-_..a l... QUICKER AND EASIER COLLECTION WITH BRITISH CONSOLS "Canadafi mo}! popular Virginia Cigarette” SAVE THE PANEL FRONTS You need ONLY THIRTY from the British Consols IO’: package as reproduced above, with portion of excise stamp attached, to equal the value of a complete set of British Consols Carcl Pictures. UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE THIS OIIB VIII-l- II ITIDIIMID AT- HALIFAX, N.$., 243 Hollis Si. ST. JOHN, N.B., 67 Dock Street SYDNEY, N.$., 219 Charlotte Si. MONCT ON, N.B., Brunswick Hotel CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E.l., 29 Queen Street A BARGAIN IN PREMIUM OFFERS 9S Flume Dried Fruits ' _ And Vegetables "the three methods of home-dry- fruits and vegetables, namely, sun. by artificial heat. and by t, are dealth with in the bulletin on the subject issued by the Dominion Department oi Agri- culture. The sun drying method is Hie least expensive bright. hot days and a breeze. If he by sir bias slipstlc conditions are satisfactory. be; t d 1 u, d ‘d t w“ dung; e153"; gm i: 3i? Ziii-‘spifé. Klimt? "y liiafilmf... ti. .3325. ...‘."3 me - e Y" i?" Ville‘ For dryln! b)’ “initial heat. the rent oi air is created by an till. IRON FIREMAN AUTOMATIC COAL BURNER CURRIE s must be washed and out in- to pieces about one-quarter oi an inch thick. If cut too thin the pieces are difficult to handle and if too thick they do not dry quickly. A wire screen over which cheese cloth has been spread makes a good drying tray. but the cheese cloth must not be allowed to touch the products about to be dried. One layer of the product s-ould be spread and turned over_ once or twice during the day. The trays should be removed indoors care must be temperature is juicy. The ism Air blast dry but requires method but m warming oven or the ordinary ins. The pzelimin of the W)rld's has just been iicially opened nouns will be and then through rural trip down the and Belgium al the Continent, O "I'll fir . {urn f a... ..§ ill‘. . u... ‘;i.l°é'.2“§%'l‘."3"..’.2fifl-‘.‘;,‘i Iron Fireman. What's more, the temperature won’! u? m?‘ ‘hm two Email i stalled ron ireman cs ‘ ' heating or power gm... m u: rgll you S’ MURNAGHAN 60 Queen Street So fr. the heva definitely tralla, China, Great Britain, Mexico. “*"~l44\v\'|» , _. “'f‘§§’vvew‘c t . . per ton; fully screened Formerly priced $10.00. The highest quality of any coal in the world . . .. no. slack . . . very low in ash and Sul- ' SEPTEMBER CASH PRICES YORKSHIRE and SBDTBII flieI”-.'. .tryaton. ._We have s 1W! llrse on larger quantities. COAL EZiTnEyTBQRTSa; be made to suspen oi the range. In usin gin at about 110 degrees. be increased to 150 degrees. the quickest Cc" gress sessions will be held the "Opera Kroll" and will be of- trip is being arranged for fldIJIl-S when France. cipate. Canada, Argentina, Haiti. Holland, Hungary, Rhodesia. Sweden, and the United States- taken not too high ing is is difficult to re- gulate the process as the product electric fan, with or without arti- ficial heat. In the oven method, the fan may be used to complete the process more quickly, by using it during the last half-hour of dry- The World’s Sixth Poultry Congress ary announcement Poultry Congress which meets in Berlin next year The in published. rn July 24th by Chancellor Adolf Hitler. During the Congress the after- devoted to excur. ions to places of interest within the city of Berlin and outside. At the close of the delegates will attend the opening ceremrnics of the Olympic Games take Congress the a week's tour Germany. including Rhine. _A six week's Can- Switzerland so will be visited on and a few days in England on the way home. following countries decided to perti- Aus- Creche-Slovakia. Ecuador. Esthonis. ::Cheapcst of all Oils-Consider- ing the qualities cf Dr. Thomas’ u‘ Oil it is the cheapest of all preparations offered to the puh_ lic. It is to be found in every drug store in Canada from coast; to coast and all country merchants Keep it; 1°!‘ "le- 50. being easily procurabie and extremely moderate in price, no one should be without a bottle oi it. or s. rack may d over the top g this method that the at first. otherwise the surface of the iruit or vegetables w while the interior will still be perature should be- and may ill be hard i111‘. i. ‘LIJZLLLI Royal Thohstrothelof the news received with so well known and esteemed. outside the Borders, wedding retinue. “BOOlIT GIRLS" crowd. though in their hearts real- ising a crowd's mighty comforting a “community spirit" very useful in every walk oi life. The “Scott girls" are always in l. bunch at point-to-pcints. meets, and Border races, ' their numbers augmented by the tall and exquis- itely besutiful Lady Dclamere (daughter of Lord George Scott), her twin sisters (one a bride of last year), and other young people from their sporting group. Simple tweeds, knit jerseys. a pull-on felt hat, and brogues are Lady Alice's racing uniiorm. HER BROTHERIS SUPPORTER But all her time has not been spent rusticating. She