l . WES TERN c ' w‘ IZIIIILT: ,1 uflfllui-e mo: In mama n l1 s], yard numb‘ "I 14"” __—— MINERAL OIL Spec- wzsfzsk€njlEfaylor Drug Co., Ken- gpgton. Lrrrm DRAMATIC AMI‘ “Here Comes up» 111 French River Hall oxginesdav, Sept. 9. Admission 25o Ed ,5, ' L-szas-s-s-zi JMAYELLEIUS REST Dramat- cmy, present “The Man from f-orhue" in Tyne Valley Hall on w,» September llth. ' L-8334-9-9-21 payable .1,EA\'ES FOR. MONTREAL - y Q Simpson of Summerside morning for Montreal. He “pacts to return the latter part of Ll, week =5 .111o11 $011001. OPENS wml 11501351‘ ENROLLMENT IN HIS- “my .- Thc Summerside High moi opened yesterday morning “u, an enrollment of 585 pupils, 1;, biggest enrolment in the his- WM the school. This figure re- nts pupils from grade one to mire, Cwrutle eleven has 38 pu- r11 and urndo twelve has 17. Tea- ms and pupils are looking for- urd to o successful yeaL-S JHTI-lRI-‘RONT ‘ BUSY — Surn- wride harbor presented s. busy we on luesday morning when “steamers docked at her whar- 111, The ‘S. S. Zenda brought a mo of flour from. the Great 1,1195, This was the first steamer p111 the Lakes this Fall. The B. il-‘ieurus from Montreal brought icarxo of flour and some way- pight, The third steamer Pictou munty brought a miscellaneous Qgeight flllfl left in the afternoon is Charlottetown. 'I'he S. S. {gurus also finished unloading and sued for Montreal. ‘The S. S. iaidsis still discharging her cargo Iili0lll1ail's wharf where there is metal storage facilities for flour-S -r1101ua1"r1ow COURT-Sev- nl cases came up in the Prohi- Iltich arose out of the seizure of tier 0n Sunday by the R.C.M.P. llie pitriy was fined $25 and costs. lilllie case against a, party from Portage. where the R.C.M.P. found five - gallons of beQr, the pity was found guilty and fined 815 and costs. Another party from Portage found guilty of having ‘litter in his possession was fined tit. Another party from Portage n: iincd tcn dollars for consum- iiirliqiior illegally. Another party iwm Fortune was fined ten dollars "iii “his for obstructing the R. c. if. P.-S Personals -Mr. Heath Woodside of Bed- filllt is n patient in the Princé Minty Hospital-S -Miss Bessie Enman of Illlerslio ta patient in the Prime County Hospital-s -.\ir. Joseph Peters of Tignish has cntcivii the Prince County Hospital for treatment-S —Mi's. Nden Lax-gs of Albany is Iidergoing treatment in the Prince Oounty Hospital-S -Mi§s Jacqueline Scot of New York rcturncd this week from a visit to friends in Miscouche-S -l0'. Louis Demoches who has been visiting his old home in Mis- ouche loft this. week on return to (iiouersicr, Mu55__$ -—Mrs. George A. Burch of Bor- hileft on Saturday on a visit to lfontroni,_s *- and her mother. l i Mtwnoskgnhié yesterday on a ‘(r-Mr A. R. Coflin has returned his home in Truro, after visit- ! in Summ-rrside 11nd vicinity-B M~Thc Misses Patricia MaoLella-rl, i" Mflwlllloitch. Hilda Brother- °°tl and Constance Montgomery i" visiting friends in Monctom-S “TM” Mark Barron. Souris, has daxllcd uficr spending hi5 11911- M; “uh _his parents, Mr. and 5. l-‘mncis Hagan, Kelly's Cross. mglm“ Mary uncle. Charlottetown the i the holiday in Summerside. ‘s guest of Miss Mary DeLagarde. o~Bistcr Roth Marie, St. Joseph's lllihflflm, Halifax, 1v, s, 1111a c ‘g Anna Josephine, Reserve, Dims; lave returned aftUr a very tit visit with their parents, r. xenysilllll Mrs. g Cross, Francis _ Hagan, ‘II 111E311. .-.,....11.