SATURDAY. UBLEY. GLAND (OP -Norman BURY ST. EDMUNDS. Enlllnd Minto. disturbed in nu sleep in (cm --In A meadow um this Suf- thia somerset village by a burglar, .'o1k town. more than (0 miles in- pulled the man to the ground ant ':::l, the council has reconstructed sat on top of him while his wife tuber buildings into a ”training Table Top by Eden Phillpoita called police. " It was easy." said -hip" enabling boys to take cour- Minto, who weights 252 pounds. dz w.rw.a4,v I see in scamanship. CHAPTER II Continued "Now touching the these defects of character that I attributed to them, perhaps too harshly, we have got toiremember fundamental facts, my friends, for out of them arises their history. To begin with, they never shed innocent blood save in the rarest instances. Their altars were not polluted, and they display the spir- it of Abel rather than Cain. They claimed a heavenly origin, and, for their time, behaved in a mari- 10 doz. Tablecloths .50 Ten dozen was all we could get - - - the same size as before 50x50 - - - the some lovely checked rayon patterns! Wish we could say take all you want. but a”s”'quantity is limited the best we can do is one to a customer! V. I Melts White SHIRTS to 4.95 it riuouys itnsesur KNIT" BOYS-YOUTHS T0 35 MEN'S SWIM TRUNKS 14.95-5.95 BOYS PANTS ' A famous brand at a true bargain pricel Mostly 5.95 quality, some 4.95 in the lot All sizes to start with this morning-but, g-- what a chance ito fix-up the boys for pick yours up early at y ' school! Half price and u smashed price ...................... .. l Broken Lines Menis 12.95 GREENDAUS Inca: and T0011 Y Mm'itime..1i13 Jim rllvrwn Av t1tAUt)lltit will . R. E. HART. Branch Manager, 53 Grafton St. Charlottctnwls, P. E. I. High grade branded shirts'- now, please note the sizes are l4, l6, l6"-' and l7 only - they're truly wonderful quality but white onlyl Corry away a -real "gift" if you wear these sizes. V Mostly all are genuine Goodyear Wells - broken sizes of our high priced lines - various styles in the lat - "every pair a smashing give-away at o5. Sole GET” EM TODAY the moon. the evening star. and the spirit that spoke in the thun- cler were their gods. The people were religious and paid their toll to their deities. They gave willing- ly all that was most precious to them. With gold and silver and precious stones they adorned their noble temples and brought thither the fruits and harvest of the earth. together with the productions of their own industry - the finest a- chievements of their craftsmen and husbandmcn. And that, surely. is about the most rational form of idolatry it is possible to imagine. Beneticent and all-sufficing nature was their real deity, and they took their convictions far afield, for where the Incas conquered and ex- tended their domain, all native blood rites and religious tortures and: massacres were suppressed, and the native peoples taught a higher ideal of humanity. "We must grant that the Govern- ment was despotic and created for the nation a sort of superior slav- ery. Thus superstition and force ,governed the country and created in supine, phlegmatic spirit destined to make it an easy prey. "Those who had set the slogan time one nnother' upon their banners swift--. ly went down before the battle cry of Spain, and their dream of igooci comradeship and universal humanity made no appeal to the ; lust of the Latins. Spain, with gun- lpoivder to support her and the lore of war at her fingcrs' ends, swiftly laid Peru battered and bleeding under her heel. for in I ;few years' time the Jesuits wsrc lgoverning South America precise- ily on the same old lines of super- lsiition and force that the Incas lwere used to employ. ftlie little company of our ancient 'Indian people remaining, Jclierish their memories and rever- iencc the sorrows of the past. They tsllll mourn the imperial Incas, iarid their vanished glories and lbitter woes are handed down by lfather to son. by mother to daugh- ltcr, through the avenues of the fears," i Mr. Fernandez broke off. flung away his cold cigar and lighted ari- llllR,tiESS BEIJTIME Continued from Dsge 9 I Snliy sly agreed. "A nest of any Lot the Warbler family is good. I ,put an mg in the nest of Zee Zea ithe Reristart this year," said she. i "That makes three different nests you've used this year," said inhe of the others. Then added. "1: limit all the eggs you laid?" l "No." replied Sally Slv. "I left ;.tn egg in the nest of Sweeivoice 'the Vesnrr Sparrow, and on in a fvireof host." I "Have la mung Cowbird asked. l "Frankly. I dont know,"'rreplied Szallv Sly. ”Now yoirve brought the ;ll1'tliPi' up I think I'll check. I lwftllld like to know myself how lniany children I've got and how they are faring. There's a difference tin mothers, you know. some mn- thers are better than oihtrs. It in a good think: to know what kind 0' care nnc's bzilrs will have and jchoose nests accordingly." A Liberal Graiii Crop This Year H Have You The Equipment To Handle Same? qyvwigsrn No. 64 Bumlilne Bfqqesfof fie 5 790795 r '5 4 Many lcrmon report worlttng c , Smooth-running. easily operated. rugged Mctiormick Thresher: offer the utmost in clean threshing and rain-saving performance. Two popular sizes. 