e-‘SICIMMERSIDE GUARD AND PRINCE COUNTY CHRONICLE 1i WESTERN GUARDIAN ' if AGENT-Mrs. John Pond. ll SUMMEBSIDE and Won: Street Int-Plano; no PRINCE COUNT! M“, ubscrfptlons. Advertising should b0 loll. with In. In‘ lan may 11¢ 1111111111 an; 111 any 111 u» following m", 1,, .-»-,|-;_ Iwgl-Lllalllliukstorc, Water 8t. 111 111.0 Bakery. WIIGI’ 5L ‘I'll: Guardian will be delivered to any hum; u; Gvlfllln Bruntm. Wnter n. "I'll Gum-I. s1 111111111111. s1. Bummer-side i, Earner Bvv l" 2" P" d“! °I W“ IR!‘ W86!- Phono 189 for this service q m, your order to the boy wflllonllbln for deliver-la on ..1111s column 11 reserved for new: ill 1111-111 intern-st but advertising 111 ,1 in-ivsv nature may be insert.- N ;11 2 cents u word strictly pay- ulilc in uirvuIIvl! ‘ll-REF. enlargement with each {pm 1.11....,11-11 111 ‘iaylor Drug 60., kensiiigltln- ...5'.--UII t-ociu - At S'sidc 1111 Saiaraiy a mxn brought be- am ymgsu-utt- Darby on a charge g1 li-rrnscmciit of the Hlgnn-ay T. 1 was fined $5.00 and tflxh. - ‘l-"I l-‘Oll IIALIFAX -—1M.i‘. J. URny Holman and 1111-. M1-s. Edward Crease tiis tnoriiing loi- Halifax. Mrs. 1s rsltlrlllllg to her home 1 Liljflfillble visit with her . ~11. ( l~ ' p511.- I ¢1\l.lil-lll'l'Ol\' COURT —- Mag- =- 1o Darby iicld Court at Alber- t:.. this w-wk u-licri he heard sev- ei-il c.-.s~s. The first case was from Airna uht-n n 111.111 from that dis- trict was cEi-r-ucd with the unlaw- - and was found $300 or four , this being a second 0f- seuu-nct- was passed on two - 11s from Tignlsh charged 1.1111 1 v thieving. Magistrate Dirty 11.111- 1.111111 11 suspended sen- tence c1 0111- year pending their g-od bvi sinur. A party from Al- ma om-i-ating a car without regis- tration was fined $3.00 and costs. He pflld the fine. A man charged under the Excise Act with “pos- r-sssion“ was fined $25. and costs. A man charged with ‘consuming’ was fined $10. and costs. -S. Personals —Mr. and Mrs. R. MoCaffer-y of Toronto are staying at Edge-water. 411-1. W. E. Beer of Charlotte- -Mr. and Mrs. Roy MacArthur- nf Walrtcu-n, Mass, and Miss An- nie ill-ill;- were recent visitors to n the Province. -—S. -. Ralph Hebb and family "'11; in Summerslde, the giie‘ of Mrs. HL-bb's parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Holman. —S. Alli-s. Myron Stoll and little son. 1111-1011 J11. of 01110 are spending their 11111111111 vacation at Edge-Vat.- er, -Mr. and Mrs. Ewen Nicholson and fnniy of Stimmerslde are en- Lflllllg .1 holiday at Ecigewatcr. —- —Mrs. Ruth Morris of Char- lotettou-n is visiting in Sumnier- side the guest of Mrs. A. B. L Home. -S. _-.\llss Ruth Hilz of Moncton is visiliii; 1111- parents. Mr. and Ali-s. Alexander l-liliz. Ke-nsington. —S. —M.ss Violet Cox of Winnipeg is the guest of hcr sister, Mrs. Wil- fred 1.1111011, Albcttcn. —S. -~.\lr:.»-.-.<. Ralph Williams and Rilllil \\'Qfl'l 11f Summeisde are 111 011.1111 on business. -—S. f-Mr. 11nd Mrs. W. Redmond o. 111111-1011 are vi ting in Sum- iutr-idr. . s, T. E. Dunning of Som- .:.~.. and son, Arnold are 111 Si. Ecanors, the guests F. W. Cannon. —S. '\nd Mrs. Sterling Wil- 1;11fe duugntei- have re- ’ l" ll‘ hrinc 1n Sidney. 