rue we Ii ASLTERN GUARDIAN , _-n||g column ll rellrved for IIWI d lei-ll lllienlt but ldverthlng o! "my nature may be inner-ml at . "m," l word utrietly payable in . -l-LB. CAN FIDOR. WAX 25C n Brace}, L-BBH-B-IZ-‘Zl. Jnnltlilos BOTLES. lunch u“, vacuum bottles. 50c up Taylor m; 0d,, Kensington. L 8190 JUST ARRIVED-Quantity of ’ “iyershingles. Special prices. J. w warren Co, Kensington. ' L-8824-9-10-I2-l4. .-INSTITUTE PICNIC - About twenty-five representatives of the Murray Harbor North Women's In- ' stitute visited Charlol-ietown by bus - yggtefdiy and held an enjoyable pjflllfi at the Experimental Station. JETURNED HOME-MN. Ing- ' les and her daughter, Miss Jean inglcs. who have been visiting liirs. rrrgles’ sister. Mrs. Harry Pi-idhazn, have returned to their‘ home in shediae. Mrs. Scot, who had also been visiting in Summerside, accom- panied them.—S. __GRAVEL CARS OFF TRACK- ~ rim-re gravel cars and one box cal- " rent on‘ the track as the morning "train was coming into Summerside - yesterday from the west. The ac- cider-t occurred just at the back of ~ Sinclair dz Stewart's premises and - vms caused by the flange on one of - [he wheels breakingoff. A ivreck- ping train from Charlottetown with a heavy crane arrived about ii. o'- 'clock and shortly after 3.30 the mick was clear. A train was moxie up at Summcrside to convey pas- sengers east and only a few minutes delay was caused. The noon train n-est was obliged to wait until the “track was clea.red.--S. --DIRECTORS OF FOX ASSN. MEET-Mr. L. T. Leenian. Salis- bury, N.B., President. of the Canad- Ian Notional Fox Breeders Associa- ' tion. and the following directors nt- leridcd a meeting at their head of- ." lice in Summcrside yesterday, R. G. ." “r. Pitchman .and John W. Brant of t-thc Canadian Records Office, Ot- , tliwa, Mr, Charles Freemont, K.C., Quebec. Col. G. C. Cousins, Ontario, -c. P. Barnhill, Nova. Scotia, F, P. g-Ccpp, Port Elgin, F. G. Kennedy, micharloitetoiwn, G. Eihelton Sharp, Bideiord, c. C. Baker, and Dr. LOCK- ..--flfii'l., Kensington, and George Cali- ... beck, Summerslde. The visiting di- j rectors were registered at the Queen ‘, Hotel with the exception of Mr. ' Copp who with his wife are guests ' at the Clifton Hotel. Only routine " business was discussed-S. .; ...__. —-I’OS'I‘ NUPTIAL SHOWER — Friends of Mr. and Mrs . Bruce lohnstone gathered at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clark MacQuarrle, Sumrnerside East on Tuesday even- ing to tender them l1 post nuptial sihoiver. The rooms were very faste- fuiiy decorated for the occasion. The briric were her wedding dress of blue crepe. As the young married conp‘c entered the room Mrs. John . Dobson played the Wedding Maren. z They IOOK their seals amid showers oi confetti. Assisting in opening the many lovely gifts were Miss Helen Walker. New Annan; Mrs. .ll. lnmnn, North St. Eleanors; - MES Irene Boswell, Hudson Bay; .. Miss Minnie Boswell. Miss Jean . Llewellyn. Miss Lucy Hogg. bliss Dorothy Hogg. Miss Lucy Simmons. _., Miss Virginia Palmer and Miss Lena KMacQuarrle. Mr. and Mrs. John- , sion replied in very feeling terms to I ilie many kind wishes and for the lively gifts. After a dainty lunch 1, had been served by the hostess. the _ remainder of the evening was spent ,li music. Mrs. Jack MacLeod fav- ored the company with some well- rendered solos.—S. ‘ PERSONALS '-- —Miss Barbara MacDonald of ~ NEW York is the guest of Mrs. Roy - Silliphnnt, Summerslde.—-S. ;. —Mr. Oswald Murphy, Tignish. - returned to Laval Seminary, Que- = bee after spending his vacation :- with his mother Mrs. L. J. Murphy. —Me.~.~.rs. Emmett Murphy. Theo- dore Gaudet and Ignatius Shea, Tignish, left for Brockville, Ont. to attend the Redemptorists Fath- . H's College, ' —Messra. Cyril Bernard and El- - thee Bernard. Tignish. left to take‘ ‘ 4D their studies in Prince of Wales .. College, __.,__ . —Mlss Margaret Drummie, Saint elchn, N.B.. ha: returned from » Summerside; whe.'e she has been - "Lil-ink Miss Helen Holman. ~We are glad to report Mrs. IDrJ _ Johnston of Tignish ia somewhat “Proved in health. -age by her father. —BOT DOG ROLLS-No Qrdgg foo large. Robinson's Mill and'B.ik- ery. Summerside. L-Biid -SPEOIAL front door cylinder cast brass lock sets in stock at Bruce's. L-8822-9-1Z-2i. -MISS SUE MEADOWS ic-opens classes in pianoforie on and after ‘Septembe 12th. Phone 144-4, Sum- merside. L 8835-9-l0-3i, —MR. AND MRS. W. G. SIMP- SON, Kenslngton, announces the engagement of their daughter Fills. Bell to Mr. Vaughan Harry Groom, son of Mr. a_.nd Mrs. Alfred Groom of Summerside. Marriage to take place in September. L-B874-9-i2-1i. —DE‘S!l'Ii.0YED BY FIRE - The residence of Harry Lewis, Cascuni- pec, was totally destroyed by a. fire which broke out about 3 o'clock ye.