PAGE TEN rustic Ac consisting of ‘Application forms for town. tary by July 21st, 1949. - are hereby notified that the Li Board anth- orlaed under Section 10 (e) of the PUBLI ACCOUNT- ING AND AUDITING ACT of 1949 has been formed, ARTHUR BELCHEB, Chairman. E. SOMERLED TRAINOR RANDOLPH W. MANNING Registered Public Accountant may be obtained from the Board Secretary, R. W. Manning, Box 247, Charlotte- Appllcations must be flied with the Board Secre- BUIINTANTS ; a license to practise as a Classified 3c per word; lnM of Floral and Spiritual Offerings, -< Advertising Rates-Payable In Advance Minimum Ohlrgc For Any Advertisement s5 Uenu Central Guardian Locals 5o per word; Western and Eastern Locals 2o per word; Announcements and Coming Events 5o per word; of Condolence 84c per inch; Wedding Engagements d0 words for $1.00 and i0 cents for every additional 3 words; l-lotieea of Thanks and Appreciation, 84c per inch or 5o pa word; Lists of Subscrip- tion; d8 cents pcr inch; Address and Presentation Ill. Othn latea ca appllaafll. ' Notices lie per inch; Lists Cards. etc, 5o per name: Letters THE GUARDIAN, CHARLOTTETOWN i AFRICA FLIGHT, VI-i Oillgntl When the 'planes landed. he was standing three paces behind Carol. They knew already that the party was safe. Waving hand- kerchiefs from the leading ‘plane's cockpit had told them so much. And perhaps ten minutes of .em- bracing. hand-shskmg, saluting and expressions of pleasure by the Commandant occupied the dime so exaggerstedly and completely that no-one of the newly rescued seem- ed to remember that three had gone before them, while only two stood there in the sunshine to welcome them back. It was in fact ONO Flesch. who, ‘standing rather apart from the others, ask- ed in his precise guttural voice whether the jdumey had beQn gm much for Antony Sothern. “Just lazy as usual." said Janet Mao-Wu. “Too lazy to come out in the sunshine and meet us." "No!" said Carol. And to herself it seemed that her voice sounded curiously un- real. “What do you mean, Carol?" ask- ed her uncle. And her aunt peered at her sharply. Her ears were ex- cellent, and she noticed an unusual quiver in the girl's voice. But it was Larrimore who ans- Agents Wanted .____-_-—-—— LARGE COMMISSIONS PAID daily to energetic men and women who are anxious to in- crease present income. No ex- perience necessary. Every home, factory, and office prospect. Write for free outfit and details to Dept. C-B, P. O. Box 32, Terminal A, Toronto 1, Ontario WANTED-FOUR. ROOM HEAT- ed. unfurnished apartment with bath on first floor, will consid- er second floor apartment or small self-contained house in Charlottetown. Phone BEG-J. Boarders Wanted i ONE BOARDER CAN BE A0- cornmodated in private homfi near P.W.C. Gentleman prefer- red. Apply Box 754 Guardian. Contractors I. cyan. ARSENAULT GENERAL contractor. construction engineer, i 189 Upper Prince, Charlottetown ' competent worlcmen, expert ill’- out and supervision. liars & Trucks For Sale non. same _. 19:44 cnnv. APPLY Adolph Doucette, Oyster Bed i i Farm Mac_iiln__ey FOR. SALE-ONE HAY BAKE IN good condition. Apply Harland Gass. Bonshew. Female lleip Wanted sf n fountain help. male or female. Ollympia Restaurant, Summer- s e. Lost LOST, BETLVEEN NEW HAVEN and Cherlottetovm. one market beg. Please notify Leonard Wil- lis. New Haven. Male iielii Wanted ‘ WANTED-JHARRIED MAN EX: perienced in poultry raising, qualified to take charge. Good Position for right men. Free flveoTwm 0011M. with water and electricity provided. K.W. Smith. Prince William, N. B. Personal I03 NEUIIALGIA, Lumnauu Rheumatic Pains. one" r701”, apply Heat Penetrating Glorv Oil. At your Druiliiist. Teachers Wanted WANTED — A TEACHER FOR North Rustico School, supple- ment $400. Mrs. N. S. Mac- Bridge. E63, 5A“; _ i4 TON DODGE ‘Truck. A 1 condition. Priced to sell. Store. FOR SALE-ONE FORD TRUCK. 