Frill.‘ CHARLOTTETOWN "MEQLEN W E L C O M E Rebekahs — Oddfellows May ‘your visit be filled with pleasure and your memoriesfwith delight. (raven-Bantam Nana-uni- (PUa-nlY-a. . Sale of new l KID GLOVES worth to $2.75 $1 Dair 'Another fortunate purchase by our buyers u brings you this bargain which we’re sure you’ll ’ ’ ‘ appreciate. i , French Kid GLOVES from one of the fore- ‘ . most makers, shown_in the best colours, all sizes from 5-‘/4_ up, Various types of cuff, as hint- ed at in the illustration. Ordinarily we’d have to say $2.75. We bought these right I a . . s0, choose for .... s n69 YQFRAHHQD,KEI Hhl§rl§§ IJHQEH Clearing SHORTS, POLO SHIRTS, BLOUSES All Broadcloth Shorts, navy and white, assorted sizes. Reg. 79c for . 0 Broadcloth Shorts, $1.00 type for Plaid Shorts and Blouses in sets, green I and blue, all sizes $2.59 for I Polo Shirts to wear with Slacks, Shorts or skirts, green. blue, yellow, white. Regular$100 for 1.49 Lace Trimmed Crepe de Cherie Slips, >-ALL BEACH WEAR REDUCED- -._.s.-‘¢@-nnu-m~a- 4~uaaanau-a.u-.a¢u.n~nna mun-nun» full length, all sizes, white only . . . . . . .. Halifax Pm Arrivals .__..- ARRIVALS t Pictou County Montreal Pictou Country Local. Maggie l-lomans local Viiny Ridge Ioc a. 1 Barge Local. ‘ Peutland local. Acadian Local- SAILINGS: Plctou County Local. Barge Local. Peritland Local. Dom. shipper local. City of Evensville U. 8- Ports. Bonneville West Indies. VESSEIB IN BER/I'll: Pictou County Dhcl-iarging. Quaker City loading. Lutzen Discharging. scow Berth- VESSELS DUE T0 ARRIVE: IZ-Chomedy from Montreal. F. st George from New York. Rosalind from St- John's» Nova Scotia from Liverpool. Farncrth from Boston. l9—Rieo from Halifax. Magdalen from Halifax. 14-Lady Nelson from W. Indies. Marlis- from Halifax- Irisbank from Far East. Siamese Prince from Far East. Kingsholm from Bermuda. 15—-Lenarfish from Halifax. l7—Zehda from St. John. Farnorth from Ch’town. ‘Dom. Shipper from Halifax. World Crop Reports Latest world crop reports indicate another good cereal harvest for Holland with a 5 per cent increase in acreage over i934, according to the Agricultural Department of the Canadian National Railways, spring wheat and spring barley 9m good; fall wheat on the whole good with a much larger crop than for the spring; fall barley and rye good t0 very good. In the case oi’ Norway, crop prospects have greatly irn- proved with abundant rainfall and higher temperature. Denmark re- ports an expected yield in hay 15 per cent below normal, natural fields 5 per cent below normal, with condition of ‘pasture fields normal. Japan shows an estimated increase in yield for wheat of 0.8 per cent, barley 3.1 per cent, rye 6.1 per cent over last year, with arr-estimated yield of 42,759,000 bushels of wheat, 28,485,000 bushels cf barley, 31,466,- 000 bushels of rye. The Argentine. it is anticipated. will have a, record maize production of 11,500,000 met- rictons. Recent rains and warmer weather in the west of England have greatly benefitted the hay crop, one district reporting tonnage nearly doubled. A crop above the average in quantity is now estimat- ed, which it is export-d will ad- versely affect imports of Canadian hay along with decline in coal pro- duction which involves a decrease in the number of pit ponies, thus a smaller colliery hay consumption. Egg Laying Contest Weekly -report of the Prince Ed- ward‘ Island egg laying contest for the week ending August 7. 1935: Pen Owner's Name Pts. l Exp. Farm. ‘Chuown 1570.1 2 Mrs. Roland Easter, New Wiltshire ..,1990.5 3 Mrs. J. H. McPhail, New l-laven . 1599.8 4 B. R. Peridleton, Kensing- tori 1474.4 5 MJs. J. D. MacFarlane, DeSable 6 Wm. R. Brown. wood Is- lands 9.. ~ 1904.0 7 Exp. St‘n, Ch‘t0wn 1404.9 1577.9 Total ..,..11271.6 Weekly production 52.5 per cent. High hens to date: v Pen Hen Ezlzs Points 7 . ... 2 218 248.9 .4 -. 3 , 215 214.0 6 .- . 180 .. 213.0 8... . . 5 . 195 .2063 1 3 191 . 