- terday afternoon. The loss which was partly covered by insurance amounted to about $1,200. Fire or- iginated from a defective flue. —PITCHER—HARDY NUPTIALS — The following clipping from a Boston paper will be of interest to Island readers. The bride's father. Mr. Henry B, Hardy, is the son of the late Robert Hardy of HllLs Riv- er, near Alberton. and is well knonm in Prince County. — Miss Roberta Belle Hardy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. Hardy of Hersey street and Donald Folsom Pitcher, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert L. Pitch- er of Main street were united in marriage on Saturday. August 3, nt the Methodist Episcopal Church. I-Iingham. The ceremony was ller- formed by the Rev. W. Ralph Ward, Jr. The bride was given in marri- Attendlng the bride was her sister, Miss Margaret Frances ‘Hardy, as maid-of-honor, and four of her classmates at When- ton College: Mis Cynthia W. Jones of Bangor, Maine; Miss Jailot Learned of Marlon. Pa; Miss El- eanor M. Palmer of Duluth. Mind, and Miss Elizabeth Schuh of West- boro, Mass. The flower girl was Miss Patricia Pitcher. small daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. John McN| Pitcher of South Bralntree. John McN. Pitcher was his brother's best man and the ushers were David O. Collins of Hingiham; Robert B. Pitcher oi.’ Cambridge, ano-‘iner brother of the groom. and two of the groom's classmates at l-Iarvlird. Robert W. Pond. Jr., of Arlington. and Harry S. Williston, Jr-. of Mar- blehead Neck. A small reception at the home of the bride followed the service. After a wedding trip i0 Canada, Mr. and Mrs. Pitcher will be at home, after Labor Day, nt 33 Summer street. l-Iaverhlll, The bride received her degree from Wheaten in 193B. Mr, Pitcher was graduated from Harvard with the Class of 1933. Ill MEMORIAM MRS. JOSEPH RICHARD There passed-Wopgacefully awav at her home, Duvaz", P. E. I.. Blanche Doiron. beloved wife of Joseph Richard in her sixty-eighth Year. The deceased had been ill about a year. having undergone an opera- tion ln the Prince County Hospital in June. On her return home she received the loving care and at- tention of her family, but all prov- ed unavailing and the end came calmly on Auilllit 37m- Durlng her illness she was visit- ed frequently by her pastor, Rev. Jean Gaudet, who administercd the last rites of the Catholic church. She leaves to mourn a faithful wife and mother her husband. her sons. Anioet in Westbrook. Me..and Frank at home: fou: daughters. Mrs. Arthur Perry. Mrs. Henry J. Peterr, Mrs. Emile Arsenault and Mrs. Joseph Pineau. all residing in Duvar. Four children pre-deoeased her. Also the following brothers and ilii-CYSZ Joseph Doirim End Mrs. A. Pzters of Berlin. N. H. and Raymond Doiron of Duvar. One 515w; Mrs, Joseph Arsenault of Berlin pie-deceased her. The funeral took place on A118- 29th and a large number of friends and relatives followed the remains to their last. resting place. Rev. Father Gaudet sang the re- quiem mass and a'so officiated at the grave. The pail beHNr-s W911" Frank Gallant. Alex. Gallant. Paul Gallant. Archie Anrcnault, Oliver Peters and Peter Dilirfm. May her soul rest in peace. Peer Sells Home IDNDON. Sept. 10—Lord Bolton announced to his tenants recently that he had told Hackwood House. Hant". which has been in his fam- ily 400 years. In 1022 he inherited an estate worth £613,000 from his father, and _ —Mr. and Mrs. Praught and lit- '_ “Q daughter, Charlottetown, were "lilllmz Mrs. Praughtb family in “than. ‘fr. LI BOWIIESS "YNBBAI. nlnlzcroll AND nun: M Prince 0o ndqiu ‘Milling-z Charge Qllllmelle and Bedeqoo PIIOIIG a-I. ., ' i . UNGL he stated that the £110,000 death duties he had to pay had "over- whe‘med hiin." Lord Bolton now lives at Bolton Hall. Yorkshire. and he said re- tl : ca‘?! ycame to the conclusion that 1t was impossible. I114 "W694 wrong. for me to keel) “P i“ houses. It would be still more im- possible for my son to do so be- cause he will have another do“ 0f death duties in DIM" (c. r. by Guardien‘! sow-in‘ Wlfll o-r-r-AWA, gdpt, ii-Plemler Abcrhnfl- of Alberta today Mio- i. IliI-ZHPTOVIDCB till the end of Oct- ober. Thereaftflii. ultmnzadfif- f w . negotiations “amen” h hmhmlll lotion and SIIIIIIII “QM at "I moron lulu f 111L111. ,,________.