little isn't wasting time." "Perhaps it isn't for you, but it is for me." replied Striped Chip- munk. And away he raced sis if he were in a great hurry. Peter watched him until be dis- appeared. ”I never have seen such a fellow," said he, talking to himself. "What in the world is there to I when the time came. Because they were so much bigger than himself, they would be able to cheat him of his share of nuts unless he was there first. and knew Just which tree or bush had the most and easiest to gather. so now he was ,a very busy small person. running here and running there. and tuck- ing away in his memory the places he would visit first when the time PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE Canadian Legion Hall, Grafton Street, Charlottetown Thursday, October 2nd, 8:00 P. M. MEETING. COUNTY Reagh Bagnall, President. ASSOCIATION came. While he was doing this he was also tucking away in the pockets in his cheeks such seeds Fax he found. Some of these he would take home to eat, others he idnys to come when no more seeds :were to be. found. ; Whenever he saw Peter Rabbit he tried to avoid him, tried to keep tout of Peter's sight. "Peter is lazy. if like Peter, but he is lazy. and I just can't afford to be lazy. No, sir, I can't afford it. It may be nice ito be lazy and do nothing. but I'm 9sure I Wouldn't enjoy it, There is nothing like keeping busy to make iiime fly." said Striped Chipmunk to himself. Happily Mrs. striped Chipmunk agreed wtth him. As for Peter. he just couldn't .see why anyone should do any 1 more than he just had to. There is SPECIAL DANCE EAST ROYALTY HALL Wednesday, September 24th Music by Rollie McKenzie's Orchestra In aid of the Pu-kdale Arrows Baseball Ciuli Bus leaving tenninal at 9:30 ui no thrift in Peter Rabbit. Work .:ind ilirift are two things Peter knows very little about. NINA; IIIILE Stimulating and delicious! DUTY! DRIPPLE UNCLE HORACE, WHAT DO YOU Ti-HNK I SHOULD HAVE TO MAKE THE GHZL5 LIKE ME ? GOOD LOOKS, AND A ' BRAINS. PeizsoNAi.i:D SHARP WIT! would take home to store away for V l f TEA-T" E MM--THE WAY I SEE IT, I WOULDN'T NEED ANY OF THOSE THlNC:S IF I PROVE A YELLOW CONVERTIBLE! out”-one-cco&ooc contract Bridge T. By Juephlao Culbertson . 90 OQ' BETTER Tm!!! HOPED A well-calculated sacrifice bid by South in the following deal had an unevn-ct-c' 'j'W"fL -' East ddalir... a Both sides vulnerable. QQl07' .9AJ42- . QA98 ' 4.1072 grass 4!-K08 42 N 955 9x1o97 w E 0 4 i S AAKJD NIQS E3 Q.. QQG3, picqnocsaz ass" , Tine bldding' East South West. 1 1. 1. ' 3: 4; 44 Dble. Pass 5. Pass Pass Dble. Pass Pass PM! The only thing that could have defeated an East-west contract of even iive spades was the double- dummy opening of a low diamond by North; hence, South's five- diamond takeout of North's double would have been sound even if he had gone down a trick. Actually however, he fulfilled his own'doubi- ed contract. West opened the club queen: East overtook and cashed the club ace. then laid down the spade king. South riified and ran off six more trninp tricks, reaching this posit- ion: 9:- Va 5009 icon ll, West had to blank his spade jack in order to keep adequate heart protection, and South read the situation perfectly. He led a low heart to the jack and played the spade queen through East, with the intention of discarding a heart if East did not cover, Actually, East chose to cover. and South, after ruffing, had the promoted spade ten in dummy for the vital trick. DAN'S BOTTLE '4 Clean It nfsly with Baking Soda. y . "T "M" 0" '8i'.'.1i't"5..u iiml. r t i In lltl mg. uuimi. , i COW BRAND i BAKING SODA i:'fiTiIioi-u V NUMBER 'n7.e4,l”HAsS WHO .'.' THEY'S AFTER ME,WIF SHOT- NDS .'.' . -...a..-....... . -...a... .. ...2”..'.? l6 wnEv?E T AVANGLEQE C-X2 ik ENT ONE? Tl-1 AND Tl-ERE5 no 5-an or ms CXLL us rum 9251: E 5E96EANT..- BEEN SW EFT BOUY .Z'M AFRMD I'LL LAME TWNSTREMK F02 MlLES IN THIS CUQEENY... x I EH1. ITSELF... THER':"LL BE ...AN() FEWER TO MOiJRN...WELL,PERJ-MP5 5ovlEwHERE, T1-IE MANGLER ni'.L ' an-D THE AiER(N HE NEVER --'T : ' -AD FOR OYHER5... ANN BDDV HENRY W Aijdemon v MP. EIMPKINS WENT TO DOES THAT PICTURE OF I ARA ratts on His we FALL9 REMIND N A6 u vou or Anvrume9 HONEYMOON. I'LL 6 OW HIM THIS PHOTO MAC SENT ME AND P 124 GEE! Tl-i' GURL NEXT Doop. WHO CAME WAS Awr.'uL PRETTY" 90”" . 1, ii1V745ytlLrlJ ”' (',”Mx.ii,, . i(in,.r.- a "HER NAME WAED BETTY LoUiSE"AN' SHE THOUGHT I WAS Ti-t' BEST FELLA SHE EVER SAW GTANDlN' ON 4 65-v .” .4” P , P ,,,,,,,,VW,,,C,N, 6!. -BNTHIRTV VA - K , I I SEC: AH MAINGLED FASHIONED 7:2. - 'giV;,”” 70'? blsi WIF LADlES- VEILS BEFORE. - I5 AJFEAEEP Mueumi TAKE IT MATT”; J , 7154 JOE PALOOKA - T-THANK you A THANKS A THE E POLIC ”,jf57” can RUSHES oaessme f:,?2QE COME ow, Now.'.I'vz wAs1'ev FIFTEEH MINUTES uuzema you re we ms coo uverz on. 1 HOSPiTAL - TD JUMP. IDAi'”i'KANONvVl-l5NAIVIHAD 5IOC'AC?OM- .