; .2-l .: . FUN AND FBOLIC IN THE MOONLIGHT Fun and f.l'OliC.7'lll-I need Everyone should daily hee . - Timmy the Flying S irrel. Timmy is Wholly right. Fun. the right kind of iun, la a daily need of everybody everywhere. A little wholesome fun is yeast in the bread of lite. in these days or an- terness and strife there is altoge- ther too little ot this leavening intluence in daily llxzng. Over in the Green Forest Peter Rabbit. sat. at the edge or an open- ing among the trees It. was a beautilul night. Moonlight flood- ed that opening so that it was almost as bright. as by clay. Two or Peter's long-t:me lrlenda had been having it little fun wit'.i him. when he had reached the edge or that opening anion: the trees there had been no one else there. Anyway there had been no one ...,-.c Slll When you buy I Large size Qxvnoi :1 .aMAv .LuL .l'i'””'5t15 l .. . ..v,,,.,, Venn.-7, OHODIWDUI or 19 ch in: no. Rix's Groeetoriu Queen St. Phones 1601: 100': hmej" T112 By Thornton W. Burgess. ttwhy is it." asked he. "that I never see any or you tolks in the daytime?" CAlviAY1i i 0rDUZO i KINE EIJLE COFFEE lulu I'm ututlw Hlwmi daytime.” replied Timmy. "We don't. like sunlight, so we sleep through the day." ”I know." replied Peter. "1 would rather be out in the even- ing than in the middle or the day. Moonlight is easier on the eyes." Timmy nodded vigorously "Phat is the way we Flying Squirrels find it." said he. "So we come out as a rule only at night." ”Your cousins. Happy Jack the Grey squirrel, and Chatterer the Red Squirrel. and Rusty the Fox Snuirrel. don't seem to feel that way about it." said Peter. "I don't know how they feel about it. and i don't care." re- plied Timmy. "I don't have any- Give me a night. like this and they can have the days to them- ,. selves. Excuse me. Peter, but I Peter could see, He had nought simply must jump. I'll be back himself wholly alone. Truth in prescntir. It there is any more tell he was n little lonesome. of lun in all the world than jump- rourse he shouldn't have been lug from the top of a tall tree them. an should have been at in see how far you can lump. I home in the dear Old Briar-patch dont know what. it is." with Mrs. Peter. Timmy ran up that tree as . Peter had been sitting close in. last. and as easily as Peter could the trunk or a tall tree wonder- run on the Hmundv The W96 W55 lng it it would be sale to stamp: tall. Peter lost. sight of Timmy yer across that open space. Smack! as he 20' up near the t0P- The” lsomething had hit the tree jnstlli small form shot out into the iabove his head and startled him an that. he had jumped. It was . the ope-rim: in the trees. clear to the unexpected arrival of a little the other side. it was just as it .liriend that he had known tor a Timmy was sliding on the air. In long time. Timmy the Flying one sense. he was. Hardly had Squirrel had made a long jump Timmy jumped when Mrs. Tim- air, and went gliding down across from another tree, and it. was hi: my landed beside Peter. "This is landing just above Peter's head tun." said she and before Peter that had made that smack. A could say a word. she was rar- ifew minutes later the same thing i in: up that tree tor another had 'happened over again. Th'is.iump. time it was Mrs. Timmy. Another of these lively little Now n! all Peter's iriends in the gliders appeamd. Then another Green Forest. there was none he and another and another. In five could have been more glad to minutes it seemed the air was see and none he saw so seldom. lull oi these lively little talk "'I certainly am glad to see you." gliding In every direction in the said Peter as Timmy stopped moonlight, each trying to glide jumping just long enough !or I a little farther than the others. little gossip Sometimes one would jump film "The same to vou.' replied 'r:m- after another and both would my. "Isn't this a lovely night?” land on a distant tree at the same Peter