t Q .‘ ‘ “““““ ‘ “ ‘¢“ TDDAY . . . FRIDAY and SATURDAY KINGS DF THE JUNGLE IN MDRTAL DDMBAT , SEE . . a 30-foot python at death grips with a Royal Ben- ‘ i gal tiger! SEE . . a black panther( corsair of the jungle, in the bone- crushing jaws of a giant river crocodile! SEE . . . man-eating cats invading native villages! . SEE . . . infuriated elephants, bereft of the midget ol the eeeeeueeeeooeeoooooooeeoeoeeeee ~ ~oovaoewoeoe>oeeeeveflfloew+e+w+fi c, herdl . . . l SEE . the capture of that ra-rest of reptiles, the monitor l lizard! . . i . SEE . . that thrill of thrills-a tight to the finish between I i the K'I'NGS OF THE JUNGLE-the tiger and the black i, , panther! rorucrrr EMPIRE rm. dllll SAT. Shows 7 and 8.45 f Matinee Saturday Only 2.30 "mo ms SYALLION ylllt! JACK’ ‘V - FJOGKL¥O§O #006 00 90 60,. I MDNTAGUE SDIIDDL Will Open On TUESDAY, AUGUST 3T ~ with the exception of Grade Xi QTQDO-iir-M it}? which will open oo c saowrus AT 2.30-7.00-8.4$ eoo+o+Q+oQ+oQo¢+¢+ovooooooeoooooooooooe-ooooooooewooeooeoooe ' o++0- 000444 veoooau o4 o-ooo-omoooooo-oo-o o++o++e~ g;® ’)mémb%db<i>®mbi>0b<§>0bi0d€v W,‘ l T D D A Y FRIDAY and SATURDAY Matinee At 2.30 Evening Show: 7 and 9 ¢o¢++e ¢o++o+o+o+o+¢a “+0 mo¢o<e+§m+ News - Sports - Cartoon iuow reams BUCK casrs I ms wna; ANIMAL EPIC Although a drama according to conventional standards was not what Frank Buck set out to film when he penetrated the hinter- land of the Federated Malay States to produce hLs original “Briny ‘Em Back Alive." HOW at. the Capitol Theatre. The picture hap- pens to present n complotc drama- tic cast. As directed by Clyde l5. Elliott, the characters in this Rl-(O Radio picture look something like this: Heroine . . . Honeybee: City Slicker . _ Python Gangster Tiger Chee-ild . Baby ‘Elephant Comedian Gibbon APB Black Panther 0' ana-outa n Public Enemy‘. . Ilkiend-in-Need .. Police-nan Water lluffnlo A Sailor Crocodile Tattooed Lady Monitor I. d The l-lero . . Frank Buck The cast also includes a gmup of assistant heicws_.the trusty Till- tive boys who aided in capturing the City Slickcr. the Grinastcr and me Tattooed Lady. They also saved the Heroine frrrn the City Slicker and the (‘hec-ild from the Public Enemy. The guilty were “brought hark alive" l" justice: that is they were sentenced to a re- tired life in son-re menaeerle or > some public park to atone fer their offences against‘ the jungle peace. producing as milCll meat. and live- stock prcdilcis then as lt. produc- ed before the \l'."" Tlrrnuse cf the increase in on". Pen. Ffilrrivcans will not be fed as vrrll en the av- OTRYP RS YJlT‘ "-\'i'll'. These stat ‘iirnfis hlfihllclited a from other countries. THERE OUGHTA BE A LAW! Purchases trot horses. Europe will not h $1 repnrt. on "F\lt'ori"ir* ’ i Aarieulturil SEPTEMBER 7 l Dovelopmelv» ., ." lFrlrrd an’! A" ‘ m o. ,1... ~i villi» m: '—_‘ . ; based on a "u i. r’ the PM’) ="ifl' SHAPE 0F THINGS ‘of North American farm machin- ‘ of all mall-lb!" rifin: and pro- TO (‘OWE ABROAD ; cry and fertilizers will striaddy de- j grams rf Eu ‘Y1K P"; fi-lrs ..._- i cline. l -— — —— —~— ~ Europe ;n the next three year: Drspiie substanfial . ‘on! EXPE. SHT. BUTTONS ma}: liziy lcs: forri from the Uniiq of pre-ivar CH") av .3235 by 050.1 »--~- ed States and Canada and morel and of most kinds of livestock ex- Louis XIV once Phid $14000 for n pair of buttons. By Faqaly and Sliortcn (than hilLLSTONE PROPOSED us swoes Tl-lE‘!'D SHARE AND some all; - liileunorxiv may wear rorz THE LICENSE. Aaoaovl ~ as gzoveo as WASNT KIDDING.’ \/ SUREWE CAN AFFOQD IT.’ ‘NE BOTH HAVE JOBS‘. WE’LL POOL i OUR DOUGH. WHAT'S MINE IS QLWUK éND ‘tIl-IATS YOURS INE: AWRIGHT! you HEARD THE MAN. TWO oouAes: CMoN. DIG UP ~i YOUR BUCK! PRINCE EDWARD 111m GUARDIAN. cHAisI-‘gmroww. THE EASTERN cuaiioilxu AGINTSI IONTAGUE: lnralil I’. Lilli’). All»?! Milli. Mll- I!!!» Skin?!» Ill llerrlel UIIII. AGENT GEORGETOWN: AGENTS SOUR-IS: M13 Enld Ililnhlrdl Ind Gordon Farrell Weldon Levers following plecee 1n Montague: The Guardian may be bought nt nny cl’ the lllhe s. A. Llewellyn; Mn. Clea. In Georgetown: The Poet Olive; tn Sonrle: Cundarre and Florence Boner. In 8L Peter's.- The Poe: Olioe. ..‘COMMUNITY. 1847 Roger Bros, Silver Plate Sets and open stock. C. R. Boehner, Jeweller, Montague. Cyclists Pack ' British Roads- At Week-Ends By STUART UNDERJ-IILL (Canadian Preee Staff Writer) LONDON. Auil- 15 WP) — The bicycle is turning the open road into a playground for m0" and nwre Britons. Siznce the end of the we: week- end cycling clubs have g-rorwn steadily in membership. Not even wind and rain can keep the more enthusiastic at home. On a. fine summer Sunday the roads are crowded frem daybreak on. Some are “hard riders"—de- termined young men haunched over their handlebars and aiming at a “nice run" of 120 urules or so. Many more are young and muddle-aged folk. out for e day's fun and fresh air in the open country. Babies don't keep ardent eyel- ists at. home. Sometimes trailers or side-cars are fixed to fat-her‘: bike. Sometimes Junior is car- rlcd on the back, parpoose style. The usual procedure of cycling i’ h; is to meet early Sunday mil-hing at. an agreed apot. Club leaders have already drravrn up the route and after n bried eon- sultation over maps, the group is off. Sixty to 70 milee is the ever- HBB for, a Sunday run. Sometimes more ambitious trips are arranged. lasting several days. It's e cheap My or seeing the country, sinoe there are some 270 youth hostels at which eo- coirmodiation can be obtained for 1s 6d. (30 eentsi a night, Clubs Are Growing 50"" 3-500 err-line club: now exist in Britain. The oldest i; the Cyclists’ Touring Club, which eeleibrates its 70th birthday this Sear. It. now has 48.000 members. The National Cyclists’ Union has as many. and has shoyvn an in- crease in membership of 30 per cent in the last year. Bicycles in Britain aren't reg- istered so no accurate census is available, but about 12.000900 are believed to be in use throughout the land. which means that one in every four persons is a cyclist. Apart from pleasure purposes. they're used for getting to work both by industrial and-farm lab- orers. No factory is complete without its rack for stacking bicycles. Britain manufacturers more than 2.000.000 bicycles a yeer. of which about. three-quarters go for export. Shortages of com. ponents are e threat to produc- tion. Latest model bikes ere made oif lightweight. materials. making it. easy to push them up hills or can-y them across streams. Main highways are usually left. to automobiles, with the cyclists seeking out country lance end byways. l Quick Relief Fren Summer Dornpleieis To get quick relief from diarrhoea, intestinal pains, see- aicknees or summer complaint, use DOCTOR FOWLEBHB EXTBACTOI‘ WILD STRAW- BERRY. This dependable family remedy is one of the moat elective end beet known medicines for bowel complaintr. Insist on DOCTOR FOWLER/B EXTRACT 0!‘ WILD STRAWBERRY. PAIR. 0F COCKATOOB e VALUED AT 81.000 WHTIBY. Ont. A118. M —(CP) — Five varieties 0f monkeys. the only meted pair o! sulphur- crested cockatoos in Canada, a. Blue Merle dog and sundry other exotic inhabitants of Donald Mc-r Dormld‘; Sheridan Arviaries moved from e ranch near Whitby recent- ly to a new home and more spac- ious quarters st Maple Grove. Ont. two miles west. of Bowman ville. New name of the ranch 2.