stark... Si g gsraslessesxsss.assess ,_:=e".4_:r1.3Eh§EEi,_ _. . 4e-~_...-.. l... _-~,-.,--...'- . .. a“ .2... V, 17in fobuloul oltplolh of Wynn loop‘, .. I’ "whose blazing six-guns brought the In; Io the wildest, wicked»: m" qf m. i!" "M" Mb- "Wdolfvo mm nobody over bod Illm Io iIlo chwl PRINCE EDWARD TODA Y & SATZ Capitol-Today gr: clllor lllouoiirolfilll»: WESTERN nlnlu oflLlTlhlEl Ho was prol- rlo dynamite b I a o t I n g crooked nod agents! Ijemon Juice Recipe Checks Rheumatic Pain Quickly If foil ff Ilfllll‘i'l.l$ lillillertrgoltrlllslhillrgrzaitew 13f expensive home recipe. Get a use of RU-EX Pnrscm from your druggist. Mix it quart of water. add the Juice o; 4 lemons. Its easy. No trouble at all and pleasant, Ycu need only 2 tables onfuis two times a day. Often wthin 43 hours-wsometime overnight -3'p]en- did results are obtained. Try this Dffisfirllltlon. Feel good. Be without rheumatic of neuritis ain again. Wits only a few cents alloy. Monev ban: if it does not help you. RU-EX PRESCRIPTION is for sale and recommended by TIIE JENKINS PHARMACY THE REXALL DRUG 5TORE CIIARLOTTETOWN 11-766-11-20-22-24-28-12-1-4-5-6-7. 111s colloidal-X 0N Ollssoow —(OP) —A unadul- ticus OIJJGCLOI‘ who testified his fath. or hud been insane for 21 years asa result oi the last war was granted unconditional exemption from mi]. 1w »» s» m RANDOLPH scnfi- NANCY KELLY CESAR ROMERO - o INNl-zs v CARTOO "Practical 1gp’ COMIMUNII‘! Bing Crosby son‘; COMEDY “Stine Ln The Attic” LATEST WAR NEWS BINNIE BARNES frirréwascfiua TRAINING PRAIRIE GIRL BASKATOON, Nov. 23-—(OP) - New fields will be opened up for country girls shortly in Saskatche- wan when courses in housekeeping. home and convalescent aid and dressmaking are begun in the rural districts. - Arranged primarily for girls from 18 to 30 from farms. villages and towns of not more than 1.500 popu- lation the courses will be com- ducted at residences in Humboldt. Kamsaek and Cadillac. Enrolment for the specialized training is under the direction of Miss Bertha Oxner of the Univer- sity of Saskatchewan who is in charge of the women's section of the provincial youth training pro- gram organized by the University in conjunction with the provincial and federal governments. “It's a sort of co-operative life idea," Miss Oxner explained to in- terviewers. In Humboldt and Kam- sack. large houses will be used as residences for the girls. The house- keeping group will be in charge of the cooking and housework and the dressmaking students will make When S in Torture Drives You Mad Get a bottle of clean, powerful, penetrating Moonels Emerald Oil. ‘lhe very first application should give you soothing relief and a. few short treatments convince you that. you have at last found the way to‘ comfort the itching torture and dls- in trew. Moones Emerald Oil is easy and simple to use—greaseles5 — stainless — economical — promotes healing. Ask any first-class drug store or a small original bottle Oi itnry duty here. b k if ot atisfled. Use Mlnard’: fo. uumr. . ‘mfiwyne? mug 80,, Ltci, and ‘ Redd n Bros. . MOOI1€'S Emerald Oil-Guarantee of receiving top value. the outside. for same. POULTRY We are in the market for all kinds of poul- try, buying daily at top market prices. By ship- ping your poultry to us, you will be assured of We have an open market for all grades from Milkfed Special to Canningfi alive, use a light weight container to save ship- ping charges and if shipping dressed include your name and address together with number of birds