The SUM ,Ti LE ‘WESTERN GUARDLAN >_\ t coma-run. John summons Y Pond.“ [DI Water Street Int-Plum; up ""3 PRINCE COUNT!’ mm. Subscriptions. Adveflhing m,“ b. l,“ ‘m, n“ h“ muirdian may he bought daily at lily of the louowln, store; in IumIIIBISIITQI Bell Bookstore. Walru- St. Toronto Blkefl- It'll?!’ 3L Tlle_Glll-l'd|ln will be deliver: carrier Boy at 2e W!‘ Ill! marlin Dmelwro. Water 8t. "l"! Gander. in Granville st ll $0 In! home in Sllmmeralde I,» °' 1°“ n" week Phone m m ulu eervioe q ‘m, your order to the boy responsible for deliveries on your route, _____ "fills column la reserved for new; 0| lucill interest but advertising 0| a uewsy nature may be linen- cu at Z cents a word strictly pay- able in advance. ._L.»lltG1-3 BOTTLE COD LIVER oil. out‘ at ‘layior urug Co, Keil- sluelull. -' LlllL-lttl-TS oiicake meal ls low in M, ‘lllgn ill prutclil. Feed with mm- grutvn grains. L-lul-itl-b-Zl. surfaced and plain roll oolnpleto with .tiiii rtlllellt, solo iii. hracek». L-107-i0-o-z1. Llllhllluxs oi slllaii oysters will bl‘ illllrl ll not picked and replant- cu lll ut- ,> trailer. buy shovels. forks by, at Liltitcb. L-ltii-lll-o-Zl. _l£.\'l'i-1It'l‘.~\iNl:JU FOR RED U135 lie ell Machweil ell- i ior two tubes 0t Bridge ' 0\'L‘iiiil,,' at the home of Mr. and fvlrs. Arthur .\l.l u... l. a. llliiiOléluC, Reiresll- ll;_;ll., vlclc served at the close cf ylllv. -BlllDAl. rWER. - A pretty llllciiQilliltliilLs shower was tendered ti All.» Uorotilv l-wiioflilfi 01 lllnltils brltlis, when irlcilus gather- “, a, mu llJlllll or hcr parents. ivlr. ul. Ilila. .l;l.lll w. Hoitg, Wllnlot ' .o do her honor, The house utkllllllflliy decorated Witil flowers and lounge. ‘The 5m. honor was cove-led with gulp-mil have; illlu made a cillrzll- tr; llltksrsulld tor tllc orioc-to-be. fill. ~.l.ll.ull Wilugll played tile uvu. iIiLl liLiiCIi us tile bride entered ilit- lctiil \\illl Miss nit-Lillie maul"- llitili. llle lilulc cil willcll the pre- !.il..s . strewiliirs lll pink ulid wnile Coming irolll itli‘ cllillltiehcr to the four cor- u; tile lithic. Assisting with the in. llzl Crozler, tllc Misses A\lii.§_ \Vlii-.i uzu-cly. Helen . LLllklll Soot-y, licicn Forces. . . .lri-.s urcwltl. and Mrs. Hor- a“. mil-n» After the brlde-to-be ilwtl exp cd her tilan-ks lil her > ‘ izlllpy lllllnncr, reiresilmenis ti\t'(l allu the remainder iii \i'lliil:_' spent ill social chat and a _.lllg-. oil-z. 5 Personals c. v-s John C. Gallant is vlsltlilg ~-Y\ s. m A <3. .5 NCFCUll Johnson, of Tia- iiirll. u. » it recent. visitor to Sulllé iillifilklt}. __,_._ -\rt-. iclrl Hickey, lllspecwi of C:ttl.l Ullltllis. was ll vlsiloi‘ Wbunz- nlt-rswis lust week, 5 S . Harry" BlSIICD and MYS- B;.¥:l ,l nit,‘ hpflidlllfl lilcii‘ llolldtrs lll bliiililltjlbltlL‘. ~ .\l;. l-‘rallk Doye, of Monctoil. 1\ . ;. return. visitor to Sliilillltf- slur, S WRIT. Aieialloel" MuoKBS’. 5°“ 9i iilr. illld Airs. Sterling A. MacKay, 0i sullllllcrsltic, has joined the Pa b- Isuliti ltlgihallocrs, and lefl. on I'll’ cal" tcr riulnax. Ml". Mooney 19m‘; v.1 up its it private. althougll he no Llillil all uiilcers trillnlllg coulseiat lticulli .-\ lsUll Uiilvfifsity. Mr. Muc- klll- t, ulte of those young i119" Wh° i, wuxhus to serve his KIDS “Fm Coullzljv, and ills action in oinlng the rtluks riltilcr than wait a vfllg ColllillCllv KEIiLY-COWER WEDDING pretty wedding was soi- ellluizcd at St. Patrick Church. Fort Augustus, 0n Aullli-Si 6m- llilen Rita Kelly. daughter of Mr- mld iilrs. Patrick Kelly of Plsiiuid was iliillffl in marriage to Em- zlltt Jullu Power, son of M11 5nd Mr» Ji).'\(']]li F. Power, Mt. R150"- Thc (‘.