, flA-dmrglh-nlflrnfi . U.F.Ii.Y.7¢<>7-30p-m- B, II, G, 3,8 to8.30 p.m. a SECRET SERVICE TIIRILLER IPONIOIID IV VIII MAKER! OF ROXY ‘CIGARETTES AIIIITION SALE I am instructed by R. P. Rogerson. Victoria, to sell at "The Beacon” Thursday, May 11th, at 1 o'clock- household furniture comprising eleven bed room suites complete, dining roonr table, small tables, chairs, organ and pictures. Some of the above Articles are one hund- red years old, also bedding, linen, towels, napkins. linoleum and a quantity of silverware, stainless knives, Mallett Cream Separator (new) and lee Cream Freezer. I will also sell on the above date the following stock, and implements. One Ilnlstein Grade cow 4 years void. frsslrened, one Holstein Heifer i! years old. one Shorthorn Cow 8 rears old, very large, one Holstein llelfer 2 years old freshened, one Hardy Sprayer Power. 2 row scuff- lv-r, hay rake, hay mower, disc hzirrniv, plough, cart, double and single truck wagon. one driving wagon, 2 wood sleighs, driving sleigh. 2 sets driving harness, 8 sets of leather work traces. one set iluriblc harness complete, collars and haiiics and a lot of other nriii-lcs too numerous to mention. Ail sums up tn $5.00 cash. Over that amount G months credit on approv- ed joint notes. If not fine follow- ing day. HUGH MORRISON, Auc tioneer. ' 1194-5-3-6-8-10-41. Attend .|. w. Fyfe’s Big Auction Sale At Emerald 2 I'll. SATYRDAY. MAY 13TH. MR. FYFE IS REMOVING T0 CIIARLOTTETOIVN TO RE- SIDE. i John Dccre Tractor, in good condition. burns crude oil. l Tractor Plow, three bottoms. 1 Double Disc IIarroiv-Massey- Harris. 1 Four Section Lever Harrow- Massey Harris. 1 Four Section Spike Harrow- Massey llarrls. 1 Double Ilow Cultivator-John Dccre. Double Horse Hoe. Spade. Fertilizer Sower. Double Row Planter. Hay Rake. Gang Plow. . sets 600 lb. Scales. Potato Grader, sorting table and elevator. 2 Potato Forks. 1 Bean Duster. 2 Pncis and Brccchlngs. Douhlc Harness. 1 45 gas. bnrrcl roofing. Credit to Nov. i, i933 on approv- ‘rd joint notcs—under $10 cash. 6% (IiSCOllnlZ allowed for cash. The ribovc sale is mode under and by virtue of a. Chnttcl Mortgage dated Ird of August. 193i, given by J. W. Fyfe to The Royal Bank of Canada. HUGH MORRISON. Auctioneer. 9345-5-9-41 Professional tiariis Stewart & Lowther .|. n. srrzwsrvr, K. c. N. W. LOWTIIER BARRiSTEltS. SOLICITORS, ETC 84 Great George Street AIONEY T0 LOAN McLEOD & BENTLEY .|. A. BENTLEY W. I5. BENTLEY, K. C. Banister and Aitorney-at-Law MONEY T0 LOAN OiYicc: I80 Richmond Street Prohibition Commission Chas. ll. Black. Chairman, Charlottetown. Ias. n. llfcllnnnld, West St. Petera John Simpson, Hamilton. Send all‘ information regarding Infractions of PROHIBITION ACT "flow, suppose the accused tclls us in his own words Just what hzip- wncrl," the magistrate suggested. "Not likely!" rcpliccl the man in the duck. "What do you think I pleaded ‘not guilty‘ fort" _,,_,__\ lkd u ti’!!! his.’ "'" B’ KATHLEENL NO RIS “I can catch him-good-bye, Mel" Maggie celled, her voice coming bed: on the wave of cold air that was admitted by the opening kitch- en door. _ Mrs. Johnson sat on dreamily. munching and pondering. Maggie and the man of the family had to punch time clocks at half-pest eight. But Elizabeth, the older daughter. could saunter down to the beauty parlour where she "demon- strated" a complexion cream, at any time before ten. She came out now, tousled and sleepy as her mother had been, and mapped, like her mother, 1n a soil- ed kimono. ‘iph, Lord, I'm dead!" simply. . “Have good time last night?" her mother asked, rattling sheets of newspaper. "Time of my life. Oh, I'm dead. I got a cold, anyway. Helen's got her death of cold. Chess Rivers was just 1n from Denver, and he's just about dead!" Elizabeth-said simply ,obviou.sly undisturbed by these mortuary details. "Ma. you ought to get a Jap in here. This place looks something awful!" The older woman continued to crunch and read, unruffied. l-ler first-born could do no wrong. , "I know it, ‘Lizabetlm, But two dol- lars a day! My goodness, you wonder wliat next! ‘Two dollars s. clay for what?