\v.' 4. ‘ iemenis, Albert Gaudet of Mon- . r=Ac;1":,§Ix \ 1-no CI-_IAl{’LOTTE,ii‘0WN_GUARDIAN» I BATTLE! ..,,...w.-..-....... «.- --«w z BUT -— AT DUSK — ONLY BASIL RATIIBONE NIVEN - ooNAm_<:5xs_r;II:-l_vI_::_- go-_ Added———rlUYAL VISIT PICTURES IN WEDTERN CANADA __. . . . ._.._.._..__. \ SHOWS DAILY 3.15 — 7.00 — 9.00 — SATURDAY MATINEE 2.30 A?- hII-I-m PIIIIIGE EDWARD" —LAST DAY FOR “STABLE MATES” WALLACE BEERY——M|CKEY ROONEY OUR GANG COMEDY "Mirocletof Salt Lake" "fviif nmon. :0 Mon. -rues.’ EACH DAWN THESE RECKLESS WAR-BIRDS CLIMB T0 SOME RETURN l I newoy nature may be inset able In advance. CBASWELL for Photographs. CONI-‘EDEEATION LII-‘E ANCE. L-9'7 ‘Advertisements for insertion the .following day must be in this of- Zfice not later than ii 5, m. I 5-3-tf. THE SPECIAL CONSTABLES. Barrier Men and Traffc Officers LAST 'rmns rmuzu MESQUITEERS i UDA Y ANGI:‘.R"—Comed nEKn.uuo'..‘. ma i.;{...(....‘{.T the social registal 0 KATY. . . wasn‘t even listed in the telephone bookl But any girl can get her man . . . if ' she‘ll only do what Katy did! It‘: the laugh-and-love topper to - "3 Loves Has Nancy“l “BROADWAY BUC;i.!.ROG" “For Your Convcn':9.n;. In TC[‘hili(‘l:'i'Clll‘ I-‘loyal Gibbons True Adventure" and . [Notmes ' g is a l‘st of Scouts y xluzuzg the R0531 Visit»- Linc Ieaciérst s-ovtmasters J. Lawson, F.A. Drlscall, W. Reid and Chas. Connolly. At. Rochford Square: Scoutmas— te- F. . r. . 1At Gaff‘; Hall: L“ tiers Allan F01’- vt. nurall 1, Fred sythe, Lvnn Bur Scouts: Ray Pound 6. L. MuC.".rvil1-c 6, Anth0I1Y Martin 6. Gsidvm Kelly 8, Amby Wezvtherbie 12. Roland McEachem 12, Colin King 5, Winston Judson 4. Harry Spencer 4. Allison Mo-X Gregor 4, Bob Clawson 9. Sid_ ., 9, Jack Gr;-:n 9. Chas. Altarrm, Jr Blnns 12, II. o'd S. sale 5. i Special M no-e 1 G90. Gal-' tart 6. Bob I-Indrzon 5, Jas. Morris 1. tM3ke Rcddin 6. Flag Duty: Ivan Robinson. Ir- win Jenkins. Dan McKenzie, Har- rison McN°ill. G(‘l”fl.i-(i Read , Earl Harding. Wm. Mclizill, Ralp Mil- ler. Keith Carmichael, Guy Perk- m;_ Bpurgeon Diamond, Wm. Burke. Roland Hwrwssey. lE1ion Mocallum, Frank Mccvuigan. aer- pld Miller. Fmnk Gallant». Rolls’ cooper, Ed Bagnnll. [John Stcrns. Ernie McK.i-nnon. Mclew‘ "wold West, Don tacv " '.1rd, Albert Doug- FE 'Doug Hill. rst, , LA. Johnson of Montague in charge. Art Brown. gran-y Pineau, Earl Doyle. Vince ing, Fred Smith. L'nc Dumont. allie I-Iifcgina, Ivo Cudxmore. of ifirlottetown. and Cliff Hughes, ‘ aid Scully. Oarl Boehne'r,.i?.ob. gue. 4 2 Clean up at 5 n.m.: hon Woma- '§:n_ .1ohn Melnnis, Keith Garner n . Gerald Miller, Hugh '1‘ arm loh Miller, Albert SinclaZr.pBo;b , M. Matlnecs at 3.15 A TUE avenings 7.oo—s.45MoN- WED Something for scouts and Cuts helped to guard the Queen, during their visit to Char- 1 iM«ol:orvald an-ti‘ Tanton McN-eill, ‘writer. are the Leaders. in “R E D R. I V E R Cartoons-Sat. Matinee 2.30 to tell their "I 8!‘ zrancrchlldren, King lotetown, away back in 1939. Cor.-'rra9.u_lai:'rms rm 2nd Sum- mer-.;e Troop. They were re-ur- gat:-izecl about four months ago. and now have twenty-two fully outfitted Scouts of whom twenty were on parade on the 14th. Th-s.V are grateful on the Ladies Aid of the Group for assistance. Elmer two old camulrnz chums of the on the 14th the writer had the pleasure of meeting scout M‘chael 'I'!1sl'a,‘b of Amherst. Magdalene "slants. who is at prssont a mem- of 6th c‘~uarloti/eto-wn (Most Holy Redeemer). 