Ilwlllll -i- Til aeAY —- Tug I“ SgI-IOWIRG AT 3:15 - 7 - 9 big musical Thrill-Show! emu: - IIIAIIS LAURITI TOMMY DORSEY oégfiefilii o. Frances turnip - ilujry tluvrns‘ BYIIIGIIIII EXTRA - “BARNEY BEARS POLAR PEST" moves m OIITIIE uourvnoou or m: LUSOIIIIIS swun- _ curse! o», s...” . g ~ Hear hum sing: "Pills! MIT Ill M" "l? Iwvocoilve love-song! . lliniwisllo "visit-tints MELCHIOR I ro-nar TUE. - WED. CAPITOL l Shows Dally At 8:16 s“ ab! ' IWO COTIIS FILM! ; “ ororenia ‘ N off, If you wont to. Tell me I've done o lot of things o lady doesn't do. . . you've not breaking rny heart . ..not while I know I've saved the life of the, boat guy you'll evov meet. . .yooh .,.ond kept l1 kid's Iloon from breaking." I FllIXAYI-Mlll with OIITA b OYNT and WALTER a.._-.....n_.-_c - .- t ALSO NEWS l... SHE COOKS. TOO! lRl-EY BLOIS, lyric Oliflwr, guest artist soprano on Bor- "Canadian Cavalcade" to- rides a bike and la 5W1!‘ She's a Bachelor of hllusI: ‘in Mayor LoGuardia loaned her magi?" when she presented a Nova “m: llllll to New York. Other m“ include Rudy Toth, Can- u“ Only professional player of ~ Cymbelom. and George Cor- ~Canada's grand old swim- “! Pxilfirt and health exponent. TUNE IN TONIGHT TO "CANADIA CAVALCADE "- PRESENTED BY .k ’ N srnntay honors EVAPORATED c 9 - 99 MILK P. M. SAOKVILLE oral. 1070 (BA OOOII II’ PIIIIIPIIN TIIIID INSTALLMINT oi OI!- Ic taxes due September 29th.: uounnroauoa ura us- nuance. D0 N0’! delay. Pa; your third installment oi Olvic tans us?‘ . Dill! IN IIOSPIIPAI. - The death occurred at the Charlotte- town I-Iospitai yestermy afternoon o! Edward Raardon altar a length! , Th; m; Mr. Reardon was oiiyoarsoiegsandalifelonkrea- idem of Cove Head Road. He ta survivedbybiawiisandone eon. Alan. both. of whom reside in the Cove Head llletrict. INTEREST WILL be charged on third installment of Oivic taxes not paid on or before Saturday. Sept. 29th. 9-24-61 0N‘ 8.5. PASTIUI - .0 O Charlottetown. among overseas Canadian Army personnel arriving on 5.5. Pasteur at Quebec over the week-end. A list of other Island soldiers due on the Pasteur was ’ recently. HOSPITAL ANNEX - Work at the annex to the Prince‘ Edward Island Hospital is g steadily. The forms have all been laid and about, one quarter of the concrete for the foundation walls has been Poured. lt is ewec 1i no uniorsesn dole. a occur, that the outside work wil be completed be ore frost sets in. Mr. James E. Harris is the architect. VISITOR-S RETUIIN — Mr. and Mrs. George F. Young left the Island on Friday to return to their home in Winchester, Mass, after a very enjoyable visit to relatives in Hampshire, North River, and Kingston. While in Hampshire they celebrated their twenty fifth wedding anniversary at the home oi the Misses Alice and Louise Stewart. Mr, Young is a District Deputy connected with thmMIss- achusetts State Conucil K. oi C. ISLANDEB DIES — Mi’. Bert Mills. 66, well known Sydney building contractor, died Wednes- day in the Glace Bay General hos- pital. He entered the hospital re- cently and had been in ailing health for the past year. A native oi P.E.l’., he engaged in the con- tracting business in Sydney over 35 years ago, and was well known here and throughout Caps Breton where the news of his passing will be learned with deep regret. Be- sides his widow, he ls survived by two daughters, Mrs. Arthur Crowe (Kate), Mrs. Neil Brown (Alice) both in Sydney: three sons, William 6., at home; Fred and Albert. Jr., both in this city. Brothers are Herb of Detroit, who arrived here yesterday; Colin, Roy and Steve in Donkin and Stanley in Glace Bay. He was an adherent oi’ the First United Church. The funeral will be held on Friday afternoon from his late residence at Doors Bt., Burial in Hardwood l-Iill cemetery —-Sydney Post Record. C. W. L. MEETING-The regular monthly meeting Qt the Kinkora sub-division oi the Catholic Wom- en's League was held Sept. 4th with a good attendance. The meeting was called to order by the president, Mrs. Henry Trainor, and opened with prayer by the chap- lain, Right Reverend J. A. Mill'- phy. The secretary, Mrs. A. E. Kelly read the minutes of the pre- vious meetini. which were approv- ed. The treasurer gave her report which was very satisfactory. Cor- respondence included a letter from Miss Catherine Macbennan. R.N., superintendent of nurses, PIOVIII- cial Sanatorium, thanking the members for a. donation. Another letter received from secretary of Sedes Sapientiae scholarship was read by Rt. Rev. J. A. Murphy. After some discussion it was do cided that a suitable amount would be voted for scholarships. at a later date. A very pleasing report on the convention held in Charlottetown