__- l ABEBHART sscuitrs now-M 1.01m mud "m, the Domlnron Qoyq-n- f impair her continued r a loan of 03350-000 m "T" i lfiwepped" for their value in wooLi 400 Yeifoia Turks Head Inn Is Condemned LONDON. Sept. ll-The lighter- men of Wapplng have a Grievance, writes the Morning Post. Their complaint, voiced in lang- uage of imaginative ripeness and vigor, is that several of their fav- orite public houses in London's dockiand are threatened with com- pulsory closure on the score of re- dundancy. The Grievance arose when the licensing authorities in the Tower Hill division. decred that '1"l licens- ed premises in this area must go. Two of these, the British Queen and the Victory, were actually in the same street-Whitehorse-lane Step- ney. But the crowning blow was the condemning of the 400-year-old Turk's Head, on the Wapping war. erfront. This inn, a haunt of Cap- tain Pryde and his pirate associates. is dwarfed by the warehouses on either side, but its timbers are stoutiy built. While retaining the atmosphere’of a saloon in which sea-dogs were wont to brandish their cutlasses and roar for noggins of rum, the place shows no signs of dilapidation. Captain Love, the landlord, is at a loss to understand the motives of the licensing justices in number- ing the days of this historic tavern. The river bank is not overstocked with inns, let alone a landmark such as the Turks Head, which ex- isted. centuries back, for the prim- ary purpose of selling quarts of ale tg hapless pirates on their last journey to Execution Dock, hard y. "It is not my own position that matters a scrap," he said recently. "There is, of course, the matter of compensation. But the lightermen and dock laborers who work on the ships and warehouses in the dis- trict have always regarded the place as a second home, To say that they feel strongly about it; being pulled down is-well, to put it mildly." The justices‘ verdict was given in April. Captain Love appealed for the retention of his licence, but. less than a month ago, the original decision was confirmed. The Turk's Head today is branded as “redund- ant." Not one drop of beer may be sold in its bar after June, 1936. Then it will probably be demolished to make room for a warehouse. Imperial Airways _Seek New ‘Croydon’ CROYDON, Sept. li—lmperial Airways are searching for a site for a great new airport to accommodate their rapidly-expanding services. Croydon has reached the limit of its capacity for air- traffic. and the company are contemplating an en- tlrely separate base for flying boats for the Empire routes and the pro- posed Atlantic service. No fewer than 26 sites have been under con- sideration. nearly all on the South Coast. including Southampton Wa- iter and Chichester Harbor. but a lfinal decision has not yet been reached. An official of Imperial Airways stated that. the Croydon Airport, which belonged to the Air Ministry. was becoming more and more con- gested. and it was increasingly ob- vious that the company would soon have to find a home of their own. Every site on the South Coast which appeared suitable for a new airport, was being considered, but the company would be glad to ex- amine any other scheme which ap- peared likcly to meet their require- menis. The Air Ministry, nounoement, said: "No decision has yet been taken as to the base of operations fir." flying boats operating from this country over the Empire air routes. The matter is under active consid- eration, but it is quite impractic- able to make any statement at the rpesent time. " in an an- 250.000 ARI HELPING T0 COM- PLETE THE QUEEN MARY Nearly a quarter of a million people in Britain are helping, directly of indirectly. to fit out the great Cunard-White Star liner Queen Mai-y This statement was made in Glasgow recently by Lord Inver- ciyde. when he formally opened an