. r 5. ya. I z.,r . ,. ;crowded with children. The Tiny Folk ,lA real story at real ehltdnal (er veryyellgohlldnenl I "Corns on. children. let's all get together in our yard this morning." suggested Helen. "School will be starting again and then there won't be as much time for playing. Pe- ter, you ask Susan and David and Laurie to came over. I'll ask Alan and Janet. and we'll call Donnie. Sybil, Jeannie. and Marie over too. We'll have run together." Before ten minutes the yard was Frisky had tagged along too for of course, Where Laurie went. Frisky went ' too. Laurie had wanted to take Linda. but Mrs. Page thought Linda had better play at home. "Now that we are all here. what are we going-to play?" asked Sybil. ”I guess I'll play horse," spoke up Peter. "Laurie and David will be my horses." "Oh no," inlerruted Helen. "This is one time we are going to all play together. I know. let's play circus " "How do you do that?" inquired ' Alan. 0.: "We'll each act something," de-, cided Helen. "We can sing orll dance or say a rhyme. or do a; stunt. We'll make a circus tentl out of blankets. You'll all have to, help." And they all did help. The girls tugged and pulled at the blankets until they had them fixed. Laurie and David brought big stones to hold down the edges. Peter and Alan got two boards and put them on harrlivood blocks from the woodpile for seats. "I'll be the dancing girl." de- cided Sybil. "My skirt is right full and swisky. Look!" and she twirled herself around. "I'll be the clown and do somer- snulls." grrinned Peter. "Since I'm wearing my cowboy suit I'll be Roy Rogers," said Alan. "I'll use this old brown handle for my horse. Wait until I find a paper bag to make his head." .Ianet thought a while. "I think I'll play the piano and sing. Lend me your top piano. Helen." Susan and Laurie hung back for they just didn't know what they should be. "I'll be the big lion and roar." laughed Donnie. "This empty box can be my cage." , "I'll be I stunt driver." spoke up Jeannie. "I'll drive my tricycle round and round the ring. Maria is too little to do anything by her- self. so she can ride with me." "Bang, bang. bang," went David with his red water pistol. "I'll snnm Ejoll NEVER JUDGE BY LOOKS Looks may help. but never trust Looks alone, unlus you must, -Old Mother Nature. Johnny Chuck's young son who had. wandered into the Green For- est and become lost, was face to face with a stranger. "Who are you?" grumbled the stranger. "The young chuck said nothing. He had lost his voice. He was af- raid. He wanted to run to a place of safety, but he didn't know where. All he could do was stare most lmpolltely. "Have you lost your voice?" ask- ed the stranger. His own voice wasn't wholly pleasant. It was part grumble and part whine. The young chuck found his voice at last. "I'm Buster," said he in a small voice. "Buster iihal?" demanded the stranger. ”The only Buster I know is Buster Bear." -.