22 x 3!! rich and 28 x 46 inch, combined with a great variety . of available cqui mcnt meet your every threshing need of sur risingly ow cost. See us . . . . . . for comp etc details on a new McCormick Thresher for - your farm or custom work. Prompt delivery assured. crops. Savu all the crop, Doclrol. Call in and lol its to McCormick N 0 lull your letter become ol the No. 64': big capacity. The extra big leader-largest of any combine with lull width cylinder--teed: short or shoulder high crops ovonly into the cylinder. No slugs, no slowdowns oven In thlclc tangled putting extra dollars In your ll you how you'll llnlsh harvest- ing latter and do It better with a now o. 64 Combine. A Number of New and llsod llinilm and Thresher: Available New alum amiaiisn TWlllES, WHOLESALE and W. R. JENKINS RETAIL lllal 0503-5584 her quite worthy of it. the run. oil-her, while Angus asked a quel- t on. "Is it true. do you think. air, that at the conquest, when Cuzco was the Inca capital and perhaps the wealthiest city in the world. that. rather than yield their treasures to the coming Spaniards, the rul- ers conveyed them southwards to Lake ' Titicaca and flung their golden images and sacred vessels and priceless jewels by the ion in- to the laket" i "I should Judge there was no question about it, Maine," replied the other. "The fact is established on massive grounds. Sanguine'hls- torlans judge there may well be hidden treasures to the value of fifty millions hidden in Titicaca; and they are likely for the most part to remain there, for her wat- erl are in places eight hundred feet deep. one may compute where the treasure arrived from Cuzco; but the lake was full of heavy craft in those days and no man can say where these precious things have been submerged. Some, however. were undoubtedly recovered; and that fact brings me back to Benny Bola, whom we have kept waiting long enough.” CHAPTER III THE 150.000 R,UlIY "The man was in his prime when we first met." began Jacob, "and as nothing pleased hlni better than talking about himself I heard a good deal of his history. One could not, however, regard'him as a very truthful narrator. the hero of his own story, and, to listen, one had thought more honest plain-dealer I "Yet." concluded the old man.l lllll ? all your egg. hatchcd?”l I545 "lucky" Glover: 'Found in Two Months -If four-leaf clovere are reauy a symbol of good fortune than Miss Theresa Gaudet, of Mis- couche. is loaded with luck. This 23-year-old girl has been inoat. adept at locating these com- paratively rare clovorl. and has had, with a meuurs of real suc- cess a casual interest in making I. search for unusual oloveu since the age of ten. - This summer for the purpose of being able to substantiate her claim. and to preserve her dis- coverlcs, Miss Gaudet began to file ed from the narrative. "He was an unconsclou artist. in youth he had followed the sea and spent much time also at various Pacific islands in guanoic palmy days. The fact had created a keen interest in birds. and I will say for Benny that a sounder naturalist never came to my knowledge. "Well. Bonny. tiring of the sea. found congenial work inland at Puno and presently combined var- ied tntereste by operating on th; lake in the steamers trading be- tween Bolivia and Peru. I met. him upon an excursion in one of these little paddle-boats, and we struck up a friendship over birds. Ha I- greed to serve ms, and. for a time, worked solely in my employment He was alwayslTiticaca. lhe was industrious and most in- that no genious. I look back at Benny as everlone of the founders of my unique Ion the waters and shores of Lake In the capture of birds fought fate and circumstance: buticollection. an element of romance never lack-I -1 and get started! to handle, nail and saw, To be continued YOU'LL HAVE FUN making smart. outdoor furniture with durable. easily-worked Sylvaply. Free plan for thia.,table. and bench at your lumbcrkdcalcr. Got it- vou cm TRANSFORM . ....r basement into . dazzling guest room, rumpus room or I den-easily and inexpensively-by