‘i‘l‘lli0lly was performed by Rev, I".\lll‘.‘i' Louis Callaghan, cou- sin oi the groom. As lll.» bridal party proceeded up the -l>.'l~ie~ iho wedding march was lliilyrd by Mrs. John’ J. M0- Cillllil,‘ uurl during the M1155 illllllls were rendered by Mr. John .1. lilvCilrtlrv, Mr. Leo weatherbic. Miss Dorothy Wratherbie. and Miss Lima Wcatherble. The brldc, who was given in marriage by her father, was gown- cti ill h .0 crepe with matching acrcsstlrics. She was assisted by her sister. Mist Ruth Kelly, who wore a be- "miilz dress of rust crepe with matching accessories. Mr. Joseilii Gerald Power, brother of the iliiiiinl was host. mall. Aftcr the ‘Wilding. the bridal party. RB)’- f-‘ntilcr Louis Callaghan, relatives anti frir-lltls motored to the home of thc bride's parents. wherv brrrlkfast was served, after which iilf‘ bridal party left by motor on i‘ iwivxvnloon trip to the Maritime Pl‘fl\'ln(3'_\5_ (‘m their return on August 8th. i0 the home of the groom's par- “iiii fiilllhvr was served to the ‘Wifli warty. my. Louis Callaghan. l-"liltlves and friends. after which iiit‘ remainder of the evening was Dlcnsnllilv spent. in music. dancing all“ fiiigiilq until the "wce sma‘ Hours when all departed for Mifir homes after wishing Mr. and ilf‘. POW"? mam. happy davL wholizikllylli reside in Mt. Ryan Young llar-Inslowcr is a prosperous ‘Fortunes AT KENSINGTON n1‘. R. D. MncNeiiFs resid- "icfl- All modern conveni- :"°°5- Olwn for inspection iii‘ afternoon this week. A very “.10 ilrrilllgcd had dainty" " —l-‘rlvan.-Fcl- failing m mp M. i" a 081' accident. a. motorist w fined $10 and costs or 15 days l}; MMILWBW Dflfby and an additional $5 for operating his car with insuf- ficient brakes. He took the clays. s —IRISHTOWN dance Tuesday; if wet. Wednesday night. Heated accommodations. Come, it won't be long now. 1,151 —RECIZIVES IIANDSOMI PRICE FOB. FOXES-Mr. Harry Silllphfint has just sold seven male PiIPS sired from a prize (white- liaiied) Diatinum male fox which 11B purchased last fall for a coll. rrderable sum. Tile price received o‘ iiie DuPs was highly satisfac- tory to Mr. Sllliphant and he is “m! m“ mime? can still be made Ilti ltihe fox business. if the rancher su ies the industry and keeps abreast of the times-S. —JOINS F0ltcE5._ oABl-ien, Mr‘ P ‘m9 Wmliany at Summer-side and his brother Mr. Lloyd 9131-10,, °i Aiberifln. a well known horse- glgn of that district have joined weekMtiilfl-stys forces and left m5; Nova s0 join their regiment in Wm wlsctfhtxerfiheltii‘ ma"?! friends mck__s_ 9 VCFY best of Claude —SAYS NEW ENGLAND “WAR. gllggiug- Dr. s. '1". Colvin of “rem ers e returned on Saturday 11B from Boston where be was attending the north east con. gress of ophthalmologists which was held in Boston last ‘week. Dr. Coi- vin said that the New England p09. '91" B"? Very “war minded" and the different lectures at the ccngyegs ‘limit in t large measure with the various phases of rye trouble that would result from the wars, _s, Expect Important Announcement 0n Seaway Project OTTAWA. oche --(AP) -—Im- portant government announcements having to do with St. Lalvre-llte Riv- er power development, appoint- mcntsnmd a. pohcyd-cslguco to ails-c the wartime ilouslllg siloringe in certain localities are looked for dur- ing the coming week. A government spokesman told Tile Canadian Press Saturday that. the Canadian and United States government on St. Lawrence Riv- ers power developments are expect- ed to reach the stage in a hatter of days where an oiilclai announce- ment can be made. It probably will be forthcoming late in the week. The belief has been expressed