.5 ' .. " . £52m!» . -- . ‘l ‘ l i .. i“ ,i l. ,' y. } gfiiw J léil l“ I“; Siarlieelilno-Satiiro-loplliis and Cmveiieth, all ‘ Slioiirelp —Wlr|dosoofi-Lon| Wearing and a Good ‘rig-Two Tone or Plfllll Colors. All i. i ' Styles, all Sizes 5 ; IMIOES ,,_... . . .. I TO I i l‘ i . . - . " Gobaiidinee-Tropicols-Fiannels —- Shaikeskins, q’ r ' , Cool Comfort, Dressy Looking and Crease Re- ‘ r‘ . " listing-Sizes 28 to 46. 6 Up ‘ " All Shades-Prices I l A Large Assorted Stock of Sport Shirts in Plain l‘ Colors or Assorted Patterns —- Lang or Short gl Sleeves-Broadcloth-Silk - Rayon: — Gabor- i , dines or Wool Ploids. 2 I ' Prices .................-_._-_._.. I Up . l ' ' . = .- ALSO m STOCK "i SPORT COATS ~ #1 i , BLAZERS SLACK SUITS BATHING TKUNKS I \ s I ‘I44 Gt. Geo. St. Mens and Boys Wear I .'. KINGSTON Y. P. U. eeting to order by calling on the call was answered by 11 members ' devotional leader. A short devo- and 2 visitors. COllOCEIlEH was tnglen The Kingston Y. P. U. met at the tlonal period was led by Mildred which “mmmled l° ca“ “ e ' I home of Mr and Mrs Parker New- Green The minutes of last meet- fClIOV/l"! cilmmllu" “"9 “WIN” ' m tori’; The ‘president. brought the ing were read and approved. Roll ed f0!‘ thelgexl W991i"!- g ‘ - Deva Ve a. 5. ' ' Study: Ray and Mildred. " é i- _ , . - Recreation: Velda anldlRay. "~ L hrEd adShrey. a ' Mllldi-ed imr/ll-tednthe members to us. . 252:1“: her home for the next y s The study period was led by Edna and Velda. I The remainder of the even ng FOR was spfiflthl? galmeshand contesttsl. b A de g tul uric was serve y ' 9 the hostess and assisted by Mll- ' ' dred. » A hearty vote of thanks was ex- tended to Mr. and Mrs. Newson for the use of their home and the kind hospitality shown. \ . The meeting closed by all re- n- T. pcatlng the Mllpflll BflfiedlCtlfln. _ Charlottetown b Sumnserslde lumen a Chandler ma. C‘ ‘ ‘ swan-r MAIL DELIVERY MeGulgen & Boyle ............... .......__........_..........._.__.._.. llnntes-Jltivcr i Reuben Tuplin C0. T i M" "MIDLAND. Ont. -— (GP) -— Mall w“ gum, __ Mllliell"! carrier service was inaugurated ‘ ' here recently. Six letter carriers , _ ~ . are employed for letter delivery i; _ , to homes and business establish- ‘ _ ’» NAPOLEON AND UNCLE ELBY Bi Clifford McBride ma... s. l” ’ l ‘ l. fi w’, ‘ _ nus-r‘ CAUSE! PLrruPwiTl-t your I " l-J L“ i as... .->==.....~>~=.esc.:s.. l No Harsh Laxatives E _ - * PETS éwcaxeepmv I i 1i ‘ l Y . i.‘ :7 y? Man Finds. Relief With ; ‘ y Famous Cereal 5 l.“ If you are nagged by constipa- rl ‘It. , tion worries. read this unsolicited , . I’ F letter: l i "Constipation ‘, , I cost me plenty wit‘ of money for i,‘ stron reme- ll; i dies! ut since a ' ,' . Istarted eating ';_ KELLOGG’ '; ALL-BRAN , i l regularly over g1. . two years ago ; I haven't had _ 5* to take any laratiya. Doing line, l . ;~ feeling finel Wish everyone d‘ troubled as I was b coneti tion would try it.” W. J. iley, ollon, f ‘i; anltoba. . M . Constipated due to leclr of bulk I . - 1g in you: diet? You may find relief i . i ' fromsluggishness and takirlzghurnh b. laxatives. For natural m to. try "i eating an ounce (bowlful) of‘ clap, " _,.' talt ALL-BEAN every da ‘ l’ plgntyofwetenALL-BllAbl l‘ le e dalidosisegulsflng fwd. no! . g‘ i a pu?atlve. Try one package end a3. , if st oesn't help you you can get s double your rrwrury back. Simply ' return empty b0! to Kellogg's, W, V. Inndon, Ont. . , *1 ' '0 I l F B t A il Protection Ilsa ,3 . l l ” ‘ l =*i IIBBETT S’ SALT Alll llESl STING EXTElllllll PAINTS _ . l lhdennderooniplete scientific ooltroltowltllltead the ravages of Mari- ‘_. time weather. Mode by Ilerltlnserl eopeolellypfor the Marltlmee. - Ill YOUR LOCAL DEALER nnos. gunnaemnsrr oiunnonnrown rnounm-ri ' f