black wings and started out. He flew low above the treetcms. He flew low so that those sharp eyes of his wouldn't miss anything be- low that he could possibly eat. Now it happened that he was flying not far from the tall tir tree in the lonsome part or the Green romp. the very tree in which he and Mrs. Bitchy had built their nest the year before. THE GUARDIANLCHARLOTTETOWN E0O'IaOOMO9&IOMCOM contract Bridg By Josephine Cluberleon naoounrssu Denna: West's shrewd defensive maneuv- King Of The Royal Mounted 7KW5 . you-to-4 -- r-'0" He and Mrs. Blaoky had discovered er in the following hand proved By Thornton BLACKY FINDS OUT: FOR SURE Tie well not all folks think alike. And what some love, still more dislike. -Old Mothu Nature. Hooty the Owl had sold he thought it was going to snow. He wasn't mistaken. Presently fine grains of snow came sifting all through the Green Forut. Booty had found shelter in the telli fir me high up in which Mn. 1-Iooty had been looking over last veal": nest of Blacky the Oxow. Mrs. Hooty had not sought shelter in the tree as low as hsd Hooty; she had settled herself in that nest to keep the snow out of it. You me. she had made up her mind that they would take that next wI Burgess would rather have an old nest built by someone else, than go to the trouble of building a nest for tzhernselveeu It was late afternoon when the show began to fail. It fell steadily the rest or the eftecmoon. and nearly all night. It was as it Old Men winter was he I. last etling. By morning, ever 'ng was white. The snow clung to all the trees. to all the bushes, to all the vines. It was I. lovely white world. butltwue touahworld for many of the folks in feI.thex-I and fur. You see. the snow covered their food. and at best there was none too much at it. Binaky the crow was one of the first to start looking for I. break. fast. Long ago he learned that he who was first. fared best. so, at lop their own this year. They break of day, Blecky spread his WEDNESDAY. MABCHE l--1:00 THURSDAY. MARCH 5-1:00 P Mrs. Wnilua seentlehury. day, ltlarch 4, CBA (1:15 P.M. EDUCATION WEEK (MARCH 1-7) nsmo nnoancasrs oven CFCY-(,'HARLOTTE'l'0WN t MONDAY, MARCH I-1:15 P.M.- Dr. L. VV. Shaw, Donut, M. ' i TUESDAY, MARCH 3-1:00 P.M.- Dr. R. G. Lee, Chairman, Charlottetown school Bond. Mr. Kenneth Parker, Supervisor of Ch'town Public Schools. .11.- Home and School Association. FRIDAY, MARCH 6-4:30 P.Mu- Dr. Frank Macxlnnon, Prinolpol of Prince of Wales College. Listen in also to a C30 Maritime Broadcast; by Mr. Malcolm Mnclienzle, Chief Supervisor of Schools for 1'. E. I.-W'ednes- "WHAT IS RIGHT! WITH OUR SCHOOLS?" of Education for P.E.I. EM.- seeu-otery-Treuurer of r. B. 1. and 3:30 P.M. CFCY). Subject: Beavers. As from this date it age by flooding. February 18, 1953. NOTICE On November 17, 1952, the Minister of Industry and Natural Resources declared an open season on Notice is hereby given that this open sea- son shall expire on Saturday, February 28, 1953. shoot Beavers within the Province except in such cases where a special permit has been issued to a resident on whose property beavers are causing dam- DEPARTMENT OF INDUSTRY AND NATURAL RESOURCES Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, shall be illegal to trap or that Hooiy and Mrs. ooty. bla- gest of all the Owl amlly. had been looking that nest over. He wiernbered this now. and he decided to (ly near enough to see if there were any signs or those Owls around that nest now. He flew high. You see, he was playing safe. He flew high enough to feel sure that if those owls were in the neighborhood. they would not be likely to see him. or. if they did see him. would not be likely to catch him. He flew so as to pass directly over that fir tree so tlm-t he could look down right into it. Blacky's eyes are sharp. They are very sharp indeed. If they were not. Blacky would have a much harder time than he does getting food. and he has a hard enough time us it is especially in winter. He saw his nest when he was still some distance from that tree. He knew it was his nest, although it didn't look like a. nest at all. "It's full of snow." muttered Blaoky. ”lt'e full of snow, and heaped up. I don't see a thing of those Owls. I wonder if they really are planning to take that nest." He flew a. little higher. With s few more strokes of his black wings he would pass right over the top of that fir tree, and of the nest. He could look down on the letter and see it clearly now. It looked as if show had filled the nest, and then piled up in it. Then. just as it was directly beneath him so that he was look- ing straight