11111-1‘ spsnding their vacu- .1- 1101110 c1 Mr. William's - 311-. and Mrs. Edward Wil- liam's Road. —S '31-‘. lot l‘ . ltfi-s ,A , ‘Dutch village on market day. IQIII‘ fllllll- QSLIGIIT ACCIDENT _ Rom Phunlpson of u... staffMgf 308°“, & Amett. Summerside had the misfortune to miss his footing While W°TK1I18 in the warehouse grecking t-wo bones in his hand‘. —PURCHASES INCUBATOR ._ Mr. Ray Clark and Mr. D. F‘. Mac_ Fhitane of Summer-side have p111. chased an electric incubator wltha capacity of 21,000 eggs, with equip- ment for brooding afigell as chicks, these enterprising gentlemen 1n_ tend handling turkeys, goose and duck eggs. Both Mr. Clark and Mr. MacFarlane are, experienced DOII-ltynnen and their friends wish them every success. —-S. —FUNERAL 0F MR. S. K. TODD- The funeral services for Mr. S. K. Todd were held yesterday afternoon at Summerslde and were very largely attended. There was a short service at his late residence on Central Street followed by a service ln Trinity United Church. The service in t-he church wasut. tended by all classes of citizens who came to pay a last respect to an honored citizen. The Summcrside branch of the Canadian Legion at- tended in a body. Rcv. LEO. Dav- ies conducted the service assisted by the choir. Interment was in the Todd family plot at Bradalbane. The pallbearers were: Messrs. J. F. Arnett: Ewen Nicholson L. w. Hancock: Eric Woodsidc; Robert MacDonald and F.J.E. Wright. Mr. Wm. R. Todd, of Ottawa, arrived home on Saturday evening to at- tend the funeral. Rev. Mr. Milley, D8810!‘ of Bradalbane Unitcd Church, assistcd Mr. Davies at the I graveside. —S. Roosevelt Puts U. S. In Marine Insurance Game WASHINGTON, July 20—(AP)— H-csldcnt Roosevelt put the United States Government in the marine war-risk insurance business yester- day when he signed a bill ab- proprfatin! $40,000,000 for a re- volving fund to be administered by the Maritime commission for that purpose. W Under the not authorizing the system, which the President a1- ready had signed, the commission was empowered to insure American ships and their cargoes at any time private insurance facilities prove inadequate and to re-insure pol- icies written by private companies, Because a large part of the marine insurance writ-ten in the United States is re-insured In Lon- don, fear has been expressed that protection for American vessels and cargoes might be curtailed 1f the London insurance market were disrupted by the war. Provonents of the new law said the Federal Government alone would be able to assume the resultant burden in the United States. Pustice Thibaudeau Named Deputy t0 Governor-General OTTAWA. July 20-(0?) — Ap- pointment of Mr. Justice Thlbau- deau Rinfret. senior puisne judge of the Supreme Court of Canada, as deputy to the Governor-General. ced last night in the The Supreme Court Act pm- vides that a new Governor-Gen- eral may appoint any number of deputies hc deems proper. The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court is invariably so appointed and generally also Senior Pulsne judge of the court. should the former be unable to discharge the duties the other deputy may do so. NAZI FRAULEINS IN WOODEN SHOES Press) BIRLIN, July 10—Kurfuornton- damm, Berlin's snappy society strolling place, now echoes like a. Clop, clop, clopl It's not the cavalry on parade. It's just tho sh on sh n" oer. Berlin's robots are not the typo they wear in Holland, but they are definitely wooden. The sole is wooden and it's curved on the bot- tom, giving walkers something of a sailor's rolling gait. The wooden shoes are held on by a band of straw, in some cases. lwqlwrfid gs ly, in red. yellow and blue. ow the secret is out. Women are wearing snappy wooden shoes simply because they don't out into that supply of hides. that: ear- marked for heavier duty that strolling in Berlin: soldier boots. “Phil!