-.m:..n.:.:?L others laughed at three year old David, so his part was settled. "And what are you, Laurie?" asked Helen. Laurie grinned up at her. "I'm going to be the audience." he said. "Some one has to sit in the seats to watch. Frisky will sit near me too." Audience was a new word for Laurie. for he had heard It just quite well for a big boy not yet tour. "I'll be the audience too," Sus- an added quickly for she usually did whatever Laurie did. "Now I think we are about all settled as to what we are to be." said Helen. "It will take some of us a few minutes to get ready, then the circus will begin." "When I saw the circus last time," Laurie remembered. "they had elephants and they paraded. The clowns did stunts and they had animals in cages too." "All right. We'll start off with a parade first." agreed Helen. '”We'll all be in it. You run and get your horn and drum. Peter, so we can have some music. After that we'll do our acts." Then the children all got very busy getting themselves ready and shoot the Indians." "That will be just great." the .. M. V. "BLII and rates up ly to P.v0. Box 65 Freight will be accepted until noon Thursday, August 26th for next sailing. PRINCE" to St. John's, Nfld. 0 NE UNDLAND SHIPPING SERVICE tomorrow you'll hear more about their circus. . Blue Peter Steemshlps Ltd. E PRINCE" of M. V. "BLUE r space reservations - Dial 8737 The Neighbors hi vv r -1 . r... m. J "' News nu.-.u. r. -. Ofud, 7-3 .1; ” "Well, if that's all there is t to L??- learn it." ly George Clerk '1 J 1 i o the silly game I don't want the day before, but he managed It - I d I B! I I . a By Thorton W . Burgess "I'm Buster Chuck. rm a wood- chuck," replied Buster, still in a lather small voice, but gaining con- fidence. "If you please, who are you?" "Don't tell me you don't know who I am. Everybody in the Green Forest knows me," replied the other. "But I've never been in the Green Forest before, so how should I know who you are?" replied the young chllck. Then a surprising thing happened. It startled the young chuck so he couldn't move. The black stranger whose coat seemed to be of long hair. sudden- ly became another person altogeth- er. He seemed to be half again as big as he had been. and he had the strangest looking coat the young chuckthad ever seen. In- stead of a coat of long black hair, he seemed to be wearing an odd- looklng coat of stiff. pointed, white and black hairs that didn't look like hairs at all. Then as sudden- ly as the stranger seemingly had changed his coat, he changed it back again. "Now, do you know who I am?" he asked. When he managed to find his voice the young chuck confessed that he still didn't know. He did not like to admit it. but he really had no idea at all who this strange- looklng, strange-acting person was. "I'm Prickly Porky, the Porcu- pine," sald the stranger. trying to make his voice sound important "Nobody dare touches me," he boasted. "When I come along. everybody gets out of my way." The young chuck looked at Prick- ly Porky-'s big front teeth. "I should think they would," said he. "I've never seen such teeth as yours." "It isn't my teeth they are afraid of," replied Prickly Porky. "It is these." Once more he seemed to change coats. Of course what he did was simply to make the thousand little Page 10 The Gua.".lan Wediegy, Aug. 25, 1954 . . "Now do you know who I am?" he asked. spears called quills appear through the hair of his coat. "Oh!" exclaimed the young chuck, and backed away a little. Prickly Porkly looked as pleased as was pouible with such a dull face as his. "That is why nobody dares touch me," said he. "Any- one who touches me. gets hurt." VII! .' ; ;'fm.'ii'l.”'i'l”s Ymaqhnallinlmutbuaog Pidgetlag. nose-picking and I tor- utenN rec Itch are often tell- tale signs of Pin-Warns... fa I17 nfest one out ol every t as per- aana examined. Entire families may be victims and not know it. lllad la the large intestine where tlizr live and multl3lGThat'I a- se y what JayIe'a - tableh do .. . and here's how they do It: ' Fi'nt---a salentlfle coating ear- riu the tablets Into the bowels ht fore they dissolve. Thevu- I 'l modern, medically-approv in- redlent goes right. to worli- ' in-Woi-nu quickly and easily. a Don't talg glances Vilth this angarona. 