205.8 F, A. D1"isco‘l, Manager of Con- test. J. A. Clark, Superintendent. rwsii SERUM ACROSS CONTINENT FOR IIORJSES WINNIPEG, Aug, ll-An gpj- demlc of encephalomyelitis among helm was mzeuding rapidly ..I0.. most parts of Manitoba tonight as supplies of serum to combat the disease were nished to the affected areas. Shipments of the curative serum arrived today from New York and immediately were snapped up by veterinarian laboring to halt the destruction of animal life, more than 100 horses already are known dead in rural districts. Use Mlnnrrl‘: for hum-u" - lobar gave his birthplace as Rice. Latin- Romance Began at. Manitoba University oaamnmoa. Ina, Auz- fl-A divorcee of Winnipeg vmo claims descent from William Bhakespi-‘m and a Harvard student. scion Hungarian nobility, filed an inten- tion to marry here and obtained a five-day wadvcr. They said they would be married tomorrow. The bride-to-be in Mrs. Mar? lllimbeth Rowland, 34, who nldshe was descended from the Bard of Avon and gave her mother's name ea Sarah Shakespeare. Her father is Allan W. Willis of London. The Ill cgmorn-to-be is Baron -Wol1'8fl-B8.Phiiip vcn Berliner-tiring. 33, graduate of the University of Manitoba and e. student in W9 Phi- department at Harvl-Id. He His father's name . was given as Baixm stefan von Bchmertzingmow living in 1111-1184117. The marriage will culminate a romance begun on the oairipus at the University of Manitoba, where the couple met when he was a etu- dent. Mrs. Rowland. born in Lon- don has h0g1“: l dent of Wirini- for-scv years, pegThfl couple secured their hcense Friday and immediately went be» fore a district court Judge. where they were granted a five-day waiv- er. After their meal-lace. V011 Schmcrtzing mid. he plans wlcwh in an American university. Curbing Tuberculosis Jessamine s. whither. mnklns woman vital statistician Of m5 United states, spends her workins day hunting up figures that will help save the lives of tuberculosis victims. Out of ofhcc hours she uses her statistical knowledge to makebase- ball graphs. charting 918W" T°°' ords and indexing b0! Mo" figures. probably the only woman. b! the way, who has ever done such a thing. The right against tubercul- osis is her passion (she is research secretary and statistician of the U3. National Tuberculosis Associa- tlon) and baseball is her hobby. Her earliest memory ls of trotlilfl! behind her father, carrying a small rocking chair, the two of them on their way to a. baseball 89-1116 l“ the small town upstate where they lived. "1 played good baseball myself." Miss Whitney boasts, "and now I never miss a league game l! I can help it." Links Disease With Al" Statistics came w her as natur- ally as baseball. While other little girls labored over their arithmetic problems. the grade-school Jessa- mine already had finished her tasks and was running to the ball field. ‘I actually have an affection for statistics.” Miss Whitney declares. "I especially like to make original social research, particularly when it comes lo something." One, piece of Miss Whitney's pathflnding has helped the fight against tuberculosis incalcuiably by proving that the greatest number of deaths occur among men in lu- dustry, young women between the ages of 20 and 24. and colored P60- .e_ pl"0ne of the universal mysteries is that death rate a young women-twice as many of whom die as young men," the statistician de- clared. “I made a live-year study of the situation and apparently the blame cannot be laid, as might be expected, upon either dieting habits or scanty clothing. “Interestingly enough. I found that dieting is not as strenuously practiced as you might think. True, many young women start to diet, but in three or four days they have usually stopped and are again eat- ing as usual. In fact, I round that girls who are perfectly healthy seem to have about the- same diet, clothes and recreation habits as girls who have died from tuber- culosls. So the cause is evidently biological rather than environmen- tal. And it isn't only in this country that such deaths occur. The situation ls the same everywhere. “Perhaps it is partly that, young women of that age-the curve be- gins to rise at fiftcem-have heavy_ adjustments to make. mentally, morally, physically, and their resist- ance is lowered." Motherhood May be Cause Maternity may have some con- necticn with the figures, too, Miss Whitney believes, and unoflllcally, she is an advocate of physical ex- lamination; for all prospective brides and