‘ I asked one of them. ‘A few dishes,’ I said, ‘and to sweep a cot- tage cf five rooms-why,‘ I said, ‘it's child's play. When I first was mer- ried,‘ I told him, ‘I could get a girl for fifty cents a day!” “It scems like Maggie thinks of nobody but herself," her mother said, out of a. long pause, “and that's the truth!" But fortunately for Maggie, it was only on rare and terrible occasions that her mother and sister agreed in criticizing her. Now Elizabeth came indlfferently to her defence. "Oh, poor kid, she doesn't get many breaks!" “You'd stand up for her, of course," Mrs. Johnson commented in resentment. . “Well, she don't get many breaks!" Elizabeth repeated absently. "Poverty is a curse, all right!" Mrs, Johnson presently responded vaguely. ‘But her daughter had heard this remark so often that 1t made no impression, except, per- haps, that of deepening the formless discontent that was one of Liz's most marked characteristics. Maggie had danced along the frosty winter street beside ‘the bent. meek little figure of Lcu Johnson. postman, chattering, with her usual eager rush, of everything in general and of themselves in particular. Len Johnson made almost no re- sponse. Shc was always like this, her eyes. her voice, her feet eager in the rush of joyous vitality that marked, for Maggie, the rise of every new day. But even he took Maggie largely as a matter of course. Tlizabeth was the family beauty, aristocratic and exacting and discontented, like her mother, and poor Mlnnie—well, she hadn't made much of a match when she had chosen Leonard Johnson, and she had never let him forget it. They had had a few years of real unhappiness. Leonard junior had died, ‘Lizab- eth had been critically ill for months, bills from doctors, under- taker, nurses. hospitals had accum- ulated llke autumn leaves, and poor lvilnnieb auger that there was to be she said NOTICE The stalls in the Fish Market will be sold on Friday, May 12th. at 2 o'clock p. m. By order, Market Clerk. 9364-5-10-11. BUSINESS STANII F0 ll SALE Very desirable store and ware- house with frost-proof cellar in splendid birsiness location. Rail and water shipping facilities at door. Apply H. F. MacPhee, Solicitor, Charlottetown, P. E. I. 9l85-5-2-tws-6i. NO TICE Pure Bred Percheron Black Mac No. 203015. Standing at Edwards born, Norbnro, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. Other days out but home at night. HENRY MALLETT, Owner. oioo-i-a-wclf-ol. " N orboro. i Pl’ a third child had added the last touch to her husband's despair. In that some dark, tinnbled bed- room off the kitchen from which she had. impresslvley emerged this morning, Minnie had quite un- expectedly brought a. second daugh- ter into the world, a tiny girl, born too soon. and promising to quit the world es unceremoniously as she had. entered it. Who indeed could have dreamed that that gasping mite, that little “drowned rat" was going to turn in a few years to definite, companion- able, loving, eager little Maggie? After the general collapse of the family fortunes and the 10s of her only sou, Mrs. Johnson had made no further efforts to plant and fos- ter her husband's business ambi- tiom, or to hold up her own head in the world. CHAPTER II. Life scrambled along somehow in the Washington Avenue cottage; and almost every day there was a, funeral somewhere worth seeing. Minnie Johnson, forty-six years old, liked funerals. “Mammirll give up the funeral of her oldest friend, if there happens to be a bigger one on the same day!" ltiuggie asserted delightedly. And yet she considered the dismal tendency as rather admirable in her mother, and when there were defective black gloves or ribbons or veils marked down for below cost, at the Mack, she always brought her mother fresh supplies of them. This morning she parted from her father, as usual, before the swinging doors of the general post office, to the much more inviting scene presented by the Mack. There were life, animation, gaiety