. fiiflllsflgwi uda-rv-mmu-mvzlndemn >4; .- ~.-i+'.ii.-:-.’-o.,.... .. . _""'_‘i"“"“(m_eg SllPlIl.‘ INTO YOUR more tenderly "than. ever! Hill “HEART. _ ' M6,,‘ Li“: ,,,..v»“"‘< =3‘ “new” l h‘??? §2 " is by I \ ALSO . . t\\\ and — OUR ROSEMARY AMES JOEL McCREA l-Y l. E TA l. B QT . "ODDITY-VENTRILOQUIST - Starting TODAY —3 Days PRINCE EDWARD a -- 7 -- 3.45 P. M. GANG COMEDY Summer Care REQUIRES A WAVE i And summer requires a really good wavwone that. can “take it." from wind and sun and water. M Percy Garrison's Elite Beauty Salon you are assured of ilfitlmg a wave of quality, given by experts. Ielepbone 1329 Elite Beauty Salon ANNANDALE W. I. CONVENTION The eighth annual district con- vention of the Women's Institutes of Bridgetown, Little Pond, Strain- ccna, Launching. St. George's, Eg- lington and Howe Bay, Cumberland I-lill, Albion Cross, Mt. I-lope and Upton was heidin Annandaie hall V on July 2nd. 1935. a large attend- _ ance of delegates and visitors being present. The afternoon session opened by singing “The Island Hymn", the President, Mrs. I-lowitrd Wood. pre- siding. The Institute Creed was after- ward repeated followed by an ad- dress of welczme by Miss Laura McDonald. Little Pond. responded to by Mrs. Hudson MacDonald, Bridgetown. Minutes of 1934 convention were then read by the secretary Mrs. Herbert Ross, Strathcona, and re- ports of year's work were given by the secretary of each Institute. Mrs. Martin as substitute for the Institute Supervisor, gave a very . interesting and instructive address on Canadian Industries, and Miss Laura McDonald gave a. romantic and interesting history of an an- tique wlllaw platter over seventy- five years old. . “ There was an attractive handl- craft exhibit of rags and fancywcrk some of which was displayed and explained by owners. _ The following officers were elected for the ensuing year. viz; - President-Miss Laura McDonald, ~ Little Pond. vice-Pres-we. Bentley Creed. Bridgetown Sena-Mrs. James McKenaie, lig- " lington. ' :1..Avoteofthankst0!etirii1igoific- en was extended by Miss Laura i McDonald. after which there was a . iifscussian on school “ ‘ an _ Camegie branch ibraries resulting _' An a resolution committee being formed which drew up and present- ed resolutions cancer-hing these lub- lects and which were adopted at the evening session. L w. Meetingthen adjourned until ev- ,-,.eri’.ng. and a very sumptuous and nzenjoydble banquet was tendered all present by the Dglinqton, Howe Bay and Little m1 ri-iditiim. . 2 Evening sessio n opened at 0.30 t 13.10., the president presiding. over ':, the following program: ' 1's Opening cboriI-nletitute loll! i "i I .4 dthe Instrumental music-Messrs. La- piene and Poole. Reclhtiorv-Miss Sara McPherson Launching. Solo-Mr. Walter Burdett, strath- conm. » Monologue—-M:s. Eglington. Duet-Harold Dackendorf and Weston McLeod, Mt. Hope. t S0lo—Mrs_ Leo McKenzie, Egllng- on. Recitation-Mr. Little Pond. Solo-Miss Marguerite McDonald, Cumberland Hill. Instrumental. music-Albion Cross orchestra. Address~Dr. Souris. ‘ S0lc-—Miss Anna McDonald, Al- bion Cross. Step dancing-Mr. Dan McCor- mack. Launching. Duet-Misses Thelmal Jackson and Delia McKenzie, Eglingtori. Dialogue-Upton Institute. Solo-Mr. Finest Poole. Collection. Duet-—Misses Beatrice Steele and Edna Dingwell, Little Pond. Report of resolution mmmittee by Miss Laura McDonald. Vote of thanks extended to Dr, McDonald and others who helped make the convention a success God Save the King. When v Brenton Stead, John Dlngweli, A . A. McDonald. Dahlias Grow As your dahlias continue to grow, both taller and heavier, keep all the shoots tied up to the stakes, for if they flower while growing along the ground, the flowers will become flirt-splashed after the first rain, Never allow seed pods to form on Your dahlias if you want to keep them in full bloom. During the dry weather, water your plants thoroughly and, if pos- Bible. give them an occasional feed- lus of manure writer, f0!