THE UNPLANNEI) JUMPING L-H. not vanity attend, Lent, you rue it in the end. , .0111 Mother Nature, outside the dear Old Briar-patch.'a Jumper mop Why is it that b.giicH so often looks down on smallness? Big tolits look down on small iollts. and smtill iokks look down on snialler Lightioot the Dezr is a big per-ton Compared with him, Peter Rabbit Mouse faintly are Very sintill people . Llghtloot is ii great Juniper 'I”lio.se, slim legs or his take liiin up into the air, and over bin-h and iences as if there were giant :3. good Jitiiipcr, and is as proud oi his jumping as Liglitiout is of lilS. Nimbleheels the Jillilpliig Mouse is It. jumper, too, its yotl nuiiltt kiioii hy his iiaiiie. Peter legs, and so does Niniblehccls. Long hind legs are aliiais jiiinpiiig lezs. Peter does a lot of jllliiltliig ii-lirii he is ,travelling about. and II. hop is rrally a short initr). Nimbleheels doesn't do iniicli jiiinp-l ing unless he has he creeps aiiout when Now it just happened that tlivsr three Jiiiiiping folks were lo;ethci' on the Green Meadows at the t-tier. or the dear old Bi'il1.r-patch. Light-1 crossed the Green Meadows on his Thornton W. Burgess ,toot had wiiiidered out there to teen. ionce in a while he like: good grass land clover, and leaves the Cvrerii it-'oresi to gel ll. He and Peter are i i ii, ,ill. 7 7-sl.'ivI W in II” .. ,watcliing Lightloot. Neither oi, p F, , - he 4.-.. ..mmm them saw Niinbleheels iii the grassi,WB.V 10 "15 Old P35lU1'9- H9 I109?” , betweeii them. tto iind the trail of Ready Fax. or i Ligliiiooi never leels wholly at 0f MT-9 R5ddi'4T119-W R” '-W0 101” eiiw: when he is out in the open. H15, whom he dearly 10V85 10 1"H"-- H0 was ruiitiniially lilting his head tori 1133 H0 111131791 With 81'-her 01 them. .1 quick look iiroiiiid. Peter was sit- tiiip; up as he watched Lightioot he can see better sitting tip. Nlni-, low in that wits against their skill and wins. Un b.PiiPPlS was squatting he t't)ilid iiol possibly see the tall giass. it was pcacciiil there, in on the Ul'(ll'ii Meadoiis. it was 138 . Slllllig up would have been N5 ii'9.V I0 tor him bccaiise even soiulmc ,mm.,.'(lear Old Briar-pritch. It was on nothing whatever against them. His Qhiiniiiig at them is in truth a game. lit is 8. matching of his skill and the Old Pasture, he d aside to visit the edge 0!: the e other side at the Old Briar- tcii that Lightioot and Peter and lovely 1, mun-L seem as 11 me,-,.lNimblelieela were enjoying the Could be such .1 tiling as danger in quiet and peace of early evening. that part oi the Great Woi'ld. Titty could not see nowser coming. Bows;-r mp Round mm min." it nor ('0lll(I he see them, because the lulu lib head to do a little hunting, on his tiwii, it wasn't that he want-' fold Briar-patch was in between. Bowser reached the end of the ed to Kill aiiybociy. It wasn't tn;ii,0ld Brlar-imtcii without his pre- he was hungry and needed mod. It'39”C9 M51118 Suspected. H5 03""? IV was just that Bowser enjoys hunt-i round the end, and there right in mg. He liiinls just ior tun. old ”''3”'' 01 mm W35 L1EMI00t- NOW Mother Nature has given him I gaine. a sort of puzzle game. iinnaeriui nose. He likes to use hi now and then to follow the traiisi i oi other iollt. To llilii, is it a sort (W at Boii-ser is not in the habit oi chas- ing Deer. He had been trained not to. But Just tor a minute or two unexpected closeness of Lightioot iivas too much for him. With a roar Bonner had slipped away from 01 1115 deer V0168. he SDTBHK 301” Farmer Brown 's 'l'() SEI"l'. QR IN(iI.liSlVFI DAILY linelnillng Siliitluysl. STANDARI) TIME. 1 and 9 am. -- ll a.in., 1. 