down. a strange thing happened. A very strange thing happened. It made Blaoky miss :1 beat or two or his wirigs. That heap of snow in the nest below hlm seemed to explode. The snow flew in all directions. There. stand- ing up in the nest, stretching out her great wings, and shaking the snow from them. was Mrs. Hooty. "Awk!" cried Blncky. in startled surprise. Then how he did fly! He got away from there as fast as those wings of his could take him. He hoped Mrs. Hooiy hadnit. heard him, and that she hadn't seen him. but he didn't, wait to find out. Later he told Mrs. Bliwky all about it. "My dear," said he, "that Owl must halve been on that nest all night. She must have been there from the time the snow be- gan to fell. Imagine that! Any- way, I'm sure now." "What are you so sure of?" ask- ed Mrs. Black;-. "I'm sure those owls are going to use our nest this year ,and that that part of the Green Forest is going In be a place to keep away from." said Blacky. "The hateful things! We wanted that nest mu-selves this year. Now we've got to go to all the work of building a new one." declared Mrs. Li'l Abner wuars MAC DOING. TILLIE P HE at-louLD BE womvlrti Blacky, a. little tw much for the declarer. -1. South dealer. Both sides vulpenbie. .4104 i i UAJ985 013 p 4.5532 . . .Q. .JI75'. yqioos N . 2- '” w r '” .,Qy1o ' ' 9.1108! 91 S 4 QAK6 ' -v72 gaxqe .1..u(s4. rue hiildingi souur 'H'c-at North East. 2 Q rm 2 9 P18! 3 4. ' Pun 3 9 PI” 3 N '1' Pass Pass PIS! No one can deny that the six- plus honor-tricks (or 23 high-card poin-is) constitute a strong hand; but South was nevertheless on question-aable ground wh he siarted of with two diamonds. t of the leading experts would open the South hand with one club (to make it as easy as possible for partner to respond) and then, over a heart response. leap all the way to three notrump. However, South reached the same contract. West, opened the club queen, md East discarded a low spade. south won, and when he counted tricks he saw that two hearts would be required to fulfil the contract. Since delay would only give the opponents time to get set, South immediately led ll low heart to- ward dummy. If West had automatically play- ed low (us almost every defender would) South's proper course would have been marked for him .He would have put in the eight or nine on the chance of driving out the king or queen; then, on his next he-ert lead, he would finesse again. West, however. threw the proverbial monkey-wrench into the machinery - on the first heart lead toward dummy, he put in the queen! South's dilemma is obvious. He had to duck dummy at this point. and when he made his second hcert lead. how could he possibly tell that East now had the blank king? South was not a mind- reader. On the second lead he put in dumy's jack, and the consequ- ence was that he took no heart tricks. SOUTHAMPTON, England (OP) Avniversity of Southliampton stu- dents erected a 60-foot banner on top of the town's 280-foot clock tower. It took workmen nearly two hours to dispose of the ban- her. FEBRUARY” 27, 195; Biplane Gray By Alex Raymond M5 0,, gm . we ocuuo, we y W !'m,giaWV-- noeemoa one us some L elem: sun... mgKr5iK3EA;oTHLIOSm do ,,,, , aim?” Miss oomml 7' I'M GETTING Aunts; I'D nave was AM I -X GIN WAN? -Yam NAMGS... I READ WHERE YOU AND JOE ARE FLYING TMAKI IT... TO AUSTRALIA... You TE seen it! MV WAY ALL PAY, NAPOLEON; .z By Al Capp EVERY- 'me mix: HE won in His aawums LEAGUE AH NEVAH nzroozzs A DARE T"I'll.l.1'H'TIU'l'H.'.'-AH'SSTAYlN' Bzcuz AH IS ovmwcooeiosrrv rsu: n. VOKUWS ".4 if lg I'D SAY YOU DESERVE!) v A DOLLAR--DID YOU GET THOSE GRADES N0. 2 DREAMEP LAST Niel-rr THAT I: GOT I00 IN EVERYTHING! NOW, ON Your 21! PROGRAM W! couw HAVE A mtuerrsuov "The FIASCO KID wkmles AGAIN.” Tippy and "Cup" Stubs TI El JASPURR! c'M' qr :n"a ;1'lME To so h ED” -iMPoa1'ANr WHERE'S JASPURR ?? 0,, A guy; muygmggggwn-. on we all gurgu A nmref bo.olncA:.'mxm'ANvm,e . Mix mam": Ia wiI'hh'I3rAu7t suowmuam u L woooen mT.mmw&;Wp Mum uptofbrl ' 9.3.-.. ANlMAl5 mo mu: ux: tour; A Wmwhd . Bohxirqofbtrs mwrouqmy . s mruprz :4 I Iimpkm. 5407)! uestbemcsem 9rIW5”7P'tr9 Au!" 6000 cazlsed rsinltl (- N AGAIN EST 5 E, on TH?TFEENCE!! IVA! A -weurv-YEAR RECOQDEYEB) SIR I ii I ill I. . Wail .... . . . i am; as war woo: I xpu BlG LOAF-rill! HA ANV OF vou LOAFI CALL 1.9 bits! IN THE BUTIJEI I'LL P10 cu-r MY mesons mime ., mu II-.50.: t..m..n. v.iu,e-an-.4 PENNY WEGVEPS. ill. SAV HE IS. HE HAD A 0lFf:EPENCE OP OPNION wm-a 11-45 LAs1' NAN HI MDQKED IMP... 5 X701) 4 IHAVEI-i"i' DECIDED. IS HE &G F0? 7 ewuousu n- ? I5 I-we FODCEFUL Mo IIGGRISSNI? di .E