- . DIIICYIQI. PASSES YORK. 5761.11 2l.—(OP)— on ea pro- l t, led tod 0f acyzruhfiogdmsn. ‘L89 owl. all" "The Old GIIAT WAI. VETERAN PASBX VAN%UVE. July 11-(0?) - . tinting, B-yur-old veter- W. K. Bunting. proprie- old Toronto Mail, died after s long illness. ve Victoria since 1925. A graduate of Upper fined! Coll , ‘Ilorontc. he enislcd as a Elva , nnfng his commission tcnlolostslogondwuiu- 1 _..~ CA JAMES CAGNEY as Private Plunkett PAT _ ,as Father Duffy GEORGE BRENT as "Wild Bill" Donovan SHOWS AT PITOL + Summerside TONIGHT. MONDAY and TUESDAY "t%l W To Ill“ o" Y ALSO SHORT SUBJECT MATINEE TUES., 3 P. M. s II'l In A PM?" ,1..- sm - Claims ‘Alberta. Capable of Operating Bank OTTAWA, July 30—(OP) --1“i.t- ness of the Alberta. Government to operate a provincial chartered bank, in spite of default of’ interest payments and bond redemption, mas argued yesterday before tho commons banking and w committoe by Hon. Bolon 10w, Provincial Treasurer. Speaking on behalf of tho pro- vince's application for a bank charter. Mr. Low gave s lengthy uccount of the Alberta Social Cre- dit Government's efforts to over- come the financial disabilities tho Administration found when It took office in i935. Mr. Low had several members on their feet at one time demand- ing "an end to this sort of thing" when his remarks were construed the Dominion discriminated giving a. loan as a, charge that Government had aigztinst Alberta. b to Saskatchewan ut refusing the 7.30 & 9.15 Spanish Press Reveals Distressing Famine Gonditions Almost famine conditions now prevail 1n Spain. Spanish news- papers received hcre present a. re- vealing picture. Partly, the short- age of food is the fatal aftermath o! civil war; partly. distressing crop conditions are due to a lo- cust plague which occurred this Winter and Spring in la-nsc PM“ of Spain. " e whole of central Spain was overrun by locusts, with enormous areas reaching practiallj- to the Portuguese frontier," says El Norte de Castilla. "The immediate dis- trict of Madrid was ravaged on an unprecedented scale. so men- acing was the attack of locusts that the amty and air force were culled out to fight the plague. It was estimated that, in the sectzcris witch suffered most, there were 600,000,000 locust; per hectare 12.47 acres). Four Hundred and forty thousand acres were invaded to a dam-cc hitherto unheard of." "One hundred and sixty thous- and kllogralmine-s of poison had to be prepared. Army units mow-ed over the country in trucks with equipment. Private persons were required to put their vehicles at the disposal of the Government for uze in the common effort. Marty organizations pledged themsclvss to collect so many koligrammes per person cf the pest. The districts chiefly affected were Cudad Real, Toledo, Mar-ind, Badajos lIl the extreme west, Caceres, Ouene, Guadalajara and Cordoba-also important sections of Albacete, A- vlla, Burgox Granada, Salamanca, Zamora and Zaragosa." Devastating Effect Thc devastating efifcct of the locust plague, together virith the already distressing food situation in Spain, has culminated in a. gen- eral system of rationing of food which t-a-kcs 1n even green vegeta- bles. The range of rat:on cards covet-s everything from such com- parative luxuries as coffee. down to 11m common onion and potato. The coffee ration is the same as in Italy: 250 g-rammss per person per month. The sugar ra-tlon is the same. Olive oil, 3-4 of a litre r person, The