1% ton, new motor. Priced reasonable. P a r k e r Canfleld. Crapaud. i-IOR SALE-load FOILD. PRICED to 5e11, Apply Revere Hotel. ‘ion sate-lose noocifscnalv. excellent condition. Roy Far- quharson. Mt. Stewart. ‘OR. SALE-IBM PLYMOUTH coach. New motor, Perfect con- dition. Phone 141. liars Leaving Apply Alywards Furniture‘ Lure. Secretary. l QVANTED-TEACHEB FOR Wheatley River School. Supple- ment $400.00. Apply l-l. L. Mur- phy, Wlieatley River. WANTED-TEACHER FOR LIT- tle Harbor School. Supplement $250. Clarence Ching, Secretary, TEACIIERWANTED FOIL WEST- moreland s c h o o l. Supplement $300.00 1st class,$250.00 2nd class. Enoch Newson, Secretary. TEACIIERWANTEDFOR BROOK- lyfl School. King's Co. Supple merit 8300- Simon Campbell, sec- retary. i TEACHER WANTED FOR ST. Peter's High School. Supplement $450. First class male preferred. Geo. J. Maclnrris. Secretary. LEAVING FOR OTTAWA JULY 29th. can accommodate one pes- senger to Ottawa, two to Saint John. Phone Rustico 11-31. For Sale FOR SALE-B YOUNG CATTLE. Apply James Swan. Marshheld. liilLCll COWS FOR SALE — D. F. MacDonald, Souris. l > FOR. SALE — CHOICE BUILDING lots, $300.00 Stewart MncKay ._.____________.__. FOR. SAI.E- MAN'S BICYCLE. Contact R. M. Spence. Fish list- ill). chery. Souihport. For inforin- ntion phone 1591-14. ‘tron salsa-m ACRES LAND (two in oats), and barn; also 20-inch plainer and lathe for wood or iron. John W. McKenna. Kelly's Cross. ___._i___.__m______-_- CHOICE FRESH STRAWBERBIES 20c per box. Pick your own at 15c. Mrs. Everett l-lcwatt. Tryon. ‘;0DDLER-TOT. RUBBEI. iii;- I ered and shopping bag attached. i Apply 25 Dorchester Street. roll. SALE - DESIRABLE twelve room house, excellent re- pair. with furnace. Near shore on lower Main Street. Mrs. Mabel ileum. Georgetown. RB SALE-‘l-BOOM HOUSE AND fin-niture. at St. Peter's Bay. Ibr further particulars apply mo. Josephine Steele. lroa sans - is aortas or standing nay. timothv- Avril! Mymour l". Murphy. - land. ,_,_____________.. ‘if-II SALE-SAW MILL PIOP- . arty, 175 acres lumber. Apply i Guardian Box 75d. i " "ion SALE-ION ran or USED ‘i, boards, so long cedar poets. ' Phone 2805-1’. after 5. . boa sate-runners eaoar- born bull. Murdock Nicholson. ' Hprinatoo. i-----——-—————- Typewriters PORTABLE — TYPEWBITERS — See the New Remington. Two tone grey finish. Big machine performance. Cash or terms Remington Hand Ltd. 134 Rich- mond Street. Phone 2771. Venetian Blinds HAROLD CLARK, PHONE 152.54. Free drape hangers. Colored elets. Steel and aluminum. Wanted WANTED-ALEBOTIPLES. up service. Phone 2542 Evenings 1107. Michael Bros. FOR SALE - PUMPJACK. Al’- ply Johnnie Docherty. Harring- tori. WANTED-SMALL CENTBALLY located apartment of three or four rooms. by quiet married couple with no children. Apply Box 755. Guardian. Work Wanted GIRL WANTS WORK BY THE day. Phone 1442. _________ NUTIGE All arrears of Taxes in St. Peter's South School ‘ lf not id before July 23rd will be handed to the Court for col- lection. By Order of Trustees. Flllll F0ll SALE 75 acres at Brackley, 5 miles from Charlottetown. 50 acres clear. Near Church. School and Railroad. Apply:- IIIIDLIY STIWAIT rprsssed the buzzer wered. and Janet Manson sew her nieces cheeks whiten, and her hands jerk, as he spoke. "I'm sorry to have to spoil our reunion with bad news," said Lar- rimore deliberately. "But — Seth- ern’s not with us. He-he couldn't make lt." There was a little horror-stricken silence, “Not make it?" cried out Janet Manson. siwrbiv- "I don't under- stand." And she looked at Carol. But again Larrimore answered: “Sotherns deed.” he said quiet- ly. “And we owe him our lives— Carol and I. So incidentally do you all." "I don't understand." said Hu- bert Ms-nson. fidding with his spectacles. "Tell us what