0‘ ‘.0 >1 M_r. Allan Hooper, the Executive Secretary, is to be connyratulated on a fine piece of work in organiz- ing the parade and various spacial r"uties in connection with the Royal Visit. I-‘rvmer Provirc'al President L. D. Murray and Mrs. Mural’. now of Hal’fax. N.S.. are being greeted by many old friends. Boy Scouts will take part in the Confederation Anniversary celebra- tion, July 18th to Zlst. The mat- ter of arrangements has been left to the District Council of Queen's County, and a cordial invitation is extended to Scouts of. Prince and Kings County to join in the cele- bration. District Commissioner Wil- liam Warren. 19 North River Road, Charlottetown, will eladly give any information availab‘e. scouts as special features for follows: Monday. July 17th at 3.00 p.m. Grand Street Parade Thursday July 20th at 8.80 p.m. camp Fire by Girl Guides and Boy «Scouts by fireworks at Victoria Park. .—onai wow. MR. HUGH HENNIGAR Nomi. June 14—'rhe death of Hiusth ‘Hennisar. , eizhty-nine years, occurred seurday morning at his home in Northfield. I-Iants County. He »i.s-survived by three sisters in the states. four daughters and three sons: Mrs. Tthbets in Truro, Mrs. Gibbs in P.E.I., Mrs. Chalmers Anthony (Alma) in Ken- netooolr. Mrs. Arthur Pratt (Almi- da) in 9.-lma. Jeffus l-Ienni at in stanhope, Mass. and Fran and Percy in Northfield. The dbeequiee were con Rev. syopwozzo cozmasr A I In yesterday’s lime in i -, " -‘ . The §hopword.Cont‘est “ ' t r ' 1,‘.-‘ ~sao1~}vonn_~igo. 4 .in connectzon with the in Visit will be paid at the City. Hal to-do at 10.30 A. M. -502-6-1"!-1 RECITALS by pupils of Miss Lil- lian McKenzie, Tuesday afternoon uid evening, Heartz Memorial Hall. L-481-6-17-ii. TRYON - BONSHAW UNITED lBA.P'1‘lS'i‘. — Presbyterian service Tryon 3 P. M. Westmoreland ll AM. Bonshaw 7.30 P. M. R£V. S.D. Trites, Pastor. L-405-6-I7-ll. CHURCH NOTICE. - Biennial- bane Charge—-Rev. E. Milley, Min- ister. 11, North Granville. 3, Bread- a.lba.ne. 7.30, Rose Valley. The Roe Valley Servxce will be conducted by Rev. Angus Matheson of Seattle. Wash. L-486-6-17-ii. WE HAVE just received fliteen hundred bushels of oats. Govern- ment impacted, No. 1. Price 70¢ per bushel; and 300 bushel of bar- ley, Price 900 per bushel, Provin- cia.l Department of Agriculture. L-4606-16-21. CORNWALL PASTORAL CHARGE.-— _services on Sun 2 P. M, service 3 P. M. Comwail: S. S. 11 A. M. Service 7.30 P. M. Rev. E. R. Woodside, Minster. L-492-6-1'1-11. POLICE COURT —A.t police court yesterday a man was fined ten dollars and costs or twenty days for being drunk and dis- orderly. John Oarragher pleaded guilty to a charge of violating the ‘Excise Act and was find $25 and costs or 30 days. MURRAY HARBOR NORTH AND PETERS ROAD.—’I'he services on Sunday. June lath will be as fol- lows: Murray Harbor North 11 AM. and 7 P. M. and Peters Read 230 P. M. Rev. D. J. Gillies oi North River, Cape B-seton, N, s.. will con- duct the services. L-4-8'1-6-17-11. NORTII RIVER UNITED BAP- Rev. J. M. . , Pastor. Sunday, June 18;}: the churches worship thus: North River 11.00 A. M. Cl de River 3.00 P. M. Klrwston 730 P. M. “Alleglande to the Km ‘the best patriotism." 8 L-485-6‘-11-ll. HEAR DR. CARLETON STAN. LE1, Pre ioent of Dalhousie Uni- verslty, on "Canada A Democratic Nation and Her Place .n Wcrld Af- fairs" at , the Women's lnsmu e convention in Prince of Wales Col- lege Hail, June 21st. 8.00 P. M. v L-478-6-17-3i. “SEVENTH-DA>Y ADVENTIST CHURCH SE.'RVICES.