shortage of bread geemnme so critical that. at a special meeting, the Council of Ministers decided to increase the IZ-ItIOII w poor families, as bread is the chief item of food among thelm. "The wreolcage of national econ- omy. xvhlch has resulted in the severe shortage c4’ grain and bread, is due to the R/cds," comments E1 Norte. The rationing system dififers from that used in other countries. Each person is given a card with a num- ber. When supplies arrive, the of- quently happens. Ofipecially 1n the tci- the numbers printed. much as in o. lottery, the brief official no- tloo follows: "No supplies available." Practically every palpa- cor-rles no- tdceo of fines imposed for infrac- Mons of the rattle/rung regulations. One Madrid paper carried fifty in one day. Rationing applies not only to food, but also to factories due to flho shortage of ww mancrials. Sometimes Prom - merit. has a tmich pt’ unintended mivety ‘mus. from Arriba, Mum-tu- "In order to esta/blish mendi- cants hams and refuges for men- dlcant children, 170,000 peoetos have been set aside. "To rebuild the nolaoo 0f m0 m- fmta on. Gums-mom, the Govern- ment voted 1,_500.000 ." A wholesale root-gun lotion of 1n- dustry is under way,’ Woitlnen an t". . - n case of meat distribution, that af- , anglsts 1n Italy shout for the legit- inuite annexation of Gibi-aliar n, Spain, that Gibraltar is "This." 5113's Lecdalba, RAJ-ilk’, "l5 the vibrant cry cf the whole of Franco's glorious Spain." Spanish of1ic;al papers do not hesitate even to print. notices from the German Government in ma‘ Genman language. “All (icrmiin citizens,’ reacts such a notice in L11 Pfltrla of Granada." must i-epu-t fot-thvrif-h to the Consulate. Any failure to report, any failure to IWIIYY the consul of change o: address or change of occupation will be punsrialiie in ticcardance with German law." _ But thespearhead 01' 61-11mm influence is seen intnc 011111-1 to mould Spanish, Ituliati and Ger. {H1111 interests In an IIgQIESFIVC poi- LCY in South America. (1 imany flutters and fosters S111;:1i_;i1 0111- world dreams of rc-establisiiitig her empire in Soul-h America. On council of the 832111.511 Cmnmii-ife in the Franco (lov mem- flsllffis tile iianie of the - ma“. General Fiiupzl. as tii-csgirht. . - Germany secs Sunni as a premely useful tool in her tiotis in South America. su- ziinbl- SOUTII AMERICA IN SZTYLE TIPS (Canadian Press) NEW YORK. July l‘J~-Tliis ls the nervous in-bclivccn st-nson for the makers of women's clotht-s, a period when evoigvlroriy- watches everybody else, u-aiting in 51-1- which wny fashion Will jump. With Paris not saying ll ivoi-d. clothing manufacturers are 1111- ccrtnin v-lici-t- to 100k for inspir- ation. savs Amy Portcr. Fashion writer for The Associatcd Pri-ss. The general outlines for fall 111-1- thei-e--sliin lines. rich fut-s and fabrics. n11 absr-nce of fuss-y detail. But fashion still needs soinetliitisr to talk about. a shot 111 the arm for promotional purposes. Some- thing like the hour-class corset or the tip-hair do of other seasons. Out last springs fashion trends. two seem likclv to cni-r-s on into fall-the maittiish tt-r-ntl and the South American trend. The mannish trend will be felt. in college girl clothes-suits and sport things. Smith and Vassar started it by jnckcts in men's shops. Style scouts took no- tice. and this fall every college shop will nffcr boyish suck suits made up in masculinc-lcokitig twccds. The South American trend was strong enrly in the spring’. faded for a while. and now is SilTlllLf n-z- ain. ‘There are likclv 1o be 111m"!