IS VIllEliE Yllll LIVE ‘ &Vll|E|iE Yllll EllTEliTlll_ll MAKE IT A PRIZED rosssssIoN—MAxr rr BEAUTIFUL! . OROCKFW and STOREY LTD. through their direct contrast with Canadas most progressive carpet mills bring to you the full aesortments of carpeting as manufactured by—The Toronto car- pet Manufacturing Co. Ltd. ofioronto and The Harding Car- pets Co. Ltd. of Brantford. OROCKETT and STOREY LTD.. in addition to theirularge variety of Rugs. etc.. in stock. feature a special order service direct from the above mills cut to your requirements and fully tailor-. ed at those mills to assure perfection. ~ CROOKETT and STOREY LTD. feature "Smoothedge" and re- command it as the most satisfactory method of laying wall-to- wall carpets. D CROCKETT and STOREY LTD. would be pleased to have their representative call at your home with carpeting samples ‘and there give you an estimate of costs.—-Just ask. >tCarpde;ofl'om smoothly around Jtcarpet uts soon with hearth: >i'Caa-pet lies flat and snug to walls X-Stairway: take on new beauty N“ ‘M swine Is to lg“. ‘Mon: mo MORE women are turning to wall-to-wall carpeting because of the added roominess and beauty it gives to every room. And more and more women are . taking us to install their precious wall-to-wall carpeting the Smoothedge tackles: way-for these reasons.- . oil 7°-Wau. cans-srnlo wmi .sm0otI)c-dye .s rsclurss ulsrsulmou “WORKS ON CURTAIN STRETCH" PRINCIPLE" instead-new added beauty tlrrougl-scut—mal<ing your important carpet purchase a grand investment in added style and charm that extends from wall to wall in one smooth. uninterrupted ilow. What's more. our Smoothedge Tacltless Installation makes it easy to take up the carpeting and relay it wheneva desired, without having to yanlr out tacla or tear the edges. Our Smoaihcdge Taclrless lrmallation method inmrres a smooth, flat carpet surface that’: a joy to gaze on and wall: on. Not one ugly tacit head or one lumpy pucker. No humps around doorways, hearths, or on stairways. " BUY WITH CONFIDENCE AT CROCKETT AND STOREY Lu 134. Kent St. Charlottetown Phone 834 Purchase no carpet until we’ve hxplained this better way of irrstnllation that adds new beauty in beauty. DIPLOMATIC CHANG! MILLVALE SCHOOL Grade W-—-1. Reggie Gallant. 2. gprold Murphy. 3. Georgina Mur- M r h . 5'- Cecu pa‘§,§,,{ Grade II! — 1. Irene Hickox. 2. 2_ V Milton Peters. Grade II — l. Lorraine l-iickox. 2. Ralph Hickox. I NEW DELHI — (CP) —— Follow- ing the recent introduction of the republican constitution in India, all foreign diplomats pa ‘ed Grade 'X—l. Florence Grade IX — 1. Grade V'.lII—l.George White. Mildred Murphy. 3. Anita Gallant. Grade VI — 1. Beulah Hickox. 1 . _ _ . Grade I — 1. Arthur M h , fresh credentials to the new pres- Hlgplgrnte “urphy 3 Mam” , 2, mymma (;gn,mg_ um y ident. Formerly credentials were Teacher. Beatrice Douoette. addressed to the xing of lhgland. OUR‘ BOARDING HOUSE , Major Hoople % wua-re ‘runs ABOUT some 1 severe: GOMMA 4/ » ELec'mocu're You «=22 " A C-t-lO‘l'E?-«v\Ni6l-i'l' I. . HAD rr -ro LOAN ~/ou,Bu‘r - MARTHA HAS cor Me scnapeo To TH‘ Bone.’ —w Ni-N bow-r»/ou lr~\\n-re ‘ll-l‘ Broke in r-‘on A LITTLE PRE- l=A3l2icA-reo POKER ? EGAD cake! or; o N M Know 1 can ocgendcgsiro 1/‘cu FOR GOOD WISHES «- . p..r3?.~‘.:i.‘.2S ‘E5 “‘° lMvesTMed!r/3 -|S§i\."'AL' SHALL we PLAY A , // HAND FDR. -n-is CIGARS ? 7' I son: oven 21 Samuel lepkina Maul srellitodhsrarrnssndhereyee were narrow and heavy. nsfelt the flutter of I sob break through her lips to meet his quhtening breath. It shattered his resolution. “Don't so." he whispered. "I've got to." "or . course. I know that. I shouidnt have said it." "Don't be sorry. I'm not. Not for any or it." she said passionately. "That isn't so bad. then." "I don't want to go. You know that." ‘ "Yes. I know that.‘ “Good-by, dear." "Good-by Maids." They kissed again, and the walk- ed erect. steady. courageous, up the steps and into the house. It was only when she walked down the path for the last time and saw her bicycle -with the empty basket around its neck, alone and iorlom that she broke for a-mom- ent. she saidlgood-by to the bicycle last. . Three quiet and pleasant school- teachers turned up as the cabin mates of Miss M. Mccabo in No. 80 on 2: deck, which was farther down in a ship than she ever been before except on explorations. They were unobtrusively onsiderate. and Maida discovered that the mere fact of her not knowing people did not necessa ily relegate them to another category at beings. As the ship moved out everyone seemed to be lining the rail, so Maids went too. A volunteer escort of swooping sails, buzzing