—Young Pe:- .es Meeting, Sabbath School at .45 p. m. on Saturday and preaching tservvce at 3.00 o'clock following. On Sunday evening at 8.00 o'clock Evan- gelist ’Ioop‘s s.lbj6Ct will be ‘The s.n That Canno. Be Forgiven’. How may we know if we have com- mitted l-L? Hear this sermonl l ‘ L-501-6-l'l-ii. SACRED BAND CONCI-:R.T—Hl.s Honor Lieutenant Governor De- Blois has arranged for a sacred concert. to be given by the band of the Prince ElIWo.X‘d Island Light Horse Regiment in the Gardens of Government House on Sunday afternoon June ram fromv3:30 to 5:30 o'clock. The public is cordial- ly invited to view the gardegs and enjoy the music. L-464- -18-21 VISITING IN I-‘ItEDElI.IC'l‘ON—- Mrs. C. Ray Morris. of Grenville. P.E.I., motored to St. Andrews. N. B.. on Saturday, June 10. where she wil spend a few days at the home of Rev. and Mrs. George Morris. After motoring to Fred- ericton for the visit of the King and Queen.‘ she expects to a nd the rest of the month in Lycr- more Falls, Maine, as the guest of her daughter. Mrs. John E. Mur- ray, before rveturafng to the Island. THE BAPTIST CHURCH. — The morning sermon by the Rev. Harvey L. Dentlm. B. D. will be "Character or caricature in Rel ion.” Church School meets session, with the Beginners to lore at 11.30 AM. The senior and groups will meet immedia iy at the o oee to 12.30 P. M. At the evening ser- vice 7 PM. the Rev. I-Iarv ion will deliver a sermon on "some Little Thinazs That Ooun ." The -choir will render Elgar‘: "Land of ' nd Glorv" a the momin-1 _service and walmisIey' “From An [evening service. Use M|n:rd's for bites. {Central Guardian- . This column is reserved for neon of i local interest -but advertising "cg. - at 5 cent: a word strictly pay- INSUR- -- - *' -rn flowinc hi.kbyDorothwDix __._ 89 72131’ a dsilyowriter in the Gun-d.:a.n.—' coon usnn s'rovzs~ gt 1101. was delivered before iihe American man's price $18.00 u . All A - Society of Newspaper Editor: in tfbned. Terms if des e£L5o3 6 17 21 Washington. | ' ' - »' I have many curious umtiona PRESBYTERIAN SERVICES. — Sunday, June 18th. Kensington 11 A. M. and 1.30 PM. Frciertown 3 PM. 488-6 1'1-11. -——- of what sex? Please tell me which ‘PARISH OF ST. JOHN, l\IIL’.I.‘ON. apple tree my uncle buried some Milton at 11 A. M. S. S. at 10 A. M. money under in the Summ of and _R.ust.ico at 3 P. M. Rev. W. J. 1925, just beam he died? 1 was Phm‘P5- 1~'432'3'17' - born on the 35th of April and my ’* No- ATTENTION ADVEH.'1‘lSEBS— mm °" W’ M" ° , when the head of the house mono- of Kings is ' and-apple of the morning service ‘ll oi ey I... Den- in That Dwell Below the 5 es" it the '°°“ In.’ ny nonm-av nrx asked me. such as: What_ ppena to the soul inunecl after death? Will I marry. and if I0. how many chiidmn will I have and Are we congenial? What is the bat way of gettinc rid of a wife of whom you are tired? Do u think I should kill my hus- g:.ud’s mistress, or would it be best to not indifferent? What eha.il I name my twin boys? What shall I call my new house. dog, cat, lit- erary oluib? How can I acquire sex appeal and look hot while I keep cool? Would you marry a poor girl because you are in love with her. or a rich one whose father would give you is Join? shall I marry Johnofllbmfnothotfthemariein love with me and get about the same salary. Do girls with blue eyes or black eyes make the best wives? And so on and on. But the hardest riddle that I have ever been asked to unriddle is the one you propound to me to- day when you ask me what women like best to read in the newspapers. Not I nor any one knows for cer- tain, for the feminine mind