iu QUEEN sr. NORTHERN ELEOTRID TABLE MODEL Radio Combinations i l Quality Tlbll M048] Radio. flwlolfllth Combination in a wai- f“ “blneb Equipped with fully Clgtoniatlc Record Player and "Igor Standard Broadcasting Operation Extra large Permanent "lint! Speaker perfection gwQlln-ixlnllzlltllllllltlll 25% inches . we - r hchuhlgh c es wide, and 9/, Toombs idusic store Pisrioi. Radios El t i m ‘SUSIE/iii. lilfEelgflrllaANglllslTincu ‘WWI St. Charlottetown, P.E.l. rile woao is ' GETTING aaouun NONI MORE IEAUTIFUL IN I00 YEARS i847 ROGERS egos. - omembraince Tin 100M Anniversary Perms l. thrilling new pattern- plquam in its beluiy__ “lllflli h become II traditionally Iaineos as its Nflssssssrs . . . "inimit- MIMI" ls the "design cl ibe century". 52 - Piece. seitvice roe ' eioiir $62.75 WELLllERS JEWsLir-iis IINCI me Rere’s a ‘Box Coats-many Coats with hoods and high colours. handsomely styled ‘ '_ ' colours. 1"» r .~ . -. M; DDROTllY DIX SAYS- szeos, n. $54.95 uivisii run TRIMS Of Beaver. Persian Lamb, Squirrel and A Fox- , $21.95 i}. $15.95 KEllllEDY'$ Ladies Ready-To-Wear. YES LADY! ODAT to fit YOl.| and YDllR POCKET-BOOK. uninimmeo coiiis Newest ideas in finest fabrics-popular Ties and in..." back. and without. In oll the basic with the new in all the newest fabrics and PHONE 1766 (Continued From Page 2) satisfied if they are good cooks. and they don't. refuse 'lle dish whe SECYEi-flry. Who is gay and smart a wives appreciate them. Of course, there will always be who are gold diggers. but the offi aster. Broken homes. children. conquests. the girls who work for them are p finds in the man by whom she is No Wonder a business woman for whom they are going to work. Forsaken wives or The, wrecks that folly always leaves behind it. Sometimes the lover is mean enough to trade upon a girl's necessity of holding her job to force her to submit to his amorous advances. just for the sake of gratifying his own vanity of being a lady-killer. wins a girl's heart and fills it so full of love for himself that there is never nny room in it for any other man. and then leaves her for other Sometimes the girl deliberately bre'aks up her employer's home just for the luxuries he can give her. But, however it is, the love affairs between the married men and But they are human and vulnerable n a beautifully dressed and groomed nd full of pep, makes eyes at them and tells them how young and handsome they are. and how little their men who are phllanderers and girls ce romance is bound to end in dis- husbands. Half-orphaned Sometimes a man. ure tragedy. Very often a man who was married too young and who has outgrown his wife finds his real mate in his intelligent. broad-minded secretary. Very often a woman employed the qualities of nobleness which she has found in no other man. But it is always too late. said: "The education of all office girls should include a course in hardening their hearts against the men n 20 YEARS FOR MANSLAUGHTER SARNIA. Ont... Oct. 2l—(CP)—- Joseph Taylor was convicted of manslaughter at his second trial today in connection with the death of his wife Rita last November and was sentenced to 20 years im- prisonment. iNcANoesceMt ‘and FLUORESCENT’ Sold By R. T. HOLMAN LTD., Summerside and Charlottetown Guaranteed Satisfaction Since I857 DllLDADlNG TODAY BAYVIEW soiieeiieo 00M. $22.50 per ton ii. Pickerd 8. 0o PHONE I40 ' 2, Thelma Newson "TILL PEACE IS BORN" ‘Why do you call us from our for- eign rest, This chili November morn? Why bow your heads? We, whom you address, Can ne'er return, till Peace is born. , We cannot come from our deserved sleep, To fear-struck faces. We do not fear. We, whom you weep Feared, Death erased, till Peace is born. I Disturb us not in our content, With bugle blast. We do not grieve. We whom you repent. 1-‘eace,‘Death has lent. We lla unfettered in our white- crossed graves, Life. Death saves, till Peace is born." -J. W. F‘. (One Who Served.) MOTHER'S PLACE IN T_I'IE HOME LONDON, Oct. 23 — Cardinal Griffin. Roman Catholc. Arch- bishop of Westminlster said today that a mother's place is in the home and not in industry. ‘The finest contribution a mother can make in these clays of cnsis. is to look after her husband and children in the home." the Cardinal said. "The children are the future ctlzens of England and we can not afford to neglect their well-being However great may be the impor- tance oi’ industrial activ.ty." The main concern of the govern- ment should be housing as the wel- -fare of the family could not I! prcmoted unless there was a suf- Lcient number of suitable houses, (he added. BRACKLEY SCHOOL Report for the month of Sept- ember. . Grade IX - 1. VLncent Nev/son; Grade vIII — l. Vera Newsoil; 2, Velda Proude; 3, Irene Newell. Grade VII -- 1, Shirley Prowse; and Greta Proude (equal) 3. Stanley Jackson. Grade VI - i, Mervil Saunders. Grade V — l. Gall Prowse. R-anahan. Grads III -— 8r. (b) l. Earnest Roper. Grade II! - Jr. i. DOUG!