exhibition of a model of the liner. Lord Inverclyde indicated that the Queen Ma ‘s size was not dic- tated by an ef ort to surpass that of any other ship “Owing to the amazing develop- ments in naval architecture and marine engineering it has been found possible." he paid, "for two vessels of sufficient speed and sire to maintain a regular weekly aer- "ioe between Southempton, Cher- bourg and New York. "The Queen Mary and hei- con- templated sister ship represent the emeilest and slowest which could fulfil the conditions and keep up such a service." AUSTRALIA SWAP! WOOL FOB ‘PLANES Germany; for decades a good (m5- wmer. no longer buys .her usual quota of Australia's wood. Although she wants it. it is forbidden because of currency difficulties. Australia must cell her wool, or y and her capacity to buy needed air. planes. ~ So negotiations are in train, in Sydney, for u. fleet of Junkq-t; mg. ; chines worth $50,000 Qlch g9 be; -.Auatreliln Prue Bureau. l Banish Poverty By Credit Plan, _ Aberharifs Aim ’ B! J. F. SANDERSON Canadian Pres Staff Writer EDMONTON. Sept. iL-Willlam Aberhart, Calgary high school teacher and evangelist, in taking over the office of premier of Al- berta. id heading the first social M96115 Bovernment in the world- Three years ago, Aberhart started to organize a. party and sell his economic theories Io the people of 'the province of Alberta. He was so successful at the provincial general ‘election August 22 he swept the United Farmers of Alberta from ofiice, not oneof their candidates ‘winning a. seat. The Aberhart '_foroes walked away with the elec- tion, winning 50 out of 63 seats. The object of social credit. a rev- olutionary financial and economic "system, is to overhaul the present set-up. Proponents of the system ‘claim the basis of the depression rests on the fact the gross income of Canadians. or Americans. does not equal national production. Their solution is to enlist the national credit, to bonus every citizen of the country-or province. in this in- stanoe-so national income equals national production. They claim this will start up the wheels of in- dustry, eliminate relief and unem- ployment and banish poverty from the land. The basis of the Aberhart system of social credit is a monthly pay- ment of $25 to every adult and les- ser sums to every child in the pro- vince, It will not be in money but in non-negotiable credit certifi- cates. They will have the same backing as bonds, the national wealth of the province, At the first of the month every man will present his pass-book to the government clearing house where a credit entry of $25 will be made. With it, the man will be able to pay his grocer, butcher or any- one else to whom he owes money. Because the credit is non-nego- tiable, the grocer must present the certificate to the clearing house where his account will be credited with the amount. In return, he will be given a certificate for that amount of money with which he can pay his bills. In this manner, the credit circulates. Aberhart hopes he can convince the chartered banks-me cannot in- icrfere with them because they are licensed by the Dominion-to co- operate with him. If he can, l-he banks will operate as clearing houses. having the expense of pro- vincial offices. Creating Credit. In this manner, $10,000,000 in credit will be issued monthly. Aberhart. like all proponents of social credit, insists bank's create 'credit out of nothing and he can see no reason why he should not do t be same thing. He points to a bank making a loan, which is the same thing as issuing credit, by in- structing a clerk to make an entry in a ledger. This automatically creates a deposit. When the loan is paid, the deposit is wipel out and the ledger balanced by making an- other entry. Thus. the credit was created out of nothing and it cost the bank only the time of the clerk plus a few cents for paper and ink. But if Aberhart continued to pump $10,000,000 monthly into the credit system of the province with- out. some form of withdrawal, prices would soar sky-high and the whole system collapse on him. With this in mind. he has drafted a system of credit withdrawal by which he will remove at the end of each month, the amount he isued at the start. This withdrawal will be made through a turnover tax or, as