iij-IURCHES TOMORROW < ms CATHEDRAL . s‘ P“ Angitca! geehforll 50'!" n. mygIIIIG OIDOI 3- Mr rd“. “A” LTD. iuoillnhen flgeggtol, U0. Hill“: Organist Téifierfllflfl" ma: Eucharist and “d” schodlsermon an Everybody l 3. PAULS ANGLICAN ; _CHURCi-i m; rsnisu clwiwn wbumd Royal Foun- fl,‘ gevsrend J. T. lbbott. like“! m. “y” F, Mugford, A-B-(LO. organist and Choir Mar-tor I ma. Sunday After Easter "9 AM. lloiy Communion- u“ ‘M, I M 11.00 AM- gg-mco. sobieeli mos." _, “ma”, “Th, Glory of God - th ell. ‘Ifmohm. sveninr Prayer and "mo, subject: “The Good Giv- Morning Prayer and "God's Provid- “Anthem: “Abide With Me" - unnett. . Visitors will receive a cordial vsioomc st S. PauPs Church. PRESBYTERIAN n. Reverend '1'. n. aumu Somcrs. M.A., 5312M” Minister Miss s. Lillian McKenzie» Mus. Bac- Organist is sun. Church SehooL 11 a.m. Morning Worship and lemon: “Longing and Fuiflihnent" Anthem: “To Dcum"—Dykes. (Broadcast CFCY). 'i pm. Evening Worship and Ser- mon: “Not Everything that Hap- pens to Us is the Wiil of God.” Anthem: “Jesus Joy of Man's De- dringf-Jiaeh. n; will conduct the lervlcea and deliver the Sermons. \ ZION PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH lPrincs and Grafton Streets j lieverendfl. Carlyle Webster, _; Minister , n». Frank Johnston. A.T.C.L. Organist and Choir Director MORNING WORSHIP u.» A. M. Theme: ‘The alsnlfl- cance of the Ascendon." . hymns: 21. 2S5. 227. _ _ Anthem: “Just As I Am." lswies. EVIINENG WORSHIP m PM. ‘rhesus: "The Problem of _ Painting.” Hymns: 201, 81f. I34. ~ Anthem: The Intermediate Girls’ Choir. - The Sabbath School nseots at tm ofsioek in the morning. Hon are cordially invited in worship with us. "hind ncnrccosmt cnuacn 37 Elm Avenue Reverend Quincy Stairs, Pastor l ‘ SERVICES i0 am. sanday School with dsssss for all ages. l! ans. Worship and Praise. You are invited to Worship with us. ‘i pm. Evangelistic Meeting. The power of God is just the Inns today. ‘The Church That's Dlifsrent" The Bible House HAS A ‘SELECT! ABSURTMENT OI . MILES ' TESTAMENT! HYMNARIES V rnavnn nooks 1,5751“! would make excellent * om. _ liahs your choice QUALITY 600D’ Al‘ ass-r raroas . "ran assurances" "Palmer lisctric building" l“ like! 3t. _ Phone 218i ' m nuns li0iii. , tear awn in “Hunters. a. fl- s. ossa. Isssssi n, acsorasusoas "9 seem-no UNJTED CHURCH of, CANADA TRINITY UNITED CHURCH ‘The Reverend William l. Dudley, 1.1.3., Guest Minister l..lt.A.M., Organist and Choir Director i0 a. m. Senior Church School. ll a. m. Primary and Beginners’ Departments. ll a. ns.'Div‘inc Worship. Sermon: "No Trouble Can Keep You Doum". Text: Isaiah 21:8- Dr. Dudley. Anthem: “Hast Thou Not Known.” (Pfienger). ‘i p. m. Divine Worship. Sermon: “Three Ways of Look- ing in a Mirror". —‘l‘ext: James i:23-25—-Dr. Dudley. Anthem: "Lead, Kindly Light.” (A. S. Sullivan.) Let us not forget the alfllhh- ing of ourselves together. BAPTIST THE BAPTIST CHURCH Corner Prince and Fitsroy Sta. The Reverend James D. Davison, BA, B.D., ______ Pastor. Mrs. W. Allison Macliae, A.T.C.M. Organist and Director oi Choir, 11 A.M.—Morning Worship. Sermon-"The Christian Services Beach __Far"—Pastor Davlson. . Anthem - "Hope of the Path- GrW-Hawthorne. l2 Noon - Church School. Fourth Film Picture Study of the Life of Joseph. ‘I p. m. Evening Worship. . Sermon "The Children of Two Kingdoms" -Pasior Da- vison. Anthenn- The Sun Shall Be No More Thy Light. —Wood- ward. The Members of the “Sons and Daughters ‘of England" will wor- ship with us at this service. Our Church extends thesn- a hearty welcome. CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH Kent Street Marvel D. Dunbar. B.'l'h., Minister Mrs. M. C. Stewart, Organist and Choir Director 10:00 a. m. Bible School and Fam- ily Hour. 11.00 a. m. Morning Communion. Central Christian Church in- vites you to worship on the lord's l1"- ' SALVATION ARMY GREAT GEORGE STREET Major and Mrs. E. i-iutchison SUNDAY l1 a.m. Holiness Meeting. Subject: "What la Holiness?" Solo: “I Know a Fount." 