on the inside of the parcel as well as on Do not forget, we handle all grades from canners to specials, whether crate fattened, pen flattened 6r off range, paying top market prices tock. If shipping 135 WOMEN WITN NOTIIINO ON THEIR MINDS Bill Il-E-Nl IIDRIIA SHEARERI ICAII CRAWFORD ROSALIND RUSSELL The WOMEN with IIIYICLAIID-Plhlcth GODDARD PRINCE EDWARD Coming MONDA Y “infill/GI at the 17081211‘:- sperlal Criminal Court fllloOll-Ailllllyllvflld Ioznowpoo Ion-l ill bit ldvonuw] ol 2322-. o “mom's an in ma)». CBAIWIIL for Photon-lino. courlozurlou urn moun- mcs. n-alao-l-xl-al 1. x. L nlousu m Polling Hfldvll-IO 00., BCZ-ll-fl-M-ZI. CHURCH OI‘ MILTON AND IUBTIOOF-St. John's Church, Mill- ion st 8 P. M. 5t. Morn Church, Rustico at 7.30 P. M. Rev. W. J. Phillips. L-010-11-24-1i. CAVINDISH CHARGE. — W01‘- amp Sunday, November 26th in 01v at l1 A. M. M: 8 P. M. and 1n New Glas- gow at 7.30 P. M. HAMPTON UNITED CHARGE- Services on Sunday, November as follows: Victoria. l1 A. M. Hamp- tim 3.P. M. Bonshsw 7 P. M. L-lloo-ll-Ot-li. CHURCH OF ENGLAND SER-| l" VICES, B11 , “gun's Church Holy A. u. s rlnsfiela - Om ud-Sl-bg 8t. Elisabeth's Ohurch. Evonstmg 7.00 P. M. Rev. G. R. Hartman. 11-908-11-24-11. service " " , November 26 at' 7.30 P. M. CO-Ildl-IOCOG by RAV. I. OEVQXNIQI‘. 11-934-11-24-11. I NEW GLASGOW CHARGE. - New Glasgow christian church, Sunday Services November 20th will be at 11 A. M. The young people's germ, will take an active part in Ls service. Rev. I. Cavender will give a special address to the young fiopie o the oongre tion. Frederic- n 3 PM. and albane 7.30 P.M._ " L-983-l1-24-lI. = NORTH RIVER UNITED BAP- TIST PASTORATIIL- Rev. J. M. Blesedell. B. A.. Pastor Sunday November 26th our urches os- semble thus: 'North Milton 11.00 . Long Creek 730 P. M. "let your questing better self lead You to church." 11-927-11-24-11. I clnmcn NOTICE. _ Munay, Harbor North and Peter's Road| Presbvte Chlumh. The Rev. A. C. MacFhail of River Denys. Nova Sco- m. will preflbll at Peter-s Road at.’ eleven . M. and m Murray Harbor North .1 seven-thirty P. M. on Srb-l bath. November 26th. | ’ I1-93l~il-24-il. OUTLAWED I. R. S. IS UNDER TKIAL DUBLIN. Nov. 23-10?» - The rec=ntly set up to try members of the outlalwod Irish Republican Army has begun its sit-tings. The first prisoner was sent to Arbour Hill Mfitarv Detention barracks for three months on charges of mem- bership in the I.R.A. and hav- ing treasonable and sedition: dcc- uments. The Court is composed of five army officers who sit in private but in the presence of the presS. Names of the officers are not dis- closed at trials and reports of the proceedings are. of courtr. subject to the ordinary wartime censor- ship). Meanwhile more than 100 sus- pected persons are in eustodv. uniforms for the hous-ekee s. At Cadillac a floor of the hotel has been obtained for the students. Following such practical experience it is hoped the girls will be placed in small town hotels, ‘homes and hospitals. Transportation from any part of Saskatchewan to the training schools is provided under the plan Some of them are reported to be refusing food and in one case, a. prisoner who was unexpectedly re- leased was removed to a nursing home. Conditions in the prison are good and the food offered i: the same as that of soldiers of the defence forces. Prisoners are per- mit-ted to smoke and attend clas-f ses, receive as many letters as they wish and write two letters nu colitis: Clldfllllll Stanley Camp, a divorcee L-0l8-11-24-l1. trial