THE WESTERN GUARDIAN __,r AGENT-MIL John POI!‘ ‘I W Mr S svmmnsmlmvn ?=r.:i«3'§°¢‘:ovxv-x"'°r?""°"° "9" ____7 News, subscriptions, Advertising should be left with Mrs. Pond m"d"“ "1" I” Mulh‘ 53"! It I!!! of the following store. tn siunmeiside:— Bell Bookstore. Wller St. Toronto Bakery. Water at _'rbls column is reserved for news or local interest but advertising of a ncwsy nature may be insert- ed gt 2 cents a word strictly pay- Able In advance _ _. ..~.m_.. _uABY NIPPLE GRIPPEBS free with nipples at '_I‘ayl:r Drug 00., msinglon yl“A]L (is your films for de- wtgpiwg, ;irintin,;, enlarging. deckle egg: enlargement free. Emnon mug Co., l..td.. Summcrside. L-60-8-15-151. _C0!\'GBATUl.A'I'ZONS -- Mr. Mrs. Elmer Ramsay of Lot 16. re re. "ing congratulations on ’l3l1il'l\'£iC of a little son at their one on suday, August 13th. Mrs. msay was before '52: marriage '5 lnmazi of View 1 Wefi. ..FllA(‘TURES LEG —M:i'. Elzie or cl Rosebsnk. is a patient in .3 Prirm Ccunty Hcspital suffer- .. with a broken leg. Mr. Home :t with the acclclsnt. when he umpzd as his team became fright- d and ran away while cutting . S. — AGlS'l‘R.A’l‘E'S COURT - u.. irate Darby held Court on i any last when two parties from lerslie appeared befcv: him charg- .. with an offense under the excise ct. They were each fin-ed $25 00 it a drunken umed until next. w-. . —v?Si'i‘0ltS To SUMMERSIDE -Mr. George W. McP_hee. M. P., ho is visiting his native p'i‘0VI’.‘«"-8 cm the West; was in Summerslde - Saturliav and call-vd on Mr. A.E. clican. M. P.. and Mrs. Mac- ean. Another visitor calling on M:Lcan was ssnator John ‘-1’ S. —FRl\CTIlltES HIP — Mrs. audet a widow and sister of Al- ii"YlF" Gaudet at St. Nicholas .t with an unf-irtrinizte 9/~cld=~:~'t. V 5’*lll"'2lV mwrnivv; wl~e'n she fell '1 fr:Wil"P'l her l'i"- a‘ the home ' lvr brother. The doctor was tllrrl and the fracture eat. M's. udet is now resting oocnfort/al*"~. S. Perso "ills —M.iss Katherine Darby of New ark. ls spsnding a few weeks at - r home in St. El-ranors. Robert. Home of Il.ll:riois. - .i his father, Mr. George ome at Unlonvale, —M.rs. H T. of Halifax. -- the guest of her daugntier. Mrs. Eric Macxay and Mr. lMacKay, um-m crszc.-2 . -Mii giattrtioe Rankinl, it reoftritl. ._ ua — e Genera osp t» John. N. B. is visiting her "'M.r. and Mrs. R. 3. ‘min. Summerslde. —Mlss Evelyn Donald has re- mlcd to summerside after spend- »; a few days in Sea. View with ,'_arf3rent4. Mr. and Mrs. Edwain ~Mr \ " Li. "W55 Jean Llewellyn, nurse in “mind at _St. John General 1105-- ital is visiting her parents, Mr. dmlglers. w. K. Llewellyn. Surg- ‘—Mrs. Jessie Dalton and Miss ‘lgn Dalton are visiting friends inc West of the Province. ofigr and Mrs. Roy Macxinnon “K31”. Maine. is visiting her °”"~’T hon“ in O'L5arv. the guasts ulxr. and Mrs. Leslie Mac- rlgkand Mrs. Geo. c. Dennis. (in V ft Dizrwe. and Mrs. Edith In :3 dB Clinton. and Mr. and ‘fwd -home Irzéglma Burlington. l‘ motor trip Scotia New -3/H5-, H 9‘ glalnfield, a)§'.3w _g‘_‘..;., .1 H51’ 01“ home in NOl'b’_Il'0, P, E. I, <1 also her sister Mrs Gtesley |'o.=rt5on.. Miss I-f'.°'din"z cts ‘° Mum in about A week's me. ‘Ms. am». dmm, . _ tin.‘ Bqwness and Mn lmr;r;{n3‘d_Iror;. Robert 2%: . M ' ~ hm‘ gale “L3‘r'1c<t>(Y)ni7a:i1:“r(ii .. h':ve°mboeuD'- mgdicw n deiiamrur. olldav with Em“-n03;]Cswness' sister. Mrs. sum;-.1 Harding of . vi-it." ig SHELLEY I8 FOBGWIN - A inning,‘ each team . aoe uuxauui'%tm‘&"i'i' 0 null nmguo Min: gnudet. «"633. ss'?. _. The Guardian will be delivered to any horn. in gum M carrier Boy at 20 Mr oil! or 10¢ per week. Phone 239-! for thi:l:eyv°|cab!