2.80 Sunday School and Bible Class 7 p.m. Salvation Meeting. Subject: “Foundational The Suc- cess or Failure of Life." Duet: "Reckoning Home." Speaker: Major E. Hutchinson Ail Are welcome ELLELSJIIAIIY (Continued from Page ‘Worship and 2) - been “a good hand”~ with young stock-and older, on the farm. O O O l-ls had been "a good hand with a foal" we knew and repeating the like as folks will, sighing over what death has taken from them. we remember to be adept in such lines is to have a kindly patient heart. and to have rare under- standing and a knowledge cf the ways of farm creatures, one which may not be developed easily or put on, but is bestowed by nature ~ - - on innate touch, God-given at birth. This good farmer, eailsd sway full of years, knew as well the ways of winds and weathers, and the sea- sons were an old record to him. i-le know there was a time to wait for - - - a time to "possess one‘s soul in patience" and a season for haste. And as we have seen him, look along his acres turning then toward the harvest. shading his eyes against the golden bril- liance oi them, so we ifsncy I" recent days he would look out in regard that place “beyond Jordan" and stepping quietly, turn to walk steadfastly there.‘ And. dsy by day, in genliing wind and brilliant sunlight and quiet shower, the “Real Spring" of Edna Jacques‘ verses is hero. "Real spring has come, not shifty windy rain, But vliolsts growing down a quiet s s. ll Not sudden gusts oi cold from off . the sea. But quivering wind in every bud- ding ' Real spring with dlyl iiite 1W!!! set apart, And all its age-old hunger in your heart, _ An aching need for sun against your face, And sii the old sweet freedom of the race.‘ Real spring, with ail the fragrant l lovely earth. Puising with gracious iife and doy an rth, A quickening in the hidden heart of things, Across the starry dark. the best of wlnelf . _ . Until Monday - ~ - - ~ ' GODS-night. e e e . ssawst-b. mice-opium. los- isnd -- (OP) -- Fred Orswcock celebrated his 00th birthday by _ 8 pslatssa Nlltllil ‘ill Still! The Genital Guardian This column is reserved of local lntsrmt, but sdvsrlsilg st nature may lnssrbd ID! snewsy atiivs csataaworts abisinadvancs. I . CIAIWSIL for Photographs. Jill’! TAXI» fifis ll. cnazmnna aaos. m» all m. wood requirements. urns. cums serene pa! to- day. . 0o nlinnanou Lin: m- s 0n. JIOWABD MacINNil Fitted Footwear st lib Queen Street. nmnrs to st. Pierre, auque ion. For information caii Maritime Central Airways Limited at 3061. IABMIIS, sow your wheat, sow your wheat, sow our wheat, Bedaque Flour Mills w grind it. onnsaiu. mac's-arc Kettles Qamns-euso. Toombs Music IA!‘ HOLMANB-Rittenhouso door chimes now available at both stores of R. T. Holman Ltd. I MRS. JOHNSTONS LADIES WEAR. Coals, Suits, Special Sale Rack. Real Bargains. CITY MARKETH-Tuesday, May 24th, being a public holiday, the City Market will be open on Mon- day, May 23rd. STILL A FEW floor sample Chesterfield Suites at 25% off. We must make space for the new ears. Get that new suite now at R31‘. Holman Ltd, Summerside or Charlottetown. CORNWALL PASTORAL CHARGE-Service May 22nd. Kingston ii A. M. Church School l0 A. M. New Dominion 3 P. M. Church School 2.30. Cornwall 7.30 P. M. Church School 1i A. M. Rev. M. K. Char-man, Ministrr. CITY POLICE COURT — At the Stipendiary Magistrate's Court yes- terday. the only case to appear before Magistrate K. M. Martin was that of o. woman charged with being drunk and incapable who was . maded until May 31th. nNhAosMeNrF-Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Walsh, Mount ‘Ikyon, P. E. I. wish to announce the engagement of their eldest daughter Myrtle Mae to Melvin Gordon Weddell, son of M3‘. Wilbur and the late Mre._ Weddell of Mount ‘rryon. Marti-sic to take place in the near future. P. E. I. CHAMPIONSHIP SHEET SHOOT. 