here. lllaggie. penetrating to an odorous basement room that smell- ed of disinfectants and face powder and wct towels and highly scented soap, found some forty of her es-Q sociates surging about; changing their clothes, powderlng their faces. gossiping, laughing, and quarrelling. In the passage at the top of the flight of brick-walled stairs that led up to the shore was a nail, and Maggie took from it, with the ex- pertness of long usage, a handful of scraps of paper andbegan without: further preamble the business of the day. “Say, did they get a new boy in here in Jimmy's place? Where is he? Are you the new boy? What's your name? Joc, huh?" She had brought ‘up with a bump against a tall young man, and now she raised her blue eyes from her memcranda and smiled at him as she went on, "I guess you're the new boy? Joe Grant, huh? Were you workin’ in a department store before? You weren't? Well, see here-these are the stock orders. Ink, see? And salt boxes, see? He stood looking at her, bewilder- ed, his puzzled, mutlnous eyes far above her small head, bent to study her notes. “We might as well do the candy first, since they want ‘em for the window, I'll hand ‘em down to you and you check ‘em off. Don't be any dumber than you can help, because they're always in a rush for the night orders!" Envelopecl in her preposterous apron, her small hands fairly flying, her crown of chestnut braids be- coming slightly dishevelled, and her checks getting red. with her exert- ions. Maggie Johnson was all sup- erbly indifferent to what he might be feeling or thinking. "Here-be careful with those box- es, Joe. If you spill this stuff you pay for it. What's the next? ‘Mat- inee Habits‘? Oh, those are chocol- ate burs-didn't you ever eat one? Gee, you are dumb!" It was noon on the some day. There was a forty-minute interval for lunch, and the new boy was lounging. bitter, disgusted, against a strip of dirty, disfigured brick wall that had once been painted white. Far above his head, the boy could hear the healthy one-o'clock roar of the store, beating rhythmically, like the sea upon a deep shore. He was away from it all for the forty minutes of his lunch "hour," but it seemed all to be with him still-the noise of it, the confusion, the horrible smells. A gong. above him, behind him, somewhere up the wide, dirty, util- itarian brick steps that rose steeply between two marred and grimy white brick walls, rang twice. That meant that the second lunch shift was due to report upstairs and re- lieve tho third. The boy heard it, but he did not move in its direc- tlon. (To be Continued.) An eminent banker says the way to cnd the depression is to elimin- ate fear. And an easy wny to end fear would be to eliminate the de- ession. ~ ~ SEEDS liliAlN llow in Stock clove: — Timothy —- Turnip and Mangel Seed. Oat: - Wbeat —Bs-rley-Buekwlieat— Peas — Vetehes and Corn. All the above are belt quality Number One fresh stock lnr- ported this silflnl. Selling at lowest‘ prices Wholesale & Retail Special prices to Farmers‘ Clubs and Institutes. Call or write for prices before buying. A. iiorne & 0o. 9360-5-10-13-17-31. Rose Valley A And Vicinity Rose Valley school is progressing favorably under the skillful manage- ment of Miss Marion Blondon. Friends and neighbors of Mr. Ivan Frizzle were sorry to hear of his re-‘ cent msfortune in losing a very val- uable horse. . Mr. Efiijah Raynor, spent the week end in Rose Valley, the gu" ‘ of Mr. D. 1M. Tlodd. Mr. H. D. Dixon motored to In- kcrman on Monday and reports the roads in very good condition. Miss Margaret Todd and little sister drove to Crapwud Tuesday. Miss Adele Champion has re- May Discuss Reduction Of War Material- (Assoeiateii Prue) ormrvs. may b-Axi" endeavor may be made at the World Die- nnnoment Conference to tackle n}; problem of I ‘ucln, war mat- erial in the hope that the powers may volunteer such big redudionl that Germany will agree to abol- ish the Reichswehr and accept a eouscript army. Arthur Henderson, President of the conference put