- “Jungle Land." The strangest hobby in Can- ada, hem-m two years ago by the: son oif o. Presbyterian missionary who was brought up in India, is today expanding to a business‘ attracting nption-vride attention. Recently e sulphur-breasted taucnn from South America was, imported and sold for $90. More toucans are on the way. Them ‘are magipies. budgies, Iii-err‘ red cai-elhials, zobra finches iii doves on Mr. McDonald's rang; but the monkeys attract ‘mos. attention from passers-by on Hist-Way No. 2. Rlngtail mon- keys, marmosets. spider an; squirrel monkeys are kept in stock. Practically ell the, animals reach here frcrrn South America. by Plane to Melton airport. Newll Toronto. They spend time in] quarantine in the United Staten and have a clean. bill of health‘ before entering Canada, l Talk Bully The cocloetooe readily learn to talk end the three Menomid flflllflfln. Ronny. Betty and Jimmy, teach the bird: to say short sentences clearly. Visltm-S are cordially greeted with "Gel outta. here," "Hello," "wan; i; Cfgaret?" and other startling NIH-See by the birds which look more like studied ornament; than. livinz creatures. ' The mated cockatoos are valued et close to $1.000. They are the 01115’ Dair- in Canada since im- portation was barred about 10 were e80. The female. Billy, i; more loqueoioue than her mate. Tarzan, While in India. Mir. McDonald learned the ways of Uiese m. male and birds. and how to care 1m’. feed ‘them end train them. Many varieties of monkey eell for less than $100 eech-ifully house- hmke" ‘"14 taught a few tricks. Dozens have been taken to the homes of prominent Toronto and Montreal families. ‘They are easy t0 feed-they'll out pfgpargd baby food. potatoes. bread, rice and vegetables. i . i When the anfionals first arrive they are inclined to be nefvous and perhaps bite. But a few day; of! careful training’ makes them as desirable e house pet as any ca; or dog. YOUNG WOMEN WANT THREE T0 A PAIR NDW YORK. Aug. 24 _ (cpl _ wmlen- Npecially housewives, ere notoriously bad at figures. Harvever. that isn't the ream-n some women think three com- ponents should make a pair. When it. comes to stockings or P11111185. three should be the "Hm-ber- sar many New York car- eer girls. “I would love that man-the first manufacturer to declare that three make a pair." one YOUHB woman said. "I'm always losing one earring and my Jewelry box is full of lone. miarnated ear- rings.” While e. poll indicates general approval of pair-and-e-hald ear- rings and hosiery. enthusiasm in some quarters is tempered by cost. "If they're $1 or $2 earrings, Yd buy three at a time." (118 girl commented. "But if it's a $10 investment, why, no thanks. I'll stick to two and take jolly good care I don't lose one of them." As for siockincs. have been buying pairs for a long time. When asked if he didn't think it would be a good idea to start. putting‘ up boxes of three. one local manufacturer snorted: "Jilst like a woman! Always changing their minds! One company star’- many women tivo matching ‘ l6 years ado and would have izzrie broke if they'd stuck to it!" i MOMENT OF CRISIS f, .. l .2 "a . 4 ed the three-io-a-box idea about, BE SMART Choose Your r I l i i I NDW i i 0' Q/‘vtfs Prices Inquire about our , IT;_J0® 2369 it fi ll I65 QUEEN ST. . WINTER GDAT N-EWlEST STYLES NEWEST COLO URS Sizes II to 44 25.95 LAY-AWAY PLAN l KENNEDY’S LADIES’ WEAR PHONE I766 Next Door to The Bu: Stop NEW "P AUGUST _ 26. __ 1948 _. ~. 2,.