3 and 5 p.m. For full information contact Head Office at Charlottetown. where, by making application at least 48 hours in iitlraner-, rmiervation.-i may he st-eiiretl for llrst antl seeontl iuiillngs, each day from each terminal. For tlaily rr-port lislnn to first News Ermitlcnst 6:30 S.T.. 7:30 l).S. Time. CATCH AN EARLY CROSSING AND AVOID DELAY. NORTHUMBERLAND FERRIES LIMITED. CIIARLOTTETOWN. P. E. I. From tench terminal til"(,'V P.Hl'II morning following NOTICE Owing to dredging at Caribou not being completed and prevailing Spring Tides on July 8th and 9th. Heavy Trucks will not be carried on 5 pm. sailings from Wood Islands on these dates. NORTHl'iMBERLAND FERRIES, LTI). R. E. Mulch, President. 409,-yard and ward. Perhaps he did it Just to see lluighiioot Jump. tor Lightioot, jump- iing, is always worth seeing. Oi icouise, Lightioog did jump. Away he went in a series of jumps or bounds. They were beauiitui to see. ;At the same time, Peter Rabbit il)Olll)CCd away as it there were isprings under him, and troni almost iunder Bowser'a nose. little Nimble- lheels. the Jumping Mouse, took to itlie air. It was a beautiful long Hump, his long tail straight out be- hind him kept him balanced just as the tail of a kite keeps it bal- ianoed and steady in the air. So. iiaowaer saw at one time three or i the greatest jumpers of the Green .Forest and the Green Meadows. land little Nimhleheels was the Ibcst, jumper oi the three. i i NOTICE l l N The Annual Meeting of The Masonic Temple Company will be ,held in the ofliee of E. R. Brow 8: Son, 144 Richmond Street, on Wednesday the 9th day of July lproximri, at 7 o'i:loi'k p.m. I J. B. BIMHV. Seer:-tnry. iCliai'lriitetown, P. E. I. itlunc 25th. 1952. rue GUARDIAN. dI?OOWeG0&GOsCeCOZOW ' I contract Bridge Li B; Jouplilno Culbertnn (Q QNQWOVQOD-3ie60jO9m Mrs. Culbertson continue: the presentation or the new Culbertson point-count. me- thou. A brief review or the most im- portant leatures covered last. week will be uaetul. In the Culbertson method at .old irlerids. Peter was sitting just Nlmmbheeu the Jumping Mon” is valumg hands accordmg w I poml count, the most popular and east” to-remember 4-3-2-1 count in used ii. 9.. each tee is valued at 4 points, each king at 3. each queen at 2, .and each iacit at 1. When opening the Iiidding with 1a notriimp, these high-card values lare the only ones to be counted. iIn responding to partner: notrump, ihoivever, it is proper to count not ioniy the high cards but l(.-ngtli- values. Thus, if .respohder has a hand which suggests a raise or notrump, he should add to his high- card count an extra 1 point for a live-card suit. This is onty logical. because, iortiiicd by the honors .which opener probably holds in that suit, the iiitn card can very oiten be established. The proper count for an original one notrump is 16 to 18 point: -- neither more nor less. For It two- iiotrump opening there should be 22 to 24 points - neither more nor less. For three notrump, the hand should contain 25 to 27 points. The raise or an opening one no- trunip to