here that the objective is that Canada and the United States de- velop jointly the water-power" rc- sources ln the International rop- lds section of the St. Lawrence riv- er near Cornwall, Oilt.. and to per- mit certain diversions of water lll- to fake Superior from the Long Lac and Ogoki River watershed in Q, northwestern Ontario. Meantime the llovemment, is working on suggested measures for relieving the shortage of living accceilmodation created by colleen- tratiorls of population in certain areas by establishment of huge war industries. The understanding here was that one proposal considered ls the pro- vlding of low-cost hotlsing ln the form of pre-fabricaied dwellings built on a mass production basis and to be sold on easy terms. Any appointments announced might include new senators for tilrce vacancies in the upper cham- bcr. KZNKORA SCHOOL The following is i!.e Honor Roll of Kinkora School for September. Grade X Senior: --1. Noreen Smith. 2. Ivan Farmer. 3. Annie McCarvilie. Grade X Junion-i. Haul Brennan. 2. Frances Sullivan. l. Russel Smith. Grade Ilft-i. Catherine Farmer. 2. Kathleen Keefe. 3. J. D. McCar- ville. Grade VIII:—1. George Deighan. 2. Eugene Sullivan. Grade VII:——l. Leonora MacDon- aid. 2. Patricia Johnston and E1- Galiaht. 3. Katherine Morris. Leo Corr. S. Amos Sullivan. Grade IV:-l. Phyllis Farmer. 2. Ezekiel Roberts. 3. Noreen Shrecn- an. Grade Illz- 1. Roy Johnston. 2 Albert Richards. S. Earl Corr. Grime Iii-l. Wanda Grcenan. 2. Arnold Farmer. 3. ReBi-i Du“?- Grade 11-1. James Fanner. i. Adglgide Duffy. 3. Regina Roberts. Minnie PHD"! The following muslct pupils have 80 r cen . mIdexgiIlrcrinepeMorrls. 2. Elaine Roberts. a. Marion Wright. t. Kath- erine Farmer. 5. Marjorie Roberts. a, Bernadette Farmer. 7. Frances 14-660-1-6 pgnner. 8. Simeon Farmer. dlscusions being carried on ihtlveelie fm- thpnq‘ ‘w, l.00ll 0llT F0ll Yflllll LIVER It me bathe cause of YCIII troubles luck t uptheRlIiiTIey-Ieel pend Jourliveriallnetrgnstecyenhnyeubex 1W7 I'm!"- Nil‘ bile to tligut food, gels rid of ‘mu, applies new , allow: proper muuhmcvll to rneb When your liver get: oil of order I: ’ in your ’ " You be- come conch‘ ted, ltomach mil kidney: can’! work You feel “rottarP-boadcclly, bachchy, dizzy, dragged oil all the time. For over 35 yeen lhouundn have won prompt relief from lhele wineries-with Fruit-a-tivec. So can you now. Try Fruil-c-livee-youfl be cimpiy delighted ltovv ‘ill you'll Ieel like a new pfllon, happy an we again. 25c, 50c. Flllllf-A-TIVE corral": ll. S. Will Call Naval Reserves WASHINGTON, Oct. 6—(CP)—— The United States navy, beiu! swelled almost weotly by new ships coming from the ways, will be brought up to the necessary strength in manpower through the calling out of-rescrves. The Navy Secretary, Knox, issued an order that will placo 27,591 Frank Saturday navy and of the staff 0f the tele- nllarine reservists in uniform and increase to 230.281 the number of I officers and mcn on active duty. Tile order applied to the entire organizcd naval and marine corps reserves. It was described as in line with the policy under which recently the National Guard was summoned for a year's duty. Knox issued the order after alarming the Rome-Beriill-Tokyo alliance Saturday in a speech that. “if a fight is forced upon us we shall be ready." A navy spokesman said the call for the reserves was necessary be- cause the fleet-construction pro- gram is five weeks to six months ails-ad of schedule. Silortly before he issued his order, Knox said that the Japa- nese-Gcrnlan-Itaiian alliance "is directed at us," and that the Uni- led