‘ if they become too dry (luring their bloom- ing Period. trc flowers on the plant at that time will be mined and the future bloom will not be as luxur- ious. The important factor is to culti- vale around your plants more often Th‘s means many more lovely flowers. as a reward for the care given the plants. If it is difficult to cultivate your dahllas to any ex- tent, then be sure to mulch them thoroughly. When cuttiny your dahllas. do so early in the morning, or in the cool of the evening. Cut only those flowers in full bloom. since they will last longer than if they are in bud. or half opened. Cut with long stems and just above a. joint. This keeps your plants pruned and causes new branches to shoot out. Strip the bottom leaves off the flzwer stalks and place them in a pail or container of cold water up to the base of the flower, if pos- sible. ‘Inen place in a4 cool place for several hours m- overnight be- fore arranging them. -Thcre is something more to pro- viding indoor bloom than garden picking or buying from the florist; ‘ must hem-H?“ “ Cut either early in the morning or in the evening, freshen the blooms deep in water in e coal place for several hours; cut stems with a slanting cut to more ab- sorption surf . use contalne with ample room at. the base; never place in the sun. A lump of charcoal will aid in keeping the water sweet and clear. All flowers which wilt easily, lucb as poppies. heliotrope. forget-ine- riots, violets. pansiel. and all fei-ncf, lest. much better if they on out partly closed. and the stems plung- ldfliarninutoili ace-n cfhot water, or the stem and: bylflame. minualamendrof the stems and keeps the sap from escaping. For exhibitions, flowers should always be cut a full day be- forehand, and stood in water clear up to the bloom heads and kept in a coal, dark place. ‘ Reds Fine Parents For Bad Actions Of Their Children MOSCOW. July 24—Nerth and south. to say nothing of Eaet and West. Stalin's new order rehabilit- ating the home and decreeing that family life be respected and re- spectable. is upsetting the old Rus- sian customs. True to Soviet iti-actice, parents now..are..getting it iii the neck—or at least in the pocket book-be- cause their children don't live up to the new ideals of orderly con- duct. Instead oi patting little Com- munists on the head when they tors rocks at passing; automobiles or through windows. the militia now are fining the parents for fail- ure to keep the family life under control. And in the for-Southern regions of the Soviet Union. oriental to the core. arrests are being made and show-trials put on to get across the idea that it's now im- proper to recruit the family by kidnapping brides or deplete .t by selling-off daughters. Leningrad. where the workmen and peasants who occupy the pal- aces haven't yet learned the man- ners of the former ownem, ap- parently ls the center of the cam- paign to make children well-be- haved by fining their parents-and 5o establish disciplined family life. Within a few weeks after Stalin's Order. 385 parents had been hailed to court and penalized for failure to keep their sons and daughters orderly. Here is the scale. of offenses, as measured by the fines; A mother whose son threw water out of a window on parsers- by-IO roubles. _ Parents whose young son chalk- ed obscenc words on a wall-lo roubles. To the elders of a. little boy who rudely snatched a bail from a little girl and made he: cry-SS roubles from a child-loving court. For a mother whose young daugh- ter ran across a street and fell under a street-car (emerging un- hurt but frightened)—-50 roubles. Meanwhile from the trans-Cau- casian districts have come reports of several cases ln which the Eastern ideas of proper farriiiy life have clashed with the new Soviet theories. There have been several recent reports of arrests of parents who allegedly sold their young daught- ers as brides. And the new demand that the private citizen of the Soviet Union be respected, plus the efforts of the newspaper Ptavada, have resulted in the reversal of one of the bareb- est sentences imposed in Russia- a term of two years for nine cents. It was ‘ by a Moscow city judge on Alexei Bveranoskl, a i0- year-old student in the Automeeh- anical Trust, over a disputed fare on one of Moscow's ancient. and overcrowded street can. Now, as a result of his let. the judge who imposed the sentence he! been dismissed, the heed of the censured local judiciary has been and the Moscow chief of pollen he; been warned. ‘= ~ ADDED M EDDIE ZUILLAN BETTY FURNESS Grant Mitchell -- Edgar Kennedy ATTRACTION 5 " RUSTLERS OF RED DOG " Chapter Eight. and COMEDY — "PICKLED PEPPERS" 3 Shows Dally — 3-7—8.45 CAPITUL-Toiiay - Friday — Saturday 