bridegrooms. .... Jiwhile there sti‘l are p. “ we are making headway," she points out. “The tuberculosis rate is de- clining five or six per cent a year and the decline kept up right through the depression. The rate has been cut down two-thirds in thirty-one years." ‘ Tuberculosis is such a subtle dis- ease. Mica Whitney warns, that one may look perfectly healthy and 5:111 be in danger. Che advocates, there- fore. at lent one physical enam- inatlon a year with X-ny cir {lum- RRINGING UP FATHER of of the interior, Mapping Operations In Canada OTTAWA, Aug. iii-The 1035 Plo- gi-m of the rvmmivhlw Hid A11’ survey Bureau of the DePfl-Ytlmm for securingmdat: to be used largely in prelm- an publishing base maps includes dis- tricts from coast to coast tiirouzh- out the Dominion. " In Malpeque and other 84.110090 bays of Prince Edward Island, a continuation o1’ work undertaken 4.3-1“; pmvicus years for the De- partment of 11151161196 h" 59°11 pgigned to W.A, Fletcher. D0011!!!- ion Land Surveyor. In the Kawar- tha lakes area north of Peterbor- on)” (mm-lo, gioiuid surveys to enable air photoglillhs Wk"! NW‘ jqugjy u, he plotted, are being car- ried out by 3.1-1. Segre, D.L.S. 1h Bulifi Park, Alberta. a siuvev o! portions of the boundary 01' u" park is being made by H.211‘. Lam- hart n.i..s.-, and in Jasper Park. photo-topographic mapping 0i’ the park area is being comPWWd by Li- E. Harris, D. L. s. At Vancouver. British Columbia. an extension o! work undertaken uui-ine other veers with a view m maPPlIIE the willed area in that vicinity, has been en- trusted to on. Tuscan. D-L-S- , m the Northwest Territories, the locating correctly of certain points, for use in controlling the plottlns 01' gly‘ photographs already taken or still to be taken. has been as- signed to us. Fry, oils. and .1. Carroll. D.L.S. The work in NOT" them Canada will also include phqlpgtaphy of the area east o! the delta. of the Mackenzie river set aside by the Dominion Government for establishment under the De- partment of the Interior of a he"! of nearly three thousand semi- domesticatied reindeer, brought ov- erland from Alaska alter alive-year journey, as an experiment in se- curing for the Eskimo inhabitants of Canada an additional means of subsistence. The range to be sur- veyed is 6,000 square miles in ex- tent and consists of both summer and winter grazing areas for the recently acquired herd, The sum- mer home of the animals is along the Arctic coast near Kittigazuit. and their winter abode is inland from the east stdc o! the Mackenzie RJlVBI‘ delta. Mr. AM. Perry, D.L. S. will undertake certain ground control surveys in this area. Upon completion of the field op- erations oi the Biueau, suitable maps showing the topography of the districts surveyed will be pre- pared from the photographs taken in connection with each project. By the aid of the air camera, intimate details of the physical geography o! a district including its lakes, rivers. and streams are revealed in the photographs secured. A great deal of the information will be made available to the public in pictorial map form. Those districts already mapped by the Bureau during the thirteen years it has been engaged in air survey work are listed in a catalogue of publications, which may be obtained free of charge on application to the Surveyor Gener- al, Department of the Interior, Ot- tawa. ‘TROZEW’ MONKEY IS ‘FREED , 0F '1'. B. HOLLYWOOD, Aug l2. — The blood of Jekel, a tuberculosis-rid- den monkey "frozen to death" last week and brought back to life by a young research chemist, last night offered one of the most amazing possibilities in modern medicine. ' Jekels blood, tesicd for tuber- culosis three days after he had emerged from his brief "death," showed no tra-ce of the disease. Dr. Paiph S. Willard, former Columbia University chemist who has experimented for five years in reviving animals after they had been scientifically "frozen to d..z'.h," said he would not regard the results of his tests as final until they. had been repeated two or three times. "I used the’ complement fixa- tion test‘ to measure the presence oi’ tubercle baccili.