motorboats and gala tugs kept pace with the departing monster. and the girl found herself wishing that some of the shouted messages and god- speeds were directed to her. she ielt lonely, forsaaken. She driitcd along to the halideck and gazed wcarily out over the dlspiriting spectacle. Chapter XXVI] They were turning the last near point of rock now. on it appeared a spot of gleaming white, for and lonely and quiet. or course it couldn't be, Maids assured herself. and her impression of a bicycle be- side it was a vsgary of disordered eyesight. What of it anyway? Everyone in Bermuda rode a. wheel. and most of them wore whites. But everybody did not stand on remote rocks, in suits of unmistakable cut. while the ocean Princess sailed some kind and observant fellow passenger next her laid a pair or’ glasses in her tremulous hand. The figure leap forward to"thc summons of the powerful lens. Ridiculous to wave in that crazy fashion. How could he possibly re- cognize her in the mass of hu- manity? She could not even be sure that the figure was turned toward the ship. It did not signal. It did not move. It merely stood. Without aitermathl Sea. and sky and shore were blurred out in n mist more blinding than any fog curtain with which nature had ever obscure her still vexed Ber- moothes. - Modern youth does not go in for heartbreak. Maids was fundament- ally a sound and healthy product of her period and circumstances. Being sorry for herself was, by her standards. sloppy sentimental- ism. She had had her fling. If it left a hollow spot, that was the price exacted. she would slip back into the groove. Tradition and re- turn to her accustomed environ- ments would help. Yes. she'd get over it. That she should sea Wallis Kane again was unlikely. But she did want reassurance that he had got bad: all right. Ordinary human feeling dictated her taking that much interest. After waiting nearly a week she called up the Amalga- mated Dairies office. was Mr. Walls Kane still with the company? He was. - And was he back from Berm— from his vacation? “Yea/‘ answered the official voice. "Did you want to see him?" "No." said Maids hastily. ("Lisrl." said Maids's heart.) "I merely wanted to know." she sent him a wire. A bright, pleasant. friendly little word of good wishes. No answer came. Well. she hadn't really looked for any. she became scomiul of herself for having written. Ii’. was a. footless thing to have done. That he ignor- ed it was balm to her conscience, as proving that he had not been seriously liurt. So she felt better about it. she also felt annoyed. It was just like him to end it thus abruptly. Back of his sweetness and ease and humor. .she.hed sensed that he was hard. Nobody clout a pretty callous preson could have Gllddens New v an «honors: Master ' Of life Grown Under (il_a_ss ‘ NEWYORlK.Ilhl'ch 17-. (AP) — Pituitary glands. the master glands of life, are be grown in glass houses and are yis ding cheap harvests of scarce. smenaive r- mones, it was disclosed tonigh -one harvest is hormones that stimulate sex glands in make sex hormones. Another is acrrn. a wonder hormone for arthritis. An- other is a hormone that controls body owth. Ths iar-reaching was announced by Dr. acheele, surgeon-general. United Btetu Public Health service. He spoke at the premier of a new film describing research on the cause and cure of cancer. The new method may lead to practical, mass production of these vital hormones, Dr. scheela said. The pituita y glands growing to glass houses are taken from rats. But they produce hormones just like those made by the human pit- uitary. _ The pituitary is a pea-sized organ at the base of the brain. Its hor- mones regulate other glands. in- cluding the thyroid. the male or female sex glands, and the adren- al Glands. The rat glands are kept alive in glass flasks. about the size and shape of 3. pocket watch. They are bathed in a solution of horse serum and an extract from chick embryos. More than 150 rat glands have been grown this way, some as long as 10 weeks. They probably can be kept alive even longer, Dr. Scheele said. As the gland grows, it keeps pro- ducing its potent hormones. . ACTH brings prompt relief from pain in rheumatoid arthritis. It aids in rheumatic fever, and tem- porarily stops leukemia. a cancer of the blood. It makes the adrenal gland produce cortisone. another hormone that relieves arthritis. Both cortisone and ACTH are ex- pensive and still scarce. Other glands probably can be kept alive in the same way. A next step will be to grow pituitary, thy- rold. sex glands. and adrenal Bland in the same bottle, to learn more about the