- ,m your order to the boy responsible for deliveries on your mm, —EXT'KACT WILD STRAW. at Taylor Drug C0,, -1‘)!!! BOWNESS Clan wm £l‘.’.‘.‘%.‘w’1.‘:.:‘.’.‘.§.f...l"°'.1i«'i.“‘ 3°“ "W us‘ 23rd Y rmoon. Aug- L-175-8-19-21. —CONGRA'l‘ULA'l‘IONs ... Mm, . H. .LeIfu.:gey is being ayngrat... i‘l‘““’i‘.‘...‘l“ .‘}’‘‘i‘.’‘"‘‘ “M W“ ’°' er _ town E Y nfimafl It the Charlote S. —FlNED FIVE DOLLARS AND C°5Ts‘A Y flfcm O'Leary came before glstimte Darby on s.::.e:.d.el,=.-;°..r..n.,.w« 5*-3:8“ mm I‘ v fined $5.00 and c0sI1:a£,‘ S and “Q5. —AU'l‘OM0 ILE COLLISION — C8-PS 00‘ at the intersec- “°n M Kensln-gton on Saturday morning but fortunately no one was hurt seriously. The cars were dam- 389:! to some extent. s. —m§AR Hon. Dr. W. J. P. Mac- Millans ink on “Cancer and its Control" at North Bedeque Com. munlty Hall, Monday evening, Aug. 21st. L-l93. “DER TAG” NEARS (Oontguad from page 1) economic sense for I. fllct. Elpeaking at the East Prussian Fair at f<:senlgaber.,. State Sec- retary Fritz Lanrurled the Economics Ministry said Germany is “prepared on the economic front.‘ a "We know we could win no war if We were defeated in the eco- nomic fisld." Landfried said. “Therefore we have armed Utr- seives cconomlcall . so we could throw the full lie and fighting power of the nation into the con- test should a hostile world oblige us to do so." AN§10Us TIME (Continued frog1__pgge 1) __ long con- officea from F.tlday to Monday. The Sunday Press too reflected a no. The Conservative Sunday Ob- server h:i>r'~d its -us .1 o"Dl:ma.tlc story "A critical Week Ahead." The Sunday Pictac-"l.a.l (independ- exit) said “this week ma well be the rricst critical since e Great or. The Sunday Times (Ind) warned "anzv atatemlut to re-neat. at another victim's expense what. has been done this year by Germany at Ozecho-S'.ovaki.a‘s on by Italy at Alibaniars will bring the Union Jack into conflict." It added. however. that if "Ger- many could return to spheres where n tistion is pomlble. co-uld sua- stl ute calm discussions for viol- ence threats, she would not find her way b by Dan- don.” The Sunday Di:-ioa_tx:h (I‘nd.) diplomatic correspondent said he had learned the ministers will “give further orders to increase Britain's war pr<~’Jpaired<n~2$ " ‘ also consider," he to make is public statement relteraztlmz 1Britain’s in- terpretation of the -'-=drze to P0- la:1d—bl:at ‘British assistance will be given immcdla/tielv and with the whole of our resources in the event of Poland taking up arms in de- fenoe of her national independ- enoe." Accorlinrz to the smrdialy Express (Ind) the ministers "will give ord- ers which will result in Britain be- ing nr‘r>3.'-til for any posslwn. situ- ation in the next few weeks. CUFF-LINK SOUVENIR. J . South Africa .(csP)—Man.ag~er of an En-glish soccer team that recently visited South Africa. Bert. I-Iienzlmwai’ W35 *9‘ seamed with a pair of cuff- nks Iran/Ibo of miniature gold footballs ma 3 put oi Kruger coins. 1 ._;._.%._:..._....—__._._.