SPECIAL FILM ENTERTAINMENT WILL IE HELD TONIGHT AT" THE WHALEN MEMORIAL AUDITORIUM AT 8:30 AN members and friends of Benevolent» Irish Society are cordially invited. That which you do, not; ma! deed. Develops like rplanted seed. —Old Mother Nature. Beside the driveway into Farm- er Brown's dooryard is a hand- some oak tree. Farmer Brown's boy calls it the [one Oak. a very good name for it as there ls no other oak nearer than the Green Forest. and that is the other side 0.! the Old Orchard. He had often wondered how it happened to have grown just there. It must have sprung from an acorn. Acorns are the seeds from which oak trees . STOW. But iio-w did an acorn hap- b S r N] F95 2‘ t pen tothget in the xrlound so far ,, nations ou a rua s rom e tree on w ich it was i _ "w". 432 for m“ y y’ r’ grown? It couldn't have been ' blown there. Acorns are heavy and have no wings like the maple seed; on which to sail when the wind blows. "How do you suppose that t"; llalliltiis to be way overt here so i — l l‘ its: from other oak trees?” said he. 1 - It was planted there.’ said I ANNUAL MEETING PRINCE EDWARD I§LAND DIVISIQN CANADIAN RED CRQSS SOCIETY "CHARLOTTETQWN HOTEL" TUESDAY, FEBRUARY ZMIL-JZ (NOON) Luncheon—$l .25 BINGO iloly Redeemer Hail lFarmer Brown: “Some one planted Ian acorn there.’ The Annual Meeting of the l‘ I Stockholders and Cream Patrons _"b "lVhg?" giséfed Fairtuei" Brown's , i , . f c", cud Creamfl-y‘ c“ wj||| 0y. " nu n't because that tree I 8.30 i 0 p _ ’ | - Y a n. ..... be he“ m ‘en-id "~11.n»~.;.:L“:.;.F.i:.:".i::vih" i ma: prevailing at us d tday, Feb. 17th, at 2:30 P. M. "N0," ffipligd Farm". Brown “i Blflloetn the city | A-Ii interested doirymen are “but he saw lt planted. Vifhen I i’ 1 i Freezout I invited to attend. “'8! " “"8" “Y h” “id me "m" it. it happened when he was a boy. In Charitable P111170". Look, there is Sammy Jay over in __ that tree now. Have you ever no- ,, ‘ i 116011 110w often he is _ln that tree? ‘ A! 10h! as I can remember that lias been n favorite tree with the Jays. I believe you call it the Lone Oak. I guess that is a good name for it. but I think of it as a family tree, the Jay tree. It has been 1h the family, so to speak, for a. long time." l ‘I " A , lfiili}. _ . Ll iii iiillili’ esiiiiliiisiiii As soon as the DOS 19"- lhl J37 flaw down and hunted in the grass for the 8w"! fat acorn. Finally he 119w dow“ m the gr“; with it. For a minute or - two he was busy there. The D0! -a aln and Mr. Jay tool tgxhelzlzvlngsg. Your grandfather was curious. He went 0V" W119" m’ Jay had been and searched for the acorn, finally he found it pushes! frankness 11 1 CHARQQIIII IaTO \VN _ KING oFrT-ifsoviifmounrro moo n soft. place in the earth with s couple of leaves pulled ave; it. In the sorlns it» siiwuied l“ l‘ “me beosme your lone oak 0V0!‘ there, So it really was Planted b! l Jay. 1 like to think it was i-hfl great-great-over-so-srfiflli Erglld" father oi sammv J" W" l "h As long as l can remember I h!" noon Jays In that tree. 5o I always thin]; o! it as their family tree.’ concluded Farmer Brown- "1 suppose the Jays he" Pllllwd a lot. of trees in just that wait’ I115 Panther Browns boy thoughtfully He was rlght- . The next story: "Blacky P1635 Up 'I‘rouble." “I suppose you mean our fam- ily," said Farmer Brown's boy for he knew that the farm had been in the Brown family for more than a hundred years. "No". replied firmer Brown. "I mean Sammy Jay's family," There W85 a twinkle in his eyes. Before Farmer Brown's boy could reply, his father continued: "One day in the fall-when your grandfather was a boy he was over in the Old Orchard picking apples iii-hen he saw a Gray Squirrel com- liii; from the Green Forest. Held in his teeth was n fat acorn. He was looking for a place to hide it. Why he had brought it over to the Old Orchard no one knows. Perhaps he thought that because there were no oak trees in the 01d Orchard. and oi’ course no acorns, iio~one would think of looking for hidden acorns there. “He was fussy. He couldn't seem to find a place to suit hlim. He kept coming farther andflarther into the Old Orchard. Now your grand~ father wasn't the only one watch- ing him. Keeping up in the trees,a Blue Jay was following, watching hint. 0f course. you can guess what or. ' Farmer Brown's boy grinned. "Totry to steal that acorn. I Suess it ls a regular habit in the Jay family.