States will not be intimidated. His remarks were interpreted as a TPDiy by the United States Gov- emmeiii i0 Friday's assertion by Prince Konoyc, Japanese Premier, that ally challenge of the 5x13 would tumble the United stages into a “fight to o finish." “We arc the largest obstacle in the hath of the totillitarlan powers," Knox said. "Should Great, arltuin fail to stem the tide of ever-ad. filming tyranny. we shall find ourselves surrounded of these in- ternational hrigands. whose great. "Si \'iC‘0l‘y would be the destruc- ilon of the United States, Never understanding us, they 510119058 our people can be brought under their ii‘Oll rule. Both p5 an American and as an official of the "TWY I know differently. If a fight is forced upon lls we shall be readv war yet." SCHOOL The following‘ is the standing for the month of September. Grade Xz-l. Margaret Cummings. Grade iXr-l. ‘Vfabl C l . 2. Phyllis Woodsfdc. BlgfimltiIlagtis- Donald. Grade VTTI:- Jean Bernard. Grade VII:— Helen Hagan. Grade VI:— l. Gertrude Mac- Donald. 2. Myrtle MacLeod. 3. Ger- ald Cousins. Grndc IV:-i. Myron Mathcson. l2. Norma Matheson. 3. Donnie Bar- ow Grade III'—-l. Shirley Cousins. 2. Shirley Bernard. 3. Myrtle Gams- ter Grade Ifr-l. Basil MacDonald. 2. Homer Chappsll. 3. Leo McGulg- n. Grade I Ar- Eleanor and Jur- retta li.'lurr:ly' (equal). Grade I BI—EIPXI.I1OI‘ and Audrcy Todd (equal) Perfect Att"llrimlcet—- Blair Mac- Donald, Phyllis Woodside. Vera MacKcnzic. Gertrude MacDonald. Basil MacDonald. Highest. Average --Mabel minus —02.5 pcr cent. Lillian Marlmcd. Teacher. Cousins Cum- have never- lost a- Lutherans Meet In Convention DE MOINES. 1a.. Oct. c._-<A.i= __ DC-ieiflles to the first. of three lntiy. natlonal conventions of the united Lumera-n Church in America. m; night beard a. plea. that their church 83111116 Dart of the burden of sup- Dflruni nusslorls relinquished by war-torn hurope. this question. church officials qe. 01BX60. is one of four vitally 11119011,- BM 1851165 which will collie before the Lutherans in the first. interim. tionai conventions they have ever held west of the Misslssipphmver. Dr. Conrad Hoffman. Jly, o1 new YOTK. N.l-i.. wld the seventh Con- Bress of the Women's Missionary So- ciety here that Lutherans must ‘get back to the new challenge to world enterprise because ‘the _Lutheran church, both in mission fields and iliievtlds of influence. has been hardest H8 pointed out the preponderance of Lutheran membership in Holland, the Netherlands, Germany and Eng- land, where war has forced virtual abandonment of outside missionary endeavor. The church is seeking to raise $500,000 outside its. regular budget for the support. of missions. A fund of $225,000 was raised for tllls pur- pose last spring, but church spokes- men sav it will be cxiluusied Nov. i. Tile seventh congress of the wo- men's group, which ended mdav is preparatory to the iltll wnvention 0f the same organization, Monday through Wednesday. Another Lutheran group, t-hc brotherhood, is luceiing lll Omaha. Neb. simultaneously, while the larg- est gathering, tllc 12th biennial coll- vention of the United Lutheran Church in America, convenes there Wednesday for a week's session. Other inlportailt church matters scheduled for discussion include: i. The question of union with the American Lutheran church with headquarters in COJIIIIDUS, 0_..wil_icil meets in convention at DEtYOIt, Mich. next Friday. . The question of “church and state“ particularly rinatlng to prob- lems of "conscientious Obleotfifs’ war-dictator governments and the Cl1lll'Cl‘l'S part m national defence and preparedness. 