November 20th. K CRAWFORD MEMORIAL Christ- ian Church Bmdulbane Re ar In " warmly affectionate messMNo CB-mff) for the girls who wish to take ad- each week Bill Full-fir lfinm ulngolvv mow rolur. Nov. Kuhn admitted today he 11nd lied ‘lfuwlifi K729i‘? “° °“°’ $33 lt cloor that hologram 1101' had w extrema chm quickly frigidity ulzzgcu‘ the day-lent Ila; ‘realty to uen-dump o awkwardly inditod lovelcrttor: mod out to’: grinning courtroom. For he realized. as well III»!!! next man. that those orvid ! letters obviously had come into the l prosecution's ' 1mm the "angel" herself-Mn. For hours the iiund meluur. on n grand larceny charms in tho c. aged their. of money from continued a1 but "strlc emer- his German-American Bund. gooey" rations d d a. 3W1 writhed on the wltrlem mold while fourth of i wsdministrative staff. his nlost privgtebemlreuiono to relied! offing‘: Mrs, cam w e ren e1- nu re e lie. l’ protesting that his ro- as an still be su e with her was "my, most d and needy eases latio very friendly," and nothing nlm-o. uhn's wife was mt in the court- room. ' Atlashneartheerldoftllodly. he mode a double "In 1938." Wallace. “did you tell Mrs. Comp that yogi, had divorced Wllr wife Wes," said Kuhn. ‘(WON you lyina this morni when you said that you never to Mrsupcamp you were divorced in 190i “Th v right." “Is “mire anvthinz more that you want to change about your testimony now?" asked Attorney Herman McCarthy. “No," said Kuhn. "I want to ex- plain that I thought Mrs. Camp was o very fine lady. but I found out she isn't." ‘When did you find out?" "I found out right now." Kuhn Sallllllmtllllldshoocllrred afte three l‘ from Kuhn to Mrs. Mi b0!!! read. but not permitted in the re- cords in their entirety. ' Judge Wallace allowed the state to bring ‘them out under its con- tentlon that that kind of letter- writirlg would throw l ht._ upon its claim that arnonz K s allelfcd embezzlements from the Bund was some $700 paid to move her furniture across the continent BY FARE MEANS OR FOUL A visitor to a country fair atop- ped by a merry-go-round. He not- iced a. miserable looking little man seated on one of the_ wooden homes. But what struck him as strange was that every time the machine stopped the little man mule no attempt to get off. At. length curiosity overcame the visitor, and when next the man on the horse stopped opposite him he sald-“Pardcn me, but do you enjoy going round and round like this?" The unhappy one grimaoed. "Not a bit," he replied. “Then why do you do it?" "The man who owns this affair owe; me ten dollars, and this is the on‘y way I can get it out o! him." man WYCOMBE. sins-Tile first complaint of profiteering hem involved the 511m 01' one penny: The Food Control Committee ord- cred a pro-oer to return a penny l0 an aggrieved housewife. ZF-IHII lioliefiProhlcm ; Nov. 22-1210 de- ll o1 (JLBVEIJQY. purposes. we: with s grave relief situation. In Toledo a. survey by the coun- cil of social agencies sho 6.193 persono-enllployable reaiden and their dependents-were a from lack of food. fuel and cloth- Lnnga and in danger of starvation dependent u istressed ." ‘Ibledoismelief deficit for the your was around $800,000; Clove- lcnd. r rtlm only a few thous- uld dol to last until Jan. 1, Mid it needed $1,000,000. Colum- bus Yousowwn were o cities donundinfl n Cleveland's Mayor Hamid Bur- ton suggested today to lalbor lead- tlhat they "give the devil" to en Governor John Brloker for his clilainclinatlon to call the leclsla- ture. l-le said the current situation in Cleveland was "inexeusabl ' and a “crinlefl Governor Bricker apparently was standing by his insistence that other means of meeting tile sit- nation could be found. Fur Trim. _ ‘Avoid Colds by Keeping Your Feet Dry MEN’S QUALITY RUBBERS AT LOWEST PRICES Misses and Child's Rubber Overshoes in Black or Brown, or White with or without 5 AHEAD! DRY FEET mean fewer ca!