Sig-ill: l _-_._.__._.__ and‘ Provincial Exhibition AUGUST 14th t0 17th Season Tickets NOW ON SALE AT ALL DRUG STORES AND OLD SPAIN FOR $3 Taxes Included BIGGEST ENTERTAINMENT VALUE OF ALL TIME 4 —— Afternoons llacing—4 WITH 130 HORSES ENTERED FROM ALL PARTS OF THE MARITIMGS. THE BEST ' AND FASTEST IN CANADA. ALL THE LEADING DRIVERS fl-i Vaudeville Program IS GUARANTEED TO BE THE BEST EVER OFFERED BY ANY FAIR IN THE MARI- TIMES. ACTS INCLUDE- THE ARLOFF TRIO KIRKS ANIMAL CIRCUS tb-QUIRKS BICYCLlSTS-B WHITE BROTHERS DON RICARDO and 'MARION THE DIPPY DIERS THE 2 MIRTHS HANK THE YODELLING RANGER THE SKATING EARLS THE VICTORY REVUE With Lillian Bruidworth STAR TAP AND ACROBATIC DANCERS AND OTHER FEATURES WITH IO-PIECE ORCHESTRA EVERY AFTERNOON ALL THESE WILL BE SEEN ON THE BIG NEW BETWEEN HEATS OF THE RACES. STARS STAGE Evening Shows WILL BE THE BEST OF ALL TIME DOIVT MISS THEM-A $2 SHOW FOR 35c plus tax. AFTERNOONS 75c Plus Tax SEASON TICKETS AT $3. tax included, are transferrable and admit by special entrance. All set for the BIG WEEK Provincial Exhibition Association LT. COL. D. A. MacKINNON, D.S.O., President. J. W. BUULTER. Secretary-Treasurer. iiii “onion-too OWING TO RATION CONDITIONS ssavn MEALS T0 TRANSIENTS W AT STANHOPE BEACH mu on _ DALVAY nouss FROM . AUGUST 13th to ._¢_. 18th we WILL on UNABLE r0 l ll-II-fii. lttiHtMi WEEK ‘j l ores ‘OPEN: 1 t ores; Ii ' OPEN: 8:30 A.“ " 5 I’.. NUHEROUS BOOTHS jqcs are ciuicktirl during collection. wens are damaged . them loose to the ilfflfll ‘ of £120 $53150‘ . wibilizcd "swish" block in the PI l PLACES T0 EAT- i E“oio IIOME went" l OLD spam ‘ orsx: s om. to 2 RM. i s P.)I. to s P.M. DOMINION CAFE OPEN: 11 AM. to 2 PM. 5 PM. to 7:30 PM. Wednesday and Thursday Other Nights 12 RM. NEW ENGLAND CAFE _ OPEN : Wednesday, Thursday, - Friday. 11 A.M. to 2:30 PM. 5 P.M. to 9 RM. WHITES OPEN: ll Alvl. to 2 P.M. 5 P-M. to 7:30 EM. ROXY RESTAURANT : II AJII. to 2:30 RM. 5 RM, to 8 PM. l0 RM. to 12 P.M ORCHID RESTAURANT OPEN: 11:30 A..\I. to (midnight). l 4 I open in evening. C.'\N'I‘ON CAFE I .~\.I\I. to 2 P.I\I. 5 RM. to 8 P.M. VICTORY RESTAURANT .»\..\I. t0 Z PJVI. 5 PJI. to 8:00 P.l\l. Closed Wednesday and Thursday . at moo 12M. Other nights 12 P.M. NIAYI-‘AIR TEA ROOM . to 2 RM. \l. to 7:30 P.M. DIEXTRS QUICK LUNCH OPEN: 6 AJI. to I1 A.M. (Breakfast) ll \..\f. to Z IKM. (Dinner) 5 I’.I\I. to 7:30 IKM. Hours indefinite. ROPS LUNCH ROOM (Turner Wvvmtnith and Euston Stg, OPEN 7:30 A.l\I. EXHIBYTIUN RESTAURANT Under Grand Stand and LUNCH COUNTER Next To Restaurant OPENHI .-\..\I for Dinner 4:30 RM. for Supper. CANADIAN LEGION Lunches will ln- served to members who have scricrl or are serving In His Zifajcsty‘; forces. CLUB Until Midnight. IVOOLWORTIIS‘ RESTAURANT v OPEN 6 PJI. ON THE I1‘.»\I!f GROUNDS Y where Sandwiches, IIot Dogs, etc" will be served, FRANKKS LUNCH BAR Corner IVt-ymniith and Fitzroy Sts. I UPI-IN‘ 9 AJII. mi. siwx IIRS, IIARSHFIELD Bro . . s:.':o an. - 10x30 PM. (‘hi.. en Dinner 5 IE. ARCIIII-VS SNACK BAR .