3 The social problems of‘ home missions and questions of soolalieg- lslation as they affect these mis- sions. _ Dr. Hoffman, who is director of the international missionary _ coun-l oil's committee on the Christian ap- proach to the Jew, declared that yearly support of all Protlestantmis- sions cost $39,000,000. f this, he said. continental Ell-v rope and Scandinavia COIltl‘lbill2(_‘('i= about 34.000000 and Great Britain $10,500,000, the remainder, or flpollt 01) ncr cent. coming froln America. 3 Island Students Registered At Macdonald College -_in our boat. Of that. number, six Business Man Tells Ordeal In Drifting Boat Only ShFSE-vive from 31 in Tossing Life Boat .After Liner is Torpedoed. AN EAST COAST CANADIAN PORT, Oct. 6—(C‘P)—'I'i*lirty-one persons tumbled into the lifeboat as the torpedoed child refugee liner City of Benarcs started her plunge to the bottom in a wild Atlantic storm. SiX Survived the night that seemed “as long as i0 lifetimes" to W. B. Forsythe. Tor- onto buslneso man. The suffering and death in the exposed lifeboat-and the heroism of its occuparits-lvere pictured by Mr. Forsythc as he reached here Saturday aboard another British liner. He told of women and child- ren slipping quietly lnto death after hours of uncomplalning tor- ture. of courageous rescues, of sea burial after burial with an im- proviscd committal service recited from memory. He told the whole story briefly in these words: "'I'here were 3i survived. The water was icy cold. The boat was swamped, and we were sitting in water up to our armpits. We could do practically nothing for the children." “The little ones couldn't: stand the exposure. . neither could most of the adults,” Mr. Forsythe added. He was just entering his cabin on the City of Benarcs about 10 p.m. on the night of Sept. 1'i when there was a terrific explosion. "The cabin practically disintegrat- ed before my eyes," he related. Mr. Forsythe ran on deck. ‘The calm of the passengers was amaz- ing," he said. The ship's officers were truly wonderful." People were at the boats. ‘The ship remained on an even keel for a few minutes, then started dip- ping by the stern. The Toronto mun said he did not know how many of the ships compliment were killed in the ex- plosion. "Most of them seemed to MERSIDE GUARDI AND PRINCE COUNTY CHRONICLE The German bonlbartiicr, (top, left) his Italian coun fllflnlf" below him, soldiers at right symbolize the tilrer-pilrt "big stick" which Japans rri-mlcr rrlilce runllnillru A\I)Il0_\'O brandished ulhen he recently ‘hrflucnvd "i1"- Jillla". Germany and Italy are “really In display the power oi‘ lleccssiiy" itume-Bcrlin-Tokyo pool, uniting tilrcc lllost militar- AN and the exultant Nipponese sat. there without a wilirnprlxslle never complained. Her stolld cour- be at the boat stations." he said. The fierce North Atlantic storm was oilurnillg up raging seas. "Several boats were swamped after they ief; the liner," he said. Nine washed Out of Boat "One wave carried nine. persons right out of our boat when it left tlée wiltcr," Mr. Forsythe recount- c . - “We got them all back again." “The little ones. however, couldn't stand the ordeal," he said. “Every once in a willie. the tots would Figures released by the author-. ities at Maczlcnilld College follow- ing a meeting of the Faculty of Agriculture ca October} lnciicale a slightly increased regzstrtrtion lll the degree courses in Agriculture and Hcusc-hcid Science as compar- ed with last year. ‘ The number of first year students in the B.H.S., course is the larg- est on record, and a larger num- ber of Agfifllltllfé students