' (01 a '11! Pillars pipe. the Robins sing, ‘And drummers drum‘ to welcome i —Peter Rabbit. . Peter Rabbit has spring lever. Everybody. at least everybody in the country. has spring fever at 1N8 time or year. It is catching. It is so catching that you may catch it 1mm the Jolly Little Sun- beams. or the Merry Little or Irom little sounds. happy little sounds, from every- where. Peter has caught it from all o! them, and irom no one or nothing at all. He usually feels it first in his heels, his long nar- row heels. It was so now. He couldn't keep them still. No. sir, he couldn't. They took him lip- periry. lipperty. lip over to the Smiling Pool to listen to the happy pipers there. Peeper the 3311a and his Irlends. Then his long heels took Peter over to the Green Forest. At the edge oi’ the alder swamp at the head of the Smiling Pool he stopped to listen to the ‘fire-la- iia-lee" o! Redwing the Blackbird. He stopped again iarther on at the edge oi the Green Forest to listen to the “Cheer up! Cheer up! Cheer up, cheerl" o! Welcome Robin in the top oi one of the tallest trees. "Listening to that how could anybody help but cheer up?" thought Peter. 'I‘hen he kicked up his heels in his iunny way and went on. He had gone but a little way when he met his big cousin, Jumper the Hare. “Hello. Cousin Peter! How do you do?" cried Jumper. "I've got spring lever," replied Peter “Who hasn't?" retorted Jumper. Then both kicked up their long i heels in the most ioolish manner. Any one seeing them would have known that they had spring fever. Happy foolishness is one oi the sure signs oi this catching fever oi’ early spring. “Rat-a-tat-tat-tat. Raiumtat- tat.tat.tet.tat." Drummer the Woodpecker was drumming as only he can when he finds a drum to suit him. "Rst.a.tst.tat.tet.tat.” The sound oi.’ that drumming was carrying iar through the Green iorest and wt over the Green Meadows. ' “He's drumming a welcome to Mistress Spring. I wish I could drum like that." said Peter wist- Iul . "You can thump, can't you? ‘You can make it mean the same thing. Drumming is only thump- ing very fast. when Drummer drums like that everybody knows it is ttor love" and happiness be- ‘cause Mistress Spring is here," said Jumper. He thumped the ground with a long hind. toot. "And when I thump like that those who hear it know that I do it for the same reason. Anyway Mrs. Jumper does, and she is all 1 care about." "Listenl" cried Peter. “There's a real drummer! I suppose he is drumming for love and happiness.” It was ‘rhundercr the Ruiied Grouse. The sound came rolling out from deeper in the Green Forest. It began with slo'w beats that quickened and quickened until they became a long roll like dis- tant thunder. "Ot course he is drumming for love and happiness,” agreed Jump- er. “And ior Mrs. Grouse and Mistress Spring and the Joy of liv- lng." he added. Drummer the Woodpecker rest- ed. So did Thunderer the Grouse. I-t was very still there in the Green Forest. The stillness was broken by a faint, soft sound that caused Peter to prick up his cars. Some- one was drumming. There was no doubt about that. It was very soft drumming but it was drum- ming. There was no doubt at all about it. "Whitcfoot the Wood Mouse,” said Jumper. "He does it with his iront feet." ' "He must have spring lever too," said Peter. "I don't know about that. He does it at other times. just as you and I thump at other times. Per- U'L ABNER nnornronw W.‘ Burgess) . .. 111s jumping. They both kicked up their long heels in the most ioolish 111811119!‘ haps we thump. to warn or signal others. And it may be he is doing it now because he really is happy like the rest o! us because Mistress Spring is here. I don't know." said Jumper. "Anyway he is a drummer," said Peter. "And it is spring!" cried Jumper. and thumped so fast with his hind feet that he was almost drumming himself. aenuuMMMNKnunnnslnuunnrln Contract Bridge By Josephine Culbertson l >1 n s1 n n n n n u rffldfifi up] >1 n n n >1 rennnufl)!’ BAD BIDDING, BUT WORSE DEFENSE South misused a valuable bid in today's deal and as a conse- quence reached a hopeless contract. That is, it would have been hope- less l1 the defense had been even reasonably alert! Eastdealer. Neither aide vulhetl-bltf ‘Q54. vars Q9822 ‘A742 p A91 A108 QJ863 N_ oxoio, QQ743 W. E 95 @1055 S QKJG , dvKQ-l §AKJ632 -~ r‘ Vi! s QAIOB ' “$963 fhe bidding: _____ ,. East South West North 1 y 2g Pass 4-4 Pass Pass Pass South's jump overcall was not justiiied by his holding. This bid is used by experts to announce a hand which requires only s. little support from partner to make a game — a hand containing et the very least sever. reasonably sure tricks, with the greater likelihood that it will produce eight tricks. Obviously, South could not count his spade suit as solid and there- fore should have been content to ovorcall with one spade. Had he done this. North would not have raised so enthusiastically, and the partnership might well have stay- ed out oi the game which had so little chance to succeed. - Actually, however, it did suc- ceed because oi East's short-sight- edness. West opened the heart three, which was a clear en- nouncement that he held four cards in the suit. (It was not like- ly that the three-spot was a sin- gleton and that South had four hearts!) The heart ace was play- ed irom dummy and South drew two rounds of trumps. He then led and passed a club. East won and without thinking. laid down a high heart, South ruiied and pass- ed another club. Now it was too late ior East to shlit to diamonds —the 3-3 break in the club suit gave declarer the discard he need- ed so urgently. Surely, East had ample warning about the clubs in this case. and just as surely he should have shifted immediately to diamonds. it his partner did not have the diamond queen. that was Just too bad from East's point oi view! KEEPING 0001. Did you ever notice that the people who are hard to iluster - the ones who don't get in s stew about minor troubles-are the peo- ple who keep youngest longest? Wise people know that a calm out- look on life pays oil. “Fuss bud- gets" threaten the comiort and health‘ o! everyone around them as they work themselves up to a nervous breakdown. ' TIMBER COUNTRY More than hall o! Canada's land area is forested. ’ NAPOLEON AND UNCLE ELBY - m: STAR NEON SIGN- BIIMPAIY LIMITED 19V: llouacorfl 8t. lilllllllllll. l. I. i ly Clifford Mclride AW» XME ON OUT: NAPOLEON l UNCLE ELBI ZIOKED THIS SPECIAL FOR YOU. DOVWTSYAY LNDER TH’ PO$H ALLTH’ TIME. u... an", 5,,“ Iighllfid I a nut-rm- . 34. Valley (Bun) DAILY CROSSWORD A0305! 2. Over (poet) 21V; i. Arches 3. Part o! , wegigfmdq up] 5. Asterisk "to be" ' 2s. Great 9. Manor court 4. Fashion quantity 10. Story b. Guided 28. Seize, as in 1i. Ward oft, as 6. Duty wrestling a blow ‘I. Arabic letter 30. Menace; 12. Banish 8. Lit again Si. Regions 14. Gold (Hen) 11. Balance 33. Land. 15- Bive!‘ (GerJIS. Silkworm measure 17- Plllli-‘Wll! (Assam) 85. Pagoda tree i6. Trick (Jgp) 18- Wlvslde 1o. Claw so. Meat hotel 23. Upward 38. Ascend 30- of!" 0! curving of 41. On the ocean 119""! o! ship's 43. Tax over e 2i. Music note punk“; ha", 22. Oceans 24. Botch 27. Watching . 29. Greek lettel 32. Northern constellation D LID D DUE] Yesterday's Answer 46. Rowing implement 48. Dancers cymbals 36. Territorial Force (abba) 37. Constellation saizetord 40. A wing 4i. Saucy u. Water god lBabyl.) 45. Writer o! fables - 47. Particles 49.Avaluable fur Mkbsth 51. bong-cared rodent l2. Old measure o! length ipl.) DOWN l. Smooth. wheedlin] talk . DAILY CRYPIDQUOTE-Herds how to worl: it: A X Y D L B A A X R _ naonorntaoiv ' One letter srmply stands (or another. in this example 1 .J (or the three L's. X tor the two 0's. etc. Single lctl. . ._..vs- trophies. the length and formation o! the words are all llinu Each day the code letters are diiferent. A Cryptogram Quotation ‘r PKU'L aozz or. i-iso scram snzz. ire uso HSKVASHL no uxvns TBO znra-zxraoozzxs. Yesterday's Cryptoquote: S0 SPINS THE SILK-WORM SMALL ITS SLENDER STORE-POPE. Distributed by King Futures Syndicate. m By AL CAP? a ..~_i IRINGING ur FATHER THAT'S slusau-otwrv-ws‘ ‘ ALWAVQ VVANT€D 1D avootuv- |:= "soot-low" ' o~ l t ummucOmD LY - ~‘ BE HALF-"AS $00049 MAGGE - ‘NED " By Carl _Andersoii Jinn-a t _ I _ ’ k g °iisi£oa —- I g 3 . . , v i WHY, MHBUSBY LIVE5 Ov/ER N 5PiAR5S GROUEY" HEQI Gl-Jné HALF INTQEST JN TILLIE TH TOILER OPEN GROCRY ‘DRE HE'S ARRESTED- I ‘WAS KINDA IN’ §WARD rwo-A-o cuzcuir, fiv- Izvt lane “Jae an. _ TIPPY AND "CAP“ STUBb . ‘y Edwin‘ ' "w " -f.‘l‘é"étllé‘é‘$i€w“t3eshii¢itfi°$ Av IN SAM Buntrs YEARS AGO"! fntuen/oulaa 0UP. ONLY l-IOFE. on, no} NOT 111A?!" wuYY couwwrAsou HAVE HAD we