iq~ lEBRUARY 14, 1948 . . ~ arnusno rrosollr ran FEBRIIAZEY 194a "GDOKERYQ lIO0K” HOME-MADE COOKIES and PASTRIES; SANDWICHES . Small Parties and Bridge Parties catered Ior ICED CAKES made to order. "COOKERY NOOK" ' Charlottetown 2i! Gt. George St. PIIOM 19254- L. o. SAVAGE, Proprietor. 1 '11 -_.s=.~ IINIIIIAL MEETING PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND DIVISION CANADIAN RED CROSS SOCIETY "CHARLOTTETOWN HOTEL" TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24th.—l2 (NOON) Luncheon—$l.25 Phone 432 for reservations by Saturday, February slst p» rAnnsns'wssK Annual Meetings at Legion ilail ellnlllorrsrowrl ~ FEBliiIAIiY 24th T0 27th TUESDAY-ETH- 2:00 o'clock-P. E. I. Sheep Breeders’ Association 7:00 o'clock-J’. E. I. Swine Breeders‘ Associoion. Films and open discussion on sheep and swine in- dustry. WEDNESDAY—25TH- . 9:30 o'clock-Central Farmers’ institutes. 1:30 o'clock-P. E. I. Dairymen‘: Association. . Night meeting at 7:30. Large attendance of pat- rons requested for Full discussion on all. dairy prob- lems, marketing, cold storage, cit-operatives, feeds, etc. THURSDAY—-Z6TH- ' 9:30 o'clock-Opening session-P. E. l. Federation ol Agriculture. 12:30 o'clock-Farmers’ Week dinner at Charlottetown Hotel. 7:30 o'clock-Open discussion on general farm problems. FRlDAY—27TH-- 9:30 o'clock-Open meeting for all junior farmers of the Province. All ex-_club members and inter- ested formers between the ages ol l6 and 30 years especially invited to attend. I:00 o'clock-Federation Board Meeting. NOTE: Resolutions for Farmers’ Meetings should be for- warded in writing in advance of meetings. lint" , Eyes or ears may be deceived; Both together be believed. -Tommy Tit. Tommy Tit the Chickadee and Yank Yank the INuthatch found Sammy Jay In the Old Orchard. They were almost out o! breath, they had iiown so last to get thore Where is he?" they cried together “Are you looking tor some one?" asked Sammy Jay, , "Where is Goldie the Oriole?" Tommy Tit asked. "I don't know. I haven't the lesst ides. Probably he is somewhere dill"! ill the Sunny south." replied Sammy Jay. "Do you mean that you haven't seen him? He was over here a iew minutes use. for we heard him sing" said Yang Yank, "You heard him. You must have heard hirm. It you didn't therg is sanething wrong with your ears." declared Tommy Tit. "No. I didn't hear him, and I am sure there ls nothing the matter with my ears." replied Sammy Jay shaking his head. "I don't believe you heard him either." he added and turned his head aside, “We did too!" cried the indignsntly. “Bo did we." said Dotty the Tree Sparrow, who with Slatey the Junco had joined the others. “We have come over to look for him,." added Slatcy. "You are fooling yourselves. You haven't heard Goldie the Oriole. You just think you have. Take my word for it, he hasn't been here. I would have seen him l! he had been." declared Sammy and flew away to the Green Forest, “As it we don't know the voice o! Goldie when we hear it." ex- claimed Tommy Tit lndignantly. {you one else has a song just like I. o thers They looked and looked all thrvuah the old Orchard, They looked in the Green Forest.‘ They didn't find Goldie the Oriole. no'r did they hear him again that day. "It I was the only one who heard him 1 would think 1 might be mistaken. though how can I he I don't know. But Yank Yank heard him. Dotty heard him, and Slstey heard him, slmmy Jay must have heard him, even i! he does say he didn't thought Tom- rrrry Tit as he settled himself for the flight in the snug warm little" Q house that Farmer Brown's boy had put up specially Ior h‘|:n in a tree in the Old Orchard. ' The next morning l; he w" Sfiiiint ready to so out fer his breakfast he looked out his round doorway. a doorway too small lol- any one bigger than hlrnsely to get throush. and saw s flash o! blue st'the edge of the Old Orchard. 31mm? Jay! He must be going for aourne sunflower seeds for his breakfast. I hope he'll leave some y r ' KEEP IN THE SWING AT TIIE CLOVER l BLIIB The City's Modern and Mr- Condiiioned Dance Hall CAFETERIA SERVICE WEEKLY SATURDAY NIGHT DANCE OPEN TO PUBLIC Dancing 9 O'clock Legionaires Orchestra THERE OUGHTA BE A LAW! for me." thought TcmmyTlt. But. instead at going to the feed- ing shelf at Farmer Brown's house st once, Sammy stopped in the very next tree to the one in which was Tommy Tit/s house. The trunk o! the tree partly hid him from Tommy. 