__ e SUMM celebrates ilisl First Mass At Home church Rev. John H._ Sullivan, 8. .1.. son of Mrs. slnivnn. Bummcrslde and the late Wm. Sullivan, cele- brarted his first solemn High Mass in his home church, st. Psuls. Btumrierside, yesterday morning at 11 oclook. Asslstiru; at. the mg were Rev. Douglas Macrlelll, as d¢‘3€0n: Rev. Father 0'1-Ionic, sub-deacon: and Fatherauliivans two brothers. Enock and Arthur, The church was filled in city with friends of the ordained priest. Rt. Rev. . Iellali. V. 0.. preached e .59;-_ man which was very appropriate and inspiring. dealing partlculm-1y with duties of a priest and his high calling. The men's choir assisted with the music of the Mass. Rev, Bennett MacDonald. Grand River and Rev. Fr. Paquec of Boston. were in the sanctuary. Rev. Fr. Sullivan received early education at. the side High School and st. stall’.-3 Coileze. Charlottetown, graduating from there in 1920. He later joined the Jesuit older at the Immaculate Conception .co1.. leize in Montreal and was ordain- ed last Sunday by Rt. Rev. Bishop ‘lilrnmanuel Desahamps in the Church of Immaculate Conc - Lion with four other Island priegg. Rev. Fr. Sullivan who came hcnze last Wednesday to say his first High Mass in his home church. leave: this afternoon for Montreal to continue his studies at the Jesuit College. Kensington and Vicinity Mrs. P. N. I.a:«Bls.nc, Mrs. Jos- eph Cameron and Miss Eileen Shea were visitors to Summersid-e on 'I'h»u.rsday. . , Mr. F‘.-ed Egan. Citarlottetown was a. business visitor to Kerisi.ng- ton on y. Miss Francis Jenkins, Charlotte- tccsvn is enjoying a pleasant holi- day in Kensington the guest of her grandparents. His Worship Mayor and Mrs. Cha:ies Cooke. Mr. Marne Kennedy. and Miss Helen Jelly while enroute to their homes in 0‘Leary from the Prov- incial Exhibition in Charlottetown enjoyed a. brfef stay in I{‘.’.‘K‘lEil‘I‘_{iC'-‘t the guests of Mr. and Mts. '1‘. M. Howatt. His many friends will be pleased to hear that Mr William Toombs who is now a patient i_n the Mono- ton Hospital, is so rapidly improv- iwr from his recent serious ac- cident, that he hopes to arrive home on Thursday next, . Miss Beulah Howatt, searlewwn, is now stationed in relieving Mir: Mildred B"=.h<i,3 pro- Erietress of The Duchess Hairdress- g Parlors while she is on her In- muai holidays. The Misses Shirley Hughes and Marion Burnett are ndlng a peasant holiday in Kin on, with relatives and friends. Mr. Charlesml-iowatt. was 3 limi- mess summecside on Friday, _ His many friends in Keno! n and viclnigr were shocked to of tliesudenpassingoflllr. Mac Steele prominent reinsmem former- ly of summersdde and extend their sincerest sympathy‘ to his family andtrelatlves in elr and bereave- mm . A number of our farmers are busily engaged in harvesting their szlrain crcap, with th remainder busil preparing to the some and nanothertendalysths-ywlil undoubtedly ha/ve their crops saf- ely stored and ready for thresh- rig. Senator John Sinclair of Evp'dng- field was a business visitor to Ken- slngton om Friday. Oongmtulations to Mr. and Mrs. Percy Drlscoll on the arrival of a young son on Friday. Aug. iii. MLss Jean King of _ a. Mass. who is spending i-er holidays with Mrs. Andrew 0‘Keefe. . Kenslng- ton is at present eniovying a few days with friends in Inkermsn Beach Mr.'Ja.mea Tuplin Bind: Banks. was a visitor to Kensington on Friday . Mrs. . O. M Sydney. 0 to remain for the C. W. L. Oom- vention next week. M11. Murphy is a native of Kensington and will return here to’ fhiltsh a month's visit. before returning to her home in sydmey. After an absence of t tyelght ycaraeincept fora s:(e)lx"b holiday last when one 37.?