0.N.R. Excursion To Moncton MONCTON. N.B.. July 24-An excellent opportunity is being af- forded tc people 1n the Maritime Provinces to visit Moncton on the low fare coach excursion being operated by the Canadian National Railways on Friday. August 2nd. There is considerable to interest the visitor to Moncton, stated Mr. R. J. s. Weatherston, Genera-l Freight and Passenger Agent of the railway here, notably the fam- ous tidai phenomenon of the Petit- codiac River, the bore, and the rocks at Hopewell Cape. Many vis- itors eaclf year come to Monctcn to see these natural phenomena. A generous return limit is allowed on this excursion, tickets being goodto return the following Monday. Aug. 5th. Grime Doesn’t Pay Says Dillingefs Dad WINNIPED. July 24—-A 71-year- oid father with little wrinkles about. his eyes sat in a circus tent here to- day and told the young fellows crime does not pay. The soft-spoken little lecturer was John Dillinger Sn, father of the man who a year r130 was listed as America's No. 1 bad man. It was not always thus. There was a time when he was "Farmer Jawn", of Mooresville, Irid., but. since John Dillinger Jr‘. went wrong, as his dad says, he is known as the father of the notorious gunman. . The lecture was just a little tougher than usual for hlrn today. His tale, cft repeated for his circus audience. took on a new signifi- cance. For a4 year ago Monday Federal agents killed the younger John on Chicago's East Side. Dad Dillinger makes few excuses for his wayward boy. In fact he shoulders most of the blame himself and puts the rest of it on the long penitentiary term John drew after his first hold-up. There is no farm for the Dillin- gers now in Indiana. Down there they can't be called "home folks" any more. The old man told the youngsters irrthe circus about it today. ' Burned out a year ego, he was quick to snap up the circus offer to tell the moi-y of Jahn. how he taught him to play ball. catch his first fish and all that sort of boyish stuff. Then he said: "I forgot John and left him go too long." Now it is the telling of this tale that keeps the three little Dillinger girls in school. And there is something else. old J :hn said today. "It's kind of nice to see something except Macros-ville. and until nowI never did much travelling." so there the similar- ity ended. Young John died in a blaze or notoriety. Old John carries on hop- ing his advice to the youngsters may be heeded and thus repay in some measure young John's debt to society. c. Race of Pygmies Found in Orient I-IANOI. Finch Indo-China, July 24—Frcnch scientists today an- nounced discovery of an authentic race of pygmies in the mountainous hinterland of Armani previously considered uninhabited. woman to Hue. Government seat for Quang Birih province. The hu- man evidcnce was identified by Dr. Pierre Trehout, director of the French hospital and an eminent colonist and student of African and Asiatic peoplu. as belonging to a race akin to African pygmies. The Annam pygmtea were in de- plorable physical condition. Dr. Tre- hout is nursing’ them back to health and strength While the French school cf the extreme Orient pre- pares an extensive study to deter- mine their origin. iyphcons flooded large areas of Queng Binb, causing a relief ex- pedition to penetrate the area along a river flowing from the mountable. The relief director saw a tiny men with features differ-in! from Annamitee clinging to a log being swept down stream. He failed to rescue him but ques- tioned eboi-iginen along the river u to whether they had seen pyg- mien in the lhfilllllllfll. Pew villager; bed ventured above the river but several Annanilier testified they bed been awn-fish mm. no they Imam to Vanish on liiht. Afterieog search the man and woman brought to Hue and iden- tified '1! Wlmlee today were found mfiumg Iinh Annemltes high in mountains of the interior. ~ fltt-ier-Whotoiieerthere Theyfiirought a tinyman-anrl his- Girl Makes Kayak Solos 550 Miles mew YORK. July 24——"1'!d an" with humanity, Ida Lyman. Tl Y?" old Montreal social worker. iodfl-Y completed a 550 miles water trip from Montreal to New York 1n I- 15 fcot Eskimo kayak. "This trip has been a. good rest for me," she said, after she finish- ed telling of the risers of the voy- age. Storms and rapids beset the route—vla. Lake Champlain-which was that taken by the pioneers