9.00 A. M. May 24th. 5829f. Field, Rifle Range. Open to all P. E. I. gunners. 12 gauge shells provided. Nominal charge for entrance and ammunition. Gunners to be classified. Prizes awarded. Further information from Club Mtgmbcrs. Come and have fun, May 3t . FUNERAL HELD - The fun- eral of the late Ohristins M. Mac- Leod was held on Tuesday alter- noon, May 17th. A she-rt. service from the home of Mr. Neil R. MscLeod, followed by a service in Hartsvllle Presbyterian Church. The services were omiductcd by Rev. Donald Ni ‘- ‘ , assisted by Rev, Howard Christie. The psil- bearcrs were Messrs John A. Mac- ‘innis, James MacDonald, George Nesbit, Daniel Mecuod, Cortland Msclaood and George Manhood. Interment in Huts-ville Cemetery. A FINE PORTBAITr-Thc por- trait executed in oils by Mr. Jack Taylor is a likeness of the late Mrs. George Burr Reed. Pittsburgh, Pa. Mrs. Heed, formerly Miss Beatrice M. Mscleod. R. N.. of Hunter River and Chs ottetown wrhere she trained s/t the P. 1i. I. Hospital. passed away in August 19H. It should be noted how Mr. Taylor has brought out the very fair coloring or the subject by the subtle use oi dark oils and by creating the ii- iusion of light emanating fran the background cf the canvas. This particular work of Mr. Taylor's. who is also a former native of Charlottetown. is judged an out- standing ethibit st the current Aft Show in the Harrie Memorial Gal- lery and is the property of Mrs. Reed's sister, Mrs. M. W. Weeks who commissioned Mr. Taylor to do a composite portrait from a few smell snapshots. The likeness achieved with so little subject mat- erial svsiisbie enhances the gen- ergl effectiveness of the portrait. CARD OF THANKS The family of the late ' Angus Cameron wish to thank their friends and neighbours many acts of kindness durinl the illness and death of their father. Also to the Doctor attending and and those who sent flowers and messages of sympathy. m MEMCRIAM met-m lovins osemo oi dear Mother and Grssuinelrlsysr. ‘Mar! Meek, who left m May It. Not for what she reeeivsd Dist for what she could live. MlIedb Iiles Gardy and “allies lriehyillosstral-Qss. m MEMPIIIAM laiovmgaseascaw of mile" Mil: Jsnsss nevus. who Literature And Life s, aooauan l0 DOIED ‘rhers are times in many lives when nothing sosnn to have mush interest, and there, may bs what Shelley qsiiedrfi ad satiety," or to use a conunon but clpresslvo phrase they seem to be “fed w" with iiis. Hamlet gives enprcssicn to this mood thus: ~ " "O all?‘ the Iwulsstins had not His canon gsinst self-slaughter! O Godi God! . How weary, stale, fist and unpro- fitabie. Bonn to me aii the uses of the wwldi" The author d the book of “Ib- oiesiastes” was as he repeated "vanity of vanities aii is vani " close upon the same feeling, as indeed were many of the Hebrew psainusts at times, as for lnstanos when one of them said, ‘There be many who ask, who will show in any good." Such utterances as these came from those who were bored with life. A London doctor said to a min- ister some time ago that this wss one of the commonest of diseases and probsibiy one of the hardest to cure. It may be induced by various causes. In mch causes must be listed the person we call the "bore" who ,taiks till we are sl- most beyomd endurance. Not that he ‘has anything reslly worth hearing, but he has the same old yarns. the same old stories and we have heard them.» often that we know how long drawn out the sgony is going w be. This then that we long for the wings of s dove to fly away! Or the feeling of wearinm may be caused by such a thing as sn uninteresting sermon. for there sre such things. Even Paul could not keep all his audience awake