~ P BRITISH (301515015 -1\n1. man .1. nesnocna of Miscoucho, 3111101111055 the engage- ment of his daughter Mary Josepha to John Wilfred McNally of Borden. lgaigflllie to take place September -5'5IDl-: POLICE COURT-Three drunks appeared before the Magis- trafe in the Bummerside Police Court on Tuesday and were given the customary flne. A drunken driving case was postponed-s Kensington And Vicinity Mr. and Mrs. w. F. Taylor, Ken- sington spent Labor Day in Char- lottetown. Miss Aleah Palmer, Summerside, $110M fl few days in Kensington, guest of Miss Olive Thompson. Dr. A. A. and —l\f.rs. Inckhart, Kensington were visitors to Char- lottetown on Monday. Mrs. Colin Matheson of Port E1- gin, N. B., is visiting in Freetown, Charlottetown and Albany. Mix Doris Walker, Summerside spent the week end and holiday in Kensington, guest of Mr. and Mrs. James Jardine. lib‘. John Warren, Kensington, has returned from a visit to Bos- ton, Mass. Mr. Ray Stewart, New Carllsle, Quebec, arrived on Monday even- ing to spend hisholidays with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Stewart, Kensington. Mrs. John firms ma’ Miss Eil- een Shea. of Kensington, left Sat- urday morning on a. fortnight/s visit to Boston, Mass. Rev. John and Mrs. Barbour of Maitland, N. S., crossed by the car ferry Monday evening, for a vis- it with friends in Kensington, Charlottetown and other places. v Mia Miriam Profitt and Miss Dorothy MacKenzie, of Kensington, made the round trip by the car ferry on Labor Day. Mr. Gerald MacKenzie. accom- panied by his sister. Miss Doris and Miss Mildred Bishop of Kensing- ton and Mr. Harry Lapthome. Charlottetown. crossed by the ear ferry Monday morning, on a. short motor trip going as far as Halifax, N. S. Rev. William 0. and Mrs. Rhoad. Kensington, left by car last week to spend the holidays at their for- mer home in Pennsylvania. They were accompanied by Mrs. Fanny Adams and the Misses Olive Dal- ziel and Louise Bernard, the for- mer on a. visit to Haverhnl and the latter to Medford, Mass. Four ears, laden with happy pic- nioers from Kensington crossed to the mainland on Monday morning. going as far as Northport, N. 3., to spend the day with Rev. W. S. and Mrs. Loring. Those taking cars were Messrs. E. M. MacFarlane. W. H._ Darrach, Ervin Champion and Don Bowness. -1a Warns Against Labor Boycott 0f Coronation (c. P. by Guardian's sped-l Wire) rnmotmr, England. Sept 8- Sir Waiter Oltrine, secretary gen- eral of the British ‘Ikades Union Congress meeting hem. WW8!“ warned the delegates against a labor boycott of King Edward's coronation next May 2'7. The boycott was proposed, to- gether with a 24-hour 89319151 strike, as a protest ‘against the new ggvernment regulations ocnoem- ing unemployment insurance. Sir Walter strongly advised the 600 islbor delegates not to draw the throne into thelrrpolitioal and loc- ial disputes. "Nobody can allese." Md B“ Walter, “that any action by the King himself has been responsible for this situation. If we have re- gemgnmt in our hearts. let 118 d1!’- oct it in the quarter where it is dire." Spanish Premier Francisco Lar- go Caballero wired his thank!» 101‘ g mggssge of sympathy which member-g of the Congress sent him. “spunky. workmen." said Cabal- lero’s message. “Will "Km 9° u" very last to defend the cause of democracy Md liberty "id "m" " triumphant victory is achieved a8- cinst Fascism." I < rlKtiffilifi ma’ CORK t“? and PNCB 11111111 11 NAVAL vrssns surrtrssin (Continued from Page I.) § " crews. The attempted revolts occurred on the destroyer Dan and the sloop Alfonso De Albuquerque. As soon as those on shone were aware of the mutinles, the Gov- ernment land batteries Altoduque and Almada trained their guns on the ships, speedily disabling them and pounding the crews into sub- mission. ‘The warships were towed to shore and the crews t-hitvwn into jails as authorities worked to learn whether the mutinies had any far- reaching ramifications. . Witnessing the bombardmenis