m Nature. Sows [In Falll; WhY 1g flew Wwmufén be grown from seed l1 mg‘ iqutéhzfmltnnliab which can i8 able 5?‘; ldseed ‘hykail? whenever pflssible. plants "‘ miihi? rlier in the spring; im iwr , _ ind mofiosbllgfilrgfijects may safcl 1122s all annuals wihioh usual! MC li'5°w u). Qthcr hudy’ a-n - willing to tak with “qlicgoiollvlfrfe sake of carlie ‘chtanclafgfi, sort seeds. 9Y9“ ° ELUNQQ-iptics, nnay 510C113! in m azdigrolln}; but the hard seed we ' ‘i111 lie s varieties Whwh 9F mmry in some other way. “A seed ‘>64 wooden (‘l . PT. will: and many $3,131 me not" Fame" Experience has good If sccrls which ca" check lvFTlll-Q nrn sown and protcct cdiinws‘ \\"‘1P'l “w” impmr‘ u, _. . . S/lll‘ l and bachelor "uhpur "m!" well from full auttona nil 3"!" 1mm seed. ..( " ti. L’ iiieso & SUN OPTOMETRISTS “Specialists in the fit- ting of glasses for the correction of ocular de- feels." 5.’! Grafton Street is. RAW POULTRY We are especially interested Capons, Milkted A and Milk- hr ltd B Chicken. We prefer to have them dressed, but ore buy- "l! both alive and dressed. We. have advanced the price on good towl and chicken. Also buying dressed geese and ducks. The Royal Packing 0o. l. D. JENKINB (Prop) ,.\ DEGEMBER s. 1941 . duces annu- l Wbenesatirn ::atxi;u1;r¥é“fn, “m, "11. c" ‘h, demonstrates that . ~ 1 different sec- sell-seedtlmflléaglxtiiyyubut l: is prob- uo“ 0ft “iaiilllill 18111519111’ ‘md Wm‘ ““(C“e,,,,,u,.a, cyanus) will be s v, almost anywhere. Lark- should be sown in "m" ‘Humming “at stand lend-uln. cailiopsis. candytuit. ceny l almost as soon as in- plants. besides bein! “Peer 1n your neighborhood, and. d have small. hard seeds. f8 l! protected from bc- “raglifd out or the soil by rains- FllTYOUIiflFd by l v-b is an excellent D1869 . ' f to sow m" lmmmls‘ A mm rag‘; where shown drainage is iii rows. h, marked. it is P115)’ t9 the i.» sccri runny. mixirizr small i months? ago the o {W Flower Seed Not You? it, and do not low much deeper then you wo in the spring. Many gardeners ver the row with a shallow layer of sand after sow- ing. In u seed bed. or cold frame, after the ground has frozen a light mulch of leaves may be placed over the bed to keep the frost in. This mulch should be removed before the seeds sprout in the spring. Annuals which are usually suc- cessful from tall sowing include alyssum, snapdragons. cacalia, ca- tauria cyanus, clarkia. cosmos, cschscholtzia, euphoriba, gypsophi- la, larkspur, lupin, nicotiana, po- y tunla. annual phlox, annual pop- y pies and sweet peas. Conditions in the spring are usu- enlly fine for transplanting and plants may be moved from the a seed bed to the border about the r. time one would be sawing seed in pthe spring. The fail sown plants 3:811? not soft like those grow-n in- s l doors and receive little or no check lfrom transplanting. Burma Shelves ~ Its Blue Blood RABVQON. Dec. 2 - (Routers) —'I\he forgotten royalty of Burma is demanding the restoration of the country but the movement has Burma's independence. Princes of the royal house o; Thi- bow. Burma's last king who died in exile in India. realize that theirs is a lost-cause. ‘flheir only hope, in claiming the throne at this Junct- urc, is that they might at least secure a decent pension from the governrm en t. Burmese royalty l; waging its own battle. There is no monarcihisl party in Burma. The Burmese press takes no interest in their former king's descendants. A vast major- ity of the people stand by the do- cision of the constituent assembly that the country. after Britain's withdrawal, shall be a sovereign republic. , The royal prince and princess of the house of Thibaw have therefore organized their own party, called the “descendants of the royal mm. ily association," to fight’ for their rights. Head of the association is 70- year-old Prince of Pyinmana. a n:- phew of King Thi-baw. the last of the rulers of Mandalay. Tim assoc- IlJhiDfl as a. secretary, a treasurer and office-bearers. just like any other trade union. In Rangoon, Burmese royalty has issued no manifesto on the eve c! the transfer o! power. But some princely group wrote the Anti-Fascist. People's Freeridm Leagueflhe government party) leaders telling them to resign from the government’: executive cou ncil, "as they had no