works in A. mysterious way its wonders to penforrn, and no one can fore- tell wfnich way the cat is going to ump. Yet this problem of what women read in the papers is what turns editors old and gray before their time. because the favor of the fair sex is the real circulation builder and. in nine families out of ten, it is the Litt‘-e Woman who decides what paloer shall come into the home. of course. this was not al- ways thus. There was a time policed the paper and after he had devoured it along with his coffee rad eggs of a morning he put it in his pocket and carried it downtown with him, on the theory that, it was of no possible interest or use to his wife except to put on the kitchen shelves and wraco up bundles. But all of this is chanzed. The modern woman is an avid news- paper reader, and without, doubt the increase in divorce is largely to be attributed to the ‘sreakfast table scraps over which one shall grab the newspaper and have ‘he first peep at the b‘~pdy murders and juicy scandals a »d t'r= radio prorram and the ccnclc strips. In- deed, it may be said with truth that there is no better test of a happy and successful marriage than the ability of a husband and wife to split the pains" between them in peace and amity. Furthermore, it is inirportanrt for editors to know what women like to reed. because if any paper could assert that it was the ladies‘ I-‘an vorite and read by. all the women in town. it would b1 sitting pretty on top of the world, with aclver. N-“EYS EM1“'.1 out of its hand and b3S€‘ln!z on ben-died knees for space. For. except for their vices. men spend little money. Women are the great distributor: of wealth. Most that hard-working fathers and husbands and brothers and sons earn goes into the snanpv hand. bazrs on the Wv-rists of both wives anti dauglrt-ers and slsteru. and it is simply pitiful to think that they would never know how many things they want and need if they didn't read about them in the papers,- Oi course. one might answer the question about what women like to read in the newspapers by say- ‘ What‘ Womesnjuke 5 Best To Read 0 Newspapers T owe their tune and forttme. You wiIl‘reea.il that even the doctor who brought them into the world didn't fl overly excited about them. and Ill; ' M of d warmed to the mfhir and make it a. ti story when one of them has the tummy whe. Perhaps it is because the wet- aze woma.n'.s life is rather monot- onous and has few thrills in it that she likes to get her excitement out of the newspapers and iihe justaaahezouio themfox-her P nomsheianeverhemelfby any chance in; to be 3. gun-mall. m-killanyth gbutof1y.oi-beone of the sirens who commute to nmbutahegetsaweirdkickout of readingmnhout them while she uta her, by to pleeporand cooks steak and onions her hus- bands’ dinner. , ~ It is this craving for clamor, for excitemen/c, for a fantastic life fill- ed with incred-lsble. exitrava ifnat they will never know. at a o . th °“.."‘?‘..’i§«’.“...a“°'8o“.’..°a”°‘n’yw.‘.’