WEDNESDAY. To enable our staff to enloy Old Home Week. both branches of BRIGHTON STORES LTD.. will be closed Wednesday afternoon and Thursday afternoon. We would appreciate your co-operation by placing your order early. BRIGHTON STORES . IS YOUR HOUSE A , FMONEY-GRABBER”? sawewifi DISCO Asphalt Roofing and Siding Practical and Economicall Ihoo insulation reduces fuel cosh to I I mlnlmuml Save by choosing from the following DISCO PRODUCTS: I leek Wool insulation O Asphalt Saturated end Insulation Iolt o Torrid end Dry Sheathlngs c loll- brlslr Siding o Mineral Surface! , Ind Smooth loll RootlnglOAsphoIt ' Shingles Maritime Distributor! BISHOP ROOFING NIARITIMES LTD. IIUNDTDN v HALIFAX o SYDNEY STANLEY, SHAW a. PEARDEN LIMITED Charlottetown Voyage To Venus llope olSludenis GRAHAMSTOWN, South Africa. Aug. 16 - tCP) —There ls n small grqup of students here who are only too eager to be on board the first rocket ship for a WW8" through space. They are senior students at Rhodes University C011989i “m for more than six "1001-115 1'1"“? been studying the 90551111111!’ “l ititerplanetary flight '1‘11'~’Y ._ Mlle that within a few year! $119!“ have a chance to volunteer f0r the firs; mp away from the world. They 90m admit that the first voyage may be a one-way affair. The groups study has been done privately. having no connection with university courses. A mltlll source of information has been technical material from the United States. Ono of the conclusions reached by the students is that the easiest planet to be reached is Venus, not Mars. “A much smaller velocity would be necessary to escape from the earth's gravity and reach Venus than to travel to Mars." a science student said, "This ls because s spaceship travelling inward through the solar system, toward the sun. would be able to fall to its destin- atlon with relatively little expen- diture of power. Travelling to Mars would require noticeably more than the normal escape vel- ocity from Earth of seven miles per second. “The reverse would be true oi the return trip, which would be infinitely more difficult from Ven- us than from Wars. For this rea- son, the first trip to Venus is like- ly t.o be one way only." Members of the group were not perturbed by recent reports from the United States Air Force school of aviation medicine that space travellers would float helplessly in the air and have difficulty in eat- inrz. “ agnetlc shoes would make it possible to walk normally about the deck and it. would be quite easy to produce a small. but ad- equate. artiflclal gravity field by rotating the ship about its own axis. The inside of the ship's outer wall would then become the floor Beauty Title May Mean Much To Smarliirl By JIM BEOIBI NEW YORK. A118. i6 — (AP)- The best thing about bdnl named Miss America, says Bess Myerson. is that after a year you are an hex," An cx-Miss America, she ox- piains, works less for more cosh. Today Bess Mylrson. Whose flltlro and talent gained her the crown at Atlantic City in 1045, is Mrs. Allan Wayne. She lives with her husband. a toy manufacturer. her lB-month-old daughter Barbara, and tho 18-inch gold ltlfllette lho won in the contest. Bess, an accomplished pianist has a dozen music pupils who come to the apartment for lessons and plans to open a music school in the fall with her two sisters. She does quite s. bit of fashion modelling. She has done radio and television shows and plane her own TV program soon. Bess knows her Miss America ‘HT-IE GUARDIAN. CHARIDTTETOWN Gold Mining Subsidy To Cost l0 Million I7 IAIOLD MORRISON ctr-ram. aus- 1b —_ w?) - Tho Federal Governments P11“ w help Canada’! 8°14 1111111113 1mm” try through subsidy is 010K194 w m", 910,000,000 for the first yell‘ of operation, it was learned 1°"?- ringneg Minister Abbott will re- lease the final figure when he nuke, hi. report to Parliament “m, film: after the next session o ens Se? - - pills report ls “P9411114 i" 511°“ that the Government paid Out In average of $620 for each of the 8.100.000 ounces of I°1<1 9111545 produced in 1943- Ths subsidy plan. lmown as the Emergency Gold Mining Assist- m“ Mt, went into eflect in Junfi a year ago as a result oi mine complaints that current high pro- duction costs were 1101119911118 0111' put. Gold, when Purchased by the United States. brings $35 an ounce. title helped her get many of tho when the hectic year that followed her victory wns over. Thnf year her time belonged to nsk for ll. She modelled every- thing from bathing suits to fur coats for the companies who put nfSlilp that went with the title. She got nothing extra for