- and more tambourine huts, 111111-1: lace shawls, sombrcrns, Az/tcc prints. A mid-summer collection of eve- ning dresses in tropic sunset c01- ors, each with a South American here. Several imnortanl 11:11. dc»- signcrs feature "gauche" hats and “pampas" colors. Sprints-ii! ‘ the , Amer can ' black lnke mantilla is on displnv‘ Social Credit regime just before .i1ie first bond default in 1938. , Hughes Cleaver (Lib. Halton) not the floor, after considerable _ '.‘l‘O£1I‘, and declared he did not ‘lt-licve there was any discrimina- tion. He demanded that finance department officials be called to discuss this charge and the chair- ‘man, W. H. Moore (Lib. Ontario), said they would be heard. Mr. Cleaver said the reason AI- beria failed to get a loan was its llVfilllSfll to agree to the Federal Government's loan council scheme. 'I‘11c Alberta govetnment had "elem- ed to default." Denies Discrimination denied he had charged 11111111011. l-le said he 1 11 jiis staicd the facts. 1 lie will be heard again when , the cominittve next meets, probably ffuesday afternoon. J. H. Ross tLib. Calgary Blast) ttrzinmcntcci on the financial pic- ..i.-e pivrs-siiiui by Ml‘, LOW. "If 1 u PPCYHICC is so hard up 1 511g. v. to you that you are taking a t risk in starting a bank now, 11 1s very ' Mr. Low y dis -' s s more of dollars." Vfr x-plit-tl that Alberta had ">110 a 1:041 job of housekeeping 1d we h--- been able for the t three yeais to live within our is which ls something which few countries are doing to- fAs a matter oi’ fact you are Ilfillli-l that because you are default- ' 1 t 11 crest and, further- 1.~c you have increased 10 the extent Of alp- unziicly 310000.000 a year," lit-ks stiivl. Low denied the amount but . 1 the province had default- winvss and had increas- .l till‘- - wrnusa declared his gov- 01-111111-111 had defaulted only to the cxtont 1.11111 it was unable to pay. 'l‘11e goit-i-ninctit was faced with a sitiiri s11 that offered ‘no other allot-native. ~ Mr. Low presented extracts from 1111.- i-ectiinm atioiis of Dr. Jacob Vim-r, Univcrsity- of Chicago econ- CilllSL, 11-110 had made an investiga- tion of Alberta's economic possibil- lliPS for the information of an Uiidci-ni-iiinu Company which pro- pas 1 to handle the refunding of Alberta's (lcbi. He said the report, 111.1111» lust August, had not been published. Recommends Compromise This report, recommending a co- itivc compromise of Alberta's obligratiotis with creditors and use of the to r1 $l.1)l)1).000 to be used for into-rest payments. It aiso recommended that bond- holders cnnccl any claims for in- tci-vst art-oars from the time the iiiti-rt-st. tiavmcnts were cut prac- tically in haif by order-fn-councll 1n June i936 until the new con- O (it'll ii tonuplated agreement came into fort-c. - Mr. 1.01s- said the government agreed generally with the recom- mt-niititioiis but did not believe it W115 possible to impose any addi- tional taxation. J. J. Klnley (Lib. Queens-bimon- laui-gl nskctl the witness if he S1l","(‘i'll)t‘(l "to the easy way that 1- -i tvnttlt‘ in Alberta seem l0 111111: you have of getting over 1- 15111111111105?" "easy way," Mr. Low replied. there are certainly different and mcrq sound ways. We NEW YORK, July 18 —(C Hank Dunning is hitting it the don't catch it, with a .366 average. his explanation: “It's mostly luck. A guy another scorcher —but some right there to pull it in. "I'm not hittln’ any harder aren't there when they fall that too Wlfo Helps Homo Now coffee. A satisfying gul Harry Dannlng a pride of months: “Being married has helped Used to eat Hank, 28, and the former Migford —the_v'i'e b01111 fi-oin married in January. Big 31. The New York Giants the big aiwkivai-d younusiei- lenced catcher, but iod when Mancuso u-zis out an injured arm. A foul tin his hand in 1936 only 32 games. “flit-n a b ger stopped Manciiso 111 stepped in the breach. 