happen- ed, ‘Larrlmore. This is quite dread- ful.' "Yes — tell us, Mr. Larrimore." said Janet Manson. And there was that in her tone which brought Carol's attention, focussed with a hideous intensity upon Ilerrimore. upon her aunt. ' "1 shell have to write to his poor mother.” added Hubert helplessly. Larrimore jerked up his chin. "He died for his friends," he said. "As I'd feared, the water we car- ried with us wasn't enough to bring the three of us through. I sup- pose Sothem felt in a way respon- sible for the fact that three. of us. not two. had started. Anyway, we - z-w._._¢?‘ \ 7;“ N A N (l. UMlTID an Q (Notices. Special trains are speeding s- cross Canada bearing more thane 2.700 Scouts from ten Provinces to the First Canadian Boy Scout Jamboree st Connaught Square. near Ottawa, for July 16 to 24. Jackson Dodds, C.B.E., of Mont- real. Dominion Commissioner of Canada's Boy Scouts. sails from Montreal on July 15 aboard the S.S. Empress of France for Eng- land en route to Norway to attend meetings of the International Con- fcrence and International Scout Committee. Mr. Dodds. who was elected a member of the Interna- tional Committee in 1947, was ap- pointed Canada's first Internation- al Scout Commissioner last April. The Canadian Contingent to the Fourth World Rover Moot in Nor- way, a group of 30 Rovers. sails from Quebec Ciity on July 18, on the S. S. Samaria for England where they will join the British Contingent of more than 800 Rov- ers. The World Rover Moot will be held at Skjak, Norway, from August 2 to 12. had a discussion-quite inconclu-, sive—-as to what must be done. During the night that followed Sothern was on guard. I woke and couldn't see him. ‘Iihon I did} see him moving away from the; little oasis where we were csmp-‘ ed that night. I followed him. I think he must have seen me. Any- way, before 1 could catch up with him—wel1. he had the pistols with him." "You mean he killed "himself " “To let ms teke Carol on un- hampered and with enough water —yes," said Lerrimore, firmly. "I was asleep," said Carol, hur-' riedly, very conscious of her aunt's eyes upon her. "I heard the shot —I was terrified." "Magriificierlt!" murmured Ru- bert Manson. “A gallant fellow!" "A gallantry typical of your coun- trymen," said the French Com- mandant, his hand to his kepi. “One of our planes shall make a search for his body. Meanwhile, if I might advise you, you should not stand here in the sun after your, trying experiences. And I must send a message so that cables may take the news of your safety to litngland." He led the way towards the gate‘ of the fort. But Carol was con- scious of two things: that the bar- rier between Rupert and herself had now taken concrete shape and hardened; and that her aunt's brow was furrowed, and that heri eyes were fixed steadily upon! Larrlmorek shoulder-blades, as he walked ahead. as though seeking to penetrate the inner secrets of his heart. cnsrrnn xvrv sm oeoisoii is rozztan A little more than two months, later, and a trifle after five o'clock in the evening. Sir George, Manson was walking up and down his office. His expression was — or would have been to any onlook- er-discouraging, if not lctuglly mmrii‘. Three times during efl last half-hour he had stretched out a finger which would have to summon Cynthia Wright from the outer office. Three times he had not| We”!!! it. and returned to hia- sloomv lncinz to and fro. He will‘ ihinklns savagely. ~And yet, is n, asked himself, pausing for a mo- ment to stare out at the dusk 15111!!! over the river outside his windows. what the devil was thgg "i"? for him to worry new" t Wu true of course that the |periings, with an. obviously more Three powerful seacrhlightswill. lvichton the ‘night skies over the First Canadian Jamboree. Vis- count Alcxandcr. Governor-Gener- a] and