has travelled and she has enjoyed London at its best and gayest, though always re- taining a preference for Scottish festivities. Electioneering has also come into her scope on her brother's account. Lord Dalkeith, M.P., who has the pink cheeks and the shyness oi a schoolgirl in spite oi his war record. .is s. contemporary oi the Prince of Wales- He was up at Oxford, at "The House", when the Prince was at Magdalen. Judging by the num- ber of men-mostly fellow-members of Buck's Clair-who call him "Waller," he must be very popular. Pompous people are seldom referred to aflectionately. and one even for- gets that they own Christian names. So Lord Dalkeith is not really stiff ~—-just shy of limelight, which he leaves to his wife, who is a great beauty and was Mollie Lasceiles, klnswoman oi Lord Harewood. Lord Delkeith was in Grenadier Guards. like his uncle, Lord Ffran- cis Scott. who married one cf Mary Lady Mintds handsome daughters (another connection with the royal family, as Lord Mintc‘s mother is regularly in attendance on the Queen), and oi all Lady Alice's re- latives Francis Scott is moat likely to capture the admiration oi her soldier husband-to-be. Italy, Norway; southern For Lord Francis is a great war- gwggmmnd riot-to use a grand old word-and did his duty ncbly by the Brigade of Guards, returning to the trench- es after wounds so severe that any- tually he was crippled, and after war was over settled in Kenya. Fitting and ll. J. Soft Goal (Kitchen and ‘Furnace sizes) EYESIGIIT rxsumsnon, nwlrhaolansn. do. IMBOII OYIUMITIIII‘ 081cc Connected ma. Drugstore aQIMGING UP’ FATHER ODY- wlth his future in-lsws, and they i ut-Qi 1M! All“ Scott. daughter of the Duke. and Duchess ofnucclcuch. to the Duke of Gloucester has given particular satisfaction to the whole of Scot- land, writes a correspondent oi the Glasgow Herald. but nowhere was kcener use than in the Borders, where the future bride and her family are The brlde-to-be spends most of her time in the South of Scotland. and indeed is not widely known whm she hunts, sketches. and goes to all the local functions. One thing we are certain of is that Lady Alice will have her sister. Lady Angela, in her They have s. great look of each other. with their clear fair com- plexions. brown hair and unexpect- edly black eyebrows, strongly mark- ed-brows which are ll-ld to denote the Royal Stuart stock. Pretty Indy Sybil Phipps (always so grace- ful with her willowy figure). and indeed All five sisters (like the Duch- ess oi York's sisters) have a strong “family look." making it difficult to say which Lady Alioc resembles most-a typical Scott is the verdict. Though she has artistic tastes and abilities with which some of the other sisters are not endowed. Lady Alice is very much one of the family, She has always known the joy of having sisters and brothers to share her life. a joy which mem- bers of large families take for granted, sometimes grumbling against the little annoyances and disappointments of living in a. in good times and bad. Being one of many also “rubs the comers o ," even if you are s Duke's daughter or a King's son: you grow up with one else would have continued a most~justiiiable convaiescsne. Even- The Duke oi Gloucester loves Kenya for its sporting appeal, and Lady Alice loves it for its artistic appeal, judging by the excellent landscapes she exhibited at Walk- er's Galleries in Bond street last July. So as l. married couple they are quite certain to revisit the col- ALREADY WELL ACQUAINTED The Duke of Gloucester has been such a regular visitor to the Duke of Bucoieuclfs home for so many years that he's already well sc- quainted, as we say in the North. turn are alreadyjttachod to him by the affection which ocmos with friendship, as well as by mutual in- U U zitiiDlAfl "\f! '*-r-—~—~'*~ cfi-t- , . Betrothal Thrills Scotland- Atltractivc, Brown Haired Fiancee of Duke of Gloucester Hes Strongly Marked, Black Eye- brows Said to Denote Royal Stuart Stock- Of. Artistic Tastes and Abilities terests such as hunting. soldisring, and the Simple um. ,_ Everyone knows the Duke to be akeensoldienegoodhorsemnn s-n adequate dancer (who is not over- fond cf sophisticated parties-pre- ferring a Hunt Ball to a night club). and a thoroughly good fel- lowinthe pleasant sonsscfthe phrase. Until lately it was not realized that he had the some diplomatic gifts as the Prince of Wales. He seemed just the typical British soldier with s. tests for sports and a sense of duty, but the Jubilee Rm- pire tour he completed this spring proved him a man oi many ports. Australians summering at home say that he was a genuine success not merely as the King's son but u himself-a simple, observant, and easily entertained guest, who ful- filled endless publlc engagements without sign of boredom. But we must not imagine Lady Alice's filancs is an inhuman "wooden soldier." Hasn't he a big circle cf hearty msn friends. in- cluding his brother-ln-law-to-he, Lord William Scott. and hasn't