was given by Mrs. Henry Trainor, which was enjoyed by all, Arrangements were made to hold a dance in the parish hall. It was decided not to hold the an- nual chicken supper this year. 0n motion. meeting adjourned. Personals Mr. John Tweedy. Earnsclifie. left Saturday morning for Kings- totn, Ont.. to enter Queens Univer- si y. Mr B Roy Holman. who has been in Toronto attending a con- ference oi fur men. is visiting 0t- tawa enroute home. Flying Officer Sheldon R. Came- ron oi No. l R and NS. Summer- side leit Thursday morning for Calgary eh route to Peace River Alberta. Mr. M. P. Toombs. Professor of Education University oi Saskat- chewan. Saskatoon. has been vis- iting his mother, Mrs. Wm. N. mnombc at the home of his sister. Mrs. Alfred .1, Wood TFVOB- n9 returned to Saskatoon Friday- IIEAR PALMOLIVWS HAPPY GANG Over Radio Station c B A SACKVILLE DIAL 1070 Due to CBC re-organleetion of Trans-Canada network stations, Palmollvek Harpy Gang can no longer be hoard over CF01. Char- lottslown. However. you can eiiil hear The Ho»! Gang - Canada’: rnoet popular fllytlrne show - over ata- tlon CBA. Baekvillo. runs la Ar - 2a!‘ Po Mo [VIII WIIKIIA! , run caairurlfrltruwu GUARDIAN N LNTIGEN [ANTIGEN LANTIGE Lantlgen is a the treatment of LANTIGEN titular disease x Whcl’ is LANTIGEN? vaccine and hafbgco lrsccl successfull in ir not a patent medicine. Lantigcn is a bacterial vaccine in a devoid ofdrugs and sift l0 ilk!!- is a natural 11d. It is produced from the bacteria which an; peculiar no the P11‘- LANTIGEN LANTIGEN IIATAII I BIIOIIOIIIAI. IISTIIIM, AIITIIIIM, SIIIIIS ALSO (IATAIIIIIIAI. MID BIIOIIIIIIIAI. OOLIIS! ' " prepared dissolved messes. Lanugen “Eliftln?! Organs Poisons dissolved state, is lantlgen treannent. In the preparation of Landge the organisms are releasln Ausm‘ ' LANTIGEN~ conditions. ' destroyed by a process of‘ dissolution thus tho active principles from the bacteria bodies. Being an a_ mlflPlflflY dissolved state the vaccine u operative locally by absorption into the tissues of rho tongue, tonsils, throat, and tbo in- testinal tract and is lurch means of its diuribunon throughout tho system. More than 150,000 people in have en|oyed relief _ distressing aEects of cetarrh and allied e: operative by from the I liissolvetllaeeino io be taken by mouth LANTIGEN MAIRTHIS‘ COUPON TODAY lentlgen is available from DRUGGISTS only. . Jf unobtaln- able mall this coupon direct m: GEN LABORATORIES I-ANTI l2 RICHMOND ST . a, nooti an, ‘roaomo r. oorr. OR BOX GIG. SAINT JOHN. N.B. Please read me. . . NTIGEN The name ofmyusual Dnlggutis................."u... If you wen! further information vvrito us. Mr Patrick H. Crawford, ac- companied by his daughter Miss Mae Crawford returned to their home in Winchester, Mass... on Friday after spending a. very en- joyable vacation visiting relatives in Hampshire, North River and Kingston. THE KIRK PULPIT Preaching last evening on thc text “Ye blind guides, which strain at. a gnat and swallow a camel" (B. Matthew 23:24), the minister, the Rev. T. H. Bussell Somers, said: This failure to see things in their true proportions is often seen in relation to our grievances. When a man has a grievance-arid many men have them—he is ni- most certain to have distorted vis- on. You can block out the sun by the smallest coin if you hold the coin near enough to your eye. And we have a. way of dwelling on our grievances, till we lose sight oi the blue heaven above us_ How ready we are to brood on petty insults! How we take them home with us and nurse and ion- die them! How we are stung by trlfllns neglects! a little discourt- esy. and our soul begins to tester! And though hearts are just as warm today as they were yester- day, when we responded to them: and though the great tides of the deep love oi God rise to their flood, still, on every snort, it is strange how rt man will be blind to all the glor,v_ when a little bit- terness is rankllng within. We arc all aclepts at counting up nnr grievances. Open a new column and count your mercies now. It is supremely important to see things in their magnitudes, and perhaps we have never learned that lesson yet. The m-m who suspects Ls always judging wrong- ly. A jealous woman sees every- thing out oi focus. Olf course I am aware that the failure to see things in their true proportions has sometimes got. physical and not moral roots. There come days when the simple reason is that we are weary. Let a. man be vigor» ous, and strong. and well. and he can take the measurement oi his worries very easily. But when he is f gged out with the strain and stre oi overwork we know Mint alarming proportions trifles take. It is well that we should remem- ber in such moments that this is the Jody of our humiliation, Christ understood that matter thoroughly —"Come ye apart," He said, "and rest awhile." The disciples wcrc overstrung and overwrought. and the tact and tenderness oi -our Lord dealt with that. What the men wanted was-just a little rest. Never accept the verdict of your veariness. Never judge anything when" you are tired.