Chief Scout, will open the Jamboree at l1 a.m. July 18. The National Film Board will make a documentary illm at the Jflmbvrfifi- Newsreel movies will also be taken es well as news photos. Canadian Broadcasting Corpora- tion's “Saturday Magazine" pro- gram on July 23. will be broad- cast direct from the Jamboree at 2.30 to 3.30 p.m. E.D.T. on the Trans Canada network. Greetings from Swedish Scouts great-end perhaps undulyfi ‘- —flight of the "Star of the East" had ended in failure. But there had been certain compensating factors: any awkward tendency on the part of the Press or the public to inquire into the merits of the crashed machine-end as a result into the standard of general aa- complislunent of Associated Air- ways Limited-had been most satis- factorily distracted by other hap- popular appeal. No one was likely to wish to read a dry-as-dust technical re- port. when there were to be had for the reading in the columns of every daily the account of Lorri- more’s heroic desert march in the company of the even more heroic —and good-looking-girl, whom he was now announced as about to merry. While even the glamour and headlines of that eigngement had in turn palled beside the sacrifice of Antony Sothern. who ~ lieliiiers ATIITA. W. Ecnveiitloe Following his re-election as president of C10 United Automobile Workers, at convention in Milwaukee. Wis, Walter Reuther (Centre) AUW president, is seen with his two brothers. Victor (left), victim of an assassination attempt. and Roy (right). Birmingham, Mich, inter- MONEY takes wings today faster than ever beforq True . . '. many people are earning more 1- liut the cost of living uses up a much greater proportion. Few indeed can hope to accumulate large sums for future emergencies. How, then, can you ever hope to lay aside enougl] money to provide for your family in case of your dominated affiliates. and a reply from Jamboree Scouts will be broadcast over the Trans Canada network on July 20. from 6.30 to 6.45 p.m. E. D.T. through the International Service of the C. B. C. - Four bands will be heard st the Jamboree. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police Band will play at the opening ceremonies. The He» girnerital Band of the Governor Generals Foot Guards. the Cen- ital Band"of the Royal Canadian Air Force and the Salvation Army Band of Ottawa will also be heard. Judges Named For Halifax Miss Atlantic Pageiini (By The Canadian Press) HALIFAX, July iii-Officials of the Miss Atlantic Pageant. first international contest of its kind. tonight announced names of the five judges who will pick a Miss Atlantic here July 23. The judges are Mary Fulton Frame, Canadan artist and native of Oxford, N. S.; Alfred C. Fuller, the original Fuller Brush man and native of Yarmouth, N. S.; Alberto Rodrlques. Cuban Consul- General to the Marltimes; Mrs II. E, Kendall, wife of e former Nova Scotia Lieutenant-Governor, and Thomas S. Paley, Toronto theatre operator. About 40 contestants, from as far south as Georgia, are expected for the three-day pageant, part of I-Ialifaars bicentenary program. There will be $2,700 in cash prizes. with the winner's take $1,500. The runner-up will get $500. The contestants. who will be judged on talent and personality as well as look/s, will be shown off to Haligonians in two parades before the big night. Bands, R.C. MP, the Junior Bengal Lancers and motorcycle police will lead the motorcade. Sailors will be the escorts of the beauties at a ball July 21 at the Yacht Squadron. The Navy is expected to have no trouble get- ting volunteers. The ball follows an afternoon of bathing-suit judging at a beach about 30 miles from Halifax Biithing-suit-clad‘ girls in the con- test are to_ be kept from the eycs of the public. That judging will be done in, private and for the final judging