real powers. even in the matter of looking after Burmans of royal blood." Demands Ignored Tlhe A.F‘.P.F.l,. took no notice of _ itllis royal demand and the Bunn- csc press. which normally takes its cue from the A.F.P.F.L., did like- wise. Some time ago the royal family ‘ tiun sent a. memorandum to‘ the secretary of state for Burma! urging the British government. on lirituins withdrawal from Burma. to transfer power to the descend- n-xts of the Burmese king. from wlicm they took over the country DUPLICATE "or a rumcass- . con A leading firm of South Afri- urrnrrrs TODAY uvrriw scream ‘coir. Iflouth Africa's Plan hotel. had to II made to auit South African figures. making the coat l- Pleliardfi 0o mous m '§"'I>»¢oo¢n¢v i can coat manufacturers, after ro- Icciving details from London. sot [their London-trained designers to work early on the morning of the 20th November. exact replica. of Princess bethb going-away colt. .Workir_ig right; through the night, they fin- ished den, otherwise. the coat. is an ex- act replica. ed by the afternoon of Nov. Si. to produc an ina- thc coat in time to chow at he reception held next day in smart Bsrbizon A slight alteration little more square at the ehoui- II coats were finish- seod with drsfund to help scatter Front ro'. iel to right: Back row, left to right: Williams, June MacDonald, 6° YIfl-rl ago. The royal family, the memorandum said, would cents-oi the administration, pending a m- tional plebiscite in the issue of monarchy. There has thus fas- been no response from Whitehall to tho luggested solution of the tunic!" o! power problem, Pivot of this unique movement; is 41-year-old Prince Mekhars. Ga- ‘mini. a great-grandson of the late King Mindon ('l‘iiibaw‘s father). The prince is secretary of the "De- cenctants of the Royal Family As- ciaimed little interest on the eve 01' sociatlon" and‘ the author of the claim for the throne and the de- monarchy when the British quwmarid for pensions for his kins- men. Prince Gamani, unlike his Drr- decessors, does not dress in {lowing gorgeous silks. Ile looks like any average Bin-man. though he retains lthc mark of one who has lived for Barry Rankin, Miss Anni Gilli (t h ). B b . liams. Wilma MacDonald. Billie MacDeonald} P” er n "a w“ Elsie Lou MacDonald-Photo by Garrihum. THE GUARDIAbLQMCHARLOTTETOWN ll. S. Women Knit For British Sisters NEW BEDFORD. Mass. Dec 4 - (AP) - Some shivering Britons soon will be cosler because o! a “lhare-n-shawl" plan devised by a Cape Cod Woman. Mrs. Francis Crane of Woods Hole has started a community knitting bee in Now Bedford which she hopes will spread through the country. Her rallying cry is - "Let's start knitting again. Shawls this time. TNE VERY LATEST . IN WASHING MACHINES Most modem in design, handsome in appearance with latest devices for better performance with out- tens of thousands o; them. to keep side lever gyrctor COIIHOI. our British friends warm." A tireless war worker, she cre- T dits the idea to a letter that came l to her u few months ago when lhe was ill in a Boston hospital. fi The letter was from the Dowager Marchioness of Reading, head of the Woman's Voluntary service of Great Britain, Mrs. Crane! hostess during a two-month visit to Eng- * land last year. Reading Lady Reading's descrip- tion oi a housewife preparing a scant meal over a candle flame - the only means of light and heat in the house Mrs. Crane thought: “If only we could put a lhaIi over the shoulders or across the knees of all the people who are livsirgg like that in Britain.” e talked over the idea with ‘ . .. . an 01d friend, Miss Pauline Fenno §§<2<o§e>e@eo@>¢e@cc@co§eo@ce§m<—)eo<§as 0,! Boston. long a zealous liaison _ .. w - , re \\'QfkEr'bei»\vlZCn W. V. S. in Britain ggl-‘sungritisinpgbglirbf igociarellg and "Us Country‘ revived its wartime knitting Within two months Miss henno b -1 h ._ ' _ group and members are usy Vi t had discussed the shawl project needles and Crochet hooim personally with Lady Reading anri - . Othe friends of Mrs. Crane. in h" Pssgmates‘ and "w" their 9"‘ New ygrk, st, Louis and her home thusiastzc approval town Chicago’ have iorwarded Se‘, Campaign Under Way .1 t '1 ' _ h Now the New Bedrom smndant fgglnlgindred shriu s o Bri ain s c WWW-ilk New streamlined shaped tub