forth this ides today in an effort. to uriectrlife in- to the dead-locked discussion. Representatives of Great Britain, the United States“ Germany and France sold they would telephone to their home Governments to see whether the scheme was approved. The move was regarded as a concession to Germany as most countries preferred reaching a de- clslon on the army problem. that is whether armies should be eonscript or volunteer, before considering guns and other war materials. MIDDLETON WOMEN'S IN- STITUTE CHANGE RllilNll llE T iii | FF Secretary of Board of Trade Tells British House Time Alone Will Show Effect of Tariff. z-qmin-n- (Cansdhn Press Cable) mrmou, my B-Dr. m. I. Bur- gin. Parliamentary Secret y to the Board of Trade. today told a ques- tioner in the House of Commons the Government was unprepared at present to change its ruling that certain classes of goods must con- tain a minimum of 50 percent of Empire materials and labor before they are eligible for Empire pre- ferential tariff treatment in the United Kingdom. The questioner maintained con- siderable injury resulted to British manufacturers both at home and in the Ddminlons because the Empire content of the goods was not fixed at a higher percentage. The April meeting of the Mid- dfetcn Women's Institute met at the home of Mrs. Colin Craig. Meeting opened with the Ode and “In the Gleaming.” Thirteen mem- bers responded to roll call with my favorite book and author. Minutes of last meeting read and approved. Visiting committee failed to re- port. Schcol committee reported visiting schools. New committees were then appointed: school, Mrs. Allen and Margaret Wright; visit- ing. Mrs. Elliott Wright and Mrsi Curtis. Questionaires were then discussed and answered. A ethort 9103mm followed: S0118. Jaunlta; Reading, My Awful Day of Mother- turned to her home in Malpeque after spending the pest three weeks in Rose Valley. - The many friends of Mrs. Ken- n'e Gsaham are sorry to hear of her recent illness and all hope for a" speedy recovery. Mr. Erk Champion has purchas- ed e. saw mill and has already in- stalled the machinery preparatory to opening in e, few weeks. Congratulations are extended to m. and Mrs. Still-H. Bears, (nee Janet Cairns) formerly of Sitanchel on the arrival of a baby boy. Woman Diplomat For Copenhagen WASHINGTON, May 21-102.)- lWhen Mrs. Ruth Bryan Owen ar- "rives in Copenhagen in the near future to take up her duties there as the first United States woman to attain ministerial rank ‘in re- presenting her country diplomatic- ally, she will be just across the Baltic from the world's first wom- an ambassador. Madame Alexandra Killantay, Soviet diplomatic repre- sentative to Sweden. Madame Killantay was first named as ambassador in 1920 when the Moscow government sent her to Norway M pfllitical and liTfldO representative. Seven years late she was sent as Ambassador to Mexico. but she remained only a few months and had a stormy time because of charges. that the So- viet Misslon was engaged in polit- ical propaganda. Since 1930 Madame Killantay has represented her government as sm- baassdor to Stockholm and the work of this 61 year old widow has stamped her as an energetic dip- lomat. She has modelled commer- cial agreements which considerably increased Soviet Sweden trade. Madame Kiliantey is the daugh- ter of a former Rusian admiral and was educated in the fashion- able Smollry Institute at Leningrad. She worked for years in Switzer. land end other Eirrcpean countries together with Lenin and other en- emies of the Czeristic regime. Arm- the Kerenslcy revolution in i917 she returned to Russia and became an ardent worker in the extreme movement. She 1s the euthorpf many books. among them “The Class War-r" and "Society and Maternity." llrraril‘: Llrilmnrit to; Chlllilglnn, DON'T SIIFFEII PILES TWO SPECIAL PREPARATIONS By The linkers of lifccca Ointment Quick Relief! Two klnlls-l\'o. I, for Bleeding (solil in Tulle with pine for lntcrmil use), soothes nml henis. No.2 for itching or Pririisllic Pllrrl. Sold