\'c\'t Checker Taxi It. liiis been s citizens of Charlottetown endeav- our to hint- thcir meals at home to t-nrilile the motiate our tnrs, Our iurmt-rs and riskrtl _to liring their | them ii" Flolillltf the gt also help cut feeding our vi unclies with ty. This will (‘AUSES LQS§ mo. t Iinglhe Dominion ‘poultry auth- ptilni. out that it is the result ' _.irl:in: iinttpsor handling. ' iiislruxmiis issued s have reduced breakage in v ritts can still be made at termin- pcrt facilities, arid storage on "d ship. e in early war shipments arts. at: btiteti l0 Luge-size Llli that .:.’:\t' be an iiniinpoixtniit fctor be- (‘Kl/lee shiyiptrrs h-tve been mg in co-operation with the| lllSh Ministry of Food, has ob- ncd data on breakage: on alll " Canadian eggs ex-, tlnads of ptiltfirl in i945. It appears that most ilrezikiige occurs ‘n top and bottom tyrrs. evidently due to rough irmtlling, and thus the sugcsted, use of ii deeper case for the eggs| would not alone be a sslutton of ‘the difficulty. Breakage before in producers‘ grading occutsl hands. Too many I Some ot the by delivering stations in baskets or other conta ners. The hazard of broikaae could be Obvi ed if every egg station operator made sure that everv producer was supplied with a proper delivery ca_ and sound packing material. r. ' authorities also advise that mozt attention should bc tziveri to sup- plying the birds with adequoti} shell forming material. "SWISII" norms the authorities. KIBI. Gold Coast —- (C?) ~45 snrcimrn house of stabilizer". "Swish" (dried mud) constructiott" is being built at an estimated ('5' The walls are nrtion of one Dart 01 fmlfim _' htcen parts of "swish pound l i‘. in moulds. - —- ~—-- deems-giver": Use Mentho- I s t u m f o r nnnl dlmen and discom- tort. Quick rellefarlleny bad. Jun and ‘comi-"onr n.../. Gin-s 12:20 A.M. May have to c!ose during the day, <-.\:',1crt shfll shipments and "ill amide s.» lit-Ill the i ill Pr tiicts Board. The Board Fever " rnr PA i OF THREE B: . M"! u-lllllln Bradley <n1< “mm-saw “mm £JP°° EX Sh added "I I mrdi“ mean if its to Of COUISQ it w ul through with, o d be hard w 8 cusslon of that pa which dealt; with She had written a divor for it. diction of the Cour de Cessation she French M15885. she said, inclined to hear cases o! divorce between Americans but they ivwld be prevailed upon to do so if the 06.865 were based (m (gauge; Valid 1n the former residence tn tlh United States, so she would DIEM to conventional cruelty. She knew an influential Judge, so she thought. the hearing --if_ Dick FGTeed that a divorvoe was sens- ible-could be had about the first of November. ‘"601: it nil set," said Kendall with a. taiit- smile for hcr compet. ence “I wonder—" Kay could feel his wonder at Eve's swiftness of plan. Hg said, "I'll write her I agree. that it's the senst-ble course to take since she wishes to live abroad I'll ad: her to cable me the date of the hearing when it's set and I'll take a fast boat over I and back~ this is no time to be called it. l away long." (Supper) l I REVERE HOTEL LUNCH ROOM It was the time of hh Insult failure and the Chicago Iounda- ticm were making. Dick had been hard hit, himself. I-Ie was silent for a time, work_ in; out details in his own mind, and Kay thought. “If only he didn't have t0 see her again." She ‘kncvi’ that she would feel sure of nothing until his retum. He podteted the letter. "She likes the Continentr-there is more to do over there. And people are always coming over." tThose were the things, Kav thought. that Eve had said, the things she meant him to remember It was queer how sure she was of what was in the back of Eve's mind l Hr waited over to his wardrobe and took out his coat "I suppose I'll have to arrange a settlement. " He was silent again. thinking lihat out. He EBVP a shsflfembar- t. t l . - 1o P.ivr.