than usual have entered the third year. having taken the f.r't two years of the course at the Nc-va ‘SCOIIB Ag- riculture College, an affiliated iri- stltutlon. Registration in the School for Teachers is approximately 50 less than last year, arid a decreased at- 3 terldance is also reported in the, one year Homemaker Course in Household Science. r ‘ students from Prince Edward Island are as follows: i Faculty of Agriculture (B. Se» Agr.) Kenneth W. Anderson. St. Peter's Bay. P.E.I., Freeman 0. Newson, Kingston, P.E.I., James C-i Two sun-s LAUNCHED 1 SHELBURNF. N.S.. Oct. 6.G(CP), _.Two shins were launched fromqthc" vard of w. c. MacKov and wiis. here Saturday. One of the shilis- H i schooner. will augment the fleet cf a Shclburrle fishing firm. while the other will be cmp oyvd on The M“ ' grave-Part Hawkcsbulw f-clri rim- Promier A. S. flint-Milton spoke, briefly 3I._I.l_‘iE_!»Ii\_lll'ii‘IlllllZrQfllgfTiqili: - nine Roberts (equal). 3. Louis Silreenan. Grade VI: —l. Marjory Roberts and Carl Smith (equal). 2. Mary - Grade V:— l. Louis Mcmaghan. 2. - Favorite joke o Ingl one about Italian eubmarinel. "I polled m! chip and shouted brotre-the-idrfuee.” The ml Comedlrll will ram these flora II W head over the side of I "Walter!" he relates. "and nix Italian submrrincs aeeuq pzturec here didnt barren quite Io , as they were being taken aboard." start» to moan. “One by one they died." Mr. Forsytile took charge of their burial. As the bodies were lowered over. tllc side of the toss- ing lifeboat, he murmured what snatches of the burial service he rrvlllri remember. "It was ilorrlbic. but that was ull we could do." he sold. "It was impossible to provldc any physical comforts - for the children. They were numbed with cold. We tried to keep four of them warm with blankets. They lived until a destroyer came to our rescue (about 20 hours after the torpedoing), but two of them died "Sometimes the seas breaking over our boat carried some oi the weaker ones away," he declared. "Sometimes we managed to get some of them back again. , .but not always." Refill“ One of First One of those who died was the Baroness Von Inrzlesiebbln. a refu. qee who had survived nine months in a German concentration camp. “She was one of the first to die." Sfliri Mr. Forsvthe. Incidents of heroism shone out. One of the bravest was a British woman doctor. who was medical supervisor of the group of refugees. thought we lladlft burn $0011. age was an illspiratioil for us all “shortly before dawn, she Dil- lowed her head in her life pre- server. We thought she had lust fallen asleep. But she was deiltl. Another hcro was Arthur Lllfl- l perls, a dlstingulsilcti man of lrt- ters. “He behaved like a hero. There was not nluch that any o1 , us could do to help the sufferings j of the little ones, hut. he did everything conccivilille to nlzlkc the ordeal loss ilorriblc." Seas rail high all _ night. “When dawn broke, we -. could see the other bouts of the Benares drifting about," Mr. For- sytlle continued. It was late that afternoon that a British destroyer" ilove ‘lll sight and picked up the Siil'\'l\'Ol‘S. “There was such ll hCflYy swell tilnt we were hidden fronl tilt.