for we read that Eutychus fell down from the loft having fallen asleep under the apostle Pauli Dr. Alex- snder Wlvytc said that he was the father od aii such ss fail asleep under sermons. - Dr. Hutton, editor of the Brit- ish Weekly said lf a man. sleeps before I begin, the fault is his: but if after I begin. then the fault is nuns. Sidney Smith used to say the lnsfmgivable tiling about a ser- mon is that it should not be in- teresting. We have read how Sir R/odier De Ooverly used to rise in the village church and call to the sleepers to awake, or send some one to bid them stir and listen. What is the ours for this feel- ing or is there any cure? There are those who have taken recourse to drink-trying to drown their gloom in that way as if it could mord any relief. Others have found the "open door" of which the Stotcs spoke suicide. Still others have followed pleasure as though she could minister to s nlind diseased. ' There is a line in the "HIWY Warrior" which is nearer the truth. “He finds satisfaction in himself and in his cause.” The secret is somewhere near there- work is sn "escape." There are many who are bored because they have nothing to do. To sit down and fold ons's lunch. and simply count the "things" that the years have brought one, to have the days pass with no record of work done which charity might esli useful-this is to cause ennui and iced one in think life really 11°! worth living. We think of those who run round in “an eddy of purpeeelefl dust,‘ life unmeaning and vsin. achieving mthihs’. and then they dis and no cue ssh who or What they have been more than he ask! about the waves that fosm for a moment and are gone. The wise itfe is busy laying up s siom of personal reserve. Ally- hq itself with the High God and so getting to feel that sii thins! work together for the good of His people. ""i‘is looking downward that makes one diary" is very W"!- ‘rhc upward look where the stars are will help immensely. To I" out among our fellow men and see their problems-often as acute as our own. and even snore so- ihst will help clear ithe cobweb: from the mind. and We mlly 60m! ieseehowvervsoedllieifii” olive. IN g MEMORIAM m iovins’ humor! oi Everett can. who passes any May list. l . sieilheiandoficngago. Amlmsnuwypamtalaescanesef alumna-smallish. Wessssetomelrlthsssitdhnilsht Afsesweiovathehest And think ofhiaswhcn the son's hst ray Gem down in the fan-off West. Lovhgly Remembered by Mother, PWII. Brothers and Sister Mae. Before the sge of modern scien- tific knowledge the great majority of men had certain idoss in com- mon. For example, recognising the obvious fact that the thins in thO world’ are governed by isms. they held that there snust be a law-giver ca‘ law-givers whom they called God or the gods." They likewise held that though man is free; he loo is abject to lav/s. They held that the moral laws governing man's beimvior were, like the physical laws governing aii things. runchangeable. They held that the only dttfcrence wss that man was free to obey or not. They held that his happiness de- Deuded on his free obedience to the moral laws. Since it was and is obvious that things are governed by laws mod- ¢m elperimentsi science has sub- stantiated the beliefs of earlier Pwbles in the uistence of such laws. Moreover modern science is adding each day to man's know- ledge of the physical laws 0f the universe. With regard to himself, h”. ever. the really modern man is not W"! so certainr-Sevcrsl "scientif- ic" positions seem possible. If one wants to be perfectly scientific sfter the manner of the physical sciences then human behavior musi- be subject to laws in exact- 1y the some wsyss other thing's. True. men seem to be free. But that is an illusion due to the fact. that science hasn't yet discover- ed sll the laws of human behav- iiappsnlnsifl The Weak (Continued from Page '2) ents and sister. Mr. and Mrs. Basil MacNeill and Carol, Elms- daie and Mr. and Mrs. Stirling lumen, Charlottetown. O O O Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Campbell, Fitzroy Street entertained friends at a mixed bridge on Wednesday xxlght. O O O Mrs. John H. Price of Quebec City is being widely entertained in Swimmer-side and other sections of Prince County. O O O Mrs. Ernest l... Walker left Sum- merside on Thursday morning for Backviiie. N. B. where she will be the guest of her son-in-law and daughter, Dr. and Mrs. J. F. Frank. who are receiving eon- Krehiiations on the birth of s daughter. Mrs. Clare Tanton and _Mrs. Clarence Harris werrbridgc hos- lessee "in Summer-side this week to their own clubs. O O O Mrs. H. T. Begg of Halifax, N. S. is the guest of her daughter, Mrs. Eric MaoKsy. and Mr. Mac- Kayin Sum-mcrside. O O O Mrs. -O. H. Stewart returned to her home in Summersidc on Wed- Bwdly Even-In! after s. delightful visit insackviiie, N. B. where she was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. A. s. cowl“ She attended an. graduation 0d her niece. Miss Sai- iy Baker of Dartmouth, N. S. from Mount Allison University. O O O Mrs. I. '1‘. Tanton, Miss Mar- tha Maciflarlane, rs. Leltoy Hol- man and Miss is. Gay, Sum- merside. will lcavedomorrow by ‘ “'e for Halifax, N. S. Lo spend the hoiiday- Mrs. i-Iohtnsn will be the guest of her son-in- IIIW and daughter, m‘. and Mrs. Edward Crease. s O O Many were in attendance at the public reception for Mrs. 1mm st. Laurent. wife of the Prime Min- ister of Canada, and their daugh- ter. Mirs. Msthieu Samson, on Monday evening at the home of Mrs. Qrecbnan MacArthur. O O O Mrs. A. S. MlcAssey will leave Summer-side tomorrow for New Glasgow. N. S. where she will be the guest of her daughter, Mrs. P. Giberson and Mr. Giberson. O O O Mrs. A. C. Saunders is visiting her dswhter, Mrs. Harold n. Schuxmsn. Summerside. O O O Mr. J. Wilfred Lcciq. Mrs. Lec- ky and dsug-hter Catherine left this morning fm- woifviile, N. B. to attend the graduation exercises at Acadia University when their son Claude will receive his B. A. dqree. O O O Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Dred- shaw, Summerside, have had as their welcome guest this week. Rev. John Jarvis ohsaokviile. N. B. MASON GIIIITRIIGTIIRO BRICK WORK PLASTEIIING CEMENT BLOCKS GLAZED TILE .I. WILSON I24 Kent St. - Phone 1148-L Thoughts For Our Time ‘ ly I-Iis Eminence Cerdinol McGuigos i loopvrisht) m} moo-u t,‘ liar saw. I ‘A _ ; ‘I TEAS ice. A few nlodsd before science can ,_ Dominion elections with the same certainty as so eel-libs of the yesrsmorevriiibs n. is iibiect to isivs and because he is subject he is not fr”. . But the majority of msa ass not that scientific. And so tires in hslisvs that men are free. But it they an fro; how can they be subject to iawsi And there seem to be bwo modern "scientific" answers to that ques- tion. The first is i0 declare that ti man is free, as indeed in is, he must bammhteiy free. But as long as men ‘exists he seams to be subject to laws. To achieve his freedom, therefore. he must sub- ordinate his very existence to his freedom. Kirolaov, sessod of Dostoevsky realised this and, to prove his freedom to him- self. committed suicide. Because man is free he is not subject to law. But as long as he exists he is subject. Therefore he must -try iecesaetoexistinordertobe truly free. But once again the majority of men are not quite that scientific. And so they lfllBC try to find s compromise position between the; of law and no freedom and no isw. Must Lhey return to the for- meriy-hold position of an un- chanrgesble moral law that man must freely obey if he is to be happy? How utterly "unscientific"! Physical laws are indeed un- changcabie. But that is because merely physical things