of 200 r's ago. She is the first person to make the trip single handed, said Capt. Bill Byrne, president of the Georse Washington Boating Association, at whose float she tied up. Miss Lyirian a. native of Denmark and a naturalized Canadian, said the first leg of the trip was the hardest. "There's a lot of white water in the Richelieu River between Mon- treal and Lake Champlain and several days I had to buck storms. I don't think I made more than 12 or 15 miles those days." she said. Each night. under a tiny tent. she slept rounder than ever before in her life, she said. She cooked her own meals, but admitted they mostly came out of tin cans. Her oockleshell craft she built herself two years ago. It follows the Eskimo design. sharp at both ends, broad in the middle. and complete- a tiny cockpit. 'I‘here is a double- bladed paddle. Miss Lyman will spend 10 days visiting settlement houses in New York, and will then return to Mont- reai-by airplane. Osteopaths Bill In U.K. to be Dropped LONDON, July 24—A select com- mittee of the House of Lords Sat- urday reached the conclusion that the claim of osteopaths to be able established. The committee report recom- mends that the osteopaths bill. which had been under considera- tion. should be reported to the House of Commons without amend- ment and not proceeded with. The bill will be dropped. The purpose teopathy by incompetent or un- ;. persons. It asked for in- state register of os- teopiithy. The report remarks that the ex- tabiishment of a state register would give something in the na- ture of a "hall mark" to oaleopathy. It accepts the claim that cures are frequently effected by ostoopathy there have been some failures. The same mBY be said of course of other methods of healing. and the committee has not been in any considerable degree influenced by evidence of either cures or failures. the report says. The committee, however. is of the opinion that "establishing a register of qualified osleopathii by act of parliament should lri any case be deferred until the sphere of csteopathy is defined, and a sys- tem of education lri the principlu and practiceof osteopathy has been developed in this country in one or ‘more well-equine!‘ and‘ ‘properly conducted institutions." The report observes the prac- tice if osteapathy, though wide- or 3.000 practitioners. the United Kingdom for the edu- pose. Pending the establishment the report added. ~ 86.000 WORD! A DAY A1‘ 4d. IACII Justice Atkinson M’ hearings the number of spoken words hll averaged “mo, words have been transcribed GUM. Win80? mimicking you Ifiii-Wflll. eteputbic w». , illlll llentral Guardian ly covered with canvas except for to treat iill diseases has not been effect of the report is that the of this bill was protection of the public against the practice 0f c5. methods. 0n the other hand it, notes spread in Canada and the Unitod States, is carried on in the United Kingdom by note more than 2,000 of whom only 170 can claim to be qualified. The only eiiistin| establishment in cation and examination c1 outco- peths was shown. according to the report. to be of negligible impor- tance. and inefficient for the pur- sf adequate machinery therefore the only training ground for the quell- fied osteopath is in north America, A protracted cue and one that is very costly is being beard before King's Bench Division. Iondon. The blath- tifn are a capitalut of deduced Court, London, and a Canadian in- vestrnent company; the defendants, l. number of individuals end con- cerns interested in the dock of the Bociete Anonymc Chrysler at Ant- WQTD- By agreement of opposing will”! W"! word uttered in court must be transcribed on the some day. The ease was opened in April andtbeendienotlnnghtmthc and shorthand“ ecoetoffldlr I rm awn m suit all makes of one curried in stock. Mailett’; Bat- ten service. Ir-slla-l-la-til-lo. l WILI. ll a tuberculosis TIIII ' clinic it thl town bell, Bummer-side. lunacy JulyM,froml0A.M.t0 12_ men.’ j L-eisaa-i-za-ii. OOINWAII: CHARGE Jilly 28th. Rev. C. N. Brown will preach at New Dominion at 11 A. M. Kinsaivu at 8 P. M. Cornwall at. 7.30. Rev. D. K- Rnu. Minister. Irlibw-‘l-Bfl-ll. COI-IICTIONFAn Orwell Cor- respondent etetee the election re- turns from that poll should read: , ‘ll; Jenkins, 80; Mac- Kinrion, ‘l4; Jones 56. ROTARY ASSEMBLY AT AM- ‘HERST-The Rotary