in Jnr. for oxtcrnnl use only. Kills the Parasite and stops itching. hood, Margaret Wright; Reading. Making Both Ilfrrda Meet, Mrs. Allen; Reading. Canadian Books and their authors, Hester Inanan. Music, florence and Marguerite Craig. Meeting closed with the Maple Leaf Pbrever, after which ioecream and cake were served by the hostess. Collection ai cents. Loss of Ear Old Penalty For Gounterfeiters ii- EAIJJFAX, May iF-(CPJ-Mod- em counterfeiters might be a. bit chary about passing their spurious product were they subject to the punishment meted out to offenders in Nova Scotie a century ago. In those days of the 13th century, the loss of an ear was considered a. not too heavy penalty for the person detected passing counterfeit money. The earliest recorded effort. at circulating this form of coinage took place in Nova Scotia Ln 1823, when s. large amount of £1 and £2 English notes were discovered 1n Halifax and several other provin- clel centres. Investigation soon resulted in the arrest of one of the counterfeit band, in whose Halifax home were found scores of banknotes obviously forgerles. The £2 bills resembled the flflzlnals so closely as to defy detec- tion, but thwe of the larger denom- instions showed clumsy workman- ship. It was these that had aroused lillhicicn, ‘ " _ to the arrest of the Halifax man. Be was quickly convicted and u. was ordered that one earshould be cut off while he stood in a public piliory. Sentence of one year in Jail also was imposed. 5DUTII GRANVILLE SCHOOL Standing for month of April: Grade x-i, Elizabeth Corbett; a, Charles MacKenzie. Grads IX-l. Donald MacDonald. 511416 VIII-l. Robert Macfleod; 2, Doris MacLeod. Grade VI-i, Stanley Adams; 2, Annabell MacLeod; 3, Alma Mor. risen; 4, Robert Corbett. 91149 V-l. Ena Morrison; 2, Clara MacEwen; 3, Sandy Morrison. Orv-dc III-l. Albert MacMillan: 2, Elmira MiwMmun; 3, George Psynier. ' Grade II-l, Eric Adams; 2. Ev- erett Thomas. Grade I-1, Irene Morrison. Most stars-i, Eric Adams; 2, Ev- erett Thomas; 3, Irene Morrison; 4, Elmira MaeMillen. Perfect attendance - Elizabeth Corbett, Charles MacKenzie. Stanley Adams, Elmira MacMlllen, Eric Ad- ams. Albert MacMillsrl, Everett Tho- mas. Geo. A. Cairns-Thacher. (Patriot please copy) "Your teeth are in bad shape," seid the dentist. "You should have a bridge put in at once." "f-low much will a bridge cost?" "About seventy-five dollars." Dr. Burgin agreed that some home industries claimed the rate was too low to afford them ade- quate protection, but insisted Wal- ter Ruuclman. President of the Board of Trade, must be given time to observe the effect of the regulation before considering appli- cations for upward or downward International Nurses Convention Thousands of nurses from ell parts of the world will assemble in Paris and Brussels this summer for the International Nurses’ Conven- tion being held in Paris from July 10 to July i2 and 1n Brussels from July 18 to Jilly 15. There were over 6,000 partici- pants in the quadrennial congresses expected that this number will be exceeded at the i933 gathering. Nurses from Canada an the United States attending the con- on July 1, arriving 1n Havre July 9 and proceeding direct to Paris. A series of four "Nursing Convention Cruises" have been arranged for the Canadian and American nurses, these ranging from 28 to 62 days and enabling the members to at- travel 1n England, France, Belgium, Austria, Italy, Germany and Hung- ary. Th International Council of Nurses is a professional organiza- tion whose aim is “raising ever professional ethics and public use- fulness of its members." as well es “to provide a. means of communica- tion between nurses of various na- tionalities, to provide opportunities for them to confer upon questions relating to the welfare of their pa- tients and their profession." To be admitted to participation in a Congress, a nurse must be ap- proved by the National Nursing As- sociation of her country. In the case of Canadians, every nurse et- tending the convention must have a membership