are not free. But man is free and there- fore the moral law changes! How docs the scientist discover physical laws? He observes how things sot. How will we ddscover the moral laws proper to a psr- ticular age? Simply by observing how men act. There is no question of how men ought to sob-such a question is "unscientific"! The only question is how do men act‘! Primitive men had their moral codes: medloevsi Christian men had his. But tunes have changed. The moral laws of medisevsi Christians are no longer valid io- dsy. Do you doubt it? Rad the Kinsey report. Earlier Christians thought that the God Who per- mitted His Son to die on the Cross. also thought-that He par- mitled men to suiifn- for their own good, whether by the mach- inations of pcrsecutors or by in- curalble diseases. Such a God is too cruel for modern tastes. And so s modern "scientific" solution of the dilemma of frec- dom without law or law without freedom will appeal m the ex- pedlent of s changing moral law. But it is only an apparent solu- tion and as vain as an attempt to keep one’: cake and eat- it. For it because man is free the moral law changes, then the very notion of isw is meaningless. The position ccmcu-ning the un- chsngeebieness of the natural znorai law is perhaps not so un- scientific after all. But some men have confused the existence of the moral law with man's know- ledge of it, Holding that the law itself is unchangoaible they were inclined to believe that men's knowledge of it was likewise un- chsngeabie and that therefore aii men's knowledge of the lsw should be the same. When confronted by the fact that men have actually formulated varying moral codes. too many especially in our own day, have Jumped to the "scien- tific" conclusion that the law it- self changes. The fact that men have formulated varying moral coda proves only that -the know- ledge men have of the natural moral law has passed thmilh more diverse forms and stages than some man. even philosophers and theologians. have believed. The knowledge which men have of it is doubtless still imperfect and will continue to develop as long as humanity exists. For those who accept the Chris- tian Revelation, God Himself helps them in their knowledge of the moral low. ‘But the natural moral law will appear in ail its perfection only when the Gospel has penetrated to the very depths of human substance. . . . makes meals and vegetables so iosiy A pure eslaup, like Ayimer, is wholesome noting for the children Aylmm ,. . . from Canada's dnsst, rad-rips tomatoes. Children love its "true tomato flavor" and need Vitamin C. 1s I moon. Man. like everything else,- in 'iiize,Pos-, LARGE Rl-NSO Rsd Rips i... 1.00 3 plugs. TOMATOES —_- Li». Ifihc-“ffi z n». 1.1 9W»?! s... .. 39c $535.15.." -1-2 a. Lettuce, Cuties, Celery, Carrots, Spinach, etc. In stock Lorgs Firm . HEAD LETTUOE — iociu. 23c ........=.,__,..,,,.,..,,,,, 181 Gt. George St. Mt. ldwsrd Road Store flours I AM. to Cash fi Carry Stores We Deliver 0.0.1:! i lit. Edward lisights Market PHONE 7C1 PHONE 1191-1 r I P-M. Every Day. Secrets 0f A Fingerprint Sleuth By Chief Inspector Sydney B. Birch, late of Scotland Yard. A YELLOW HANDBAG UPSET THE ZEBFECT MURDER A shivering black and brown mongrel puppy crouched behind bushes one night two years ago at Kingsdown, near the London-Msid- stone road. Between his forepaws was a lit- tle satchel of documents. The burly man who came flashing his lamp into the undergrowth wanted those documents. He wanted them so badly he had just killed a woman for. them. The puppy's scared, amber eyes glowed for an instant, reflecting the torchiight. The man grunted in triumph, grabbed-Abe puppy fled. The man iumbered in pur- suit, caught the anlmai, and a few seconds later it lay dead. The man wiped his boot on, the grass, flashed his torch up and down - - - but could not find the satchel. I He' went back to the body of the woman he had strangled. There was a bundle of tattered papers in her yellow crocheted handbag.