inter-play of these chem- ical regulators. Such knowledge would help in understanding what hormones do. and the relation be- tween hormones and cancer, Dr. Scheele said. achievement Leonard talked as he had about cutting off the tenement poor from the milk supply. It was, she told herself. an as- set. that hard streak. it saved one a lot of silly regrets. Maids de- cided that sentiment got you no- where. And if it did, it wasn't. where you wanted to go. She clear- ly preceived that the thing to do was be gay and forget all about The charperonlng Aunt Toni, who had been kept in the dark as to Mnida's adventure, found the girl quieter and more thoughtful than before; on the whole improv- ed. as she wrote Vanderlyn Linn, adding that the engagement to simms Waring seemed to have stalled. Maids would not commit herself to a wedding date. For this hesltancy she gave no valid reason, having none to give that would not have stricken the household with horror. she wanted to get Wallis Kane out of her system before marrying simms. with a fair deal she might have managed it. But circumstances con- spired to lay pitfalls for her peace of mind. The first was s glaring, blaring announcement on a bill- board oi another hex-Lohengrin prize contest. Maids went out of that street, walking rapidly. Next came a newspaper advertisernent of the Amalgamated Dairies with s iootline: "Our delivery men are especially chosen for courtesy and cleanliness." To be continued HEAVY VOTE IN RUSSIA MOSCOW. March 15 —— (AP) -—- The final count in Russia's general election last Sunday gave an over- whelming vote of approval to the single-bloc list of Communist Party and non-party candidates, figures released by the central electorate committee showed today. The .2!- ficiai figures showed that 99.98 per cent of Russia's registered voters cast ballots for deputies in the two houses of the Supreme soviet (parliament). opposition figures were much lighter than in the last elections in 1048. The Rainbow Bridge which spans the Niagara gorge just below the falls is g steel arched bridge with rmnsvgo srrullluv March 17 and ‘I! a channel span of 060 feet. . DEMONSTRATION . _ isrnrn SATIN . Wonder. Paint’ W‘ 0-1 Smart selected ' “File! to ohoos'e ffllllo !II'li love the two-toned ma, fashion’s latent choice usr our LAY-WAY: Double-breasted suit, with large simulated ' pocket flap and notch collar. In navy, green. grey, powder blue, beigo or wine. Contrasting two-tone collar and novelty sgikirets. In beige and brown. SP0! and grey, powder blue and navy. Tattersall checks in black, brown or IT'S obs V 1'39!“ For the really smart lady our three-piece Suits (2 skirts and coat). are magic. . . . Change the shirt and presto you have another Suit! Price range from $19.95 to $54.95. Sizes ‘I0 to 44 'rr-rs: FASHION snort-s. lili Great George St. * Phone 55 Ancusrrnz covn scrroor. inson. equal; 3. Myrna Thom Grade I. nrt.—1. Preston R for the month at l'iebru- emu. ary or the Primary Department of Grade I. Jr.—1, Buddy Peters. Augustine cove School. 'l'oecl1er--‘Margaret Murphy. Grade V.—1, Gordon Inmen; 2. ' Senior I) JINXED BY BUILDING ,. I pson. Cam- ALBANY. N. Y.. Mitch 16 -a Police today charged a man will setting fire to a. building becaua Preston Campbell. Grade X.—l, Norman Ca:mtir- they sa.ld, he claimed it Grads IV.—1, Ralph Dawson; 2, era; 2. llaine Murray; 3. Delms jinxlng him It poker. Joseph Vernon Peters; 3. Ruby Clark. uatheson. Paderolry. 45, a ‘ “ , pleaded. innocent in court to a drugs ei first-degree arson and was ordefll held for a hearing. Police quoted his as saying that be thought the building was linxing him, so he went to a. rear office. opened fuel oil dnrm. dropped a llgh cigaret near the spreading fuel and walked out. to tho bvulldinz was slight. Grade Ill. sr.-1, Brenda Mur- Grade IX.—1. Kathleen Idlurlplvy; phy; 2. Lois Peters. 2. Gerald Mlunay; 3. Vernon Demp- Grade 11!. .7r.—4i, Esther car- boll. ‘ ruthers; 2, Jean Mscwiiiiarns; 3. Grade VIII.-l. Beth Oar-ruthere: Justin Murray. Ihlphy. Cl})l':d1ed Six;-1. carol Ouwllfliz or-ado vtr.—¢. Doria Oarruthexl: 2. V W3 - 3, Lorna. Murptr ; J tcllffe. Grade 1:. Jr.-—l. Willis Peters. y " M C” Grade I. Sr-.—-I, Elmer MacDon- Gr-ade VI.--1. Garden I swoon; a.ld. Juanita Macxenale. John Rob- 2. Earl Dawson; 3, Haaei '.i'homson. Principe)--Helen mid. .srr-our- wmoow Vliih Each Purchase of’ 5 $39.95 5-lube Wooden ‘ADMIRAL Radio with pbuili-in-aerial. we om: You Your clue: of. either ‘ an Iucnuc new 4 a turnover roaster « A” PIN-ii? LAMP REMEMBER * we have only: of limited number of these sets and ms orrrr cnlllol or MPEATED. a ‘