were the British steamers Asturias and Strathmorc, carrying several hundred British holiday-makers. So far as could be learned tonight neither British vessel had been endangered by the shelling. LAY PLANS FOB. ATTACKS MADRID, Sept. 8-'1'he ‘Madrid Government in the face of reports that its forces were being steadily vanquished in the northern coast- al sector, tonight laid plans for an artillery and airplane attack on the rebel stronghold of Oviedo. One column of Asturian miners at the same time was reported to have marched south 12 miles nearer Leon as the Government strove to dria the Fascist rebels from the northwestern territory. Recruits were sought by the Madrid Government to bolster the lines of the defenders of the city around which the rebels have been camped for weeks. SAINT JEN DE LUZ. France, Sept. 8—Spanish rebel columns to- night converged on besieged San Sebastian, their leaders spurning a. surrender offer made by the son of the governor of the city. Old men, women and children fled the city in which factions of the defenders were reported to be fighting each other in the streets and pillaging homes and shops. Refugees told of anarchists vow- ing to burn and sack the city be- fore they would- let it fall into rebel hands. Other units of the Social Gov- ernment defenders, the refugees said, were resigned to a last-ditch fight against the advancing rebels. hoping for reinforcements to arrive in time to prevent the fall of the strategic city near the French border. Fascists Receiving Aid‘? IUNDON. Sept. 8 - Viscount Churchill, heading the British vol- untary ambulance unit in Spain, tonight charged in a. cable to the Spanish medical aid committee here, that Germany and Italy are continuing to send arms to the Spanish rebels in violation of their neutrality declarations. “Returning from the frctnt I my- self saw the bodies of women and children killed by bombs identified as German dropped from a tri- motored German plane," the mes- . sage read. Rebel Fortress Silent ‘TOLEDO. $08111, Sept. a-The guns within the besieged rebel fort- ress, the Alcazar, were stilled io- night for the first time since the siege opened July 20. Since dawn Tuesday not a single shot had an- swered the heavy cannonading. Despite the apparently hopeless situation of the 1,700 besieged men, women and children, government attackers watched in vain for a white flag. Those within apparent- ly were banking on a last hope of rebel forces breaking through the government lines surrounding the city and rescuing them. Study Measures Today LONDON. Sept. 8-—An interna- tional committee to regulate meas- ures intended to isolate the Span- Lsh civil war will meet privately here tomorrow. The only fly in the diplomatic ointment was Portugal's discliua- tion to participate despite Great Britain's assurance the committee would make no effort to mediate the conflict. Some observers fear- IIoman Recovering! In llcspital (C. P. By Gtlardiufs Special WL. GLACE BAY, N. 5., sept. u.- George Nedourban, alleged to have shot a revolver bullet through his own head after wounding Mrs. Percy Fricker, was still on the dan- ger list in hospital here tonight. ‘Flue attractive 34-year old min- er's wiTe for whom Nedourban de- clared ‘a. secret infatuation, was making satisfactory progress to re- covery from abdominal wounds in the same hospital, doctors said. Police say Nedourban told them he shot at the woman and then wounded himself because he was angered at not being invited on a Labor Day drive with the Wicker-s. Fire M c n a c c s Movie Residences (A.P. By Guardian's Special Wire) LOS ANCi-ELES. Sept‘, 8-—A wid- ening front of fire raced down the dry, bi-ushy slopes of Los Flores Canyon tonight toward the $3,000,- 000 motion picture residences at Malibu Beach. Defying the efforts of 500 fight- ers, thrown along wide iire lines, the flames raged out of control, de- stroyed a score of mountain cabins and advanced to within four miles of the screen colony. Officers said a. large dynamite cache was in the path of the blaze which already has burned over 3,- 000 acres in the Malibu mountains, ninemiles north of Santa Monica. N on-Filtering Virus Cause “of Colds (A. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) PITTSBURGH, Sept. ‘I-A new method for prophecying the num- ber of colds a pPFSOII will suffer during the coming winter was de- scribed today before the American Chemical Society by Dr. Arthur Locke of Western Pennsylvania Hospital. The method, based on a, "fitness rating" or ability of the body to consume oxygen during exercise. was offered ns a new chemical ap- proach to the mystery of the com- mon cold, caused, scientists believe, by a non-filterable virus wthicli thus for has escaped detection. This fitness rating is a. measure of the ability of the body to clim- inute disease-producers. Experimenting with 100 human subjects wearing oxygen 1113515 wihlc working staiionniy bicycles, Dr. Locke measured the amount of oxygen consumed per squnrc met- re of body surface with a tievice known as n. "mctabolor" or meta- bolism recorder. barrier to the committee's purposes. evolved carefully by Britain and France to create a so'id front of neutrality. Although Anthony Eden, Foreign Secretary, is quarantined with chicken pox he has collaborated by telephone in the committee's agen- da with William S. Morrison, finan- clal secretary of the treasury, who will preside. Eden has maintained almost continuous contact with his own office similarly, Rebel Chieftain Tenders Apology (GP. By Guardian's Specifl Wire) WASHINGTON, Sept. 8 - The Spanish rebel command today for- mally acknowledged the possbbillty that one of its own fightingpllnls was the unidentified aerial bomber which attacked the United States destroyer Kane in Spanish watera Aug. 30. Insurgent Gcneralissimo Fran- cisco Franco, communicating per- sonally with the American Consul at Seville, said, however. this had not been definitely established. The rebel chieftain nevertheless tend- ered his regrets to the United states government. It was learned authoritatively Secretary of State Hull was study- ing the rebel communication with lish definite responsibility for the attack. 1 Just a few hours bcfore the rebel reply was received, thc Madrid gov- ernment formally hnd disavowed re- sponsibility for the nttack, It as- serted none of its planes was op- ed Portugafiabsence rriight___bc a. " FORGIVE ME, AS n1: MASTER-nnTHEY sunneeo Muuammso 1s Foscsv to SUBMIT ro HIS ABDUCTION, I-IIS ssur . IKEGAI sf - ~ (ONSLI ‘ of the attack. GORDON FIFE, Soldier of Fortune TOOK ME UNAWARES a view toward dispatching new rc- , presentations in an effort to estab- » crating in the vicinity at the time: 11111111 v01 I BNSTIIIITIUNII AMENDMENTS Trades and L a b 0 r Congress O p e n s Sessions In Mon- treal (By Frank Flaherty, Canadian Press Staff Writer) (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) MONTREAL, Sept. fi-Canadian working men can win economic freedom without. firing a shot if they build up their organizations and use. the ballot intelligently the Trades and Labor Congress of Canada was told today by P. M. Draper of Ottawa, its present as the 52nd annual convention of the Congress opened. The convention got down t0 business in 205 resolutions for- warded by local and affiliated bodies after an opening speech by Mr. Draper iu which he held pro- gress along constitutional