‘ “fi°°'“m..°" Paftricifugwo abns Louis and Ph- ther Charles the I 1 3 is erzioyint that my hm Kensington . ' .- :'=~-I wmgv r- . Dnm-tic-ll: Illustrating the advance in aviation. 22 tons of rnetal In th aha. r u. 5 Ann --n . in; fortress" roared 2500 miles across the country. from Burbank. Cal._eto N: oYo:k, in 9 mini; min “ "2 millllliflu “"18 9'39"“! 6 ‘NW “my record Photo above shows the Floyd Bennett Field after the hop. record-making plane in “The Boiler Kid” Breaks Of Iron Barrel In Life—-— And Love By NEA Service CHICAGO, 111., Aug. — The bridegroom now, and which hangs the life of Frzderlck time for the romance that flowered in his one-man prison. When the 29-year-old youtnh married Miss Tercsu Larkin of Dayton, 0., in his River Forest; home he added another achievement to a career that has re- fused to be bound by the steel cage _which keeps him alive . For more than three ycars, young Sn1l€'s lungs have been partially paralyzed—but He clubbed himself “de boiler out Ohrisimas cards. irustrated with a sketch of hi’: “prison," plastered with travel stickers, And, since he was stricken with infantile 1't1'alfs.‘- almost evcrytlilnl: ayoung fellow likes to do. He has traveled amcng sis in China, Snite has done other things. some 30,000 mllrs_ Each year. Fred‘s folks winter Ea. The lung. equipped with portable b1:t'ri':-’. is rollrd into a, specially built autcmcb’lc tm l*r. _and son goes along. Through a perlscope. attached and focused onto a mirror above Snit2‘s head. i‘? h?s watched foootball games, scen horses pcund d"wn th' turf, looked at some of the world s scrnlc 511313. Fred and his cage are tamiiar Prayer for divine help: The scene at the Shrine of our Lady of Lourdes, from which young Snite returned recently. at Hialeah and Tropical Park. suite attended a night gridiron game between he University of Miami and Duquesne. He's followed the Fighting Irish of Notre Dame, his alma mater. Fred plays cards and chess. While anoi-hcr DEF-SCH sits in for him at the table, he watches through his mirror, directing his play the hand or move the chess men. In order too thank thousands of well-wlshers for their encouraging messages, he has edited a news- paper. 'I'he publication is mlmeoaraphed. goes to press whenever the editor has Fred dictates the stories, made up experiences, to a nurse. President is on the mailing list. finite has been featured in radio broadcasts, sev- eral of which were nation-wide appeals for funds paralysis. He has toured France famous cathedrals, talking lundhing in a fashionable Parisian restaurant, a party highlighted by Chfim‘ to combat. infantile in the iron lung. visiting with peasants, and even pagne sipped through a straw. That European trip philosophy. The Durposé W35 W 11.0 d , here many invnlids Bhflne 0‘ our Lady 0 ur esfrovrln their afflictions. onto a railroad car at Miami to New York, carried onto the liner Normandle for the trans-Atlantic voy-“Bit Yet. Fred went to give vhunkh 1' claim to have found release mg lung was loadcd in May. transported thereby proves rcal1ife——ca.n be lived in an iron lung . The throbbing beat of the artificial respirator. on in an illustration of Sn“? 5 "Boiler Kid ’ is a that life — B. Snite, Jr, kepl his spirit haunt kld " Ho's mailed at Miami B:-1:11. to the iron lll‘.