agreed that it was. "Why time. They were having a grand is it." asked he. "that I never frolic. it was fun. see any of you folks in the dIy- I ”Becausr. we are asleep in the V - -., s1-OIT74 A,"' ” 'A IOYAL WELCOME 0,” Awaits NO.U,. can i-ioriai. ll MONCTCN ECONOMIZE with "uvt LIKE A xmoi, l The paint for beautiful VVALLS 8: CEILINGS AT ." iii . B '30020 slip in the following deal -but it was nevertheless latal. thing to do with them anyway.' ma GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN contract Bridge By Josephlne Clubortoon 3Q'Q . A FATAL SLIP The doclarer made only It alight south dealer. gout mica vulnerable. 3 2 l 7 0 6 The bidding: son”. xvegt North F-I09 1 N 1- z 4 3 N T 9"” Pan Peu West vacillaled between a spade and a heart lead. but decided that the spade was best. even at the probable cost at two tricks to clear the suit. On the bare chance or tlnding a singleton queen somewhere. he laid down the king. South took the first trick-he been pleased with the dum- g laid down, since nine tricks would apparently be there tor the taking. He counted two spades live diamonds and two clulm, so he wouldn't even need a heart trick. When. however, he led I diamond to the ace and West tall- ed. the picture changed! South. making a reappraisal. saw that hc could not afford to give East his diamond stopper hero and now. because a spade re- turn would clcar Wcstls suit and he would got in with the heart ace lwhich he presumably held) and run enouszh spades to deicat the contract. It was vital. there- fore. for South to establish I heart trick. This was sound reasoning. but South did not implement it pro- perly. He led the heart queen trom dummy - and west sim- ply ducked! Now. when south surrendered the diamond trick to East. the latter did not return a spade - West had d'.SCafd&d I spade. clearly asking for a dis- continuation. East led the heart eight, and West ran the entire suit! One. small change would have brought success to South. He should have led a low heart from dummy to the king. thus keep- ing the 10-2 in his own hand and the Q-8 in dummy. 1:61-.iTICAI. Genius .lan Holmeyrt south African Statesman who died in 1948. was principal of the University or Wit- watersrand at the size oi 25. KING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED IMM1 Hf 71Wl(DOlII15S! IHIVD WMAUIS HMID AMYII FEBRUARY 7. .1952 By 21”” F--cu; t By Carl Anderson CA ATJ. . TIPPY AND "CAP" STUBS By Eduins Napoleon and Uncle Elby ".'?54 5IIID MW til torHo?it5lEArvaliziazumgwillis: ( '30 EATING ow NAPOLEON5 MNNER-' TiAT's A 6007 -JOKE ON HIM! ocracowtte IX-AMINW Meet-tANtwoct4t.e By Clifford McBride I rat on . M-...... ..,,,. Fer .- nu- AB.V Al Capp tsm'A nAm1ct.I'.or HEAT NIAI HIM-YET Hts SKULL out A TEMBERATURE or 2:2: AND rrs azrrme Awrui.i.v W JWNM IMFLI VDUIE A IMNILOI. U ...8OU'li Mill TALKIWLIKI I '7 WIN KPOW I'M I-ill 0.0 THATWIY. sun ct.m.IcIsv..RlAl. cues! saunas LIKIA ms AIIINAT1-iY'l ocuoot. ur ALL our... 't'i-IINKC mm AN oemu ...m uatam...rr's oorra mv -w:'i.L HAVE?!) 4 FBI IN A miSULTAN'l'-- DXTX l-9OF.'- HIS &FiC.E I5 IA1IA IN A BKNANA TREE, IN CENTRAL HAITI 5' y. ' H.By Alex Itayrnond NICE Gll...'l'HE FIIST DICENT THING I'M EVII NIAIO IMUTVMJ, .tlI,'1t(y',l,,.lm K LlET JAseui2t2 come IN, TIDDIEI AN' HEQE I THOUGHT lT VIA5 i i -swan THAT CAT 15. rm... mm. Iluvu kt-ire. rm. JUMPED ,gAINsT 'ru' HOME roe mug omuen--? wiNDow!wELi..l GUESS 1 U- WW5 ALL Ti-r oootzs AN' wtuoows ARE Lociztao Now- A! THINK or ME 9EiN' ' De-AN' IT was ONLY TI-i' CAT--3 BRINGIlxI'G'L'J-l;-FATHER WHY DIDN'T YOU COME N&-I KNOVV YOUR MEN BOSS VERY WELL ' IN r:AcT MAGGIE AND I ARE INVITED THERE WELLelF f1'I5N"1' MY OLD FRIEND EEN PlO(TON- THE BUTLER - I HEAP HES WOQKINS NOW ml? .5..- TILLY THE TOILER ' PENNY lLFl "'”L-3i i eaaoti lJDWElJ.- NEXT WEEK :04? DNNE): - PEALLV ? 3 :1? C - ydl ya gv N . , . . r-11':-6'37-rt-tstzsls A mm 2 GRAND ru. arr Lure TD en on: Air -rt-a soda