“ N0- weii; 2. Wallace Jackson. Perfect Attendance: Vera New- son. Thelma Newson. Greta Proude. Mervll Saunders. Giiil Prowse. Frances Railahan. Earnest. Roper and Douglas Nowell’; Hffltsb Average Senior Grades: Vera NUNIOTT. 98% ‘ Highest Average Junior Gredci: Frances Rafllihln. 89% Teacher - Lucy T FOR HEALTHY PIGI Clean, fresh sod or dIrt put into a pig pen every few days is I Iood 1 ma c; QRDTAN,__CHARLOLI"_TETUWN Yllrli And Vicinity MlSS Allitfl CTOCRBbD. City, gpgnt, Sunday at her home in York, Mr. and Mrs. Keith Rodd, City ‘ were visitors to York on Sunday: Miss Evelyn Undorhay. York. was a visitor to the City on Saturday. Miss Helen Lewis. Qmploygg of R- E- Milt-ch. is spending her 11011. day at her homo in‘ York. Mr. Junior Rodd, city, gpemi Sunday in York the guest of his r-ousin_ Donald Crockett. ‘ Mr and Mrs Howard Watts, have i as their guest this week, Mrs Vvntts‘ mother, Mrs Nicholson Flat River ‘ Mrs. Milton Vessey has returned to her home in York after being. a recent patient in the P. E. I Hospital. , Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Rodd, andj son Billie, City, spent Sunday in l ‘York the guest of Mr. and Mrs.’ Gordon Crockett. Mr. and lVlIrs. John Granger, lyd- , jllfiy. C. 3., are visiting in York," the guest of Mrs. Cirangers sister, -.\frs. Milton Vessey. Miss Beverly Adams, City, was. a visitor to York during the week- end where she was the guest ofi LMlsseo Olga and Christine Proud. Mr. Edwin Lewis, student of P. 1 wings Secrets 0f Flies Are Revealed For First Time By Henrietta Leith NEW YORK. Oct. 2i - (AP) — The common drone fly now is "top secret." Thanks to some new fast pic- tures-SOOO to a second-scientists at the American Museum of Nat- ural History are finding out, “mat; the common fly has known for several hundred million years. They've discovered how the fly knows where he is when he can't see where he is going. how he can. fly through fog when a bird can't, , and what it is that, when he loses it, causes him to make a sudden crash landing. The movies were made at the request of the Sperry Gyroscope Company. ' Dr. C. H. Curran. museum in- sect expert, worked with photo- grapher Henry Lester for several years before they got the pictures they wanted. In the movies you can see the 300 beats a second of the fly's virings and-more important-the halters or vibrating balances 'jusi under The under lady's tiny balancers, sticking out the wings like a pair of hatpfns, go up when the 80 down in their sculling, oarlike motion. This, said Curan, is one of the; _thlngs scientists didn't know be-i W. C. spent Sunday in York, guest of his brothers, Ira Claude Lewis. M‘; 1 they are Just beginning to get into “l l the study of how the little balanc- ers work, maintaining the fly's iequilibrium like the fluidrof the inner ear does a man's. The halters are different from the modern gyroscope that keep lcompasses on ships and planes (balanced with the earth's axis. The ifiy's balarlcers move up and down Mrs. Robert Crockett. York, is at I Qmdegree angle’ whue a Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cooke, and Iwo daughters. Constance and Hei- | an. City, spent Sunday in York. the guest of Mr. and lVLrs. Leith Brown. visiting in the city the guest of ; gyroscope rotates. her daughter and son-in-law, Bu, the ham,“ a" Just as eh and Mrs. Neil MacInnis. ;fore the pictures were made. Andi Grade III - Sr. (a) i, Frances - -— i Mr. Willard Murray, Pleasant‘ Grove, spent Sunday in York the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Crockett. Mr. Wendel] Keilly. Stanhope was a visitor to York on Sunday the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Westley Matthew. Mr and Mrs Lloyd Vessey and Mr and Mrs Harry Lewis have re- turned to their homes in York ai- ter spending a few days in Monc- ton. N. B. Mr. and Mrs. Ira Lewis, York, were visitors to the city on Sunday, the guest of Mrs. Lewis’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Wats. -C. While Donald Crockett was pick- lhg potatoes at Lewis Brothers, he picked up a potato that weighed 2 1-3 lbs and was l7 inches long and 13 inches wide Beat this who can Mr. and Mrs. William Crockett, York. motored to Orwell Cove on Sunday. where they were the guests of Mrs. Crockett‘s mother, Mrs. MacPherson, they were sc- companled back by Mrs. Crocketvs sister. Hazel MacPherson. Service was held in York Church on Sunday evening. The guest preacher for the evening was Rev. 1V Wilson. Covehead. who ex- changed services for Sunday, with Rev Mr MacCallum, which was very much enjoyed by all ii. S. Man Drowned While Soaliopjlshing GULLIVER/S cove‘. us... Out- 21 -- (OP) — Eldon Conrad. 