il “*"=‘-"1- 1O-2iJIL44-LL44_.£ l‘m/\>.-1\)>~\IA~_ u-_...-__ U Eiifiyl‘ I-vislk") I FRI-rim PAQE TWO “At Last I've Found Rellef from Dlstreeslng HEAD ODLBS" Y0“. tm will pay tribute to good ld hlentboldtum and its quick resuitsoin relieving bead colds, nasal oatarrh and asthma. 'I‘reat that cold at onoe . . . before it. becomes l”, U” Mentbolatuni tonight. Insert. a little in each nostril and inhale deeply. See how the soothing antiseptic vapours of this healing balm reach to the furthest. we! passages . . . relieve nasal dis- cbbfgt, etuifineee end irritation . . . soothe inflamed membranes . . . clear those clogged breathing channels and help keep them clear. Get l 30 eent tube oryar o! Mentholstum today. Use it tonight. Relief ouoranteed or money bark. u Discuss Reception Plans For Royalty Dec. orrratvs. __ Minister MncKenzie 0f his cabvic: who are members o; the sub-committee charged with milkinl-l arrangements for the i-e_ Wption w be lllven King and Queen Elizabeth when they oune to Canada next Ma . adven. °°d “Mr plans at a. two- our an. Slog today. ~ .~ ‘P311115 FIN-lit be submitted ‘.0 élllictnhlnycstic-s for approval and ‘O59 Him-ll"? Expenditures require approval of cabinet council here as zfoell- .-‘\li ‘the senior members of H1161. ziic on x1e sub-commit 0e. Aliolltvr committee, consiym Dvilirv .\l;n:s:er:~. of the pepirgf Lilli l'\ concerned ii-irl; me nfid ‘imam; , 1* “OTKIIIZ continuously ' s iis representation i the cabinet, c0 ‘(get s to i l l POULTRY l Buying daily Live and dressed Poultry Paying Top .\l:irket Prices (‘orrccf Grading. Prompt Returns ISLAND COLD STORAGE . COBIPANY, LTD. FOX MEAT Fresh Frozen BEEF TRIPE so. l 3 — — — — — — —- — 4c Fresh Frozen CALF TRIPE 50's - _ _ _ _ __ _ 3%c Fresh Frozen Ground MEAT 50's — - _ _ _ _ _.. ._. 5c ALSO Horse‘ meat 8i Boneless Beet Above prices lowest in Canada ISLAND COLD. STORAGE CO LTD. l svnri will DRY hilrllest mar- - w. g\1\ I _ -Z\-- ‘_ ket prices for dressed 5i poultry. I “rite or call for lnfor- i‘ if} matmn. ' l Swift Canadian C . Phone 1027 Charlottetown 5S Fitzroy Si. Professional Cards ll. F. AlllllllBALll Chartered Accomtant ,i' us; \.- I40 Richmond Street Phone 47. P. 0. Bo: l2. McLeod 6. Bentley W. E. BENTLEY, K J. A. BENTLEY, xjc? c. r. BENTLEY. 1,1,5. Barristers and Attorney-at-Lny MONEY T0 LOAN lllllwRlchmond 311-"; Fred- ric A. Large Barrister, Solicitor, eta. Successor to D. Edgar Shaw. K. C. Prowoe Block. I27 Grafton treat. Charlottetown. P. l. L Money to Loan Collections. Real Estate Alex. W. Matheson BABRISTER. SOLICITOB ETC Money to Loan Collection! Ofllce: 90 Great George Street. _ MARITIME Ad|uslmenl Bureau CREDIT — COLLECTIONS CREDIT REPORTS PERSONAL LOANS Peardrn Bums“ Clrtown Phone I216 George . . confirmation be I . \.r\\ Story American But one flirure w“ very frequent, 1n these dreams. He was sometimes, the second in command, sometimes‘ the op ito general suiTendei-mg with a the honors of war some- time; an ambiguous political asoc-i late in the revolution. or the coun- ter revolution. or the war of liber- ation. or the great conquest. which- ever it happened to be. His admir- ation for the generallssimo was ex- treme. his loyalty amounted tande- votion. This was Carstall. My trusty Car-stall." Rudlie never seem- ed able to keep Carstall ou: of the phantasy. He never wanted to do so. He whlstled w himself as he took his imagination on ihese excursions