Assembly o! District 82,, comprising the Maritime Provinces Ind Newfoundland, will meet on Friday and Saturday at Amherst, N3. Mr. P. W. ‘turner. District Governor, will preside. The presidents and secretaries of the various clubs are the delegates. Mr. A. B. Fisher. president of the Char- lottetown Rotary Club will attend. Major J. A. MleKenzie, the secre- tary, will be unable to‘ be present due to pressure of buelneu. PROMINENT VISITOBS-Amons those who will visit Prince Edward Island in the near future are Rev. and Mrs. H. A. Berlis. of ‘Toronto. Rev. Mr. Bcrlis is the minister of one of ‘lfiomntoblargewest-end con- gregatlone. Royce Avenue Presbyte- rian church. He is also well known in Ontario's educational circles. For the past three years he has been ghairman of the Board of Governors or the Missionary and Deaconess ‘Training Home of the Presbyterian church. _Rev. and Mrs. Berlls will be accompanied on their trip by Master Douglas Beriis and Miss Smiley Crichton. While on the Island they will visit their son. Mr. Rudolph Heriis, who is student-in- charge at Brookfleld. .____ WDING BELLS-A quil. wed- ding of interest to many friends of the bride and groom, in the west- ern part of the Province and in Charlctetown and vicinity, took place at the home o! Mrs. All. Wil- kinson. 48 Upper I-lillsboro Si“, Fri- day. July 12th at 4 o'clock. when her youngest “ ' Eva. was united in» marriage to Mr Hugh Stanley Hyde, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Hyde of Cornwall. The ceremony was perfornlzd by the Rev. A.B. Weir, B.A., of Vernon, who is a perscnal friend of the bride's home. of long standing. The wedding march was played by Miss Best. A‘ e010. "0 Perfect love" was sung by‘ Mrs. AB. Weir. The bride was the recipient of many beauti- ful gifts from her large circle of friends. The wedding party, con- sisting of relatives and a few im- mediate friends, were later enter- n. LAPTHORN and 1.._s._s,ravaNs0N Managers, i40 Biotin-and Sta-cpl. Charlottetown iTi-dmineni Ns. ' Eduoationalist Dead ERICPON. 20.8., July 24- ( PJ-Word has been received here of the death of Dr. David Wiley Hamilton, native o: Florence- ville. Carleton County, N.B., who gained prominence as an education- lst in the United States. The late Dr. Hamilton died Monday morning at his home at Pullman. Wash, at the age of 5'1 years after an illness of several months. The deceased was head of the department of vocational education and prolessor of agricultural education at the Washington State College of Agri- cultural arid Mechanical Arts at Pullman. Was. The late Dr. Hamilton gained a reputation in educational circles in his native province of New Bruns- wick before removinz to the Pac- ific Coast iri the United States. He was graduated by the Provincial Normal School and also the Uni- versity of New Bruwwlck in this city, and between 1907 and 1912, was instructor in nature study and agriculture at the Provincial Nor- lnal School. Mrs. H. T. Fallis Is Appointed Senator OTTAWA, July Ei-An eloquent and public spirited woman, wife of a Peter-borough, Ont, farmer, Mrs. Howard T. Fallis today‘ holdii the distinction of being the second wo- man member of the Canadian sen- ate. She is the third of her ~-ex to hold a sent lri Canada's Parliament. and the only woman on the Govern- ment side of the Red Chamber. The name of Mrs. Iva. Campbell Fellis appeared among the list of ten senators named by Prime Min- ister R. B. Bennett last night. She is a daughter of Ontario who has known the rigors of life on a Bas- katchewan prairie farm. and com- bines the ability of performing most of the heavy duties of farm life with that of an eloquent platform speaker. In February. i930, shortly after the Judicial Committee of the Privy tained at "The Old Spain Blue Room" where a. delicious wedding slipper was served. The young cou- ple are to reside at Cornwall, and have the best wishes of their friends foi- a. happy and prosperous mar- ried life. MlcQUAIl-RIE — MIoDONALD NUPTlAbS-A very pretty wed- ding took place at the bride's els- ter's on 105 Fort St. Piiilrhaven, Mass, at four o'clock, July 6th. The bride, Miss Florence C. MacQuar- rile, u. graduate of Falconwood Hoe- pltsl. 