Aber- hart terms it, an unearned incre- ment levy. Every‘ time a farmer sells n bushel of wheat, he will pay a tax. When the miller grinds the wheat into flour. he will be taxed. Similarly, the baker will be taxed. Aberhart calculates he will receive about 65 cents when a bushel of wheat is processed into bread. The same principle will apply to all ‘goods processed or marketed in Alberta. To guard against price increases. Aberhart will appoint a board to set fair figures-Because Alberta is an agricultural province, he will set minimum prices for some products. If, for instance, a fair price of 75 cents were set for wheat and the y world price was 65, the government would bonus farmers by _10 cents. ‘at. the same time withdrawing its i usual turnover tax. Fixing Prices All through the election campaign and since then, Aberhart has been as vague as possible on details of his scheme and this appllefi PBYI-lfi" ularly to his price-fixing system. His object will be to raise prices for producers and lOl‘.'.‘l‘ them for con- sumers. This fantastic-sounding object. he says, will be attained by compressing the price spread by means of his turnover tax and in- creasing sales and production by the improved purchasing power of the people. ‘There are other planks in the Aberhart platform. the exact from of which, only time will tell. He intends to issue production loans to farmers without interest and to manufacturers as well. Through these loans, he hopes to influence manufacturers in the east lo drop their prices because he claims a far- mer who has no interest to pay is a better risk than one whose inter- est. payments eet. up his whole in- s uMMeRsion SGUADIN Hind PRINCE COUNTY CHRONICLE AT YOUR ozAteifs ROCK CITY TOBACCO COMPANY, LIMITED 100% cannons nun INDEPENDENT RUBBE It took long worth it. _ out and fresh THE new SMOKING TOBACCO IN Tl-IE PERSONAL develop BAG-PIPE . . . a cool slow-burning tobacco. the best leaf and an unique age- ing process. But every man in the country will say the result is .Try BAG-PIPE. You can't become acquainted with this grand new smoke too soon. Mellow and. mild. agid long-bunting, with a rich, round satisfying body that never wears off on the edge. ‘ | R POUCH experimenting to It took p‘ Crumble- but never gummy. ‘ how he intends to handle pricesof manufactured goods from the east. The social credit leader insists his scheme does not involve confis- cation of wealth or loss of individ- ual initiative. There will be no re- pudiation of bonds, he emphasizes. not only by the province but mun- icipallties and individuals as well. The basic dividends are calculat- ed to provide the necessities of life and every man will be entitled to add as much as he can through ivages or investments. Provincial baby-bonds will be sold for invest- merits. Abcrhart claims his social credit system would not interfere with foreign payments. External ac- counts would be paid just as they are today. The debtor would pur- chase a postofiice money order, for instance, paying with a credit oer- i-ificaie, The money order would be cashed and the debt transferred io the government, forming part of its actual balance of trade. It Wlfl be 15 or 18 months before his system will be in operation. Aberhart has told the electors. Be- cause of its revolutionary nature and complicated set-up, it will be months before even the foundations are laid in legislation. Social credit people believe the wealth of Alberta is being manipu- lated selfishly under the present system -and controlled by the few at the"e‘it‘peii‘se of the many. To gain a cultural heritage for the masses. they propose basic dividends which is another way ofsharing wealth. but not confiscation. The machine, they say, has be- come a curse, creating unemploy- ment rather than leisure. They would cure unemployment by har- nessing the national credit, and, at the same time. accelerate industry through the stopped-up purchasln! power. THEY MET ABOARD A WINDJAMMEB LONDON. S'*pt. l0 - Romance awaited Miss Nancie Moore,d i8 year old Dublin girl. when she went aboard the Windjammer Ponape early this year to sail io Australia. She wanted to take part in the famous grain race back to England. Her request to be allowed to sign on as one of the crew was granted. One of her chiefs was the hand- some second mate, 21 years old. Off went Miss Moore to Ade- laide, sailing from Copenhagen. Then came the race back. The Ponape took two hours over 8'1 days to reach Millwall Dock — gained third place. Miss Moore will not sail again in the Ponape. The handsome younil mate may not sail either. It. is understood that he and Miss More have become engaged. . second c.