“ he said. “The result was negative, but it is pos- sible PM’. INQZing might have changed blood ~nditions slightly". DOCTORS WILL "LEAP T0 THEIR PATIENTS Moscow. Aug l2.—Dclegates to th< National Parachute Congress were told today a large number of doctors would be trained to jump with parachutes so M l 31d can be sent people in isolated aet- tlements This problem is particularly acute on the northern coast, where communications are cut off .for a. great part of the year, The r‘ ctor-parachutlsts will car- . full medical ipment when they leap scone tests. Miss Whitney has travelled pretty much all over the United State; in the course of her surveys, some of which have been made fur the Government. 1n i020, she was ael. ectcd as one of the eight U8. dele- gates to the International Confer- ence on the Classification of Causes 0f DBIl-h. the only woman ever ap- pointed from any of the forty countries represented in the confer- ence. which la held every ten years. "countries has come to share the Quality In Binder Twine The binder used to wine now beiiil Canada's grain crop comes from a number of sources. Canadian made twine sup- , plies a large pert of the domestic demand and considerable quanti- fis made in the Domini!!! IN exported to other countries, but. binder twine fronraeveral other Canadian market. The; greater part of the iirvportationa into Canada are from Cheat Britain. Ireland and Holland and in re- cent years small quantities have also been received from Belgium and Germany. ' The law requires that each ball of binder twine sold ln Canada shall bear a label stating the number of feet of twine per pound in the ball, whether 500,550,000 or 850 feet. This is a case where quantity is the estimate of quality. Inspectors of the Dom- inion Department of Agriculture Seed Branch inspect Canadian made twine at the places of manu- facture and imported twine at storage warehouses, and by a system I of measurement and calculation determine the actual number of feet pound as compared with the length guaran- teed. Results of binder twine ln- spection ln recent years have shown a. steady improvement in both Canadian and imported twine used in Canada. More than three hundred samplw were taken of the twine distributed in Canada in 1934, the tests of which showed that 47 per cent had actually more twine to the pound than was guaranteed and it?‘ per cent had exactly the leng guaranteed. The remalner of the samples had some shortage which was incon- siderable in most cases and only 26 per cent had a shortage of over 5 per cent, which is the limit of shortage allowed by law. Tensilo strength in binder twine is not subject to legal control. Inspectors however, give some attention to this factor but it is now seldom that a sample is Joiind in which the tensile strenght is too weak for ordinary grain binding. ' British Empire Is Biggest Customer Of United States Unmmnufactured cotton was the great export commodity of the United States for the period Janu- ary to March 1995, representing 15.7 per cent of the total. Automobile parts and accessories came ncxt with 12.2 per cent; leaf tobacco 5.1 per cent; electrical machinery and parts 3.4 per cent; lubricating oil 2.7 per cent; gasoline, naptha. and other like products 2.3 per cent: crude petroleum 2 per cent; other products being on a descending scale. Last year for the some period unmanufactured cotton ac- counted for 22 per cent of the total exports, according to the Industrial Departmentof the Canadian Nat- ional Railways. Of the chief ex- port markets, the United Kingdom ranks first during the period, taking 17.8 per cent of the total value of exports, followg; by Canada 13.8 per cent; Japan 9.7; France 4.2; Italy 3.7; Germany, 3.2; Mexico 2.9; Cuba 2.8; Australia 2.0; ‘thine. and the Philippine Islanrk 2.5", Belgium, Argentina and British South Af- rloa 2.3; Brazil 2.1 per cent. Can- ada took l3 per cent more in point of value than for the corresponding GEORGETOWN ' BUS SERVIGE Via Cardigan and Newport Ferry Road Leaves Georgetown 8.30 a. m. Cardigan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 9.00 a. m. Arrives Charlottetown .. 