He never learnt towhiszle normally- It was a sort of acid piping through ha tee-h and it lacked any consist- em. tune. Arid always he got home by twi- i lixzht. For in the dark nhe kings and ‘captains departed. the fiBhflIl-E and {the conquests died sway. and the ismall bov was left exposed to those bears and tigers and zorillas, which mcape so frequently from manager- ies even m, me _ most settled dis- tXlCLs. and to criminals and homici- dal maniacs and hedge-bogles and all the shapeiess terrors of the i night. ‘ _ V 1 As his mznd crew and his read- ing expanded his reveries became more realistic and Vcoherent. and darkness le.~.< menacing. He began ‘o study maps. particularly maps in which each country and its foreign possessions were done in the same_ color; he began to collect picturcsl l and comparative diagrams of arm- ies and navies and air forces. He was particularly keen on air war- fare. Dropping high explosive bomb= tocether with printed warnings and roclamations. appealed tohlm as ust the perfect way of making war. He read Ihe newspapers with an avidity uncommon at his tender age. He knew thc salutes and sivm- pols or all-the dictators in the world and the inner significance of every colored shirt. And as he izrew up w- ward them. these heroes. ihcse mas- ter; of men who marched like lllflfl torches through the blue haze and reek of cCfliPflllwlarY 1:140:11 seem- ed continually to come down nearer ‘he level of his understanding until sympathy. So it was our Holy Terror nourish- ed his imagination and antictpaied his career. SPIRITUAL INFLUENCES His early religious experiences did not amount to ve much and they pjayed onlv a smal part in his sub- sequen: career. Still one may say a word or two about them before dl-L- misslng them. _ He was never God-fearing. Nowhere in the world in his days was there any atmosphere in which the presence of God was felt. The general behavior of people every- where made it Dlaln that whatever they professed when they were ques- tioned. they did not feel any such Power within or about them. For most of them it would have been an entirely paralyzing thought. to have been lving in the presence. in the slgjit and knowledge of an unseen and silent Deity. ‘with indefinite powers of intervention. The tension would have become unendurable; they would have rcreamed. They dismissed the thought therefore and they dismissed Him. no‘. explicitly of course. but tacitly and practical- ly. On mos; of their occasions. even the professional religious people. from DDDBs and archbishops down to candidates. behaved exactly like atheists-as well but no tter. Young Rudolf indeed heard very little about the supreme immanence. Mrs. itlow had a. delicacy about mentioning Him eXCep: in connec- ilOn with the Lords Prayer and the Ten Commandments and similar formalities, and Mr. whltlow only mentioned Him on occasions of dis- mey—as for example when he heard that Aunt, Julia had come in to see them. Then usualy he would ex- claim. “Oh God!" From the outset young Rudolf put up a considerable God-resistance. He reed such portions of the scrip- ture as were chosen for his learn- ing reluctantly and with lncredulity and aversion. Father was bad enough without this vastcr Father behind him From all the world around him Rud cauizht the trick of putting divinity out of his mind in the ordinary affairs of life. But only by de ees. He had