it. "I couldn't be ungrateful,” relates. And besides the contest officials hold lho money in escrow for Bess and she was allowed to draw checks on it. There were compensations, of course. A six-week vaudeville tour at $1.000 a week, for instance. Bess played the piano (in evening dross) and then came out in a bathing suit and joked with the comedian. "I don't remember the lines." she says, “but they were pretty bad." Continued Studies Meanwhile. she was using up the scholarship, continuing her piano studim at Lafollettc School of Music and studying conducting at Columbia. In May 1946 she played a concert at Carnegie Hall. "Of course, l never would have had the chance to play at Carn- cgic if I hadn't been Miss Ameri- ca. But. the reviews were very nice and the press didn't say anything about bathing suits." Later, she appeared at Carnegie with the Philadelphia symphony, as a flute player. Again she was well received. Bess, who was born in the Bronx, a. daughter of an interior decorator. had just finished Hun- ter College when she was entered in the Miss America contest. She was 2i. Alinn Wayne, now 31. was fresh out. of the service as a (‘out art- lllerfymhn in the South Pacific when I10 attended a gm show in Atlantic City. Boss was the offic- inl hostess. They Plflped in October mo, the night Bess took her second screen test. Barbara came on the eve of lilo New Ycar of 1948. "It's been very pleasant.” says Allnn. "Bess has never torgpiten that she is a. wife and mother. She takes only the jobs she thinks duce exactly the some effects as ordinary gravity," another mom- and centrifugal force would pro- ber said. 1* LONE LAST FINAL BLOW! A PRICE - COVULSION ALLNEWSIIMMER DRESSES T0 $35....12. things she has. But she was glldl the contest sponsors, local mayorll and almost anyone who wanted to the subsidy up the money for the $5.000 schol-| Some new mines showed £1151 1" was closer to soo an ounce to mine gold in the first 31°" °1 W‘ oration. The expectancy is that aided by and through their own efforts, mines will produce 15 per cont more gold in 1949 than in That will mean that at the rate of 035 per ounce. Canada will be AUGUST 17, 1949 tmgducing gbout $120,000,000 worth she of gold this year, compared with sl00,000.000 a year ago. There is no indication just how long the Govemmenfs gold subsidy plan will run. If the United States decides to Jack tip the price of gold to $50 per ounce, it is expected the Government will drop thr- plan. liressmaking Ari Taught 2i Years vamcouvma. Au8- 16 — (GP) _. A pioneer school in the field o! manual arts comes of use 141115 year. 1t i; the Academy of Useful Arts, the oldest institution of its kind in Western Canada, which is now 2.1 years old. speciaiizing in designing and dressmaking. the school holds day and night classes the year round. Individual instruction is the rule and the students -- girls and mar- ried women -— can ernrol at any time and take as much of the course of instruction as they may wish. Having contacts with leading New York designers. the school begins by teaching designing and tailoring and continues through a course of training in dressmaking power machine operating and smocklng. she can do without with our home lifc.” Wayne is very proud or his wife's achievements. "A lot. oi the girls didn't do much with the title after they got it," he says. "but I think Bess did a. lot of good svith her tours and lectures. She en- joys fashion work, as well as mu- sic. Her sisters. like Bess, were honor students at Hunter. One plays the violin and the other the piano. I'm sure they'll have a top music school." interfering i Lontlonrs Seek Tomb r i i i CELEBRATE “OLD HOME WEEK” i With The PERFECT SUIT Gentlemen visiting Charlottetown for "OLD HOME WEEK" will be wise to inspect the finest showing of Suits for men ever shown by Moore '8: McLeod Limited. You will find your ideal in model, colour end fe- liric in these ‘Fine English, yarn-dyed worsteds, tailored in the styles of of fine There are browns. greys. blues, single breasted or dou- todey 1.. n; -. and ‘tomorrow by Canada's foremost designers clothes for men. ble Breasted models. For leadership style, quality, tailoring. see these high grade Suits at Moore8: MacLeod Limited today. ' $45.00 to $65.00 “ MGDRE a. MiLEODli.m....lls..