“ so don't nu w take advnn: turn of this superior Offer g stylish. quality lzaioshea today goongrcpared for the storms a; Women’s Galoshes " $1.25 Warm. fleece lined ._ nll sizes and styles, Japanese ' Report Advances HONG KONG. Nov. 22 -(CP°)d- The Japanese army Telwfied t “Y its advance ards had rctwhfid 9- i’°...‘...“.d‘ ‘tilt’ étlehil’ ‘"52 1.731112% e launched m South China a week Today's Short Wave 980 to cut Ohinme supply routesfih Nahning is headquar ers for e powerful Kwangsi province Chinese armies and the terminus of a b1811- w-ay from Hanoi. French Indo- The Japanese said the vermin-Yd of their central column had ad- valnced 1s miles in the ow 1h!“ days m reach the souhh book v! W’ Pea-fl River, 1o miles from 11811111118- Nanning, wit-ha normal popula- tion of about 631m. is on the 11°11“ Radio Program IAII Time in Eastern Standard) FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24 BERLIN 3 :00 p . m .-Naws ~11 . The in- fiilfidéiffi. he‘??? ‘ p5...» inland ultimately to out C ‘a south- western rail and motor hIGYYWQYS through Yunnan rovinoe to French Inclo-Chirla and ritish Burnm. LUNDUN 7:15 p.m.--'I‘alk: m.; GSB. 9.51 meg., 31.5 m. ROME Most. of us seem to collect lots 7:30 p.m.—News of odd rolls of wallpaper. The idea of using them up for shelf paper only occurred to me the other day. With the edges eut into seallopfl (simple with a pair of curved nail 11.81 meg., 25.4 m.; meg., 30.5 m. MADRID 8:25 p.m.—News scissors) they lock as attractive asmAQI 9'86 meg., an" m. the most expensive shelf paper. BRADY FDDTWEAR C0. §~§4-O-&&§-§40+ In English. bank of the river. which ls e1 ct- gflw be“? fcrmmgle obswvc 1f p.111, 15.11, meg., 19 m.; DJN. nese once-s - 9.61 .. 31 . $1.2“... .1: ..%"%‘.‘.E.€i’l.li‘“£i.“°"“el ,. m" Bview which the Japanese landed under 47° P m-— Fragments "Om Operettas. HAT-i, 9.12 meg., 32 8 m. “Bflcksround 15.10 . to the News." oer‘. 15.14 meg., meg’ 19.5 m.; esp. 11.75 25.5| 3,00 ,_m__B,o,dc,n m ‘b in English; Guest Night; Amy Bernardy. 211.0 - a th my, o.aa y e in English. ' CARACAS 0:80 imam-Amateurs Program YVDRC, 5.9 meg., 51.7 m, GUATEMALA 10:00 p m.—Raldio ‘Iheatrq r11 5113111011). TGWS, 15.17 meg. 19.8 m. ' BERLIN 10:80 pm.--News in Engim, DJD. 11.77 meg., 25 "L; m" 9.61 meg., 31 m. LONDON 11:00 p.m.--I"ull News Bulletin loop, 11.10 meg., 25.5 m.; H; meg., 81.3 m. PARIS 12:16 l..m.—-Ncws in 3113mm TPBll. 11.88 meg., 2s: m.; TPAQ, 11.71 meg., 25,6 m, TOKYO 12:40 mph-Vocal Solo. Jzx, 19.7 m. MOSCOW llsh. RWG, 15.24 meg., 19.7 m, American plated Jewelry is balm better classes h ::Chrlstmu Sula tench that h. berculosls is not Inherited. Every case comes from another case. Molotov, Stammering Former Exile, Becomes Likely Sucessor T Stalin P. E. I. (lo-Operative Egg & Poultr; Association Inc. - ----- —-€l " ' [r9264 44-27-29-121 vantage of the courses. “Because a girl does not live nca-r the towns in which the schools are located. she need not feel reticent about applying," Miss Oxner said. In addition to the other courses. classes in poultry and beekeeping also are being provided for girls in rural districts under the Youth ADELAIDE-With the price 0i tinned salmon and sardines rising as a result of the war. the A-us- tralian tuna-fishing canning in- dustry is expecting a boom. The season for the “chicken of sea" began this month.