‘ said lie. Farmer Brown nodded. Before that Squirrel found a place to suit, him. a Dog appeared. He chased‘ the Squirrel. The Squirrel dropped ilic acorn and raced for the near-l est tree, From that one he Jumped to another and finally disappeared back toward the Green Forest. The Jay kept quiet. As soon as the Dog‘ left. theflay flew down and hunted! ln the grass for the acorn. It didn't Mlle long for hit-n to find it. He‘ picked it up and flew up ln a tree at the edge of the Old Orchard. “Your grandfather watched to see what he would do with that By Fagnly and Shorten i . i Craig Msskay (center), Saskatchewan. Canada. is helped from the tee after he collapsed at the end of the 5000 meter speed race at the Winter Olympics in St. lvioi-itz, Switzerland. The event was won by Reldar Llaklev. 3Q. of Norway. THERE OUGHTA BE A LAW! i in; siioEEioizo. niiiooosiiiw IMBECILE!’ Biii SHE'S innit» A simian CARD coon iii _ us WANTS io rim w FOR unveils SAiIE, MOM. NOW AND GIVE A 0w FMME 9W1 - 14:: IF W29 some Aiii- - new; now grip 005T ilitE iiiM! 90 midlife GET RID OF iIIMII CAN'T ; ATE! S0 THOUGHTFLH! IF ONLY ‘IOU WERE MORE LIIZE HIM. SOMEIKNJI AI.- WAVS THINK (X5 "St/ORGY _ TiHNiE TONIHT. DESCQIBESlIIM T0 / ilUBBYi CHASED, AFTER FLOTILLA NEAQ- " time use \\\ . flew;- Say Die! The mgr-o hopeless the contract may appear, the harder the dec- larer should fight! Take a dell 111W today's for example. North. dealer. East-West vulnerable. North-South 40 on score. ‘Q54! ‘K103? Q5 ‘A1062 ‘its; 4.11096 eons WNE :33 A 10 ' .73 S ‘K19! ‘q 53 gxv ‘A165 QKJQGO 414 ‘lhebidding: North East South Weet Pill Pass 1Q Pal 2Q Pass Peas Pa. South opened with a heart oo- cause he intended to bid diamonds, if necessary, over a one notrump, one spade or two C1UJ response from partner. west might have been a little more enterprising. but he apparently felt he had excellent defense against hearts. West decided to make an attack in the trump suit and opened -the queen. After some thought declarer put up the king because he wanted to lead s diamond om dummy, West captured the with the queen and doggedly re- turned-the heart nine. This was taken by dummy's ten, and. when East showed out. declarer led a low spade to his own king. West won from his present “eqiiais" of J1. conclusion that the distribution ot cards had been ton much for him and that there was no hope. He ruffed a diamond with dummys last trump, cashed the spade queen. then brought homo his own last trump by ruffing a spade. After that, however he could onl cash the club ace for his seventh rick. At the point mentioned, there was only one hope, slim at is was. That hope was to find West wit-h exactly five diamonds. one club, three spades and four hearts-his peeing holding. litter rutiine the diamond in dummy. south should have cashed the club ace and spade queen. i-uiied a spade, theh led a diamond, and West eventually would have to surrender a diamond trick to South for the fulfillment of the contract. nour-Qziwbiiiirrwso-otisno _- (CPI-Mrs. Audrey i-ioneyiman. ‘M. a poliomyelltlo victim save ' to II. 5 l2-pouiid girl here. one had been in an iron lime four months our r2251?” ~r emcee? untti- three weeks before confine- ment ‘ ly Alex Raymond - ~- m~'fI'J£ii5"i"cm' l ou-iiiacoee...w.e-ra -- wouuon lamond Jack , and returned still another heart South, winning with the heart ace i came to the natural but regrettable ‘ - i-ioRAce DR\PPLE,>OU mu Now we NEVER aiYiTiciN 1 . I‘ I i MAYBE r MISJJDGED Mosmrose - iu. J16?‘ TAKE IT EAsY-ILL NOT a5 ACQAID TO ‘SIT N THYG ci-iAiiz NONI! A woui2'_s' ii: VfiA WHAT A SPAIN .11 v i ly Cori Andergiil i lA6Aiu,Ei-i€...-ir-:M>b.| 552M "5 SFENDA iUTd= TIM!