9.12.1. also of 8t, Luke's Hoe» pital, New Bedford, was formerly from Rlverdaie, P.E.I.. but nurs- ing in New Bedford and vicinity for s number of years, wars at- tended by her sister, Mrs. Chas. H. MaoDougall. The bridegroom. Mr. Norman MacDonald of Nine Mile Creek, P.E.I., was attended by Mr. MacDougall. The double ring cere- mony being used. The ceremony was performed by Rev. J. A. MacClel- land, pmtor cf the Ililrst n ‘yter- ian Church in New Bedford. The house was tastefully decorated with laurel and pink and blue flowers of various kinda. The bride's neices Evelyn, Arlene, Betty and Natalie formed‘ an isle of ribbons. Miss Cora Weatgste sung O Promise Me, accompanied by Mrs. Milton Car- giii. who also played the wedding march. " The bride's dress was of azure blue. with hat and shoes to match. She carried Liliies of the Valley. The matron of honor wen finned tn clmoe pink with white hat and shoes and carrying blue dclphinlum. Many lovely and use- ful Iifto were received. Following the reception. the happy couple left for N Y., sailing from there on the 5.8. Georgie for Halifax for a brief honeymoon tfirx-(Petrlot please copy). PERSONALS Mr. E- A. Kinley. of Acadia Uni- versity it et present visiting the Province. Mrs. Inward Everett has arrived from Jamaica Plain. Mus. on n. vis- it to her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Joe- eph Hearts, Cornwall. Miss Katherine J. Mecliean. of Boston, is spending her holiday! 113th friends and latives in Clyde ver. Mrs. Herbert s. Campbell. Dor- eheetor. Mass. is visiting her father, w. John A. Murray. Clyde River. Miss Mary E. stems. B. N., left Tuesday morning for Boston after e very pleasant holiday with relatives and friends on P. I. Island. While mthecitylhe was the guest other slster-in-lew Mrs J.A. Stem. Rich- mond Street. w. W. H. B. Ritchie, manager of the Bonk of Nova flcotin at. 90100501194511. N. 8.. accompanied by Mrs. Ritchie. are insitink in the city. the guests of m. Ritchie's perenll. Mr. and Mrs. O. w. Ritchie. Greenfield Avenue. MODIIATOII. FRIZACIIIS IN OWN ROM] TOWN owm eoimb. July IA-ilev. or. D.'I‘.L. Melton-roll of Victoria Pree- bytorian Church, ‘lioronta. Moder. . uroh Ruched at 8t, Andrew's Presbyter- Council had decided that in Canada women were "persons" and entitled to all the prerogatives enjoyed by them in respect to Government. the then Prime Minister, W. L. Mac- kenzie King, summoned Mrs. Catrina Wilson, cf Ottawa, to the Senate. She was the first woman senator. and the second woman to become a member of Canada's Parliament Long before that, in 1921. Miss Agnes Macphall, a. Grey County farmer's daughter and school teach- er, was elected to the House of Com- mons for Southeast Grey. Ontario. She was the first of her sex to take a. seat in the Dominion Parliament i-r- RADIO AUD CE l8 HIGH IN AUSTRALIA Australia's army of licensed radio listeners is steadily nearing flu 1.000.000 mark; During April the not increase in the number of 11c- enees issued in the Commonwealth ‘was 0.51s. bringing the total num- ber in force to 700.781. ‘These figures ' ‘ ' u“ steady growth of radio llsteriersfln Australia and encourage elm n”; that the country will reach the million mark in three years. ‘this would mean that one pf:- son in every seven in Au: is, would be in the radio audiencepnt present. the proportion is the in. ceptionally high figure of one in every nine and a ham-Australia! Press Bureau. ‘l 1 Ail. RAIVDS ARE IMPOSSIBLE WITH NEW BOMB USE, LONDON, July 24-Alr war will be impossible in the future, 11f claims for a new invention are jul- tified by War Office tests. r. The apparatus is now being per- fected by Grindell Matthews, faun- ous “death ray" inventor, who, for some time, has been carrying an secret experiments in the heart of the Welsh mountains. ~~_ "Gunfire is of no use ‘against el- eniy aircraft," Matthews declares. "They must be brought down bl- fora they can reach any lairge city, We must ensure that there will never be any more aerial warfare on defenceless women and children. “My invention provides for the laying of a mi e field at any - tude. An aeria torpedo will be ,_ from the ground. and it will reach a height of 30.000 feet in a matter of seconds. It will carry secon rackets which will be released f it at any desired height. A la of these rockets will be despatchld in all directions, and will travel 3J0 to 40o feet. A parachute will tliIu open. and up to 500 feet of wire drop down from a coll. with a smell bomb