‘ N. a. REVENUES r.‘ MONTREAL, Que. Sept. l0—The ROYAL SPA ROOMS TO BE DEMOLISI-IED HARROGATE. Sept, 1i-—Th0 Town Council here has adopted a i proposal for the demolition of the f Royal Spa Rooms, which have stood for onc hundred years; the conver- l, sion of the Royal Hall for the dual l Purpose of a picture house and l. conference hall; and the erection of l park, Tlicre was strong opposition when the minute making these recom- mendations was road. Councillor Rhodes said that the scheme would cost. 50,000 pounds and was unnecessary. By proper or- ganisation the Rotary Conference of 2,500 people was satisfactorily housed in 1928, It could be clone again. The scheme would mean altering the Royal Hall. the acoustic prop- erties of which were perfect, while the Spa Rooms were still capable of fulfilling their purpose. and a parking place could be made along- side the Royal Hall at a cost of about 25 pounds. ‘ Councillor Dawson said that the scheme was not so necessary as a swimming pool. People were not coming to Harrogate because noth- ing was done to attract them. In these days, _he declared. it ivas the children who ruled the par- onls. Alderman Bolland said that ten years ago the Spa Rooms iverc in- spected. and the roof repaired with strips of linen to make it water- proof. but. the building was con- sldered beyond repair. and it was unsafe. -~ In the last lhrce years Harrogaie had to refuse several conferences of 3.000 people owing i0 lack of ac- commodation. and it was imper- ative that the tmvn should have a. conference hall. AUSTRALIA PLANNING WORLD AERIAL RACE SYDNEY. Sept. ill-Sydney. the birthplace of modern, civilized Aus- tralia, is planning to celebrate its 150th anniversary by Qrgamzmg an air race round the globe. Late reports show the suggested course, starting and finishing at Sydney. by way of Fiji, Hawaii, Vancouver, Montreal. St. Johns, London, and thence along the Im- perial Airways route back to Aus- tralia. Meanwhile, Adelaide. the capital of South Australia, is organizing a floral festival on a mammoth scale, an Empire exhibition, liter- ary and musical competitions and a nautical pageant in honor of its centenary. next year. The Empire exhibition, which will open on March 20. next. year. will be hous- ed in a. specially-built Centennial ;hall covering two-and-a-half acres. A RIPPED GLOVE gross revenues of he nil-inclusive Canadian National Railways Sys-, lem for the 10-day period ending] the nn compared with 04,886,852. for corresponding period of i934. come. hberhert ha: not made clear increase of $2,073 when mending a rip in the glove. bulionhole the two edges with a fine needle and fine thread, never August, slgt, 1935, were 349493135, g5 i silk. Now catch these threads to- gether in the buttonhole stitch and , hens wo you will have a "neat. and repair. l a small conference hall with a car v l l l "OXFORD" VOICE CALLED MERE LIP-LAZINESS OXFORD, Sept. 11—Instructlon of children, the work of conductors and the "Oxford voice" were among the subjects discussed at the 14th Oxford Summer Course in Music and Music Teaching- Gilbert Hudson. professor, Trin- liy College of Music. London, said that "the Oxford voice" was a. mis- homer. "It is no more the Oxford than the Cambridge voice, and you can hear the same at any of llie public and upper class schools and in any society gathering of the upper class in London. "Here. in Oxford, I have not heard onc example of it, But please do not call it the Oxford voice. _ “Call it anything you like except good English, for it is nothing but a distortion of vowel sounds. a lip and tongue laziness. and it’ is a menace to the English language. “There is a tendency for elegant people to go back w a debased form of southern speech. “While we are not allowed to drop our hitches in polite ‘ society. we are allowed to drop a whole string of words and go into the very best circles with impunity. “There is no