31. crew member of the motor vessel Tancook If out of Lunenburs. N-S. was drowned of! this zisnais vil- lage last night when he was caught in a drag and hauled overboard whle scallop fishing. A llfebuoy was thrown to him. but. welgfteddoivn by heavy clothlnk. he could not reach it and d'58l>' peered almost. immediately. His body had not been recovered early today. g. iiiisisis and \/‘ iiiiiis STERllNG SILVER 'l 00 to ‘I30 GOLD FillEO "~15 -. u.» l0 In GOID moo ll "$.00 hind engraved sedsneineiwnl Sold by Leading jewellers Everywhere .44. maul; preventltive. fectlve—they tell the fly just as accurately which is up and which is down. At the end of the movies. which takes several minutes to ruri but show the action of a few seconds. the fly dies-another martyr to science. slain’ by the heat of the photographic lights. But, says Curran. these “most amazing pictures ever taken of in- sects in motion" have unlimited possibilities in industry. Even more avid attention is coming from the military. "But beyond that I cannot go.” said Curran. "Top secret, you know." ilew Dlue To Polio Secrets Reported By ‘American Doctor NEW HAVEN. C0nn.. Oct. 21 — (AP) -- A new clue to why polio infections sometimes kll or or pplo and at other times have no effect is reported by Dr. Wendell M. Stanley. pioneer in virus research at the Rockefeller Inst tute of Polio. or infantile paralysis. is one of many diseases caused by viruses, t.ny chemicals that exist in the twilight zone of life. Viruses breathe. eat, and reproduce them- selves but can do these things only when they are wlthn certain cells of human, animal, or plant bcdiez. Dr. Stanley described prpmlsiris new studies on viiruses in a lecture at the centennial of Yale's Shef- field scientific school. In one study, seven different straps of a virus that causes tob- .acco mosaic disease were compared ‘Wm, the regular virus. Slight dif- ferences were found. he said. in ther contents of amino acids. the “bricks!” of which fill P411719 "S B"? made. Although these differences were (slight, the differences In virus act- Medical Research. f l Warning: TliE LITTLE TIIEATRE oiiiLo OF . CHARLOTTETOWN PRESENTS “GANGWAY FOR GHOSTS" A Three Act Play by JAY TOBIAS Directed by BARRY BUGDEN INITIAL PERFORMANCE or THE 1941-4: SEASON PRINCE EDWARD THEATRE WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29TH OPEN TO MEMBERS AND GENERAL PUBLIC Membership Fee for the Season (including this performance) . $2.00 Limited Number of Students’ Tickets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. $1.00 Admission to Non-Members (This Show Only) Reserved Seats, (Members and Non-Members) Membership Cards, General Admission and Reserved Seat Tickets may be obtain- ed at The Maritime Electric Co. Ltd. Office, Grafton St., Saturday, Oct. 25th, from 6:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. and Oct. 27th, 28th and 29th from 10:00 a.m. to 5:15. MAKE TlllS PART OF YOlIR llALLOWE’Eil PARTY. YOll’l.L BE TllRlLLED. Prospective Members are advised to join promptly to be sure of ocl- mittancs to this performance. PAGE SEVEN 8:15 P.M. .. 50c 25c extra as wide as the brims. l For cocktail and dressy hats hei used the pill-box style with sud- den height introduced by feath- ers, plumes or large bows. For evening wear with long skirts, large stiff brims giving side width were shown. Most of the brims were raised sligthly off the face. Sequined veillngs for keeping the hair tidy on evening outings were also exhibited. His berets were designed with side width to be worn at the' back of the head. and the brim‘ of one of his halo hats swept gent- l ly around to a high point at the‘ centre of the forehead. Another headwear show was put on by Aschers. a well-krpwn firm of textile designers, with square scarves designed by such artists as Henri Matisse, Henry Moore. Andre Derain. Graham Sutherland and Feliks Topolski. Ascher squares. which can also be used for neckwear. sell from 17s 6d. ($3.50) for a design by