card showing that she is a. ember in good standing of the Canadian Nurses’ Association through her provincial organization. The inter ational congress this year will study many interesting professional subjects and a great number of nurses will take part; in the discussions. The time between July l0 and July 13 will b, dgvotgd to meetingi. Sunday, July 9, wgii be kept free for registration; Mon. duy. Tuesday and Wednesday will be spent in Paris with impel-nine general ' ; Thursday will be occupied in travelling from Paris seeing visits on the way; Friday and Saturday will b espent in con. Vellum Batherings at Brussels, end. ing with a farewell banquet." T" hi"!!! Higher Thv imports of w. in March u» IGBIIOG 9,579,340 , ’ gompared with 6,712,089 in Ifirbruery and 9,125,881 in March, i032. Tea from India in March was 0,042,490 Pl-‘mn-ds, Ceylon 2,444,875, Japan 451,378 and China 252,833. The quantity 0f grten tea in Maren was 476,039 pounds, 446,860 coming from Japan, 20,566 from Ceylon, 802i from China and 493 from Germany. Charged with stealing socks from a shop, s woman pleaded absent- "Buv. doc. can't I let along with a small culvert?" .mindedncss. A clear case of wool- gathering. at the last international convention I held in Montreal in 1929 but it is ' ma], a d3, um vegmb,” m, iworlfng in my garden, higher the standards of educationQ to Brussels with interesting sight- ' Welieve a most interesting proposition to offer liable potato growers near llllPlilPilllilllilipgng-lms» AIIENIIIIII I0 1'5. CIISIIOHG guplflyhl wri, their rfliillirelnenta iii fertiii r u = the remainder llflymerrt iii 3111;931:301: ‘.i‘.";'.,'" market Price- If you are interested, call at the 0on3," further particulars. 1.33mi: .;rtii;.ztlz.za.s"""" "h" ‘w; i“ u‘ PAllL A. riunnrv, 9265-5-5-5l Form Copper De- velopment Ass ’n. IPNDON. my o-(c. P. Cable)- Qovher interests today announced formation of e Copper Development Association to collect and dissemin- late technical information on uses of the red metal for the benefit of con- sumers and potential consumers. The announcement said the As- sociation would meet representatives I of leading Canadian and Rhodesian Producers here to consider plans for lncreasin: demand for their product. The meeting will be under the chairmanship of Chester Beaity. member of the American Chamber of Commerce in London. ‘lussia. Beokons Exiled Royalty i NEW YORK, May S-(QPJ- ,Count Leo ‘Tolstoy, tall. angular ‘Russian exle who lives in Connec- ticut and longs to revisit the land of his birth, is in New York to de- liver two lectures on his father the Russian novelist, but finds public speaking and life in the me- tropolis disagreeable. The square bearded Russian who looks something like Saint Peter is a lover of the soil. “I am unhappy in the city. I came from the soil and will minim to it. That is where I get my strength. I must put my feet on the earth." ‘Iblstoy eats but one and a half grows moot of them h'mself. "I like 111881118 among the ' and coirbages and letting my subsconcious mind ventlon will sail from New York , express 3981;," he said meditatgve. in the Red Star liner Westernlaud |1y_ "I should like to visit Russia age/n. I would like to see the old woods, the old places I loved. It has been fifteen years since I saw my father's home." The exiles de- sire for Russia becomes r‘ wet in the Springtime when there are tend the convention and at the i"fields of violets, the woods carpet- samc time take the opportunity to ed with lilies of the valley and the trees filled with birds." “Where my father is buried-not for from our homo-stand seven big oak trees. They shade his grave. There are many birds in their branches. My mother used to feed them oats," thepatrlarch reminisc- ed. rm: nscrwr or rtoaariza BEES Although honey stealing by bees is likely to be most troublesome in late summer, the bee-keeper has to keep in mind that robber bees may start their racket at any time. ' In warm weather when there is little or no honey to be got from the flowers the bees