% ui: izested that all , restaurants to ucgqm-j families arel the restaurants in i Th. b; breakage Z BYTQQIICTS '- l - s 11g is ticcasion.‘ ' cpl; hrcal: o. t.:ll.s into two inuiii tiivisions—(a utter graciiiic. and (bl before grad With regard to breakage after bYl ristruct~ are grown by the Tithoriia. some- czi to remove all over-size eggs froml times called the Golden Flower of setl the Incas, and this is a flowering to ixealzini: and drying plant, bearing 2-inch orange flow- rascsd laurh "If only g1: admitted grimly, but l?! W°11ld a. short. price to “he 351d, “No U39 391118 lllw and settled down to dis. rt. of Eve's letter , the definite plan that if he wanted . ca Slit! W0l1ld suggest Paris. as that, meant less publicity, l and .5118 Md Riven him the exact ' details involved. m; would have l»? some Over. to accept the juris- Prendh court, the, were not l Background and You Gan Grw F ceuasnraN In Memoriam o 1 O l In loving lilemor, of 'l‘rlvtlte Arthur Hector Hunter liver Km"! llll Actlon Afllltlt ll. 19“ that. a man lay down for his friends. Tlwy lhflll n01 n91 old ls we that are left grow old Age shall not weary them nor the years condemn At the going down of the sun and in the morning We shall remember him. Surely M5865 by gftrlther, Brother; and Sister. I . -1 his life ‘ curittes-you wont rich man, my girl. He was going to be over-senor. ous to Eve, Kay felt, and she was glad of it. She murmured, "My dowry is half g house-mo ." He stood thinking "The lease to the apartment is u in Decem- ber I've ire-id off sgning. I'd bet- ter clear out put the stuff in storage and live at the club. That. will cost less Well, we'll work it out," he said abruptly. That evening he had a dinner engagement and Kay wondered how he would get through it: she l could see him being grimly, notice. ably reticent when he was asked about his wife S-he questioned how long it vxould be before peo- ple knew. Did Eve write anything to her friend=.—anything about thcr? Would she wit,» anything now’? It \\';=.s hateful to feel that t she was at Eve's mercy and yet she I WRS. " be marrying a (To Be Continued) ges roan Seed l QTté§QFiIZ“é%.~T1“-“°L°“" RICINUS-‘CASTOR BEAN: g1 ' _ 1 _ Great interest in ornamental tflfiopllyllfl- mfllws _ _ 0 ‘USS n Dom plants is being shown by Vlctoiivzllfl? 0t b1‘l8l1'~ lellow 81'6"" liafibt ' are , wihich in late summer turn tlltlfltlll-i planting borders and bsckgroundslson. it ls even haiidsomer in its, to set off their attrac- ~ izrecu than in its red form nnd can this year. Many of flowers tive rows of garden vegetables. Where screen planting is desired quickly and at small expense, there plants which can produce both. Largest of all is the caster bean. a beautiful plant eight feet tail and as much in diameter. The leaves are large, and of a bronze or ma-- roon tone. The Zanzibar stmin will produce plants twelve f€€t tall, in" is of blackcst bronze, tipped withl eggs suitable _ soiirz-c of mishap should water and rich soil. locations with plenty oi Great bushes four to six feet tall iii t oi‘ the s -' e cmbling = single zinriia. l Dec 0W1‘ resflniwlenvqzi tirc__pla_n_t Kcchin c_annas, CHSIQI; b “i5 ontheélfph- a mlniatusc [he pruned to make a low hedge. and backgroundtTlie coieus. the old-fashioned plant‘ our grandmothers delighted to are annual‘ grow in the house. can be raised, om seed easily outdoors in a var- ii‘ l In hot, sunny locations, Amaran- _ 1 . this rear in COmpari- From one small bean can be grown i lfitv 0i brilliant coloring‘ ll with i544, but further improve. tthus tricolor, often called Joseph's {coat after the biblical stor-v of the con: of many colors. will attain it»; fflnest coloring. The inner Ioliavc lgresn, the outer bright scarlet 0nd o . E Heavy-leaved plants should be relieved by those of liner character t in the border. Eome of the ornn- 1 mental grasses easily raised from seed are useful for this purpose and are often s=en assoziated with? “Try it n ow amt" Gaimestcr. Greater love hath no man than this, His Fathfl‘. hand‘ o; III BAPTIST OIUIUI The 0mm; and 0v "l: vices 01ml? were oondu ed h.’ e . us, so - 32%;’. “ma... c‘ fiub"si3““£3‘l ' o; m‘, yin-Lt Baptist ,Chureli at 'I‘ruro. . Mr. Eaton‘; morning sermon W85 ~"Vicsriou.s Suffering" and for the Ieventng his impressive sermon was - ' based on the words of Christ "Til" 0k and learn of hi. liorhsiuponokgolls easy and my. burden is fight." at the morning service Mrs. T. H. n l . Miss Marjorie Cruikshanki "at the evening service sans Dtll ‘Rte 0's "O Loving Father." Miss} Lou e Cox, organist and director] of choir conducted the music of | the clay. I , l Plowing . (Experimental Farm News) With many different rolls to plow and many kind-s 0! plows, no definite rules can be laid down as the best method for n11 soils, New and more efficient types of innplements have been made for cultivating soils. P001’ and faulty types o! farm manne- ment have created conditions that require drastic changes in work- ing soils under certain climatic conditions where lack of rainfall produces soil drittng These and other considerations have led some to condemn plowing as in "Plow- man's Folly", which advccata tl-IL‘ age without plowing. But where there is adequate rainfall a good Joints: plow in the a skilled plowman will prepare sod land for s suitable seed bed. better than can be ac- complished by any other means action uses less energy to make certain soils friable than other implements of cultivation which all have their place in prepsrins the soil for seeding. Plowing is one of the best means of tncorp- crating waste vegetation and man- ure with the soil to form humus. a most valuable ingredient for all soils. In working land for seeding Out ivitlh grain after potatoes or hoed crops, the plow should seldom be used either in the autumn or spring. These lands DNGUCE b“- ter crops when the connection be- tween tlie subsoil and the 1095011 remains compacted in Permlt moisture to rise b!’ CflPlllBTY 8t- traction These lands are always very thoroughly cultivated durins the season that produced the hoed crops and are easily made ready for sceding_the following 5min! ant-ear caladium. The ornamental grasses, both an- nun] and perennial. give excellent decorative enacts. I The pennise- tums. pampas grass terlanthusi arid culalia with green 11nd white lc:i\e., are_a_ll attractive. ____ _ A. “We fold "Ho! Ho! Deuccdly clever ideo- except that I'd rather see those malty- rich, sweet-as-s-nut Grape-Nuts Flakes go into is bowlful of milk." "Right you are! Then we'd all tn-kg on a cargo of carbohydrates for energy; proteins for muscle, phos- phorus for teeth and