1 games, batted near .300 w to step out when his hand w tcst. He caught 57 of the 1'1 games in 1938 when he 11-11 he worked 120 games that batted .306. Late Performance 136 of the Giants’ bad luck was there. A 11-! tic/n kept him benched for weeks and the Giants lost n s. row. cross. Harry tho Horse (ho know where the name at er has helped him to date. more easily, have less heft fer alL-who knows? “NOTHING NEW" Hitler's speech yesterday, "there was nothing new in cept when he said he 11111-1111: ed M1 understanding with now to lift ourselves by our fotrapo and we cannot do Hitting Secret Is Mostly Luck t, from Harry the Horse him- self, is why he lcd major bnLl lea- gue batters into the July stretch The matter thus simply explain- ed. the big Giant catcher tore in- to a platc of bacon and eggs. Be- tween bites, though, ho amplified lmows. One time you hit a searcher -— and it's a bingle. Next time up. last year (.313). The fleldersn Just know m," my ' negotiate would be no peacc. b1" only a chance for him to perfect 11.11‘ ti-cziclni-i-les and new felonlcs." More bacon and eggs, then; “Tell you though. I am waitinf!’ longer Gettin’ a better eye on the 111111 bo- fore I let go. And I'm trying to shot-ton my stride at the but. You know, stepping into the ball Wlth left foot. I've been strldln‘ far." an appreciative glance across the“ table toward beautiful. blonde Mi-a 1 w, than you'd realize. You know, a regular life, meals like this at the same hour. food as you uunt it. dinner at Si-Vflll one night, 10 the next. That's bad." Arigeles —say their rcmancc stirt- cd last December ("but I'd knn-m her a long time before"). ’I'hey were thinks —and so does she -—tli11t it was the lucky start of a lucky Dunning broke in with Bridge- port of the Eastern League in l9- from Buffalo in 1933 but he caught only three games after his arrival in July. In 1934 he played second fiddle to Mancuso, a more exper- hit. .330 pinch assignments and dui-ztig 1110 few games lie caught. Dt-spitc 111:1:- good mark the only chance he 110-, in 1935 v-as during a 1244211111: por- tind l1:- uot into 1'.- broken just as he was 110.11g lint- low for three works by lllllUan. B111 He handled the catching job in 152 coni-t-sts in i939 and battcd .313. Bu: tile old Dannlng figures he'll do better than the 7'4 runs batted in last year. -He's batting further back in the otrder than the second or third place shots he occupied ln 1939, has more tihance to send runs a- doesrrt thinks it's improbable he'll win the batting championship. A cat- cher works too hard. 0001 weath- it gets hot, he says, he may tire swing. But he's aiming for the title. Af- LONZDON, July 20—(Cl>)—F1-cnc.l1 circles in London, commenting on I and Great Britain. he failed to add "I do not believe the destruction of France_'.