next Saturday night the girls will wear evening dress- es. The pageant is being sponsored by the Halifax Men's Press bi- centenary committee and produced by the Halifax Men's Press Club and the Nova Scotia branch of had "laid down his life for his friends." The lonely suicide in the desert had taken its place in the gallery of popular heroes beside the lonely figure of Captain Oates stag- gering out into the Antarctic bliz- nerd (To be continued) i NOTICE If you want a straw blower built, write or phone MACK MaeFADYEN Canoe Cove Satisfaction Guaranteed including Up-to-daie room hull Iron sans‘. Near City, desirable new IIOIIIQAIJQ acres land, fronting on paved highway 220 ft. n poultry house, brooder house and gara ewbnlldlngs ,fnilyinsuiated,fnilsge cement basement: all modern conveniences, with Pem- brolre bath and shower. Dougha fir finished. Aisoooducksaadgeeee. Wiilseiiwithorwltlioiitmcaponsdiiioaolil. LOBNE BOWNIII Welt Royalty the Canadian Women's Press Club. _________,_-_- GERMAN SOCCER. TOUR. nurture -- (or) - A Swedish soccer team started its four in Germany with a victory recently by defeating, a German team in Berlin's Olympic stadium. ‘This was the first visit to Berlin by a gggin team since the war. -natlonal union representative. Victor's son. John. looks on. speech at convention, Reuther urged the C10 to oust all Communist- In his ~ Electrical Contractor WIRING AND REPAIRING ERNEST R.- ILAMSAY, 129 Elm Ave. Phone 1003.! CORNWALL W. M. S. The regular meeting of the Cornwall W.M.S. washeld at the homeof Mrs. Harry Crosby on Monday evening. July llth. The theme "More Missionaries“ was carried out in the devotional per- iod led by Mrs. Charlie Hyde. and in the program study in which nine members answered the ques- tions as how to influence young people to become workers in our mission fields. and the necessary preparation for same. Mrs. Chairman led the discus- sion and much helpful informat- ion was learned by the members whose-desires should be "A Work- man That Needeth Not To Be Ashamed." The treasurer. Mrs. M. Godfrey reported $25 more in advance of this time last year. The Mission Band leader plan- ned an ice cream social and also xi joint picnic of Mission Band and Baby Band in the near fut- ure. Mrs. Cliarman gave an interest- INSURANCI HEAD OFFICI dress at conference and said ev- ery auxiliary was asked to make a quilt this year for displaced persons in Europe. ~ Mrs. Reggie MscEwen invited tlie members to her home for August meeting. Mrs. Crosby and committee served lunch, and a very loquac- ious social hour was spent. lng account of Mrs. Miller's ad- our dun wliv UP TH GREASE AGAIN.’ You FORGOT 1o PUT l5 FRONT BOARD AND He's BEEN iN THE HAVE rro EAIZRJCADE even TH‘ SOFA AND ARMCHAIRS AT NIGHT! CAN'T you min, THAT we? i Manuriiruiuaiis com-an} (Established 1887) ‘a untimely death — or for the years when your earn- ing capacity will cease? The only sure way is through Life Insurance. II would take years to build an adequate savings fund for your dependents, but a proportion of youl savings put into Life Insurance will immediately guarantee to them a monthly income in case of you; death. At the some time it will provide for your declining years should you live to old age. - I TORONTO, CANADI C. M. FRAZEE — l. H. HUGHB Special Ifiprclentaflvea __',i STRANGE HARVEST VANCOUVER — (GP) -Stre.ng( things grew overnight on G Thody's front lawn. One Sunday morning he found: two overcoat a man's suit. dressing gown, eigh shirts. women's slacks and skirt seven blouses, five dresses. threi slips, a night dress and chenilli dressing gown. He gave his harvest to the police, but he's still puzzled WE illiillllillilllililllllllilll‘. , "I ‘ l"’ 1 ‘AIN'T seen ABLE TO TRAIN l MYSELF "r0 surr : You WIMMIN i I var: . niil , liY J. B. WILLIAMS "i “F?