bones, iron for Lady Twigglns she co and she chose Grape-Nuts Flakes!" that Grape-Nuts Flakes pflwidgll uld pic “We'd sd - k Her own il into the day on g cereal that's made of two grains-M just one! Both wheat barley specially blended, toasted make Grape-Nuts good and so easy to digest. andmgtm bakedmi Fish“, ‘ Letudni; i to the grocery store for anotiiu i Early autumn plowing is econ- omical because horse and man. power, which is at a premium during seeding and hbymaking, is usually available. The heat from the sun in August and September hastens the decomposition of sod and other vegetable matter which properly plowed under and rottcdl will supply plant food for the crops of the following year. Plow- ing and ridging can be continued late in the fall because the frost. of winter, nature's own wonderful soil pulverizer, will correct errors and mellow baked and water logged soils. Autumn plowing has usually given much larger yields at the Charlottetown liitfiperimenbal Sh- tion. Early autumn plowing is rec- ommended for sod. Autumn plow. ing for stubble and ridzing along the contours of the lands on slopes prevents erosion. ORANGE SPANISH CREAM 1 tablespoon granulated gel-stine ‘t cup cold water _._.3I¢.l¥"-f__"_°ll§.___ l l l t l l . ' VICTORIA VANCOUVER NEW WESTMINSTER 1 cup orange Juice 2 teaspoons 2 tablespoon 3 68k whites fifinia. Clarifhlesxltittgirlntmiigrliltx. the blood, and other food essentials package!" I1 EXPC *- I Charlottetown. Plowing properly 23m’ “m5?” Fill“ fsildélfi Tl“ gmvfmn“ a“?! ‘f,’ u“; it cup was: 1 o n equit- , Wwdi- i559“! "Id the m“ °I aiewsoil nijustr be comgilcied 88am l‘ mspmu “u mdeflls- Its “WNW 5nd Fmdlng to produce a full crop. ‘A cup mm‘ 00m grated orange rlM s lemon Julc 9 Method: Place the cold water a bowl and sprinkle the elatine over this. Allow for 5 mlnulcs. Beat the egg yolks sl stir in 2 tablespzoiis oi the salt, corn syrup and the orange juice. lseat the mtxiun then cook over boiling irate well, for 8 minutes. stirring Remove from the heat and add tin softened gelatlne. stirring llglill thli is corn letelv dissolved. remainng V: cup of orangt juict and the lemon Juice. the mixture until thicken. that is. until it. IBJCIIISI honey-like consistency. Now beat the remaining 2 ened custard mixture. molds that have been then rinsed in cold water and c firm This until . mill’ plain-may be orange sections-or may _\vith_z1 custard sauce. iizhzly ant egg whites unit stlfl. but not. dry and best 1n ta tablespoons sugar mt told this into the partially talc!- (Idued under the WIN NIPEG HAMILTON TORONTO OTTAWA HUI-I. quartonlnuyoltheledhhletsoenhuytethe Olllbfllllllllll silence usLln addition to etlselpelalfleqwlllberequlletlhvuahlho shelhlandtluedlltrletltllsewnexpenn; A .. d‘.- _ , audit» - _ 0439, December 19, i944). THE WARTIMI‘. PRICES AND TRADE BOARD No person may move to and rent or occupy family quarters in any of these congested areas without a permit from the Administrator of Emergency Shelter. Before making arrangements to vacate your present home; be sure that you have other accommodation, and a permit to occupy it. Applications to: permits should be addressed to the Administrator of Emergency Shelter in the area to which you plan to move. Order-in-Couucil RC. Krtiflllllig to rta e siigu Z '1 constantly Then clitl begins ti Pour lnu oiled be served garnished wl be IBIV