1 coats; can con- Illtlon. At the tlyrat algn at Pla- rnia, ask your at genuine Innis P-W V . . . the small, easy-to-take tablet: pen- teetetl by famous Dr. D. Jayne 3 Son. specialists In worn: remedies for over 100 years. c I l I 2 l i i 'o'ATi"?'ci2'6's s w'd R D ' 9-Acnoss "'2. mm-.(ea.) I. Talk 3. Club a 4. Hecklel 3. Conductor's 9. Earthen wands i our (55).) (mum) to. 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'enf'oic' 'Er'1”sI3iitRal iussmo avtwmi Lower swmaunrm. .-- - Mp N a !'-I Lllo ovwvl , . and: for another? In ti1ir35tllIl5iTA.'ia' used for the two 0'a.'ote.' Blnglo lettrrs, apoao; trophies. the nngui and formation of tho ' ;Es9lI gday.thLcogo'letten aro.dlloront.”" .. -. ed "A orypnsg-:LOuouugi, , .- . ' g. 1. 11:14.11 21. An'-e Authorl. BEG ytative decree These are issued by ,, III P039 . I-Ikllsiffl g 'omc9g HIS!!!-I Lll.'II-till! 23. Photo-, 'vw.-aw '- '1' ',,pm., jXeeterday'o AIOIOI low a .29. Lau hln l4.rrq':iii-. to Old: S i(8cot.) mcuum ' 26.Irrltation: -I ' jot the rngth. . itkips g 7: Bucket 20.Monetary "...Greek letter; ” unit: , J0. Narrow inlet iEcua.): . . ” moi.) ” I A R K II" ,u:oi-so are all hmts.',' -dbwivuh... omtct JKLJI Qckbl csvo ..vKtv OGK1," 0l.KO.- ' LAUGHTER IN, nan imz- Grandma fT GIVIS MI AN IDIA I I'LL aovs. I'M 0OIN' DOWNTOWN AN' IEIPGOBABLY BE GONE TILL lNlN'.(' -- . 1 NOW MAYII I WON'T HAVE 1" SPIND ALL DAY 'l"MOIlOW MAl(IM' OPAPI JAM AN'.)ILLV.'.' by Charles Kuhn By Fran Strike..- Buz Sawyer EH5 Kefl Henry Pogo i'l Abner Bringing Up Father Tilly The Toiler Muggs and Skeeter Mickey Mouse YW , PLENTY or C2 SAM 3 eerrwe er.-ousu EXERCISE? M ed. IUZ. IIIAVE NEWS. JUST -IICIIIID WDIIS 10 Hill iwisiv IF 1 Know! TlIlY'VF 601' A llllllldlll sums DOWN 1'uin,ANn A commas coat. AMYII mar wm-r -to st: WHICH cm mg 115 MDJIT 1'0 nun. M0 YWR MIWET TD KI BV ROV Crane LOFS OF THINGS COULD HAPPEN R4 y-go”! Ja-.l.l?;'.vl.. l 1 I, , ii!) &. -I-e '- ING wi-uirvou nreo IFANV"-' IF He oossm i.u,pAi..'i.iow's vouo IS ACCIDENT SHOULD HAPPEN STOP HANGING HEALTH? oewicwe lNSui2ANCE',PAl..'.' 70 YOU mm” KNOW, ADOUNDYOU HE'S WHO GETETHE PART; DoN'l'.)'Ou 3.2- 54: DOES .f' ms one so-is - HAP-PE x--h f THINGS GOING TO e......-..-...........v..!..... y m nab.-y:.aai-n , . ' g. g , p . my lune ' v;mill'M4tv I'M BIGINNING 10 an IT! -n-issi: ARE rwzv -ro-rsi . . see, oouaic-mp, Woo 3:112: snar WATU-IING vow: wsisurt Jurr urr wand 4 i wear on ma siour-DAV mat; MAC OVER TO THEATER TO GET MY A TICKET '1?) THAT, NEW PLAY MV BQOTHEP COQIIEV EJAID VES CGAING OVER TO EEE. Dosh" wot?-Iv I WCXJLDNT 'TPl.v5T' TOOK MV THE BI WIFE you! so pow-r sou DAPE '- 60 OUT! we corn: vocal music wan-vi -ms pm MOVID uvcnuoex--z'i.L an COHKEVJD one Ml! M?! Jl6dG! women Io I-Jsira - sin 7 BV Paul Robinson By Carl Anderson Bv Bob Gustafson By Wally Bishop By Walt Disney By Walt Kelly coma -pass ' HONEST ABE IS OUR'N.'.' uArcHI:nu- our, AT u.As'r, mutt ws. is Lgl-l ! ii! iii I I i ll"' 'lUii By George bAcNlanus