.a3‘? The doings of tire cinema. stars have superseded the fairy tales in our childmenb fancies, and even before little girls can read them- selves they cluster around their mother's knee and beg her to tell them all about the pretty lady in picture with the 300,000 sable oatonandwhoisgoingtomarry Clark Gable next. It is only too sadly irue_tba.t the average woman has only a vague impression that the great generals and statesmen and writers scientists are people about whom hherewaaaiotintizegaperathat she just can't recall at t e moment. but she.is perfectly clear i.n her mind and knows every detail about what Greta. Garbo and Myrna Loy eat and wear and what cur- rent, boy friends they go with. And that every little sch read the classics under sion. but she laps up accord every word that is about Mae West or Robert Two other topics of etemai in- terest to women are society and beauty culture. No doubt the first society column was started by our cave grandmothers as they scraped the hida of the animals their hus- bands had brauizht in‘, and related to each other the gossip of their neitwhlborhood. of’ how such and such.a one had roasted bearmeat for suppe:--and meat so hard to set. my dea.r—and how» such another one was making a. perfect love of a drserskinskirt witha snake glrdbh and that still another was no better than she should be and was making eyes at all (he husbands. The ,hu§yl And from that day to this women have been everlastingiy interested in what other women were doing, Wh9lh'9T they knew them or not. It is what makes the parties of the mlllnnotres exciting reading to women who consider a can of sax-dina a banquet. and going to the neighborhood movies an orgy of dissipation. It is what makes the woman who hasn't a second dress to her back delight in reading every cle.ail of the wardrobes of the ten best-do-cased women in the world. And it is what makes the woman who gets her name in iihe down in the “among those also- present" notices of a sup. per. cut it out and treasure it as if it were a gem of literatu:e. Probably not one womaxf in a thousand. no matter how old and Mmely she is. ever skip: the beauty column in a. nawmaper, be- cause every woman one;-lane, gm‘ optimistic belief that somewhere, somehow, some do in some news- ing, Ev-erythlng: For a newspaper is -an epitome of the gossip of the world. and women's curiosi is insa/tiable about what everywhere, and their taste in newsisasvariedasitisinfood and runs all the way from caviar to chocolate sundaea. ' There is feminine intelligentsia which is strong for heavy editori- als and Waiter Linnmann and simply calls up foreign and politi- cal information and tax reports, EM 18 80 Primed with current events and facts and figures, de- rived from its perusal of the pop- ers, that it is a fearsome thing to encounter at a dinner y.,Am1 there are others whose daily diet is the society ‘ and the bird: and death notices. and who cannot the day ‘until they which cirenw star is getting g, d]. voroe, and why, so the newspaper, like the reflillurbnt. must not only have 3 varied mernu tormeet the appetites of ill clleIn.tlele,.bu; mustvtiu-ow in a. few extra frills for its feminine patrons, for women are as choosy about what they read as are about what they eat and wear, You can't not them down to o’ roast-beef-and-mashed - tatoes ie meal of to omutlc Mm Ano- diopntches and edi- whot are doing market itice and A/ted Pres torials about Wash and s reports sporting events, as you can men. They want all of that and some sinner and aeni.:..-lent and romance thrown in besides for A CAIINIHG I wish to announce that}! will be in a position to take one of the canning of your and fruits at ’ reasonable rates. ~ V canola: .4‘ ;. yw. . surplus garden vegetables W“ ; 1 W” cm. . N cfnnanias-:.« ...’.%‘”“°" hirhbivwe, meet Of politic: hioi'n' their eoiunusiat 'a.=:.:.“"a*:.':.:.'