attached. ' " "The first ‘brood’ will be released at 10.000 feet, the next at 12.000 feet and the third at 15.000 feet. The main torpedo, at the end 0H1 run, will blow out a parachute, tn will float down to earth, to r6- trieved and loaded again." The inventor added that on .0 certain amount of expel-line at work remains to be done to ti-v the rockets out under true con q Four Chinese Die Ji in MUKDEN, July 24. — A hundred men searched the hills of eastern Plengtlen to-day for the “adder 56y" of Chuangchow with orders to brim him in dead or alive - preferably dead. ‘ Reports received in Mukden do not ma: the truth of reports dist and has been returned at every gen- eral election since. Born in (bat-Mon. Ont. Mrs. Iva Campbell Fellls was born in Castleton, Northurnberlahd County. Ontario, the only daughter of the late M. J. Doyle and Mrs. Doyle. Her father was warden of North- umberland- arid Durham. Mrs. Fal- borne. where she received ‘her high school education, and later to Co- bourg. She attended Normal School at Toronto and later taught school for five years. After her marriage she moved to Baekatchewan, where she and her husband farmed for eight years. They then returned to Ontario. Since then Mrs. mills has been prominent in Conservative affairs. For seven years ehe was president of the Women's Liberal-Conservative Association in Peter-borough she storoftheoerinel Aueinbl crthc momma-i on in was also vice-president of East Centre District Association and first vice-president of the Liberal Con- servative Association of Ontario. shewas a member of the national convention comrnitte and was chos- en several years ago at Winnipeg to represent women delegates. She ms. been . active. . in- Qllflllllllil. ‘l0- men's Conservative associati-ris and Macdonald-Cartier clubs. Strathcona Trust Shield The Btrathcona Trust Shield which is awarded to the school mak- ing the greatest progress and stand- ing first in Physical Drill lri the schools of the Province during inst season hes been awarded to the school at Dunstaffnege of which Mia: Marjorie Fraser wes the teacher. Th; Shield will be presen- ted to the school shortly after the next. term opens. The schools leading in their In- epeetorel Districts and standing nelt in merit ere u follows: Murray Riven-Insular. Mr. Ver- non Mecbeod Pleasant Valley - Teacher, Mr. Maurice Tierney. New Acadia - ‘teacher, Mr. Den ecDonal M d. Btrethcon ‘Beecher. Mile Sadie I. hrqul-iareon. Chery-Teacher, llr. Lloyd Hen- hndllllflilihe mm .1». fizrnuwll 3m sill its mcvcri with her parents to Col- w” the 7-year-old boy has poison fangs but they make it clear that the pop- ulation of Chuangchow believe ‘he has-and furthermore believe four persons have died from his bitel. Homes in Chuengch-w are being guarded while the men seek the boy. Since the boy's own father lied ,‘ ’ to execute him but felled. it is believed no mercy will be shown. 0m report that reached Mukden "The young killer, whose bite means death, is as strange inJP- peerancc as lri his penchant for-bit.- ing. The lad resembles a baby 0pc. "His extraordinary nature first was noticed when two relatives csme to call upon his parents. He bit them and the next day both were dead. This rriight not. have ed so alarming except that one he same day he had bitten the dau - ter of a neighbor, who also within 24 hours. i_ "The boy's father became serious- ly alarmed and locked him in a case intending to put him to death later. The next morning, however, when he went to the else he found that the youth had broken from his prison- "Bome days later a woodculter found him in the forest cryln! W‘ terly and taking pity on him i001! m his benefactor d his ratitude e 8 The woodeutter by biting him died. "The killer is again at liberty In up hills outside ciiumachvw- Th‘ cltlneris are resolutely determined to kill him on sight." __ nxrlnr TYPIBT AT SIX;- RAYMOND, Alt!" July itr-Little Rete Elder tic-night claimed ‘the title of Aim-mi youngest =1 l" typist. Six yearn old. Reta can P! V! words per minute on i! l" materiel, and from 50 to 65 per fill" uto on new copy. - J . SPEEIA Lf Myers Hand Spray Pumps for side or end of barrels with tyvu Row Spray Boomer-fit greatly reduced. brute! will be sold . l.“ or separltely-Q I'll" WPF“0°i-..i.. ' -'" g. BltU Di From Boy’s Bite. .m§9 the lad to his-cebin..Tlierc.he.shW.- .. _