some bad times, usualy about. judgment-day and hell-fire. They were worse to dream about than falling into tig- er‘s dens. He "had called Alf a fool several times. The: he learnt was a hell-fire business. And there was very little on the other sideof the account. He had tried praying-as for example at cricket for a score of twenty and then he had got out YTERRUR! THEfZl-lARLOTTlITOWN quianisiv of a \Vorld Dictator By H. C. WELLS Copyright, 1938. by The North Newspaper Alliance. lnc. l_it.le cad iii grain. to whom unfeel- ing ruthlessiies and nroediness and implacabie WllllllllE&S were as natur- Bl as night-prowling to a hyena or an evil odor to flowering prlvet, The chances of the genes had‘ Bil/tn her that. but her spirit sirug-l 818d 588.1115! her luck. It was too OUT OUR WAY ' "Yrlv dim: bu: she could not 1mm. earnest young - _.a..._._.. i‘- much to admit. She luvw bc'ier loicd bcm of couisc but calnil " then anyone no ‘ - - y. and last Easter my noee bled some- m com“ He. Sh‘; $51111)‘; arilrdxlmearrély ‘, did not distress yourself about thing frightful. Until mother got a l-"K- find his instincts seem fur-‘ For a term or so there was an (aiéhateylsift like tuberculoab which wists-m umalster in his: says your lupus away." cernczilinelg Dont worms?’ sold Rud. "I w V __ a uilcture the other day o! vgy -- fl e in a chaps liver. Something horrid. You get it from eating ‘Y3 tungst- vwm assistant mas- of her own flesh and blood ln such the early stage; or 9v 2§:=3€°1¢§F1r!\1S-“Hls_soul is awakened," at I-looplady House. m e km ,, erself. one must be pat- the more] Obitillllty in wh And after all. he was very clever! high‘! llintg d 181% t the be w “‘.€.°'.l‘.’.%‘".%f.‘.l§.“;“€£§’mil%‘€i..‘.l‘ wisi 2s:.:fij°:.i.n.‘s' s... "= ... .Hls -- _' . - W‘ is muss eoi-upuy. “I'd i erzilvrlzdihllilig: efbr ‘a. w 14°"! and ones leqt hats to dlo before f had don’; n . "'11-"- ff ‘leg s‘? muytth ‘.8031 thrift’: Lift’; h? i§ii‘.§i’.i,...“".£'£.,?°l.°£§ f} 3,‘ w” flung‘ he was horrid he hard to draw as a frightened bad- _ = n8. ‘Phat at any rack ger,_The earnest your-i mm“; ¥al°.é’.f.::l%.i:;.“ls- .22’; ' imrssrltswnnsl. 5:. alt-rd o. ... t. . - 12rd h ' l met , ....J..‘ll..‘€lf...‘".‘i.%‘“i “m” "‘°’° ll‘ "" ‘“""°“‘°‘"- m“ °' "in ween o: - u~§l’i£i“’..9.ii.‘;.."lt or A" Th“ f n d? alfiut Sam chad coughed blood. womd b, m, m 8° to l “us” . - . W 1'9 O r0 . " ape/w "We Ordinary like their rilzneénlitiiil times.‘ ssiaultilill iiilnilinxiiiethrglleli- Ic-iblgiililiktiigsiii uTOO-pholglnllllttln '-' - a . some dreadml aiuin ‘ __ 7. 1938 _q Do ‘t ever want to do thing; _ m”, "Menard-be a machine gun. xOh but that's klllinll" WW3‘... ‘flit; f“.‘..”°l‘..%° " ‘hi’ m‘ u,“ 11¢ lbout "I sho doertell _ o "n! not be a lol With a record l lento?! UIIIIIOB: l: :1 um“ lib m m. punt-u, depend 0h ‘mmhue. m” The assistant vlslon. I-Ie stoodmgtffi w‘? lost hi? | I es and 1 i ‘n w. ... mt ma“ ariiiu u: ‘There's n shorter way thih next. stile and across 1%,?“ u. d Rud after a lengmy Dana . | 11ml and d’? aloud. ‘lgeb. i °“~‘~1..~. "x"- '~ i" “- . said ma, “imfiw” °° “h” 1mm i». m.“ one‘ "m: "' - By J. R. Williams l’ went, ‘m’ coox h ll i susss ma? ecrr BACK ‘FROM COVVPUNCHER wno 1 TOWN’ A34 wane RLJIHED sux HE GOT AfiDI-lSIMxWmFAKES KNIVES AN THREE mppgp "4 H515 pUT 1R- 5-'|-}§,(,E A D06 ‘FIGHT, '.‘.°.=?.i’éfi°-‘°§.?