an unknown artist to £7 9s ($30) for a square by Matisse. They were exhibited in frames. like pictures. opening up a new idea for interior decorating. Many have been produced in limited editions of from 250 to 600. with each numbered and screen destroyed after printing. Aschers say hopefully some may become rare museum pieces. Some of the designs are surreal- istic, Others feature ballet danc- ers and even still life. Missionary Receipts lip the ' To Banish li D in iiiiie Days “Ti l NEW YORK. Oct. a1 — venereal disease could be banlahed from this country in nine days 1f the DOW" or penicilln were used in a con- certed national effort. Dr. Thomas _Parran. surgeon General of the United States, reports in a signed article in the November issue of the Woman's Home Companion. "With this new drug it is pOssibJe to make syphils and gonorrhea as uncommon in the United States as smallpox. typhoid fever — even as rare as bubonic plague - in nine days," write; the Surgeon General. "but the-only way it could be d0!!! would be to have every man. wom- an and child in the-country take peninclllin simultaneously under the supervision of the nation's phys- iciarls." Today, with penicillin, treatment is no longer the most difficult problem. Dr. Parran BHYI- T!" great problem is to find the vic- tlm-s of disease who are still un- discovered. and wlho will be m! source of infection for the quarter- mlllion new cases of syphilis and over a million of gonorrhea that will develop this year alone. More shocking is the fact tihat private physldahs and public health clin- ics will find and treat only one-half of the new cases of syphilis and less than half the new cases of gonorrhea. Dr. Parran visualizes a nine-day campaign preceded by months of intensive paration by the na- tion's heal forces and by nation- wide education through newspa- TORONTO. Oct. 2i — Dr. Denzll G. Ridout, Secretary of the Mis- sionary and Maintenance Commit- tee of the Unted Church of Can- ada. announced today that the re- ceipts for 1947 for the miifionary enterprises of the Church had pass- ed the mlllion dollar mark and were now $72,000 ahead of the some date last year. Dr. V.T. Mooney, the Treasurer of the Un.ted Church. expects the total to reach 32.175000 tihis year. Dr- Ridollt. announcing the coin- pletion of Presbytery gatherings in Central and Eastern Canada. said there was displayed unusual inter- cst on the part of layme in the (Lvity were great. One strain killed :tomato plants. while the regular [virus did not. Yet ll. differed from Izgtllar virus only in small percent- ages of bwo out c-f the 16 different ‘kinds of aimino acids that each contained. The difference between a mild and deadly kind of polo virus might also be due to slight change? in amino acid contents. Dr. Stan- ley said. Perhaps a mild type of virus might exist in the body, sud- dcily becoming deadly when it either loot or gained ln supply 0! one or more amino adds. Dolor Trend Shows Wedding influence By DENISE DALTROFI‘ Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON. Oct 22- (GP) Fancy hats were on display at the fall show of Erik (Paris) Ltd, with three colors predominating- black, winter white and wedding wine, thet last intended as a compliment for the forthcoming royal wedding. His models were designed to sit straight on the head. and his trimmings were a variety of high- standing feathers._a profusion of winter flowers or a narrow sequin band around the base of the crown. Black Poodle was his name for s new fur fabric used for some of his models. It has a bushy ap- pearance like the fur of a French poodle. ' For wearing with tallor-mades he showed many hats designed on the style of beef-eater models. A small crown and small straight brim curving slightly upwards in treat. The crowns were almost ‘missionary work of the C roh. ‘New California Fashion Designs lire 0ut Of This World By RALPH DIGIITON HOLLYWOOD. Oct. 2i —- (AP) -W1lai California designers think clothes will look like in the pre- dlctable future is pretty close to be- ing out of this world. And if it isn't _ it should be. if style trend; displayed at Monday night's “fashion futures" show are a fair sample. Nearly 100 designers modelled their forecasts in Earl Carroll's right spot. The new longer look prevailed. Not even Adrian —- Hollywood's last holdout against dropping hem- l.nes — challenged the controver- sial trend. “Cover ‘em up" was the mot"! of i948 California-made fashions. except in s few instances in which designers made up for h dng the legs