‘.S'. {.0 race track uh. T£ The “holler kid" does the fair: Witnessing guest. he saw other pilgrims about h;m and uttered a pray for t‘n:m. New York World's Fair. lcge, he was accompanying his parents on a wor i-our, appeared headed towards a high position in h I-:ithcr‘s firm. Fate had a different idea. spent $50,000 to bring Fred back to the Unitzd State siili more in efforts to cure him. l~e.=piv-ator." made of aluminum and rubber. “licmc The new Mrs. Suite, Jr., met her husband about at milrrlnge with increased hope. that some day. somehow. he will be able to mov still more to keep on living for. D<vnnA— the games substitute how‘ to enough material. mostly of personal Rooscvclt himssli visit the famous Out of the iron core: The only respite Fred B. at to ask for lightweight “vest" model respirator. Bonds Q three-dimensional polarold movie as Grover Wha'.en's himself. And. whi‘e he rested in front of the shrine, Upon his return in June, he made a tour of the It was back on April 1, 1936, Fred Snite was placed in a respirator at Peiping, China. Fresh out of col- It was 14 months before the by could be brought home from China. The father is reported to have Some progress has been made. Suite is now able to spend several. hours. a clay. in a "V961. D°%:i: small artificial lung weighs but 9 1-2 pounds in con- trast to the 900-pound machine when is his regulal five years ago while attending Georgian Ccuri: Col- lege at Lakewood, N.J. she met Fred through his sister, Mary Loretta. who was one of her classmates. The man in the iron lung goes into the adventure He still believes about like 9. normal individual. And he now has Snlte. Jr , gets from his mechanical lunl L1 in this SIDE GUARDIA AND l>RINcE COUNTY CHRONICLE 4 S \ \ fF'II'I'I.IIIIII.fII'I'I' ff . BE UP-T0-DATE AND USE A SOUND SYSTEM at Your Picnic or Any Entertainment OUR PRICES ARE REASONABLE \ The WRIGHT RADIO SERVICE S UMM E RSI D E >lIttll1tlIItIlItIl'1 1-———§ IIII555 Dictured above. The er An elevated train wecldent In Brooklyn. N. Y , that injured 22 per- ‘ sons, was saved from being 1 major tragedy by the lucky ht-cal ls‘ car of the train, crowded with Coney 4 and-bound Sunday pleasure seekers, jumped a, switch and ' vtgfiliheéi with terrific force into the power house in the foreground. “on ya he fact that It was tightly wedged between the house and the °“ °°"°-‘I I-"II It from planning to the street. so feet below. i .3 ; id is IT’S FREE TO ALL - 5. it costs nothing except the time we spend at it. spend very little time Layout.s_ Ideas, Etc. today, realize that it. costs nothing to advertise. advertising pays for itself many times over. Advertisers in The Charlottetown Guardian need on their ads The Modern Ad Service Bureau supplies all Cuts, Copy, Artwork. ‘ There is no charge for owimmlng in this countr! ‘ f Leading merchants, who are really “in the swim" 1 Good ABSOLUTELY FREE Simply Phone 132 Our Copy Writer Will Call on You The Gharlottetown Guardian tnemlleo BO TILLIE THE rotu-:n_— MAc's UNDER 4% AW THAT 6ROAN- GRIGGS HAS MAYBE WE HAD THE LAST CAN HELP SUSPICIONl MR.6l2ANEY..WE CAME TO YOUR CASINO TO HEAR GR|6GS' MUSIC PM. K»: Ram.-. syn.» u.-. var . W-old ndimuefl P.S.—Right now is a good time for wide-awake mer- chants to “get in the swim” with some 90011. ¢'9¢"'°”‘- effective, Guardian Advertising. _ LISTEN, GR|GGS,l’M PAYING YOU FOR MUS|C,NOT DANCiNG..OUR PATRON5 ARE I .m........~..._...._n'....A . -—-g By Westovog COMPLAINING 1