-. y‘ " ‘ u"? iflvfifiiwr»)? i fit§~ew ti» Q ~90 QO-i-‘QO sit-od-éeéifl 210WiW1-w .344; m“? h Looking For Spectacular Session (By Douglas How- Canadian Prom Staff Writer! UPTAWA. Aug. 26 —(CiP) -'I'll.- fifth session of the 20th Canadian Parliament. the one coming up, could be a climactic and spec- tacuiar one. It vvlll he shadowed by an inl- pending Federal election; stim- ulated if not sparked by two ne-v leaders: freshened by three pin.- form-laying national conventions. And it. will have William Lyon Mackenzie King out of the driv- erks seat. at least technically. It would be called this fall if the Liberal leadership decides it should be. Prevailing Ottawa opinion. however. is that. it will not start until next. January or February. fndliional period of the inauguration ceremonies. External Affairs Minister St Laurent will take over the House leadership of the Liberal Party. fully aware that. the session roilld have an important hearing on his success in his first. and probably last. election es Prime Minister. All four parties represented in the House \vill have something w spur them. The Liberals and P10- gressive Conservatives will have new leaders, selected in convers- tions which updated their pro- grams. The C.C.F. still remembers lI-S sweep of three by-elections aiiu e national convention that rc- affirmed confidence in leader M. J. Caldwell. The Social Credit. Party has just come through a sweeping vote of confidence in ‘one Alberta election. .RlIlEME AIHEMPAIIIIS. rue m ‘ 19-46 reerrelele, Int-drying. l0 IEIOBI 0d large, eeenernlrd Illa. 6!: yo; f: . .,i. jdaybedu. here whndgggttlllnkebullvln hIIIIiQ-lmflidricletm-Jevuhlehmwuq !_'_ Tension Eases In Potsdamer Platz Area B!‘ GEORGE BRIA. BEl-‘tlillN, Aug. 24--(AiP)—'Ibn- sion eased today in blockaded Berlin as the Russians appeared to have given up, at least temp- orarily. their series of "kidnap raids" into the western sectors. On the internal political front. Marshal Vassily D. Sokolcrvsky, Soviet-zone commander. announ- erd that elections in the Russian zone have been postponed for one year. It was the first time an occupying power has postponed elections. SOIKOIUVSXY said that iif time were taken for the election nr/W. “the attention of democratic or- ganizations and the population in general would be diverted from e practical solution of their econ- cmic problems and the task of in: roving the general living stan- dard." Along the city's pc/wderkeg Pris- damcr Square. where the Ameri- can. British and Soviet sectors w“. meet, Red arm-Y Petrol: were quiet after days of bordcr-crosrzrig raids ostensibly aimed at hjick marketers. British ofiiclals laid they had abandoned plans to string up barbed wire between their pas". of the square and the Russian aide, Some ivlrc was strung sritrzrrlq but it has sinre been removed. Ira the air lift. over the Rzlaslan blockade. tragedy struck attain with the collision of tivo Amerle can (3-47 miilsporis in tile at) near Frankfurt. Four crew meme bers were killed, brilichty: to rune the total of Americans kn ' crashes during the air opcrahon. A formation of fighter planag believed to be Russian Yaks. i190 over western Bcrlin at a hirh alt-e ltude late today’. American an British officials said the Russia had not notified them-as ls re- quired-ef a flight of their planes Cardigan Officer Cadet p Trains At RCCC School 2’Lt. Ftriiest MacDonald of Cardigan. P. E. I. a siudtrir of Diiilstans University (rightr, who ls presrnily talzinl! n will“ “‘ " RCOC mum's we ool. Longue Polnte, Quebec. g ‘Jil He is shown disru Garner system of pelletizing stores with Lleut. R. MorcnCY o! Mm"! rel . en instructor et the echool. ISU- v,” . v bylldlLdllei-J‘ ‘Olllndian Army lfh""" r b