two notrump requires 8 or 9 points. including the point which may have been added because of ii live-card suit. Holding 10 to 14 points, responder should raise dir- ectly to three notrump, and with more than 14 points. he should make I slam try. It the opening bid is two notrump. responder needs only It points for I! raise to game, but he also gives the saine raise to game with as much as 8 points. Beyond that, res- ponder should make a. slam try. Both players must bear in mind at all times that 26 points in the combined hands should provide it good play tor three notrump. that. 33 combined points should offer A good play for It small slam, and that 37 combined points make I gi-and-slam venture extremely at- tractive. t The pi'z-icticiil application of this advice is as lollows: Opener bit-is one iiotrump on 18 points. I-Its partner raises him to three notrump. showing a maximum oi 14 points. Opener should not be tempted to continue in search of a slam be- cause he happened to hold tire maximum notruimp opening: by sid- dinz his own 18 points to his part. ne:'s maximum of i4. he gets a tot- al of 32, which. at best. is one im- portant point short or the slam re. quirement, and which may be even 5h0"e1' if iiartner did not have the maximum holding. WE IN THAT aAsr.-, pazwnv :9 By Walt Kelli YOU HA MEMBEKEZ WED OF SEEN IN' AND LOOK N' FOR HIM-" '71? Ar: turf. --To ASK uiM WHAT we the 7 GOT AND WE GDIII-DN'1' OF Hwt AND IF we couwN'iAsK HIM we Mieur NEVER HAVE Kiioweiz wt Fozeor HIM. i.-... M. ,.. :. kuunnt 1...... -an nu um run ... WEWE SO GWITEFUL TO VQJ BOTH FOR Vouk usL yo mm. ti... a VP nu-m unnu- SO PAGAN'5 DEAD. EU! I SUPPOSE THAT'S HER GHOST WALl(IN' INTO . WELL, YOU ASKED ME TO GIVE jf2JN1V HONEST; UNSVASED oewicrsi. f m r K l YO.) SAIDVU SPEAK E161-TT OUTANDTELLVOJ VVHATI IZEALLY THINK. HOiNDiDI KNOVVVITJ VVEEE 0 N670 DISAGEEE WITH I CHARLOTIETU W N ROYAL MOUNTED HEMAkt5 4M4; 1. ya.- ' ntemve AlEMEFf5.'!V5V mvauw sow; V14 as 704 73 my Paulie w - Mu mu ta nw I . ' (N070 war! . -o--&.?2 mm I6 4 ouwtri rm; VAL Li X MAW-up MVE meg Pz.4aIE.A'INa.' 1" ' t . , . EfAMP5,I'MP1llWlMKA 7?MFEfA THPEMI-I M115T 6'57 EACK TOIMY IIEADOIMPTEI5 . JULY 8, 1952 EL t.)'.7ra4451ai,&: HMS I5 501?! ll L 1 DAiSY. DEAR- WILL YO' KINELY GIVE ME ' KIDDY BANK.'.' HOWDY, JOE...HELLO, ' HELLO, HARRY. WE MET HIM IN THE HALL. I CAME TO THANK YOU FOR THAT xuoesv. you JUST Missso NARVINO. Hats sums A COCKY mo! ADVANCE. -roo BAD 1: um; 12: so BACKTO THE OFFICE. NOW . . I'LL uavem I CAN'T WAIT! NOW5 MY CHANCE WHILE ALL THE BOVS APE HAVKNG LUNCH TH' NEXT av as -AWTHEN-lT'S HE MEAN5 we AIN'T 601 No , um: cAiH...EV'RVTHlNGS IN 1 . mvimmmre...1i4,AI's , 4 mm HE MEANS... .4 someones - I'LL -I'D HATE To HAVE AWOF an-lose OFFICE WOLVES 95: NE Now: YOUR MOTHER WOULD HAVE APPROVED-r I'M 3URFIRlSEDSAARTNj?U. iiJ BRINGINC. UP FATHER DOGS AND cars BELONG OUToF DOORS. AND NOT lN we HOUSE! NEVER 0”! 04-49! w'L'Ll., I'M STILL '; MAD AT YOU? av G'WAN HOME! ' rm NOT MAD AT ' You ANY MORE! Ii W; 1?-0'1-qvllnub-vAlnIuIIn-ire In .. . . .4. -.A ... .-.A.-. -... A-- By George McM;iiiii3 LOOK WHO”; COMING I GUESS WE'VE WALKED I HEARD HEP SAY ENOUGH - l,lCOr?iCE I LET'S FWD A PESTAUPANT '.' 60 ON-A ma EEOINNINS IMMEDIAYELVI V D(-DEFY DRIPPLE i :7 ' HORACE! coma HERE, PLEASE! I HOPE YOU AVPRECIATE THE SACRIFICES VOUR FATHER MAKES FOR YOU”