liucs pre- ferable to revolutionary or disrup- tive propaganda, . Y Assure Cooperation From Hon. Norman Rogers, fed- eral Minister of Labor, the Con- gress received an assurance the government would listen t0 its rep- resentations with a sympathetic ear. He said close and friendly re- lations between government and organized labor were the best as- surance of sound government and social progress in a democratic state. “Our government should pro- vide by law that all employees should have the right to organize for their own protection," said Mr. Draper. “This was done temporar- ily during the war. It. was agreed to in the treaty of peace at the close of the war. It was recom- mended by the price spreads 0.0m- mission last year. “That. the workers must work out their own salvation to a large ex- tent will be agreed by all, but the ivorkers should not be up against hopeless odds. The power of the state should be put back of the workers’ natural right to organize with their fellows in labor unions of their own choice.” Resolutions Passed Some 27 of the 205 resolutions on the order paper were disposed of but the convention did not reach any, of several resolutions express- ing sympathy with the committee for industrial organization in the American Federation of Labor and protesting against threatened split in United States body with which the Canadian Congress is affiliat- ed. Resolutions banking, constitutional _a.mend- merits, minimum wages and other topics. An increase in the currency issue to make it more in keeping with the "Wfillilll and resources of our country developed and otherwise" was urged in a resolution passed on submission by Toronto Street and Electric Railway Employees. The motion said the government should take complete ownership of the central bank in order to carry out this policy. Proposal Rejected A proposal to make homes valued at less than $2.000 exempt. from municipal taxes was frowned upon, however. It was rejected after a brief debate in which Carl Berg, chairman of the resolutions com- mittee argued it would divide workers into “DTODUT-Y-Qwnlllil slaves and non-propcrty-owning slaves" and might disrupt the labor movement. Amendments to the British North America Act were demanded in another resolution passed. The i, act was‘ said to be obsolete rind to have outlived its usefulness. The executive of the Congress was in- structed to ask the federal govern- ment. to have the law amended to ,"'make the government supreme." ‘The resolution said legislation for the benefit of the people had from J1me to time been declared uncou- stitittionnl by the Supreme Court y of Canada. passed dealt with , COUNTY CH RNICLE Prcsery 0f I P. E. I. Meets i At Iiarshfieid 1 The Presbytery of Prince Edward Island met in special session at, 7.30 p.m. last evening in the Pres- i byterian Church, Marshfield, andi J11 thefilbsenoe of the moderator, Rev. W. O. Rhoad, was opened in due form by a. past moderator, Rev. Fred Williamson. Those l>l'i‘sl‘fll' were Rev. Fred Williamson, mod- erator pro-tem, Rev. R. Hensley‘ Stavert, clerk, Rev. R. Moorhead Legato, D.D., Rev. T. Owen Hughes. Rev. Edwin J. White, Rev. M. E.