fixed standard of English, and we do not want one, because if it is to be ri living lang- uage it must be flucnt. We do not ivant. for instance. a cultured Dev- oiishire man to talk like a York- shircman or a Londoiler. "We want to keep the individual- ity of the districts, otherwise we shall be impovcrishing English speech. which is only lhe develop- ment of dialect. Dialect keeps Ill’! main stream of language alive. and it is only the snob who wound (1.1 away with it." GLOVES HAVE COLORED INSETS Lively color treatments are cvi- dent in kid gloves this fall. Gloves with color insets at the wrist, color insets between the fingers are shosvn. Red touches on navy. a fav- orite contrast. and black on white for afternoon are fancied. Knitted and fabric gloves in all colors. are much more attractive than they sound, They can provide a color accent to n costume that .will pick up the whole ensemble. Try bright green knitted gloves with a. green felt hat and n navy sports outfit. Or yellow and black. Gloves that. button at the back of the wrist are much in vogue, both in sports styles and ‘afternoon gloves. Sometimes these are hand- stitched in contrasting color. " In spite of all the new glove novelties, many women are still wearing, and will continue to wear, , their old favorites. the plain slip They an, “council Howey. on—lii fabric or in washable doc- skin or suede." Big velvet, fasten many chic new sports coats or jackets. Cork buttons, bordered with fabric, are smart on jersey dresses. Multi-covered velvet rib- 18551118 checkered plastrons, yokcs or pod:- Lita fur or felt buttons 1 Dust Hovers Over l i Old Colnbrook COLNBROOK, Sept. Il—-A littiO group of men stood "at the parapet of a narrow bridge and watched an ancient. historic town being destroyed before their eyes. L One hundred and twenty time- ircrn, mclowed cottages were be- ling tumbled inlo ruin: timbers ‘ ivhich hove withstood the ravages 10f centuries were crashing into dust and mortar. Within a few weeks‘ time the town of Colnbrook, as it was known to half a score of Ellgilfll lztnqs zinrl i0 the Wayfar- ers of cen"::-ics upon the Oxford Road, will be no more.' Moze than half the inhabitants have been given new houses out- sidr the town in, order that the local Council may complete a. wholesale scheme cf slum-clear- ance. They have departed, many of them. grudgingly and unwill- ingly. All have left behind them hombs that they llcld dear. Some have forsaken ‘their livelihood. From r1 great. new housing estate beyond the town they watch the demolishers‘ picks slruik ir.to cot- tages that were dear to ;i\3ir an- cestors as to themseivvs. Many of the residents were glad to exchange old privations for new luxuries, though it meant the break-up of their homes. Others were denuded at once of their walls and cf their livelihood. One elderly woman who for 30 years ckcd out her sustenance by selling toys hrs IO‘li'ld herself in the even- .ing of h?!‘ days without a living, without compensation. Two maid- ‘ on sisters who lived by the sale of sweets have lost their home. An going photgraphic dealer has lost liis business and his hope. One considerable landowner is faced with the necessity of demolishinl at her own expense 29 cottages from which shc drew the rents. A walk down the main street. which shczvs little change from its aspect. in the days of royal pro- grosses. reveals the inn from the upper rooms o. which innocent travellers were cast to their doom in a vat of boiling beer in the days of Edward Longshanks. By the ancient milestone a wo- man sits sketching a scone which the next generation will never know. On the bridge, feebly peeping from beneath the scars of time, is the inscription "i777." Here is a baker's shop which has been per- l mitled to survive. There a genq-el i store which must go. There a half- timbered cottage which will [ir- ‘ ish. At the enri oi the street. stlrk l and staring in the sun, is a. blue ‘ of white walls. haggling with red roofs. line by line, row by low. such is now Colnbiook. PATENT LEATHER l If you find your patent leatho. l handbag is full of fingerprints tron l carrying constantly dip a soft eloti "B" (“Zilhif mflke amusing‘. into cold milk and rub on the leu- ihs-r, When dry polish with a sofi l"_\" cloth- It will look like new.