°**'”*’° paper she is going stumai:-le across A reliable recipe that will restore M1’ Elly hair to its natural color, demove all her wrinkles. and turn her feather-bed figure in similitude of a string bean, of course. the miracle never ha . pens. she never finds the Founta n of Perpetual Youth in printers’ in , but she never loses hope nor fai that she will. and she still keeps UP search in her daily paper f.‘1¥.”E°.a‘ia°"ii"3.‘?..“.l‘;.i..’°.‘.‘.‘.‘"’“ ":2 too old dim to follogvyvfi Ehe the almost ii I about ..‘;°..'i3“%...§i."‘i.'...i‘ ”"‘ “” husband. Oonaoerni th , furs; gowns fit for I shoes for ylorr. . society column, even if it is stuck , 193.9 1?w?‘°w ut’ the ‘ftp: I = 1 ** tulaigztmitl ,V1°'~NMI"|!f.g mfim a The Twenty-sixth Annual cm...n.,. by gmninistmnz them to him in t 0.1.“ ‘ vit . hm . . V 0 , women ‘never fag .0 woman-s INSTlTU’I‘ES ; i I OF PRINCE . EDWARD ISLAND i ' Will be held in A Prince of Wales college, Auditorium Wednesday 'und.,Thursdoy, June 21st and 22nd [ GUEST SPEAKERS Dr. Carleton Stanley Dolhousle University, . will speak on Canada A Democratic Nation and Her Place in World Aifuirs- ‘ Dr. R. F. Seaman-—Cancer; V M“ """°“,i’.;:i?:i‘...5:‘:E.‘I."lal.:".1Z§i'..:.,“’°"“‘°" on For further information watch your daily pupef3_ last. but not i‘.?°n‘i‘a‘”fi new no theld '* vertiaunenin wih ch I3 the old woman did her mm kiver to kiver. '1'ihe'.v on her daily. ma eaepeoiall-y her mods . nym- turc. In them she takes 3. mm into’: world where her Fairy God- mother shows her all the chines would like to heve— W018 Hid noose 3 Miles and hate or clowns: the bungalow; of which‘ she has .dmam».e-d: furniture and I and diina and silver; nnegicx , I 1 . Halifax, makes even readinrz of them al- most aydebauch of excitement. M-an oniv 1o'-k at the advertise- ments of the unions they W5-M End hope to buy, but women gloat over advertisements of things th never to haw..n'§hev read e ad- vertisements they remember what they read. and he woman who could not tell you whether Al- bania is a new kind of soft .drink or oanmed 3 knows where the smartest hats are to be found. what shop has the best bargains in its basemenfc. and lust what sort ofaiixmmineliheiagoingtohave if she is ever able to have a car. And so. as I said in.the bearin- niing. there is no telling Just what women like to read in the news- raperu. It is a little 0_ this and a itt‘e of that, but, in the main. it is the thing: that pertain to their sex. with 1 little dash of Holly- wood and a, touch of fiction and a bit of poetry thrown in for lami- apoe, as they any in Louisiana. For. after all, women have two worlds in which they live-—the bio world and the little feminine world with- L479.a.i*‘7T T. < . Annual Meeting ‘ The Annual Meetln of the Prlnc - Silver Fox Breeders’ gand Exhibitors? .IlEs'ls‘(‘i-élilzitiiolrlsliiyvliidl be held in the Board Room Civic Building char lottetown, on Tuesday, June'20th at 1.30 p. m. ‘A fuli attendance is requested. in it which has its oi-am peculiar BRENTON CLARKE: W. R. SHAW *.::.°r::.*;..-st an: 4"; President sect-em... petual interest to tr Prince Edward island Silver Fox Breeders‘ and Elrhihitors’ Association IONDON — GOP) — At the at!“ of 15. Ursul Mot‘!-“"*'l ““" “ " her first solo art exhibition here. El- ‘ ected to the Women's mtsmau .131 Art Club at 13, her won‘; is des- [ csrlbsd as "fit for the Royal Acad- ‘ emy." _ L-491-6-17-21. ' /- \,_} King George and Queen Ellnbeth 1! they ‘- at the Barrack Green III Saint John. N” ‘ amended the reception ‘platform Saint John where they were given In entbuslutio reception by the citizens of Brunswick. ‘