plain, porcelain. Dome shaped cover. White lacquer enomellcd. New Lovell winger with tenitc screw and new push- pull bar release and reset lever, automatic tlumc, 2" veils white. Chassis 7" flanged skirt and Z" casters. All white finish. Capacity-J lbs. dry clothes. MacMNALB ninio SERVIGE f PHONE I207 T60 KENT ST. 45.5.4 7 ‘ddré John MacDonald. Mars. I (i years as an exile in foreign coun- tries. "l don't think any member of the royal farmlly is anxious to be cm king 0t Burma." he said. "But a claim is a claim and it must be lodged. And in any case, the de- scendmts of the kings who ruled this country for centuries deserve fur better treatment. - - Prince Gamoni- is a man of few needs. He livly in a little thatch- roofed cotkigo in the suburbs of Rangoon. He last. his wife some years ago while in Innis-China us a virtual exile from Burma. His 82- year-old mother now keeps house for him. There are about. a dozen mem- bers of the Bumieve royal family in Rangoon. The mrzr well-to-do among them is a princess who ma-r- iQQ/Q" . Qneaema. 16-.» :_Q\ce§oe@>c ’ admitted duty-free when addressed stun-s minister to China, Mrs. to W. V_ S headquarters," 4liicfiilll‘ formerly resided in London Tothiii Street. London. s w. 1i The reason she picked shawls t: Ellglflfld- ‘help Britons through a fuelless The Chuch World service Central winter’). Long Island. N. Y.. has volunteered‘ ‘Thcyrr- easily made." she said to ship the shawls to England} ‘Because they are not made tc without charge for lndjvjdual5 or‘ size, they can be passed arounc groups unable to afford the over- 1111101151111] members of u household.’- scas shipping cost. And she has set a hoped-for "The Royalty of Table Radio" de- luxe six-misc receiver with standard broadcast and two cxpaaded- shori- wave bands; pushbutton tuning; built- tcnna, tone fidelity and undistort- in ed volume that rival most console seu. Richi styled in aelecre walnut i‘, {this Times has volunteered to serve as Through arrangemengs made by fled l" Australian bwklnalwr- headquarters for a national "share- the w v s ‘haw; shipment; are . . -. Daughter of the late Charles R. quota—"Une shawl from We?! Crane of Chicago, former United woman in the U. S- A"- rorr THESE oursrirrnruscgviiurs m wrsrmeuousr ouiirrv RADIO Westinghouse engineers and craftsmen have been busy getting this all-stair‘ line-up of sparklirg, modem radios all ready for you rust before the, holiday seasomfl” ’ ' u. It! See them! Hear them! Compare them .:. in Appearance in Tone in rich undistorted volume in doiiar-for-doilar radio value with any; ‘thing you can buy! You'll realize that you really do "get more in aWesciaghouse”. .- There’: a radio or a radios phonograph here for everyone; Visit your Westinghouse dealer now ... while the selection i: sriii complem- i TIE A new, distinctive sryieiu moulded laaiic cabinets . . . a S-rubc super- beterodyne packed with power . . e full, rich, undistorted volume . . . aparklin tonemautomatic volume contro . . . beam power output tubes f~a 8 I baud. Fashioned frdlll ifikfiefih hmd"“bb,‘d copper walnut. . .wiih gilt-etched iucire dial. . . . Acoustically balanced. 5""? su erbeterodyae circuit provides vivid, colorful, neural tone and IlCh1'ufld"' zoned volume. Standard broadcast and expanded 51-25 metre shore-wave Built-i a mine. . Piiouo or PM gonaiiction.‘ mbuiit-iu antenna... AUTOMATIC RADIO-PHONOGIAIN New different, advanced. m s6 rb tone and undistorted voi- ume Lchalicnge comparison with i e finest console sets. And it's a double value. Complete up-to-the-minute radio-phonograph combination with automatic record-changer for twelve i0’ or teni2‘records....ANDaself-conmned6-tube s radio that you can lift out, and plug in anywhere." jjiaadsomeiy rich, mahogany-finish cabinet- NOYI 0N DISPLAY AT 3 MILLER BROTHERS L_TD., Charlottetown SMALLMAWS LIMITED, Silmmersido Fifi , no " . '~ - ran I lilw._f.....lilll ill in in nu en A peppy, true-toned S-tubc au rheserodyne with automatic voYiTme control, lighted lucite dial, attached antenna . . . and a modern, snsai-ei -sryled plastic , cabinet, n-imme in your choice of four beautiful pastel colors: Tu: oise BiuemCai-dioal Red ... iie Greca...Fawn. a 01/ f/r/ ORE /}/ ti 11311011 s * "s/K/ L .. ., .4 .... waa-m-ewewm». .=