‘ Training Plan. The poultry and beekeeping courses are of two to four weeks’ duration. Girls attend- ing them must bring their own food supplies while officials of the program attempt to arrange hous- ing. MURRAY RIVER WOMEN'S INSTITUTE The annual meeting of the Mur-; ray River Womens Institute was: held irl the Institute room in the Public Hall on November 15th with the President presiding. Following the opening exerczses roll call was responded to by twenty members by payment of dues. The minutes of annual meeting and last regular meetina were reed and approved and signed by President. Rrmorts of committees were then heard. Sec‘y reported a not profit of $56.40 rm chicken supper. 20 lbs. of varrl had been purchased for R/ed Cross work, and iwventv pairs of socks had been forwarded to Red Cross Office Olrtown. the balance of Wm having been zlistributed for knitting socks to be sen-t later. Twelve Hos- niial liQCl gowns had been complete-i Mrs. Wm. Porter reported for "W! onmmttee hcvlnz made six visits. The “resident then wave a very in- terestinsz address on the work of the Institute, and the Sewetaryfis rqwort of a very successful year's work Wes adoptel The following of- flows were re-electcd: _ . President -~Wrs. (Dr) L. Hrehml‘. Vie» Pres sivr», J. B. ‘Fhrmson. tSec’y 'I‘res. —~Mrs. Fred W. John- s on. Directors: Mrs. Wm. Alley. Mrs. Gen. o ivuitcway and Mrs. Clar- ence iillcnlle. AudWov-s: lvlrs, ‘F ‘D. Brehaui. Mrs. T. A '<"‘P\'ll"\. W" Wm. l-Yuroe w...- vrpcnpf 1.. u... Infnypet no up ‘Red Cross N-"tionql Wer Appeal and roller-tors were appointed for the. Liillilrrav River South polling div?- . on. If, “m; rip-lap’! In w." n wonliik Wvnd from "m ‘P. 1P Y. ‘F. R. Ielwve l“, rflnvrllfllllfiw 0cm w ma; 91p. nodded to haw‘ "drool "M" .-~---<-'~-»r Ans f-sflnqvvlflfl §ah|fdgv_ Mrs. Dalvfiel had charlie of the PM- way“ “up-l. w.» "tat-ad "ugh epoem m. "orgy-asap." fpllnrwvqd i“. (‘not hv M1" ‘Nlwollp rwl we“ riparian (encorcd). Mrs. W. ‘l’. Mel-Lend wand '1 nrovor my m"- Wv-qnITQ‘ p599}- inc closed by wmrlnv "The Binnie. Yam‘ Forever." A dainty 11inch was served hv the hostelres of the eveggntz and a socinl cup of tea en-, or . r-"Ybv-lsim-n "r1111 hr-urht no" Lflkfi. “psalms me var-round ell“- mir-i apimt tuberculosis by the P. E. I. Tuberculosis ' Island Apples are now at their best. We have a. good stock at special prices. (looking Apples- Good Quality, 19c pack Baxtors - good eating ap les 25c peck Mac ntoah Reds. » Small size-Aloe peck MacIntosh Red- Medium size-19c doz. Old English Peas- 3tins 29c Quaker Oorn Flakes- pkgs 25c. Quaker Pufied Wheat~ . . . . . 2 pkgs. 19c Quaker Pufied R.ice— 2 pkgs. 23c Beets . 10 lbs. 19c Walker's Sodas- ....2-1 lb. pkgs. 25c Junket Bonnet mix. pkgs. 21c Yellow, Corn Meal and Cracked 00m .. $1.95 Rix Grocery Longworth Ave. ill Queen 11-23-11. .. .. Revolutionist at 1'7, Premier Is Alter Ego t0 Russian Dictator, Resembles Late T. R. _. HASWT FACED B PROF. THOMAS J. B. y SINGLE ‘FIRING SQUAD WENNER For 18 years he has been the immediate assistant of Stalin and .has escaped the successive purges Written for NEA Servoe SOVIET RUSSIA is currently looking at me world through which have depleted the ranks of the plnce - nez glasses that “he old Bmshevlkl" As new master at- the foreign perch on the nose of her kowpie-l faced foreign eommissar-preorlier, Viacheslay Mikhailovich Molotov. His recent harangue at the dc- mocracies for prolonging Europe's war and the "war of nerves" office (which has known only three changes in its leadership in the last 21 years-Chicherin, Lit- vinoff and Molotov) he is one of ‘the youngest foreign ministers in, clamped against Finland for refus- ' fir”: n 59:?