panelling with Sylvaply, so easy iI.'e more fun than work. Get Free ”How-To-Do-It's” from your Sylvaply dealer, Serving lumber Dealers from Cont to Count laollllll I ILOEIEI. LIIIIEI Vancouver 0 to Winnipeg london 0 Windsor 0 onnto o Moment 0 oeoboc Ch "Do-It-Yourself" with SYLVAPLY each unusual clover in an album. in a manner which oiueifiee each 'of chain as to date of discovery and number. At the present time her collec- tion which wn begun eight weeks ago consists of M5 four-leaf clov- ere, 11 with five leaves, and one with six. Neatly arranged in one of her five clover albums each one is past- ed down with transparent tape which clearly reveals each leaf and every detail of these beautiful ciovers. Miss Ctaudet believes that Thurs- day must be her lucky day as she has found most on this day of the week. although on Friday. July 24, she located 60, which was the greatest number to be found on any one day. Most of her unusual collections has been found in and around Mlscouche during occasional searches. Mill Gaudot jokingly suggests that her ability to locate these clovers might not prove no suc- cessful if they were rare enough to be worth a price. but her pleasure and enjoyment. in this unusuol' hobby makes her collec- tion well worth whatever time she has given to it. Miss Gaudet ialthe daughter of ,Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Gaudet, utfiacouche.-S. ' DONCASTER. England (GP) - Two "museum pieces" will come out ofiretlrement to commemorate the transfer of the Great North- erng Railway locomotive plant to Doncaster in 1853. The first lo- wheelod engine to. be built in Brit- ain, ”Henry Oakley". will haul a special train from Londonito Don- cutcr wlalle engine No. 351 will make the Yorkshire-London trip. AUGUST 15. 1953 T Acknowledgement v The parishioners of St, Au... tine”: Church. Rustico, p, E” ' Wish to thank the following 'peg pie and business firms for m,:; generous donations to the Chiclm Supper and bazaar held in Sou” Rustico hall on Wednesday, MW: 5: Mr. A. R. Mcinnis, Mr, ma Mrs Larry Kelly, Mill Ankelina Blanch. Fertilizer Co., Home Motors, gm. on's Dry Goods, Dillon and Spine" Bevan Bros, Keefe Drug 90' Queen Street Service Station, Am,' fast Coal Co.. Evangeline Beyer. ages, Clark Wholesale Fruit co J. and M. Murphy. Halifax seed 50' Seaman's Beverages, Peerless an-.' erages, DeBlois Bros, Canada Pack. era, Pure Milk Co., Queen Si. Me... Market, P. W. Turner. Sidney T” Green. Whitlock Tire Service, cl”. ence McGulgan, Central Creamer- ies. Condon Woollen Mills. K. and R store, Co-op Store. S. It. Mcpon, aid, Moore and McLeod, wool. worth's Rogers Hardware, 1:-en, net and Chandler's. Toomb's Mum Store, Holmes and Bradley, cu. terls Book Store. Tire Shop, R.-dam Bros.. Hughes Drug Store. Ken- nedy's. Miller Bros, Fashion Shoppe, Piercc's Cash and Carry B. W. LePage Shoe Store, R. T: Holmanis, Henderson and Cud- more, Atkinson's Cash and Carry Prowse Bros.,,iMetropolitan Stank: ILKESTON. Englzmdt cpl . ,r cluded in a newly-built college in is inaugurated in September 5111, this Derby town. When the college ,V0llLlI' employment bureau is in. dents will have a choice of 100 courses. t Loot; what you can do evitlz ' The great, new ”Do-I)-Yourself” movement is rolling along, stronger than ever! People who used to think they couldn't drive a nail straight have found this exciting and profitable spare-time occupation ”right up their alley.”.Itis rasy to make so many things that help make a house a home--with Sylvaply. ' ll WHAT A BLESSING youill find the extra storage space and convenience in a hunk of built-in drawers like these. And. his all yours when you make your own built-ins with Sylvaply. YOU CAN EASILY ENLARGE to use Sylvaply. Just follow your home be it: new or old, by oimply turning waste attic space into valuable living space. You donlt need to he an expert the sim iln step-hy-at:-p Instructions in the Sylvaply Free it ow-To-Do-It's" your dealer has for you. Lightweight and strong, the big handy panels of Sylvaply Douglas Fir plywood are more fun than work for building. remodelling and making fumituro. Thcylre just right for the "week-end” carpenter using the simplest household tools. P111113 : it's nag... just average skill In the use handy for odd Jobs.) All you need In work auoeeufully with those eu!'l"' handle 6 foot by I feet panels of lightweight lylvaply I! Got tuned by falling over your project at "llandysnan lleadquenere"-your local Syluply doalot. (Ila Ian tlir now "Take Hope" clue. too-"small Sylvaply panels -11:11 a few simple tools needed of ordinary houuliold tool!- L-- ard, Cudmore Dry Cleaners, mand .