- warship until it was fairly C10“? i0 11S." Mr Forsythe said. “For a time wr- "Our hopes sank. We fired flares we got from the watertight com- partment at the bottom of the swamped boat." He said the people in the boat had difficulty reaching its food supply because of the amount of i water in it. "Callncti milk was the t main course of our dict. Someone unearthed a bottle of brnlldv, but that seemed to make us iii." Marianne And France To Visit Maritimes By Gladys Arnold Canadian Press Staff’ ‘Vritcr OfITAWA, Oct. 6 -(CP) -Irl— dimtions are that forthcomtlii: fashions of Canadian women will be considerably influenced by i\\l'fi little French dolls nolv tourirv! the "All through the awful night," ITALIAN SUBMAIIINE SURRENDERS T0 BRITISH ‘W l Clrcilt Vi .l Accepts Call To Baptish Church Rev. C. W. Cook of the Baptist Church at Kingston, N.S.. has ac- ' copied the call to the Bajltzs; Cilurt-il ilt Suillnlorsidc. Rev. Mr. Cool; is n, {.‘,l‘ii(Ill1i'(‘ 0f Acadl: Unlver and has served ill va iii the ltIctfilillic He. is o veteran of tilt» illld slrved in the air force. Ho. was a prisoner of war in (ICYlllillLY. lie I.\ expo/vii lo enter lll-w" tlullcs lil November. .~ Rev J. B. Vvilson who ‘ st wet-k ior Afitidlcion. N.- are "Marianne" permission to 'I‘llcy ti" and DOIlIilllOli. and "Fr c‘ copy Ctllifllll ii designers. As it. illlpglcns the dolls’ hats gowns were created in i938. But the tiling to remember is that one hat (iocslft maize a fashion and only one of evelgvtlling in the elv- iensivc \val';1roix\s of Marianne and France was nlildc. The dolls, presented by the ch.l- dren of Franco to Princesses Eliza- beth and Margaret, are on tour of the Dominion under the auspices j Julv. Penn Strife tilscovo clothes has been granted slandard L5 Oct,‘ and‘ C i of the Canadian National Conlmit- ; toe on rclugcvs They went on dis- play ill Montreal today. Ill the wzlrtlroilcs are to be found full and straight skirts. box and fitted coats, puffed and ahnple sleeves. large hats, small he's crownlesa hats and tricoms. Once questioned on the subjst: Paris’ dean of couturler house.- Wortll, sold “fashion can remini- the length of a skirt, whore till waistline shall ‘be and the Ica- sons mcst popular colors -- i.".i nothing can regulate creative fall v .. ‘Tilntks the reason that the rhodzl gnu-ll isunwiasllionvnlul not a fad. i of their military’ iiiiailee in vilsi‘ _ _ isiic nations on earth, resulted from "unfflilmi American opposition to Japanese policies," Japanese soy. ) .. i“ W‘ the Toronto mall declared. Si“ BETTER nouns FOR Rev. C. W. Cook BABIIIS BURN IN FALL Sceniific evx‘ llro J A ' O '£i7;'i‘ lil‘ Novln e,- llavc batt- wc. s on ‘ we u" p. those rd Coiitg The study was made by the div’.- slon of hmlnv rrrr ‘.1011. It is not. Ill t = bu‘ (Lt-z uni l ‘e: in diet. llloze inner- -r maturity. the nerv- al tlersuy" .l..r From Novclrl-ix r o" born bones rlrt- p in tilesc two nap.’ T119 practical importance of the ' is in the p058- . wiil brinz in»- s up to the bone >.-r and Nolembel. ‘biiilv i-hn’. bct: - fants or all iliCll IF Nose?) “FILLS u|>"‘ AT NIGHT Here's One Successful Way To Get Welcome Relief II voun_ NOSE ‘ves you a lot of troll hi9 B! n18i1t—_fi ls up, makes breatllin dlfiicuit, spoils slcop—]ust put a fad drops of ta-tro-nol up each nostril. ncsulrs AR: so SUTpfISiiiiZiy good be onus» l It~ll‘l')—Ii0I 1S flXpftiFrill designed to r c (listrcss in the nose and up]. mt, where trzlnsieilt conges- tion i rs free firs-ailing. linjoy the Ronni-rt Vicks Va-tro-llol brings ... tonlglltl AITSHIPS IN MEDITERRANEAN simply. but British naval units in the Mediterranean have found Ffnlilfll. shown ill lcft foreground. watch the n'l"f".'lt'h n! ~ MusaolinPo undersea fleet no problem. At LEl-"I. British warships 1 lmni-l braving the Italian crewman. After lilo itirilnus were ilrituullt surround a submarine, disabled and blown to the surface by ilcllth nhonrrl. the submarine Wits sent to tho lmltnm. charges, while lifeboat: begin rescllrlng the crew. At RIGHT, British , I l i