“ Gem“ and‘ enc uen y. mg Russian mmmry demands’ Molotov _is hardly known out- throw light on the personality, background and outlook of the man who since last May has been directing affairs at the Soviet foreign office. Many informed persons‘ in the foviet Union now consider Molotov the logical successor to Stalin, now approaching 60. _ Molotov is Stalin's , flier ego. Forty-nine years of age and son of a clerk. he won his spurs by becoming a. revolutionist at 17 and a Siberian exile in his twenties. Ever snce he has been stumping ‘for Soviet "ideology" in general and Joseph Stalin in particular. Islde of Russia. but his wife’, now CAREFUL GROOMING ) DOESN'T FIT 1n personal appearance he isnot unlike the late Theodore Roose- velt. He is pale, rather thick-set with heavy shoulders. and seems‘ out of place among most of his colleagues because of his Anglo- aristocratic bearing and careful attention t-p grooming. Like Ry- kov. whpm he replaced as chair- man of the Council of Peoplel. Commlssars. he speaks with a no- ticeable starnmer. During my recent trip to the Soviet Union, I found his picture everywhere, often beside those of Lenin and Stalin. sometimes en- tire top-stories of Soviet; office buildings are covered by canvas .- ~ . Vlacheslov M. Molotov: Through hlnyes. Stalin looks out on the worll head of the Soviet Cosmetic trust. visited the United States it i936. ‘ On March 22. i939. at u plenflll rmeeting of the Central Committe of the Communist Party. Molotov was elected ‘o tile powerful illnel Political Bureau of the part1 which makes decisions fol-elven. by the g In addition to being plcnller and chairman of the Council of Peo- ples Commlssars. member oi tllfi Political Bureau and Commlssol‘ of Foreign Affairs. Molotov standfl next to Stalin atop the pyramid of some 2,400,000 Communist peril‘ members who have special Pflvi‘ leges in helping to EH10‘ ‘he Soviet "democracy" - the only 1°‘ galized political party in the U- S S-R AUTHOR or LINDBERGH l "ram 1.11m" ATTACK The name of V. Molotov is af- -fixed to every decree in "l! Soviet Union. First attention wll called to him outside Russia when he denounced Col. Charles [lind- cergh as a “paid liar" for n1 csi-‘d slurs against the efficiency of R115’ slab air-arm. Second time W" when he shocked most of tht world by signing. together with Herr von Ribbentrdp. PM 5mm" oster-portarlts of the Soviet lluadrumvirate: Lenin, Stalin, Gelkeanmlzftgnollhe; o’ his com. Molotov and Voroshllov, commis- ‘flow mg “m,” is “Sm; u s" I" “m”: films df his ollvn ciuooslns- 3° The mum“ cmmls”, I’ pol," was born Vischeslav ‘Scrlflbllb ular and personsbly capable, but As a young revolutizpmst‘ 1n "no is destined to remain n flgure- _ om’ or flue three times’ he head so long as Stalin is maste‘ adopted many MmsflL H? pre- in the Kremlin. Close observers of long experience in the cupita‘ refer to him as the Georgian‘; "good mun Friday.” Molotov and Stalin: Together as they hon the alt-u of Maxim lqwg, m 1935, “and m“, in u“ llllllll-llll of lllMflill-IOIIII Affairs. ferred Molotov to z unov. PM‘ ma, Riabin, and Mi I. allov. so hi’ kept it. '