“ He thrust it into his raincoat pocket. Next morning a lorry driver, grinding in low gear down Wrotham Hill, saw a woman's leg sticking out from behind a bush on Labour-in- Vainliili. All this happened 6n the night and morning of October 31, 1946. There wss no motive that the pcliZe could at first find, and no clue. _ ' ' Yet it was from this actual ab- sence oi clues, the void of some- thing that shouid have been there but disturbingly was not, that Scot» land Yardwcsvcd a noose. To take you really behind the scenes, and show you how Scot- land Yard did this, just for a mo- ment try to imagine you were the man who murdered this woman. Study then with whet patience the net Is spread for you, and how in- tricste are its meshes. You must imagine you are known to the underworld of Lon- don as “The Bashcr.” You have thick wrists and scarred knuckles. You have 16 convictions, some for thieving, but mostly for brutal as- sauit. Your job is to drive a four-ton lorry between Cambridge and Lon- don for a perfectly reputable firm. Bu: besides that you keep a dil- honesc ear cocked for any talk of lorry loads that your underworld friends might profitably "knock off." The black-market boss, who has brains and knows all the “righl" people, is troubled about a woman‘ called Dagmar Peters, who lives at Kingsdown in a sort of hermit’: hut that cost only £8 to build. 1r. is 8 ft. by 6 it., and 7 ft. high. Just about the size of s. tail tool-shed‘. But it doesn't matter to you. Basher, what sort of a house she lives in. The Boss wants you to go and take a certain diary off her. give her a bit of a beating up, and lei] her to mind her own business in future. For this lonely old woman, a 48- year-old pensioned telephone oper- ator, has been keeping a romantic diary of talk and movements among the lorry drivers who eat at the roadside cafes where she often goes for meals. Some of the stuff in the lonely woman's lcribbllng book is dyna- mite to the Boss. g You Think You're Smart, Eh? So you meet the hermit woman on the road from the transport cafe and give her a lift home. Her dog runs out to greet her. You kick it. Then you demand the diary. She runs to the hut. You grasp her, she struggles-and you have choked her with a jerk of her scarf. The dog, frightened, darts off into the night with some. sort of satchel in his mouth. You chase it, kill it, but cannot find what it' was carrying. Anyway, it probably doesn't matter. There are some ps- pcrs in the woman's handbag. Well, there you are, Bssher.’ You're supposed to be smart. Whai now‘! _ v First, you remove the body to s" remoter place. The dog? Leave ii —it doesn't matter. , ’ ‘ ' Dump her from your lorry, three or four miles up the main road. The yellow knotted string hand- bag. - - - Of course, you will gel rid of that as far as possible from the murder scene. Deliver your load of bricks at the factory 10 or 12 miles distant. Then put a stone in the handbag and drop it in the- miilstream. v Now, try to think: Did you leave . anything behind? Did anybody. see you‘! There is no link between you and this woman. No appar- ent motive. Fingerprints — oh. yes, you wiped your lorry door, its handle, the window, the dashboard top - - - wherever her fingers mighi ' (Continued on Page 9) Misses’ Sizes 12 to 20 A large assortment oi:- Shantungs Striped Silks Bahama Cloth Eyelet Ginghasas Chambrays so American Cotton! and Etc. TEEN FIGURES 150 Queen St. A DRESS TO FLATTER t“ Children's DRESSES A Big Selection of NEW SUMMER PRINTS and GINGHAMS Sizes 2 - 14x $2.95 to $9.95 A RACK 0F LAST SEASONS COTTONS REDUCED T0 CLEAR AT BARGAIN PRICES IIIILMES AIIII BRADLEY ..r~_r .'.z'..' Phone 92