‘_'__ TIPPIE AND “CAP” STUBBS "But way-s an“ British Papers Spurn Hitler's and the people. The papers unanimous in "Pence ultimatum" P) The Daily M1111 said that and and obviously ho carefully." The "Hitler speaks in vain." The ier‘: speech was “a. false m”: oi nplmascment," . - ' 1'. guys 1111urs pieviousj 55 Z “Peace Ultimatum” j that. By ‘we’ I mean tho people of Canada. We are trying to change that." St C t IDNDON, Juliy 20—(%P)l-—lgritl1sh newspapers 1c ay pu lis 1c 11c‘ ar a c text of Hitler's speech, winch they culled an effort to drive a v-etigc‘ between the Churchill Government we t-v- spurnlng l-litl-zrh Mr. ‘- Churchill "receivccl a special trans- utiun with expert comment on the sixech soon altar it was delivered, will study i-L News -Cftironlolc declared. Herald, which sold. M11, Churchill probably would give B, reply tiext Tuesday ln the House, of Commons, commented that Hi1.- lulla-bi‘ against which President Roosevelt had warned 1L! “If we walktd into the trap, if we were lured into a ‘icy of ap- than peasement," the Herald» Bald. "W? peace we might The ‘Times commented:- offci- of pence is purely perfui by attaching to it no u-hatcvci- of tcrins on which is possible. Presumably any p and for Europe... as 1111111, this new order is a. l lapse into twaniiy. "We can do no other than to the last extremity against. if 51X l more ___ EASY IVAYS TO DETECT Dun know whether the hen L05 111g condition show-s it. by he waxy coinb, and by her full Harry yeah ski-nned v-uricties.) A wide s 0312;): lions of laying. The greater spread and flexibility of laying. in tlic beak will The earlobe (on skinned vai-ietiosl fmv days of lawn-s. w i t 11 brok- o ‘i0 opposite in all “5 or c0111. \Vll('ll the comb is as de- v .0 51-1-1111-11, the vent 11-111 be diy, puck- rsxdf, err-d. 11nd y-clloiv ton all yellow-- 5 L“ skinned vxirlclit-s.) Examine the y,“ base of the feathers 011 the fcutheis; the old broken, replaced by that base 1111- being bright, dean feathers quills nftcn fluid at t.:e base. (ling her feat-hers . , A 111111 nlnf“ during b11100 inc in mg If the signs dooribed m clearly been, examine oiooer. beak may be all yellow, on “m” be a pale to a. deep yellow ivhite- earlobed bi-cg-ds. The bones will be thick, blunt, Ivhe“ be slirunkfn the skin hard m his of producton long enough t0 the beak enti-ely. the shanks will a‘so show the vclopcti 111v)’ are seldom, if cvcr, in) FILM STAR DIES . Oiic sign that itction or soon will be rivcilctl, dry, and cool ices. “Hitler in effect. admits that his ictory inditlon ECG BITIIS u that he would now propose would be based on acquiescence and oo- l0) ution in tlic so-cadcd ‘new or- Mr. Roose- IIICTG fight "h" NON- LAYERS When culling it is important to being haritlleti is laying. The hen in lay- r red . soft abdomen. ‘P110 vent of the laying 111-11 will be large. moist, and flee 11-11111 yellovi- color (in all }'t3ll0\\'- pread between the pelvic bones and the ktx-i bone and a flexibe condition of tht-sc- bones are further indica- the these p111 s, the more heavily the hen is \ to lny, or has been laying for only n $11111‘! time, the comb will be hot. x to cig-h: weeks of average . be 11-1211 ton all yellow-skinned vu- y-cllow- fades after s ivlition of a noti-luying those she neck and body for signs of molt. This is iiidicail-d by L111»- prescrice of pin- W011i. wilt-d feathers that are dry at the new have filled \\'ll-l'l a bloody shed- early suinmer is likely to be out of lay- not The all y-ellow- skinned breeds. or show yclloiv- returning at the base of the beak, indicating that tho bird has stopped laying and has placed all or part of the yellow col- lorlng. Likewise, the