‘ Gouge, D.D,, and Messrs. A. E. Morrison and Stewart. McKinnon. representative elders. Others not members of the court present were Messrs. Earl Foster, John McFarlnne, Geddie, Douglas. Cameron McLauchlan, elders, and Messrs. John Pigoit, John Stetson, Chester Coffin, William Douglas, Ralph Coffin, Chas. B. Woodside, Preston Benirsio and William An- derson, representative laymen. The chief item of business before the llliT-llllg was the dealing with a. call from the congregation of Marshficlcl, Mt. Stewart, Heirring- ton and l-litzhficld addressed to Mr. John C. McNeiil, B.A., B.D., Glacl: Bay, N. S. The call which was at very hcnriy and unanimous onrn, having been signrd by 107 members 1 and 52 adherents, was sustained by, the Presbytery. I On the evening of Tuesday, Sgpt. .30 22nd, and at the hour of Prince o'clock the Presbytery‘ of Edward Island will meet in tho; Mnrshfield Presbyterian Church for the ordination of lVir. John C. McNcilhaticl for his induction into the pastoral charge of the said Mnrshfield congregation. _ At this service Rev. Fred ‘Wil liamson will preside, ordain and; induct, Rev. R. Hensley SYRVP", will preach the sermon. Rev. T.‘ Owen Hughes will narrate the steps leading up to the call. Rev. M. E. Genge, D.D., will give the charge to the newly inducted min- isicr and Rev. R. Moorhead Legato. D.D., will address the people 0f the congregation. The Presbytery adjourned to meet. at the call of the moderator and clerk of which public intim- ation was given and the meeting was closed with the benediction byt the moderator pro-fem, Rev. Fred! Williamson. i RAIIIIII.IIIA 1111111 AGAINST uimuiinans Untrained Workers Called T0 Colors To Replace Insurgent Regulars. (By Arthur Lcfevre, Copyright 1936 by the llavas News Agency) (C. P. By Guardian's Special “WWI MADRID. Sept. s-tuuecnsorcdl _1C_ P.-l-lztvnsi_'[‘he story of how the embattled Madrid Government organized its present. fighting forces —a story by turns tragic and ll0r0l0 _-i.< now Zivuiiabie for the first tiuic. Dcsertlon robbed the Govcrumunt of most of its army mid MOM of ‘J5 civil guard when the revolt broke out on July 17. A5 r1, result. the Government. IOU]! the grave stop 0f arming the 1x0- plr. The Connnun1>t1 and Social- ists insisietl on it, and the uiovc was made on the basis of tiircc reasons: the People‘: Front nond- qunrtsrs could exercise close sup- ervision of those chosen to bcur arms; theft‘ was already n well- discipliucd nucleus of Socialist rind Communist _voutl1; and Spanish patriotic sentiment. would sec that the people themselves had riscn ag- uinst tho thivztt- of FLISClSIII. But tho Anarchists \ armed. and liftd to arm fir: as best they could lat-er. i‘ 'l iiflitia shot as traitors oiilcc who implored them to advance slowly and set up sol- id buses us they wr-cni. Col, Nfrmgarlu thcn so‘. up u training school in Madrid and as thoroughly as time permitted bo- mun to illriflltt iPOOps destined for the Gundarruma front. lt was r1 1on1; struggle to make the militia. a for liprnhn undcrstiniihnt they were fighting A Nasty Disposition! ‘(ARELESS DOG! I WILL HAVE THEE FIJXYED ALIVE HR 1105. . uni-u. v-m- n uw-mwI-v-v-l h‘ itross. Its houses nice all ,Legislntivc Building is an ilisiorit: l; . honor 0. B. Bcttrr k1 Bib pat-r new life in the worker on a big job there is nothing so bracing and satisfying as a cup 0i " MOIQSE’S TEA Ottawa J 0urnalist’s Impressions Of P. E. I (Continued from page 4) niicr, suggested the popularity in the Maritime-s would i be assured could lie itrrunge lower [Uffy rates. torisis are cit ., i 1iassngc and $3 it-Iurn, ;1i zidciition two" to head tax. lzivrn this cllzirqz: was l rrdiicfrcl by lion It J Alzizimn, former Miiiisivr 0i Rilli\\'il_\';1 I Canals, from $4 511.511’, r1111! $7 re- turn. i i I O O Cllfll‘l()|.t(‘.tO\\'Il has hm 12.000 in- habitants, less than lirnrlzviiio or Pembroke, but it. is the huh of the ‘ - i cu} Miiiistei-‘s in" < . fllifi 11.; ‘ ,, was n trip h}: through tho n: r1 4"-foot; Island's 5.000 people. Its wit!“ ‘ ‘ mmi“ winding 5.1.09.5 a", hi“ m, m ‘cclvflnunr-h that lznd a low: his- 0 hp ii-o - Guided brorirl boulevards, lined Wiiil inrh ‘ f‘.'