- We are so Int to honoured and ihlnk bit-tor thinas. when all that we need is a little rest; and relaxation, All that will come. the birds will sin" a- gain; the dew o! May morning will sparkle on the grass, We shall see things in their true pro- {iort hs on. Meantime trust hou in God, and play the man. sackvnc: om. 1070 ax,_\_:~c\\\:\0c PER BOTTLE LANIGEN Writing k in the issue of January 1 Clinical response definitely marked.‘ sufferers. DO THIS about AN IMINENT PHYSICIAN journal," speaks as follows in the experience, the oral antigens have been mostly employed for cases of Catarrhai infections, rheumatic c_o_n- ditions and catarrhal envarooolrtre. statement, however, heralds the dawn of a great release for Catarrhal Go to your Druggist and get details the LANTIGEN which will be most eflective in your case, and which will help :0 prevent a recurrence of this complaint. NHQIINVT NJQIINt/T; "British Medical S, 1956: "In my has been quite ’ This important TODAY I [IOZIITIODI l-i-sta-oluvvv r-‘waoualvrt DISTIIIUTOIIII IMLTIY BROTHERS l.T lllilllll It SANDS - 5W Clmbil SL, Vancouver all! I58, Slilii lulu, II.l. l. E VMSSOII - D. - Slum Ava, Ttronll NJQIINVI ' NJOIINVI Dorothy Dix Says- s-l (Continued from Page 2) (Continued from Page 2) but dnstead to begin our pickle making in earnest. These are i0 be used combined with onions, in the manufacture of a, favorite re- lish known by various names in the cookery field but at Alderlea always and only “chow? The re- lish" I request in a thin polite V0168. when we have "ultra" com- pany to dinner. James searches the foods spread, with a bewilzler. ed expression. ‘till finally I covert- ly signal him with an expressive eye and he at once passes the chow. I Sllslleot that James’ verdict that it would bc as well now if the potato tops werejrosied was ar- rived et not, WllIIOLIf; due delibera- tion. Not that I would ever charge any farmer with coming to such a decision, the result of agricultural rfisflarch curried out to over the week end. Supposing a good farmer with the welfare cf 11h family, his farm, his flocks and his herds Ill- ways before him, were to be taking a Sabbaths Journey over the fields to see Jamie or perhaps only to a far meadow to fetch the cows to milking: it; wsuld be no harm- or would it? to barely Step effort, lessly over a fence to slip Expiring. tory practiced fingers beneath a bushy promising top to verify or deny anticipations? Not that for a moment I would insinuate that this was done yesterday at Alder- len. But a relevant remark let fall in my presence to a visiting farm- er raised a sus iclon. "And how will?" James as ed "do you iind "lid" F- WD?" It struck me at the time. that ours were much better informed than our company. ‘in fact they spoke with certainty up to the third or fourth top. e - . In mil’ have been that those men of ours garnered their ideas of the forth-coming crop this morn. ing. James suddenly shut of! an early news broadcast. because he m "Just had to so to the iencing." At this time Qi year on a farm, fences are often moved from pre. sent sites to others to allow the horses and milking herd more "use and also to make it more convenient for the potato harvest. ing to come, so that gates and bars may be left open between field and bin. Accordingly this mot-n- inl, James and Jock sci; off with all the equipment necessary in. eluding the axe, Jeanie and I de- Deilll Wholly upon to provide us with a bit of kindling in a culin. 9W crisis. Then quiet reigned at lderlea. The calves lnzed about t cir meadow; Nell and her foal about the barn yard. Pard was gone with the farmers and the three cats washed themselves and Drlmneri in the sun. Jeanie too washed her wash and spread it go tho mt-‘llflw Autumn silfi and breeze, MONDAY IHIOUOII FRIDAY 4.30 m (BA DEAR DOROTHY DIX: We are two girls who are planning to get married shortly. The men whom we intend to marry are the best of freinds and four of us have planned to live together after we are married Dc you think our plan will be successful? ANSWER: Not a chance on earth of its ending in anything but Within six months you will have fought like cats and dogs and will hate each other the balance of your lives. Living together is one test that friendship won't stand, so