riiiiiirrs tsiiirs no. , pose with which he said Carol. who Africa Flight By . Val Gtelg-d i AN IDOL GRABHE! Hendon - and high summeri The sun blazing down out of e cloudleu sky‘ glittering on the hundreds an hundreds of ranked cars parked together .for the occasion o! Empire Air Day; setting off to the best possible advantage the new London season's hats and frocks. Thousands and thousands of people crowded together, their faces intermittently turning sky- wards from the stands. Young Antony Sothern pushed his exquisite grey hat back from his forehead, and mapped that some forehead wi e grey silk handkerchief. The expression on his good-looking face was definitely petulant.‘ while the no? glass jammed over his right eye dded af- fectetion to what might otherwise have‘ passed for mere froppish- ness. . Not that young Bother-n was an idler or a wastrel. True. he was an Honourable. ‘Irue that his hair curled naturally. that he dressed too well. that he spoke with an Eton and OxforcLvoice, and declined to he ashamed of doing so-having, been at Eton and Oxford. But he‘ had oome down with the best scien- tific degree of his year. And in the normal course of events he Professor Hubert Manson. the cele- brated archaeologist. and worked exceedingly hard. Something of his petulance could at the moment be ascribed to the fact that Antony would have in- finitely preferred to have been at the British Museum than at Hen- a don. "I don‘t know why on earth youl Carol Manson. And in that little phrase she re- vealed to anyone who might have » been listening the principal motor- muscle of her existence to date. a Carol Manson was Professor d Manson's niece, which accounted for Antony's release from his day's ‘work. Motheriess since the age of seven. the only child of‘ Sir George Manson, chairman of Associated Airways Limited. and blessed with good looks far above the ordinary. Carol Manson hail seldom had even to argue about getting her own way. On the occasion of Em- pire Air Day she was just three weeks past her 19th birthday. blondc. RWY-eyed. slim, and as well-dressed as a girl can be in England. There was an under- standing — not an engagement, bo- cause Sothem had no money apart from his 10b. and because she was still so young - between he'l- and her uncle's secretary. ' Carol sometimes wondered what motive she had had for coming rn that understanding. apart from curiosity. This was one of the times when that wonder was acute- ly emphasized. Carol liked Antony Sothem a. great deal. She liked his looks, the perfection of the faced the world. the seriousness with which he took his job. his undoubted af- fection for herself. But she did not love him. and she knew it. At least did she know it? Love was so far to Carol Manson a book firmly closed. She had longed to open it. She had come tn that "arrangement" with Antony just because she hoped 1o open it in the company of someone she knew well. and liked. But she had been dis- appointed. And she realized that it could riot be very long before Antony would have to be told. She felt that when she told him he might be tiresome. He could be very tiresome in his own essentially gentlemanly way — he was being tiresome now. "But why did you want to come. Carol?" Antony persisted. They were sitting in Sir George's newest car—a huge black sports twoseater. which Carol drove with a certain desperate brilliance. Few of the passers-by failed to glance twice at the exceptionally good- looking young couple in the ex- ceptionally large and expensive car. More than a few recognized Carol Morison. who was a favourite with Press photographers. "l should have thought you'd have had all the aeroplanes you wanted in the home," said Antony Soihern. “I didn't come to see ‘plsnesfi’ seemed entirely occupied in focusing a pair of field- glasses. "Then what did see?" “Did you ever hcsr s proverb. Antony. about curiosity killing tho cat?" Sothern lighted s cigarette. "Of course if you get a kick out of making a mystcryl” he mutter- you come to But Carol kept her temper. rath- er surprisingly perhaps. "I'll tell you. if and when fepot him." she said. "Him?" "Rupert Larrimore. Tony." "And who the deuce is Rupert Lsrrimorei" Carol diopped the glasses into her lap and faced him. "Are all scientists quite such dumb-bells?" she dlnanded. less of Bothern thgn of the world at large. "l take it." pursued Gotham. quite unaffected, "that Mr. Lorri- more has something to do with flrlfll?‘ "You take — not only it. but the cake. the doings. and the works!" said Oar-oi. "Don't you really re- member. ‘lbnyf The man who one the first to the louth Pecifie Report Revolt ' revolt in Abyssinia with large bet- tles near Addis Absba. in one o! which 300 deed were left on the ground. Wu reported tonight in Italian newspapers. tempt vru mode to ambush the Crown Prince of Abyssinls. Asfsou Ouossan. eldest eon of Emperor Haile Selassl. The despatohes. cer- ried under Somallland) dateline. reported that the rebellion broke out a few days ago. After one battle near the cw- ital, government forces withdrew “to avoid causing a spreading of the revolt." the dLspatchee said. ports. the rebels ambushed e mil- itary column which wes to have included the Grown Prince. car which bore the royal insignia. and escaped the hail of machine- gun bullets which ripped into the beck seats. The Prince's secretary. who was in the column. sent an immediate call for aid and royal troops rushed to the scene, between the capital and Dessie, and beat off the rebels. them horribly mutilsteJ. were said to have been left lying on the ground. d u. h d5 m meiof Rome's newspapers. including ysgéty o? pfiygfeasecrlétary w the usuolly-well-informed Messag- gore. Head of Hillsborough wanted to come out to such s. god-Urns a visitor to this district re- forsaken sort of Jamboree!" he cently, - grumbled. . “I just wanted to come," said Mr. Clifford Holmes. Kingston. visited Head of Hlllsborough re- ccntly, Hillsborough was a visitor to Char- lottetown on Wednesday. Fanning Brook were Head of Hillsborough recently. Malpeque were visitors to Head of Hills- borough on Sunday. trict arrived home after spending the winter in Boston visiting reis- tives and friends. Road, Charlottetown. day with her grandparents in Head of Hilisborough. Thomas Baird are sorry to learn she has entered the City Hospital for treatment. Mrs. Baird is doing well. peque Rodd. Charlottetown. spent Sunday with his grandparents in Head of Hillsborough. family spent Sunday in Head of Hillsborough the guests of Mrs. Ralph Coffin. Busy Centre Of spent the 24th of May in Frederic- ton guest of her mother. town. paid n flying trip to Sum- merside Sunday end was the wel- n Abyss_IiiIa ROMS. May M — (Reuters) —-A According to the reports an et- a Djibouti (French On May 18. according to the re- But the Prince was not in the Three hundred deed. many of The reports were carried in most and Vicinity Mr. Floyd Jay. Pisquid East was visitor to this district recently. ___.< Miss Shirley Jay. Pisquid East. Mr. Alton Jay. Pisquid East. was visitor to this district on Mon- ay. Mrs. Frank Myers. Head of Mr. and Mrs. Milton Rodgerson. visitors to Mr. and Mrs. Howard Douglas. Road. Charlottetown. Mrs. James Myers of this dis- Mlss Florence Douglas, Malpeque spent Sun- The many friends of Mrs. At last reports ___. Master Nelson Douglas, Mal- uncl Peter and Joan ‘iii F . elncl Peggy PARDON our pointing . . . with pride. But it's an event when the number of bank workers passes the 40,000 mark-as it did last year. That’a 65% more than lgefpre the war. M45191» 3.95s It's an event, first, because it shows the increased use of Canadian bank services . . . More deposit accounts: now over seven million. More funds: customers’ deposits now reach nearly seven billion dollars.