.'lfllf‘ ~- f a brick house exists in the prov- uce, it escaped this observer's eve —and are sidc-shiuglcd. Its old site. Hero on September l, 1864, gathered the statesmen whose de- ,1 liberations led to the formation of the Dominion of Canada The if table at which they sat has been i preserved ALI ~“ l s ‘ ,. , m." ‘ . y mfir “i. pwctr '1 One of _Chn1lottcm1.t..~. p.1i.ecly rem“ "m, hosis is Liout. Colonel W Chester b- ‘ H)" 1 n oar: 1:1 S MbLurr‘. foriuer Conservative i M P. from 1030-10115. president of -' the Charlottetown G 11 a r d ia n, the Islands lending ncivspnpcr, and 1 owner, ivith Limit Colonel D A. liiacKinitoti, D S O , of the Island's srcoiid largest silver fr»: 11mm For farming oricinntcd in Cun- nda in Prince Edward Island, From the best statistics, c0000 51111-15 were offered to the fur trade of , the world in i035. C; nda loading, all other ccuxrtries u .11 the pro- 1 (luction of 200 000 skins i The Mi-Lurc-MncKinnoii rnnch z ;covcrs 120 tvoodrd IICIIK 11nd 1 ibrecds 2,500 uni. '11s —-l.500 pups ‘and 1.000 adults --of which 1,500 , are killed annually Wllfll fur in “Primr." , is recorded in the Canadian tionai Livestock Record Book Ottawa. They are kept in pairs in in Dcccmbor , largo wirrd enclosures and fed tons oIu mixture of horse moat tripe, f..sh. powdered bone. diivrl vegetables. groin mush. and milk A staff of only seven attends to their care and feeding. Their av- erage litter when they breed in . Ftbz-umji", is four 0:1 five ' - ' sell at all average price 0f some l'llill‘l€£‘i1ill1§,' as hisli $250. In boom days of 1.-.. litany i sold for $1.000 II I I The Island's principal attrac- tions in Summer time —Au,eust and early September tourist mouths —ure its beaches and its sczt food. For miles pure red-brown sand, where tides change little, and the ocean is as warm as the Ottawa river -an in- - sniid-dinied strip 0f shore extends - n1. Stunhopc. 16 miles north of Charlottetown. Days are warm in the Island in Summer time, and nights are cool. Twenty miles atvay is Cnvcu- dish, a smnil town on the North s.de. a pilgrimage for litcrnr_v poo- ple. There stands the little school house made known to the world by Mrs Lucy Mitiid hfonirzotncw MacDonald, who iu 10351 l'\‘(‘(‘l\'I‘f‘I from tlic into K111: Grrwtv lint to ill!‘ stir‘ 1 0f and its ‘ iworid as L hi’ hi‘. wrote those enchanting sh “ Giiccn Gables" a mod n war, iI O11 the other hand. tii- znhrl troops nrc for the may pnrti trained vcteruiis, skilfii": Lil’ i veteran officcrs, and tin; iziitg virtually nil of Spain's mod- crn war mncliitiv. By Bob‘. Moor credible, but true, exticriciice -—i.lic 50H‘. day". in innocent-into}: raiiri . bait. It tvoiiirl be som ,' brncr about to pull in 11 1:11;.» of‘ l5 to 20 _P'\il"fi=. been n tieklish 011010, groceries mnv not ho sold on Sundays, but st" t am ma“ , the O1‘('l.ll.'\llf‘(‘ prohihi tall fruit. tobacco, 1* ‘- drug sundries. and the toiiiist c e and L. Bcwncss FUNERAL IlIRICI "IORS AND ‘(is A good the cryptic ~ . 1w "o moved 2111101‘. - in a few l'°’ll‘.‘.'1 fi l. . 0"- fir! K . y n1" tircblem. I? \IB.\ I.“ Ii ll S ' i Prince (‘uunh i, Ambulance in (‘Imrgc i Summer-Id". Iivdeqiie and ‘ lit-n Ilnspitwl ~ll IUII Phone Q 33-1. oh s.» inn = quorading: syrup sh .,.w ll _ t rout bu‘ :1 coil on is (i/‘flfi 1v ' ' _ ‘ 111." 011 Stin- ill.“- Tllf’ H. ‘ haw cone 1 brick n friv hund: yours and 1m). i vckrd the Campbell Go eminent . llllfi micro. __ a half-forgotten is Dov Art \'.i:i"l1 would pro- ).. the tiiiirlics" of r1117,‘ "not. Qg-l la‘. couiitiofi - c sovezitlf Whore to draw tho line has As in ll is . ‘rr'~~v:_ry 8180!! t n Hales HERE ONEWTHAT OR I'LL GIVE YOU A TASTE OF UR OWN “GAG HIM AND TIE HIM ' THIS COMPLICATES THINGS. WE CAN'T TAKE IIIM ALONGJOO... i_ AND LET'S GET OUT OF HERE, IFFFF‘ y. i