<1.. fertilized by the influence oi sur- rounding beauty. From this section came the Thomsons and John-sons. Tom Thomson, one of six paint- decreasing interest. Local plcturu control is because such larg- by as district painters filled Citylnumbers of weed seeds are put into Hail at the annual exhibition this the soil through lack of oars in spring for two days. And by the ordinary farm operations. looks of things there will be more Investigation, have shown tlm N0 ALL NEW SUMMER DRESSES T0 $1 8....8._ PASTEL SUITS and Sll0 inert. s29....1o. suits priced for o mad cleanup at .. . . . 1H,“. .. you a complete 16.95 $4 For . . . . . suit $8 full SWIM SUITS to $12.95 $10.95 SLACK SUITS SWEATERS TO $4.95 Yes, they all go now at $4! Real bsou- This Season's finest Slack Suits — the For cool Fall evenings time sweaters of ties, expensive 10.95 and 12.95 bathing Slacks alone are worth 8.95, but will give finest wool will coma in handy. Make no y mistake — thry'ro beauti- For .........$2.95 ' FINAL SWEEP! COATS 3 T0 9.50 Down go Coat prices again for tho last and final I close-out! Brand new styles that you can vveor all Foil and next year. What a saving! What a so take them’ away .. price-crash! We don't can now, $14 I Io 0 0 A T S. 10159.50 . compare e‘|__._neoo|'el e - . .5‘. .3 You'll volt till the crock of doom before you'll equal this coat bargain-Now, ovary 59.50 coat in the ytorc, now the finest coats of tho season-simply su- perb fabrics, linings and styles-an irresistible bargain beyond w LADIES’ STORE n‘... for out Whittington IDNDON, Aug. 16 - (GP) - Plans to excavate in search of Dick Whittlngtows tomb. believed to be lying under the north wall of St. Michael Paternoster Royal Church in the city of London, are being made by a band of people headed by 51-year-old Canon J.A. Douglas. A church was originally built on the site in 132i. During Dick whittingtonm term of office as ‘first lord mayor of London he lived next door and was buried under the north wall. In time he came to be regarded as n saint and people made pil- grimagcs from all over England to touch the tomb in the ho of be- ing cured of diseases. T o auth- orities, however, frowned on this custom and an organ was built over the tomb. Canon Douglas, one-time pro- fessor at London University, is anxious to bring the tomb to light. "It is remarkable that there is not. one monument in london to a rnan who might be called the father of the city of InOIldOTl." he said. "If our plan is successful I should like to soc some sort of monument erected - a beautiful garden or a great picture - to make the church one of London's historical sights." GEORGIAN BAY ARIA STILL IOSTIEI All.‘ OWIN BOUND.’ Ont.. AM. 16- (OP) - One of the busiest art. centres 1m appropriately at one of the Dominion’: beauty spots -- owon Bound - at tho and of the railway lino. ‘more, amid the isolated, un- dulating terrain ot Gray and Bruce ooimtlls. oa tho short of ing children of pioneer‘ settler John Thomson and leader of tho famous Group of Seven, created there some of his most moving and vital works. And there is the notable John- son family. Sevcn of the 11 girls in this famlly‘t00k up painting. Agnes Johnson Sinclair taught one group of keen youngsters ai- ter another. Ann Johnson Rogers headed the Lyceum Club Women's Art Association for many years. Since pioneer days, people of the region have tnkcn to the brush nncl easel and there'ls no sign oi Palnled this year. while many farmers are extremely cmreftii in the selection and cleaning of the seed they use, other: do not give this Important step in fanning the attention it rightly deserves. Clean seed is of vital importance because some weeds are so 1910119" in seed modulation that relatively clean fields may become badly con- taminated in two or three years 1i the weeds are allowed to go lo ""1 WEEDS ARI) PROLIFIC _ Weeds are one of the greatest problems in successful farming, and llarticularly in producing a more abundant supply of clean forage, grain, and other seed. To got the best returns from the land and produce n high class oi clean teed. farmers halve to wlge a ceaseless war ltLQJing woods in check and preventing the Quad of new kinds. one of the principal reasons why The Inst coast. of trench WI! Africa has an average winter wu- wred are not brought under better psrature of 70 degrees. Iva so different today ' ‘Ilrnewas no olsloct t» Cleopatra who ha» Jinn attendants served breakfast Cleo of today must be quick al the mrk. So no woedn lather praises the sorvcd-ln-a-llly, engag- sight Post's Grape-Nuts Flakes. They're not d1] convenient but delicious and nourishing too. Yes-Post's Gropolhu "also penile ‘*1 quantities of carbohydrates proteins, Id other food osscsisls to out the hay day FllM-Isdowhhtwepnlno-wbootndbllsy a ".2." "u: 'l.'l."i.'.'i'.“l°.l.""""......""“‘ litult II‘ Pomona-um rum. "'- i Ql-II