‘ More services: to farmers; to personal and small-business borrowers; war pensioners; to ' people receiving Family Allowances. It's an event, too, because of the kind of men and women who have joined om" ranks. Eager to get ahead, they are finding in banking an interesting job, a ' challenging career. They can tell you how important privacy in banking is to the Canadian way of doing things. SPONSORED Golngteyourbenkllnd like having to deal with a state be under slate monopoly. BY bureau-bu! that’! bow ll would YOUR BANK r ‘Mr. and Mrs. Bobbie Piggot and Hunter River Miss Gladys Weeks, Summerside, Mr. yron Spence.‘ Charlotte- come guest of his aunt. M-rs. Ed- wards. Miss Mildred Spence. C.N.R. em- ployee, Charlottetown, weekend at her home in Hunter River. welcome guest. of her moth- r. Mrs Selby Spence. spent the Mrs. Honeynell Spence, Hunter River and daughter were where Iiey spent the day with he-r sister-in-law, Mrs. Edwards. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Smith, Oys- ter Bed Bridge, Mr. Elmer MacDonald of New Glasgow. motored to Sum- merslde to the home of their par- have them back once again. Joan Gale. in Summerside Thursday and Mrs. and daughter i l ents. Mr. and Mrs. David Edwardlf First Street. Mrs. David Edwards and daugh- ter Verna. Summerslde, spent the holiday. May 24th. at Hunter River with Mrs. Edwards’ parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Spence and was delighted to find her father much better after the relapse of “flu". Mr. and Mrs. William MacDou- gall returned to their home in Hun- ter River after spending the win- ter in Charlottetown with their daughter Ruby. Mrs. Roy Smell- mim and Mr. Bmellmen. Mrs. Mao- Douinlrs health is much improv- ed and her friends are glad to Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Spence. Hit" ter River, returned home Charlottetown. ilrhere they °' brated their 04th wedding snniv sin-y on May 6th at the hem their daughter Janie. Mrs. i! Murphy. In the evening a rec - tion was held, three dsushi three sons and their family ‘i’ present along with relatives friends numbering 4t. The brid table was centered with two briii cakes, one topped off with t bride and groom. Heamest co gratulations were extended w - and Mrs. Spence. Their ages be! 84 and 83. Two of their sons 1r unable to attend as they art Western Canada. ‘they received number of lovely gifts and m For StoresmOfiices... Homesmlndustrial Plcinirs. .. A ‘ BUllD RIGHT with MAS § PRESDWOODS Use MASONITI PRHDWOOD! for Interior Fin- lohol .. . rnunuo rueowoons for Exterior URI Ind PIIIDWOOD TIIIPITILI for Klttllflfll end Bathrooms. * irr e e waler-resisturinmron’! clierlr, aorlr, split or splinter. . . coir lie sawed, planed, bevelled! Book Cases . . . Shelves . . . Table Tape Furniture . . . Cupboards . . . Room Penellln. Store Displays . . . Counters . ilnteriomuOficePertltlonen For samples and detailed inlormetlerr; writer INTIINATIONAI- IIIRI IOARD It Pl-YWOOD ‘Al-IS IIMITID OATINIAU; our. 001.1" ' ':is:::isi-.-.s~.=.~r.~.-:iuaa:..-~=-- .Bulii:-inDub —or consult your nearest lumber dealer! solo from vs parsiso to lydneyr The man whose stunt exhibitions sent the ltetes oresier than any inlo since Lindbergh "I think I ao remember the name an mention the details.‘ in continued) emu-rotten. i.. u. roots I rumpus" ‘rim-m co. Lro." ' nomonro eurnne I ' M. s. sciiuiiuAri MeobONALD-IOWI WOODWOIKING CO. “Us ellnseweesspteet IIIIOII-lil iiyr. HOLMAN m.