he finally shown the good sense to fall in love with a Scots lass and plight his trolh in the bonny Borders? If. only they could be married in Soot- land, what a great deny for our country that would be! The Scots are related to so many Scottish families that even were the wed- ding fixed at Westminster there would be a tremendous gathering of the Clans. A SAD OOINCIDENOE It is interesting to recall that the Duke of Gloucester was at Eton in the same house as the tragically bereaved King of the Belgians, while Prince Paul oi Serbia. now Regent in Jugoslavia (when the Duke and Duchess of Kenthave been staying with him at Bled.) was an Oxford contemporary of Lord Dalkeith. Another of the Prince's genera- tion u Lady Sybil Jhippss husband an old Life Guard, while another Scott much in the public eye is Lord Herbert Scott. who. as chair- man of Rolls-Royce, brings the family into contact with “big bus- iness." To trace the rauuiications of the Montague-Douglas-Scctt family in Scotland along is tco long a task t6 attempt here, but it's quite safe to arm-m that one and all will give Lady Alice's husband a great wel- come and feel pride in their kins- womans good fortune and interest in the new life which opens cut to her as a "Royal Highness." British Labour Party Griticises Gov. Policy LONDON. Sept. l1.-(C.P. Havas) Severe criticism of the govern- ment's foreign and domestic poll- cies has been incorporated in a re- port which the executive committee of the Labor Party will submit next Monday-to the annual party con- ference at Brighton, it was learned tonight “If the present British Govern- ment, from the outset of the dis- armament conference, had been willlng to oflcr-at any rate, to all European membe a ot the League oi Nations-a treaty oi non-aggres- sion. and had declared that they I subscribed loyally and whole-heart- edly to the minimum obligations ci the collecting system-renunciation of war and boycott of an aggressor -.and at the same time had been \ C ~_. New stock oi Veluasuede Bloomers and fabric — Non- Veats — Runproot shrinking and slim fitting. Tea Rose‘ and White . . from 14 to 42. very seldom see anxious to give Germany equal rights through general disarma- i‘ mant, the present situation would have been very different." the re- DOrt sayl- g "The labor movement will givc the lead to citizens of this country in deciding. ii and when an emer- gency arises. whether the govern- ment should be supported or re- slated." Bitter Clash Seen In 1936 Elections WASHINGTON. Sept. l'l.--(A.P.) Demands for new reverence toward the United States constitution were sounded by political and public loaders tonight in speeches projec- ting possibilities of a bitter clash ticn. n ticipate in tomorrow's ceremonies. l Ilnerfl Idl-m‘. null Greele- over new deal laws at the i986 polls. 3s occasion was tomorrow's 148th niversery of the document's sub- mission to the States for ratifica- Persons skeptical of the attitude of the Roosevelt administration to- ward the historic paper-including Herbert Hoover-prepared to p“. CUT NOISE T0 MINIMUM LONDON - intended pricing sells patent medicines. em said m for the overnight expresses to from Scotland the London Mid- land and Scottish Runway has con - plated the first of a series of 26 "luxury" sleeping csrr. with noise cut to the minimum. BIHDI OI‘ '16 ASKS HATE. W. T0 BI FOUND SOUTH BEND. 1116.. Sept. 1'1- ws. James Henry Hatfield. a 1s- year old bride of s month. asked police yesterday to search for hoi- 91-year-old husband, but cautioned them to use two men because "the old {col is a wildcat when he gets started.’ » __ Fine quality crepede chene with the new "resisto-ripp" seams. lace trim, adjustable shoulder straps, full length, Mailed postpaid on receipti of price. Wash Taifeie Slip Wash Taffeta Slips — adjustable straps Tea Rose, Sand, Black, for only TWEED SKIRTS in choice of all wool cloths, all new models, shown in blues, greys and browns, in every size This is a. value that you will m t. v unveil sv u." * _\ “Reside - Ripp" ‘repe De Chene in sizes 82 to 44. TEA BOSE ONLY lace trim and tailored — White, $1.00 Klyberettes -- Cotton — Brief length and knee length. Tea Rose and Pink Kid, Gloves Just ' In i -—-B_rewn --.-.-Blaclr Grey -——Navy $2.oo $2.50 O :41... $2.50 oovauoaeoosoesoa has been missing fordays at e time during the month of matri- mony. Mam. Hatfield also filed non-eup- port chsrges against her mate, who EX IIRSIOIIS Couch Excursions W Quebec, ‘lhres livers, Montreal and Toronb - gohg September Mb only. Boston ‘via roll and Intern Stcemshlpa-golng Wednesdays nectar-i; w. "nr-e- are‘ - '3 "i I Ill-id S b 2 Ociolm‘ m: aim-m. n n‘ Sm“ “I l" i” For full‘ particulars apply t0 W. K. ROGERS 181- Queen Street Currie Building Clftown ABE I sizes for Institutions ngs. . .askusfor [In ’-i-ii ‘ ~_ Tel. 1000. hulflarge 8i 0o WiLL-Hhb/EWE YOU YQP DQY OF rphur. . .extremelyhot. .'.recom- womsteso smaeaeacvwo mended by engineers as a “perfect °" ’~‘°' ,-;,. ‘flélee BET $555516-