by baring the bosom. One notable creation of this ria- ture was a wool broadcloth suit by Jean Louis of Columbia Studio. The blIlCk jacket was sl.t to waist- llne and revealed a bare tummy underneath. In the dress rehearsal, the model removed the ‘Jacket and something awful happened. Mon- day nght. the model did not re- imove the jacket. DlEhTETuR OF MAJORITY ‘The word “bolshevilfl in Rati- slan means a member of the maj- orltJ. . pers, magazines. motion pictures and radio. Then on a certain day. the_natlon's press would announce the beginning o: the campaign and from glx l-n the morning until nine at. nigiht. ever-y doctor's office. ev- ery hospital clinic. public school. firehouse and polioe station in the nation would be open to give free penicillin to the population. "If everyone received penicillin simultaneously no venereal disease infections could elude treatment." he writes. And although millions of persons without disease wsuld receive the drug. the Surgeon Gen- eral contends that toxic re:ctions are not too common or serious and the required daily vis.ts to a phys- iclan would assure proper manage- ment of the few that do occur. He also stresses the point that there is no valid evidence to prove that venereal diseases acquire immun- lty to penicillin. In the event that so dramatic a solution of this serious health prob- lem never becomes a reality, Dr. Parran suggests other. less dras- tic measures. He contends that if every doctor andevery hospital did a blood test as .a routine on every patient wiho came for medical care. they would rind about invo cuss of syphilis in every hundred patients who consulted thorn. The Surgeon General also insists that in bus n- ess and industry blood tests for venereal disease should be includ- ed in all physical examinations for new employees and all present em- ployees and employers; and in all examinations for insurance and for admission to schools and colleges. He cites a number of towns and cities in which the women of the communities have worked wlah lo- cal health departments in house- to-house canvassing to put over city-wide case-finding campaigns. Savannah, Ga., Birmingha-m. Alla. Oklahoma City. Okla, New Orleans, La., and Louisville, Ky. are among them. "Now for the first time in Am- erlcNs medical history." writes Dr. Parran. in the Companion ‘arthle, “the purge of venereal disease re- quires no more than the will of the people - all the people. Enough penicillin. devastating enemy of syphilis and gonorrhea. is at last, available - not perhaps for the‘ nine-day dream but the long pulll And 100.000 doctors, hundreds of hospitals, thousands of public clln-l ics, stand ready tn administer it.| If all inc people needlessly eckl w tn vciiciaal disease can be frundi and ticjcfl. we can eliminate thhl serious ilnri constant threat to the health of you and your family.‘ l ‘Say Girl Readers Sharper Than Boys MONTREAL. Oct 21 (OP) -. You can take the ‘con-l of me p“) vincial Association of Protestant Teachers 0f Quebecfiglrls are sharper readers than boys, A reading test was given 1.000 students. chosen at random from Momrsfll- Quebec and Sherbrooks and from rural districts of Ofllflb- town. Lemloxvllle and Knowlton. Reading ability and ability to eb- sorb what was read were probed and in most tests girls were better than boys and country students were butler than those in cities. SWINGINO 0N TEHBXR ROOM DOOR "Oh poor little Willy. your we'll see no more. Swinging on the bar-room door. Your mother sits at home, the stove is oold. And Lttie Willy shivers, in his raga so old. 180i The ‘poor little fellow. is standifl starved and pale, y Waiting for his father to drink hi! pint of ale. I ‘spose your going to tell me. yfl think this isn't true, Well I would like to take you to I dive, or two. , It isn't just the ale, but there's loUA of "shine". . _ I know. because it happened to I friend of min!- . The boys drop in. every night, 1118b for a drink. When the cops make a raid, they pour it ln the s.rlk. There are many more like Will] looking sad and pale. While father is a Big-shot, and drinks his pint of ale. One night we found little Vvilly lytnl deed on the floor. So no longer wll we see him. a swinging on the door. ‘Cause the poor little fellow. Jim isn't any more. If I go to Heaven. ther'es one I'd loo-king for. And I hope I find hm swlnfllhl. On Old St. Peter's door." —I\larg.e Williams. Provincial Sanitorium. and Supervised bu it o l. e x O WATERPROOF DUSTPROOI NON-MAGNETIC Sold. by Leading Jewellers Everywhere