will easily yield to any tem- ptation to obtain it anyhow. After more or less fighting they will over- power any very weak colonies, and carry the honey to their own hiv. Old robber bees have a shiny ap- pearance. the hair having become worn ofl with entering so many dif- ferent hives. No colony should be allowed to grow weak, says the Do- minion Apiarist, and no honey or syrup should be exposed in the api- I17. RIVEBDALE SCHOOL The following is the standing for the month of April: Grade X-i, Annie McQusid; 2. Beale MacKinnorr. Grade IX-l, Glennie MacIeod. Grade VIII-l, Berton Multin- non: 2, Waldron MacKinnon; 3, Harris Iliscfiadyen. Grade VI-l, Janie MscKinnon. Grade IV-i, Henry MecKlnnon. Grade III-l. Inuls MacKinnon; 2. Hilda MscKinnon; 3, Rae Mac- Fadyen. Grade I-i, Lloyd MacKinnon. Perfect eztendsnce-Maldron, Ber- ton. Louis, Lloyd and Hilde MacKin- non, e~ MacPhee. William Gregg and Harris MecFa-dyen. Teacher-Annie MacEscl-iern. “Whatever became of Meckle- vlteh?" _ "He went to the States and made a name for himself?" ' "How?" "He cells himself ‘Jones’ now." "That harp player gets $200 for every concert." , “Harm. Easy picking!" 1 Prince Stree"! Charlottetown, P_ E1 l. < i ‘will msiiici iuaii iicnii llNSUtllESSllll Polish Aviator Land, At Maceio, Brazil After Speedy Flight Over South Amer. rca. PEIRNAMZBUOO, emu, Maya (A-PJ-After a. speedy and nounced flight from Africa, c” taln Stanislaus Karzynske, yo“ aviator. who sought. to esteem, new distance flight record. whim landed unexpectedly at meek,’ m, capital of Aiagoas Province. In his big white llwfioplang m, ilyer reached Brazilian soil berm, dispatches arrived announcing in departure from San Luis. Scum; at 10.10 p.m , Sunday. He wu sighted near Natal, Brazil, at w, p. m.. today, after crossing ti‘ South Atlantic in 1'1 hours and 5g minutes. He landed at Mercia a 4.30 p. m. He had. flown 3.433 kilometre; (2.149 miles). ‘The distance film record was set Feb. 8 by the Brit iish Aviators, Squadron Leader 0 R. Gaylord and Flight Lieut. on. bert E. Nlcholietts, who flew am kilometres (5,343 miles) from m. land to Africa. “will! Karaynske. one of Po- land's noblest pilots, hsd ho off without preliminary aim ‘ . meat in 1931. He flew from Wu to Belgrade and then made ii cir- cuit of Africa. He was the third flyer to oom- plete a solo flight over the Soutl Atlantic, the British aviator Capt James Molilson, and the late 3H1 Hinkler having previously iiccom. plished the feat. JPRING PARK SCHOOL MacBeth. Grade X-i. Dewar Maclveill; i lldizry Driscoll. Grade 1X—Sr. 1. Augustin Campbell: 2. George Veesey; l Grade 1X Jr—l. Russel MacNeilll 2. Virginia Cairns; 3. Vcm Lewis. Grade VIII-l. Harold Garnhaiii 2. Ira Stewart and Jame DQ115613» Eva Douse; 4. Martha Dause. Intemiediate Department-M. I Durisfbrd. Grade VII-l. Martha Saun 2. Marjorie Thompson: 3. M . 'I'hr.mpeon; 4. Dorothy Thomvwi- Grade VI-l. Aubin Blecquicrli 2. Robert Mackenzie; 3. Earl 0N8- ory; 4. Harvey Mclnnls. Grads v—1. Edna Mackenzie" Harry Rdbinson; 3. Norma Vessel‘; 4. Lloyd Ford end Earl Dicks. Grade IV-l. C"arlie Jacklflul 2. Gerald Lewis; 3. Ethel 08m‘ ham; 4. Margaret G-authier. Primary Department-A. M. C" merits. Grade III-l. HOIQII cream" Charles Doiron; 3. Marion Mclnuil and John Stewart; 4. Wallace C01- es and Eric Robinson. Grade If Sr-l. Anne Gariiliam; 2. Jackie Garnham: 3- Ham“ Gregory; 4. Bobby McInnls. Gmde II Jr-l. Reta Mocklnuolli 2. Ralph Car-eon; 3. Innis 0B5‘ ford; 4. Francis Bell- Grade 1-1. Phyllis 001"? i Dorothy Rodd and vernou V’ can; a. Gordon Stewart; 4 Wayne Bovmees. Jorrusmrrs arvrza scriool Grade X-l. Raymond T11” 2. Dorothy Hbllzvran. Grade IX—l. Willie Currie. i Grad’ v'If-1. Daniel 0"" a. Melvin iii-mi; a. Marv 5111M“ Grade VII-i. Annie Smith? z limmet Power: 3. Basil Slavcii. Grade IV--1. Lillian 1418811153 Reginald Power: 3. Lflwfl“ Brzei. ~ Grade m-i. Alvin aeaiuu Grade II—1. Anita Bimini? Elmer Brunei. A a Grade I-i. William ltlorzisJ- autii minor, 1W“ Principal's Department-J. sI Iedvlell Veesey; 4. Phyllis Butte. '