10.00 a. m. Leaves Charlottetown 4.00 ",1. m. Daily service. Parcels carried. Bus will stop on signfls. Nobana Tea Rooms and F, J, Solomo rs, Georgetown. r5. FARNORTII Leaves BOSTON 10th, 20th, 30th of each month for CHARLOTTETOWN via Halifax, arriving three days a r. . Returning via Bras d’Or Lakes, Sydney and Halifax. For passenger, freight and automobile rates apply to Buntain, Bell 8i 0o. Phone 829. . "ll-HY 3.9: British mdia 8.1; China. SILVER LEAF knots and snarla. L-9023 L ‘AUGUST 13,3935 BINDER TWINE TWO CARLOADS re- ceived direct from the all"?! and made by . Q ‘ BRANTFORD CORDAGE 00., LTD of BRANTFORD, ONT: the largest makers of Binder Twine in the British Empire “SILVER LEAF BRAND”, Guaranteed 550 feet lguzhlfiyllllgllilg- qfaVItghBall guaranteed both for Absolutely free from Book your order NOW. Prices as low as "- the lowest. For Sale at our SEED STORE. CARTER & 00., Limited period 19M. Increases fai- other mnpire countries were Australia 52.5 per cent; south Africa 24; India 35.7; New Zealand 2.0; Hong-kcng 32.7; British West Africa 119.8; Bri- tish Malaya 20.1. Rance. Germany, Belgium, Netherlands. Spa-in and Denmark made smaller purchases while sales for Iotin American countries were larger. Increase in “DOWN to Japan amounted to 5.4 per cent while China showed a de- mgieetyoef 2'1 per cent. imwrts during this period coffee takes first place with 8.4 per cent. followed by sugar a1 per cent; wide rubber. including latex, 1.2; PW silk 42: tin hm, blocks, pigs, etc, 4; standard ... , t pqpgr 3-4; wwd null» 8: undressed and ares“! n"! 3-3 Der cent. and other commodities in g deacon” ,5 gout These imports came from the fol- lowing countries, Canada being the m!" "W" "1 Bubbly. accounting for i1.'l per cent of the total: Brit- 191 Mil-live 7.8 per cent; Japan 7; United Kingdom 5.8; Phflipping 15.. lends 6-1: Brazil 5.2; Cuba 4.9; Ger- 3: Netherlands India 2.9; Argentina. and Colombia. 2.8; France 2.7; Mex- and tin ut Bnitish Mala sixth int?) second place. yiimm from Canada increased by m) p" cent over the corresponding perm last year and'there were substan- tial increases in purchases mm, Tragically all other Empire coun- Special Deer A Hunting License New Brunswick MONOTON, N. B, Aug 1g__ New Brunswick will institute . special non-i sident deer hunting license this season. according to the Fish and Game Department of the Canadian National Rail. wasys. The price is $10.00 ‘and m, licen_. will permit of huntcn taking two deer and two bean during the season, which will eg- iend from September 15th to Nov. ember 30th, The regular non- resident deer IIOGXIQ. which is $25.00. will still be available. This latter license pg- mits of the taking of two gem twu bears. ducks and partridge in ico 2.5. Heavy p... ha”; or rubber Glty Bus a Elmira Headquarters Old Spa Parcels carried at L-7050-6-11-t1. B iilegtcwn ..... 5.1a [LII- Dundee I " Ihaclbrcek ...... 4.50 p.11; " Keefe‘: Lake ... 4.35 ma. " 49 Road 4.45 pan. _' Cardigan 5.00 ma. I .- n-u-u. I.” fl-lfl- DlngweFa .... 5.40 pan. Arrive Fortune axxxnxxxxa x Souris 5-50 p.112. Arrive Headquarters ln Chariottetcwn-NOBANA TEA ROOMS. Helfllllln in: In Sollfla-LENNOX HOTEL. the legal limit, in the m, guan- . wwé- Service 0h’town in Tea Rooms, Ch’towii Cox Hotel, Souris lklvea Elmira .. ‘Llfloavca Charlottetown ,.,,,,,, 4,10 " B01111: 8.10 " M; gww." _ " vii-no"- Mw- w -- Mnrcll “ lent. lzeilsn iisa c st. mm “ ore . 9.15 " m; l, ' m. Stewart .. v.40 " Soumelxiilli- ' Arrival In Charlottetown . .. rascal-rim in Elmira .. ir- Minimum of 25¢. Bus will stop on signal at any point. 0-0-0440 ' ciuniorrrrovni n ironrunr Fardy Bus Service & Taxi Service TIME TABLE leaving C‘ icttetcwa 4.00 nualoavuing Fortune‘ Dingwc " Keefeh Lake 9.10 ain- " Iluelbrook . 9.45 n-m- Charlottetown .. 10.05 a! Bnmmervlils Iclool Vernon liver Peter: carried . mane A M“ 85.3. mrmornav mazes norouuv A MONG .Mv : WHO is ‘THAT’? GOODNESS " on! ra-lA-rs JUST oui 85m rui-r ARI n "rHs PICTUIII ' I ,lrllillll llallklllllllllll ~ lllllllllllllllllllilllliillll HAN gs".- v I40 llii l i l! BL u BUS LINE SCHEDULE New Perth School >eaaeaeuaalaneaanreleasing-ne- -------..-----u... Parceh Mlle carn- Iaawlllahpcualgaalatanypclnicnrouu. liabi- I lllliilidllllllllllllll lllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIU" liillillllllillllllill L iVAA in"!"Wiliiiiiiiililll lliil