'I'l1e latter was Just ready to go out and say good morning When he was startled to hear the son! of Goldie the Oriole. It was not loud, but It was clear, and it Came 1mm right behind the trunk of that tree where Sammy Jay was, You should have seen Tommy Tit pop out o! his little round, doorway and fly over to that tree! Goldie the Oriold wasn't there, Ne. body was there but Sammy Jay His head ‘was tipped back and the first note of Goidie's song had came from his throat when he sew Tommy Tit and-the song ended By Fagaly and Shorten n. ' __.__, im-z- ~-: £9225?" 1.427,, _lnw w \. 1 . ‘ .5\\¢ -.. I’ - vn - ?nlour ELLPU '5 Eigylgtlflilg‘ DAllillEulglrvlSiii'iiPllloi gltlllylyfillygfiélf ALL ollllnossliss“ TIOFILLAIITTLE “"5" u‘ svelzvloomm ‘fififfglwggillf-‘glfi CAVITY, lIE vol-is VOIIR HEAD-WOW! E ll’ IN SLWIAND ls IIE IN A BIG EASY STAGES» URRY! ,_ SSBEDII EviiiRl my" s-“Q- . * b -~ v ‘Fiji VQIJARDIAN» "Ha was over here s, teov minutes ago, for we heard him-sing." said Yank, Yank. almost betord it had begun. He looked as it he felt a little iooliah. “I knew I heard Goidie's voice." cried Tommy Tit triumphantly, "No you didn't. You heard his song, but. not his voice. It was my voice." chuckled Sammy Jay. Tommy Tit was staring at Sammy Jay as i! he never had seen h'm before. He had both seen and heard yet was still having hard work to believe, "But Jays can't do that!" ho cried. “Some of us can but most Iolks don't know it." replied Sammy Jay. The next story; "Sammy Docs a Good Turn." Contract Bridge By Josephine Culbutson &$R3oo~. x wxxsvsi No Justice! The bidding in today's deal was something to marvel at, but by iinding every card perfectly placed and playing the hand to the best advantage, the deciarer came through. The moral is, presumably that crime is not always punished. North dealer. Both sides vulnerable. std .0763 “K172 JisQJd42 KQIO N 4.1M: OJ 109 w E QKSIIC QAQG Q98 grease S aura assess QAQ2 §10854 ‘A The bidding went: ortls East South Welt Pass Pass 1Q Pass l-NT Pass 2Q Pass S) Pass 4§(!) Pass ‘r A Pass Pass Dbie. It was doubtful enough that South should bid even two dia- monds over _Norlh's one notrump; therefore South's four-diamond rebid was astonishing. Perhaps he knew. however, that ha was about t0 iind "gold" in the perfect (it o! the North-South hands and in the position of the missing cards! S West. opened the heart jack. South captured Ehsi/s king, cashed the club ace and the spade ace, then rulied a spade in dum- my. His next lmove was to lead the club queen through East. The latter covered-it he hadn't south would have simply discard- ed a heart-and South ruffed. A second spade was now ruffed with the diamond seven. a heart was discarded trom the closed hand on the club jack, and South then entered his hand with a heart to the queen. He led another spade. West saw that it Would do no good to rut! with the ace o! trumps, so he discarded his last heart, Dum.ny's diamond jack Tufted this trick, then declarer led g club from the board. East made a noble eiiqt to stop the cross- rutt by trumlliiis in with the nine of diamonds. but South over- ruiied with the ten and led on- other spade. There was no way tor West lo shut out Dummy‘! now-blank king oi irumos- 3nd that card produced the eleventh tuliilling trick. ' IT'S ABOUT TlME I FIXED THIS BASE PLUG-- BUT I'D BETTER TUQN OFF THE MAIN SWITCH FiRST--' 114$ l5 MV LATEST NVKNTION- We JU5T lNATCl-i -I GET IN TDN DAEHBOARD-IT WILI OVEN {TI-E GAQAi D0095 ANQ WELL, NO WONDER-- SOMEBODY TURNED OFF THE CURRENT] TIFPY AND "CAP" STUBBS more’? You THINK GRAN‘MA'LL EVER COME HOME AGAIN“? OF COURSE Si-IE WILL! NOW EAT Youia suwvsrzi . ANvifi- 5N’? or wow 1o LOOK AFTER A cl-lruali-on A 00s. Elrl-lanii ALWAYS rsaoru- HIM we AT TH’ (fin/l lily" . ‘(W9 ma“ wnoti‘ YOUR FACE- I " I LOOKS LIKE - 1.! ,. l? WUSS FINALIH INVITED MI '5 i FEAT 1K3‘ I'VE SIMPLY BEEN OI PINS AND NEEDLES m 11mm sums, m Act A omlerz! I'd \\ ‘An/um! fuQKEY sosgyxal. TONIGHT! WELLFIHA MIGHT BE scion!“ _ *I\%w\ A ‘BUT I DIDN'T LE1’ HIM iolcw i1’! l DIDN'T AN§V~IER FOR AcTuALLV MlNiJTE€l