don't Se: up your separate homes, not too close together, and you may maintain a beautiful friendship that will be s. pleasure to you all your days, but too much intimacy is sure to breed discord and make You will have all you can do getting along with your individual husbands and wives. failure. try it. people get on each other's nerves. a couple oi friends on that. WONDERIN G Don't superlmpose while I fetched sticks from the pile and went about my round. "By the stream" Joules iolcl me thfil/ would be working. It surprised me to see them presently in the potato patch beyond the rise. On the near side; in the centre; on the far side. At the top beside the fence and then I lost sight of them at the bottom, by the stream. I have no doubt it ls the result of this fascinating diversion that caused James to say_ yhen he came in to a late dinner: “Ellen? he said easing himself into his chair qiposite mine at the table. "I believe to my heart I'm going to have that sore back again." t O l Visitors to Alderlca over the weekend included a lady relative who is spending her holiday on The Island. She remembered well a week she spent with me when I taught in a school at a cross roads "and the old black dog followed us in, and no place would do him onl lying in front oi your desk an the children had to walk around him to 'CIBSS--BIICI their crusts for him." lady guest came from where the kitchen stove is a beauti- ful piece of furniture because it is always polished to reflect the sun- light and in that far away farm hoarse dust and disorder are never und. Only peace and quiet. And scarlet, runners against a. ploy house and a snug retreat beneath the shade of trees. in which to chat. or read—and in winter eve- nings a delightful long white hill for coasting. One youth among our company. was one who left motherless in infancy grew up al- most; unrepressed and notwith- standing Solomon‘: predictions to the contrary, he grew into a peacesble law-abiding citizen, lik- able, social and much esteemed by all his friends and business as- sociates. He of course may be the one exception to the old estab- lished rule. One tall slim chan surprised one o’ ours who askrd him they had done much threshing yet. "Nearly all." he said "perhaps a half dozen stacks left to do." There are as I al- ways remember, other fanns and farmers (and wives!) besides those at Alderlea. What is James saying? Listen! "Ellen." he calls "where on earth can I find an extra blanket?“ - tonight at Alderlea. Until tomorrow - Diary-Good- night. STOKE-ON-TREIPI‘. England - (CP) -— Britain's last awcrait shadow factory here is lo 5\\’l'Cll over to the peace-time Driidllfllfill oi ccllierv equipment and refrig- rotors POLYNESIAN TERM "Taboo." meanng forbidden. is a Polynesian term for which equival- ents can be quoted from most sav- age vacuum-vap- Puhlishers 0f “Social Suicide" Charged TORONTO. Sept. 2i - (GP) — Photo engravers and Electrotypers Ltd, publishers of "Social Suicide" were charged in court today with violating a section of the Defence of Canada Regulations by falling to indicate on the pamphlet the name and address of the publisher. Magistrate Prentice reserved jud- ment until Sept. 28. B. A. Trestrail, author oi "Soc- ial Suicide," said the pamphlet was a condensation of a book. "Stand Up and Be Counted” and contained political comment. Mr. Trestrall was called as a Crown witness. F. Erichsen Brown, defence coun- sel, argued that the pamphlet bore the name of the author and thus met the requirements. STORK MAKES FORCED LANDING LUNENBURG, N. 5.. Sept, 21 ._ (CP) —- Pasengers on the Tan- ccok ferry boat were surprised today when the stork had to make a forced landing in Chester Bay and deposit his bundle on board. The ferry boat was called to make an emergency trip to Little Tancook Island and bring Mrs. Kingsley Levy to ihe hospital in Bridgewater, but about hallf way ghrough the trip the child was orn. COLORFUL POTHOLDDIC ' gin’. IY DESIGN NO. 1124 Three attractive interesting and Ideal klft i124 tions. potholders are easy to crochet s or prizes. Pattern No contains complete instruu To order pattern: Write or send above picture with your name and address with 20 cents in coin or Postal scrip to Needlework Bureau Charlottefiown Guardian. Design Ne. 11M i Name street Address Worth I9 aching for Mother KNOWS-what is good for Baby because it’e SAFB—Silver-vvood'e Irradiated Evaporated Milk. It in nourishing-q": haa that fresh flavour babiea like —- so easily digested. “Good Milk Makes Good Meals" BUY SOME TODAY Silflorsrood.’ lnedimd he Vitamin "D" avaronatao MILK ell! -nass_¢i...~._... ..._¢u s- .. . ma -.-..-¢.._..s>-.--..