-‘é.. E" r "E ' , LOOKS LIKE =__i_ uuxso win-o m 0N5 OFTHOS; BIG s1‘; BERNARDS HIMSELF! l ztil i‘ § FEEL‘: l A LOT BETTER v» AFTER THlS= -1 oua eoaaoiuc “bilge _ TO BARK AND RUN Awouui: Ni6HT5-~GIVE HIM ONE sump OFA com AUD 1a,; 351- HE couw LOCKFE Tee's-nu. _! ‘r " J" Pm B. Col s) _ _,_ Mfliflr Hoople //* uMF--5l>'-4T-r_'- sPula-f: t=ui=-r=... 56AM wens rr HOT FOR MY luaunsv 1.5a AND AH OLD SABER WOUN? ‘THAT LAYs ME LOW: You WOucD NOT DARE ARousE A HOOPLES nae ‘fl-tug / With .- UNDERSTAND HE ukss m: AIN'T 54cm! ms Noss_ IS cow A5 |¢B --sea now "w. n" is! (l // QQ r il l ‘l B)’ George Q McMaE i DAUGl-ITEQ-VLL as GLIAD WHEN MAGGIE ee-rs THQOUGH WITH JAIL. ii= SHE QEMAl "ri-ierzi: ANY LON6Ekl|2§ WHAT- SHE'S ANDEI "Fl-lib: 5HE'5 CQYlhV- SAKE- TIDPIE and map" STUBS FOQ GOODHESS 114E JJDGE FIQED AAASDOSEIgSEAElJILQY DOLLAR EN NTE WHAT’ 5 WATC H fr’ 4 NO- I WANT MY SAXOPHONE! CAP — HOW WOULD YOU LIKE A NEW A NEW WATCH — AND A slimy FOUll-BLADED KNIFE. - wm-i A CORKSCREW ‘t THING -— first ball. mu right, God." said little Rudle. HY .. ou see. Then he heard tell that old Doc- tor Carstall was an atheist. The schoolfellow who told him that spoke in hushed tones. “What's a Nathelist?" asked Rudle, I "It's-me don't believe iheres any God a‘. all. Airft it orful?‘ v “gall have to a0 to hell.’ 551d Ru ‘e. "Hell have tn go to hell. And him“ res ctedl It's a frightful it ." .0... b‘§“<‘>‘;“l‘.i.° a look at rs . He seemed to be carfylhg "r 01! all right. Thenflludie had an im ulse £0 ask young Carstall about l but he dld not dare. There was something about this sinister idea of Atheism that at- tracted him. It was frightful. Ohl unspeakable. but it had a mlqnl- suptpose really there was niz . . . y u might d The things o! . . . Gradually h thoughts took the Thimble Theatre, Starring pOPEiYE-Q vo,,','ghéw,-,,g__~[dem i MIGHT — Mauser. — FOR. one By Edwina A Gum MY LAND! WELLAF mi YOU'RE NOT TH’ MOST PROVOKIN’ BOY m TH’ WORLD! 11:7 a ‘ \ Li: ning the Business from the Gro und lIp.”-1'onwr}¢w;~,45¢u¢ p;é;,'popeue_r*- HEQE'S A TEE ~ , SlGN lT.‘ ATV TH_E TEEATY SEZ THE spmlrlAlcGS MUST GROW so oer YE’? SPlNACH seeospn-ie DE-MNGS »"‘\ AREPLOWIN‘ . _ ‘erld I!‘ n we"... shape of feeling that the one heard about, in school did no. exist. that they didn't mean it whatever it was about, the Trinity. but that nevertheless there was a God.—an- other God, that Molten-who went away-so that. you could do any llt- tle things you wanted to dO-Whf) was lndccd away generally. but who might at any time stage a tremend- ous come-beds. 'f‘hen He would ask everybody what they had done with the things of l-lls maklri . and Rudles lm rerslon was the most gzople woud look pretty silly long fore lt came down to him. There was no reason Rudie could see why he ln particular should be pitched upon. He was quite prepared to turn God's evidence against one or twn people he knew. (‘IIAPTER Ill M. Alban Farmer seams-ran. soucrron erc MONEY TO LOAN l Bllll of Clllldl Bllldllll. b Charlottetown IDEALS, ETC. End's mother puzzled about him. and .rled to feel lov m; and proud‘ about. him. If she had been quitei frank with hersc t, she would rirei confessed to herself that this dome- Iowed Ion she had borne wiw pi OFFlCEfFiLLlE THE TELEPHONE FROM YOUR ALTl-UGHTLFORGI WE HAVE WORK 1O DO.- TYPE A LETTER 1'0 BLOTZ AND CO. DEAR SIRS... CE L NOR-LET MAC SIT DOWN THERE AND SEE lF HE ...m..i.r.s>.u" 'l‘.-'........PV.;.Q, By Weslover eaea sco-rr , rum": "m: souuo MU z HEARD PHONE