ear-lobes wil TG- (on pelvic and close together The abdomen will and thick. When the llGh has been out ool 0r oi- return of yellow color. Hens that have de- piwslcal ilvcakiicss. or are sick should be culil-d inimcrlintvlyq ‘lug. Larges)‘ $212 in fiellfariiimea- PALI DRY GIN» GER IL! . .. lND GOLDEN GINGER ALENSTONE GIN- GER BEER. “LIME RICKEV. . LEMON. ADE . . . ORANGE- ADIZ AND TWELVE OTHER FLAVOUFW \.. SERVES FIVE 111111111111 Service 'At Bedeque A very impressive and ins itiductioa-t service was held at tho Bcceque Ututcd Baptist Church on Friday evening when the new p55- tor. luv. Cliiirlé-s Britten was 1n- ductcd as Pastor of the Church. The DBTVICB was ucted by Rev. J. B. Wilson ussisle by Rev. S, D. ‘Priies and Hot-A . A. Mac/Lead. The charge to the new pastor u-as Dresenteci b3‘ Rev. J. M. Blesedell 11nd the Cllfllllt: to the Church by Rfl-v. H. L. DLlllOll. ‘The niozlcrator of the Island Ba List Church, Rev. J. G, Duncan rought greetings from the island churches and Rev. Mr. Barker and Rev. Mr. Hoddin. ott greetings from the United Church. Rev. J. B. Wilson preach- “d 8-“ 610111111111 sermon 1m the Ra» sources of the Church. Mrs. Wat- son Sillickor of O’ 111-11,; 1,119 Soloist. Rev. Mr. Britten pronounc- ed the l! t: 611-11011. -—S, Dutch Embassy Claims "N0 Reason‘ For Nazi Threats WASHINGTON, Jul M—(A.P)\. A Netherlands Em spokesman said yesterday there was "no mo. son" for ‘vast change; pm-g from Amsllortlum, gccomipgmed i; threats of reprisnls, that Got-ma "T9 b91118 mistreabi-d in the ma: East and West Indies. Gerinlriis ivti 1 11km’ rounded up at rlie ‘gm gf tho lNllZl invasion of the Netherlands two months ago an be; treat '-d-1§;n111-.-- he .1111. n‘ °° " 11v men have been this official said. “Oi! gnu-sq 1; p not incnsani to b1» k t. or concentration cam-peqlgmmufioa soners are 111-11111 troatod dewnmj !'l‘1\I.l.-\.\'S LOSE 'l‘I>IRl-‘.E Still‘ Ilnyail Air Fort-c glam-s, roaring tu-rtiss the “Mliif-rrtir " Italinn ships hurlrlle-d norfli of‘ Augusta, Sit-ii)‘. bombs sank a (‘cstroyw-r and a 11e- 11111 ll Rom! 591d - m pot 0r store shin. it ex- HOLLYWOOD’ July; 21,._(Cp) _ belatedly annnunccd that the m0- vvlirit- William An10l11_57, film and 513,139 inf-ship Pllll-lllllll 1.11s burnt-J mid Ital)’ (‘llftl'fl(‘lr‘l‘ tit-tor. icd Sfllllfflill’. His sunk Jum- 7114 rift‘ llurnrzn. A .1, lust ivork ivns lll “The Dictator" t-urry-iiig 2'10 Italian 11:11! A n 11-1111 Charlie Chaplin. V__ nntl mt-n tn flu-Er 1‘.- Lool< AFTER TH’ trons? WELL. NOW, BOYS! I'D LIKE TO GO CAMDIN’ WITH YOU —- BUT WHO'D ‘pg ..__ MR. CAMPIN’ DOG being 1 on clubs on the Dom Lovers in Italy and the Kraft durvch Fhwde plan in Gcnnany. A gon- ersl census of industry, agricul- inn-e 11.113014111131114 a‘ beitxng token. prapara pu rig c. mm. ough going system of notional con- Germon Influence Evidence of Damion lcifluonoo h flagmnt. Barcelona lpoipors rqaort the celebration 1n "Got-man town", the Nazi ooctloii of Barcelona, of Hitler's victory, and of "The Day", the anniversary of Franco's victory. Italian 95-99131 Dflbliohed in Italy bear witness to the sympathy between Italy and Spam. 1:1 the Squares of Madrid, Barcel- Rorlnc and Berlin, re-echo the cr es THAT QLENNY’S $URE A STRING db... av..- "- "rams:- BUDGE-“WOULD YOU LIKE. TO GO g--o WITH LONNYN m; ¢\N'TH' UH ? "-UH ~- I'LL ‘IHINK n" I ' . .. 1].; _. - \ WELL, MEG-BF. IT uiutwp 5L BLT, - a "FERN NOT QOINHNI‘ ALL‘. ‘Jfl/ t l SAY WHO'S SHOWING LACK OF SYMPATHY NOW, You 0R I11“ 1.11....