lli l. in 1 1.. I \ l.. i l. l 1. l l. t1. L. l‘ . '1. T" i 1.1 fl. .g f 1.. 1v. \ Y l 1.. 1 .-("'/'>-i wi/‘ffil 12f‘. . v-nkunsJ-n wqmWi-I in“? "$4? 9'13" !“‘*‘?*1'\r- The lovely star of "Wuthcring Heights" in a g a y c o m e d y written especial- ly for her by America's fore- most playwright, Robert E. Sher- wood, author of "lcliobs Delight” and "Abe Lin- coln in lllionois" §l)\K THE (Nil- ll $ll()\\\ jeamo '\\l' ll\ll\ SHOR TOD/l Y Q -iili‘.\ ~ '> Jl-i- #15 ' ' 1 "nos 3.5.1553 HE FEELIIVS IS HIT MERLE OBERON .. Kiln?! F. jl/lfllilklvll‘; New Camnfi: l).\ll.\ — 25.15 - - I{ll\'|' "An Angel From Texas” l) I I l l. $.\l‘l-l l.l..\' \ll(llt 1's‘ -— lll .\"l‘l.\'(; 'l‘llltll.l..\‘ — BANDITS P“Bomb Berlin” Cry Increases In Volume (By J. l‘. nanderson. (‘anadlan Press Staff Writer) LONDON. Sept. ‘ZS-ICP Cable) —-Sll1klllg of the child evacuee ship 1n mid-Atlantic has added lltlpcllls to the public clamor for intense bnnibitu: of (lcrmon towns and clues in retaliation for the lindlscrlnlinate bombing of Lon- ,don and other barbarous acts of the Nazis. l During the last few days there has been an increasing demand mmoug, the laeoplv of London for rcprlsals against Berlin. Munich, ‘Coblcnz and other German citlcs. -but so far the Government has stood firm against it. because it believed the bomber strength of the Royal Air Force should be used against Hitler's invasion ports and against such military targets within Germany as oil re- fineries. transportation facilities and aircraft plants. There are two conflicting points or view on reprlsal raids against German cities. One school of thought argues that the only way to stop the Nazis night raids on London is to bomb Germany until ALEXANDER KORDA pmmls cvui &_ ily/lggtbbf’ m ‘lifiilrlltbifih ulfll Rrv HARRISON URQfL y; ‘gulp-Le, gQRgLL lhe German people themselves ‘J l -.- demand a lTRlLITliIC otherdvltew- .. . . . . . . . _. point ls that Brtan's ar een- slmnrs- wlxnnltslts or THE lmsrar Cos have Overcome daynght n“ (i001) 11H) IHTYS —— 7.011 — ‘Hill tucks and will soon master night raids but that in any event mass raids. unless they are directed at nlilitary and industrial targets, are cosllv and futile and will never win the war. To the man who has lost s home. or the men and women for- ilrcd to llllllllli‘ together on the I cement floor of a raid shelter every night. the first argument natur- ally appenls~tllcy are calling for reprisals against Berlin. They sug- gest that mechanical defences such as anti-aircraft guns and fighter lplancs llll‘l'l‘l\' soften the intensity ' of a night raid. but do not stop [bombs from lacing dropped by isolated planes that get through the barrage. New types of fighters are com- ing into commission with the Royal Air Forcc and the best sclciliifu: hru1n< nf lhc country at j work on a nunlhr-r of novel schemes to bcat the raiders. 1 'I‘here are one or two other ang- les to this problem. one is the fiact ‘that every bomb dropped 1n Inn- don, xvhcthcr it dcmnlishes a ilouse or store. is one bomb that Icannol lmmobillzc a factory turn- hing out war materials. l.,\\'l* »- EDDIE ALBIC [N I\I \ll\' 1x10 socnzrv Y‘ l)lt('llES'1'lt.\ — ran’ TS — Rllll.\'(l .\ i l. S t) .\".\' 'l.\lil'l.\‘ .\ Another consideration is the long distance British planes must trnvcl tn hit Berlin in comparison _\\'l!ll the short jump across the (‘haimcl Gcrmnn bombers and liuhlcrs lake from their bases in norlhcrn Frame. Belgium and Holland. ,1"... . ————-————-— fuzzy ' Eire shipped at least 4.000.000 ' pounds of bacon a month to Britain . during the summer. and for six .. .. . . \v k the ulnoun‘ \\'.l.‘< doubled. i QQO'OOOQOOOQOOOA4AAAA*P {Today's Short Wave ANT) BALLADS RT-FLASH GORDON ET’. l2 1 i i Radio Program + t (All Time at Eastern Standard) Q ’OQQQQQ§QQQ§QQOQQ'Q"Q'V‘VQQN l p i. Finest burning And no chat l. Fulls Wharf mu. (‘ii lclnvalui Allfiltllli OBPJRON ll ' S TZLYENOSE §(‘Rl<IENEl) TON SYhXl-IY Sfltliil Weighed on Cit)’ Rcltlcs Also: l)ry llartlsvood 11nd Softwood. The City Coal Company WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER Z5 i i SCHENECTADY I 11:30 a m.--Farin and Home ‘Hour WGEA. 15 33 meg , 19.5 m. y Niall \‘()RK_ CITY _ > 12.30 p m ~-Amcr;c.ln Avlallon. i l - \’l.'l\'1.il, 17.78 cg 16 8 in. 1 ('l_\' 1S. AT] y 5.45 pm — Lowell Thomas, News. WLWO, 15.27 meg , 19.6 m. . nrtnux i 6:15 p n1.--1..lght Music Concert Ifrom Stuttgart DJL, 1.3 ll meg, 119.8 m DJD, i177 meg , 25 4 m.; Nlil) S8175 TON ge for delivery. ‘DXB, 9 61 11198., 312 m. BUDAPEST 1:30 pm - Military March: "Janos Vltez." l ‘in Kacsoh; Iron Gcmes. Harp and iOrcht-strn, nan, 9.12 mcg.. 32.8 S aka " GwSge. 11.76 9 58 mcg.. Fragmoius from . m LONDON Phone 361 Priestley 5.5 m.; GSG, TOKYO 8:05 p m.—-M1\ndclin Orchestra. JLS2. 17.84 mtg, 16 8 m. ROSIE 8:40 p.m -Song from the Screen 2HO3. 9 63 meg , 31.1 m.; 2RO4,1li1l 1ncg.,25.4 m; 280G. . i 1 . coals ui luu" price 1 i l i HAS - .- latex HARRISON "ovlcu THE MO0N" ,1. V,‘ . ,1__ - ,0 11mm" me 15 30 1mg, 19.6 m. . ““ * "1' A f. .'. ._ muons 1r... .1111 ~. n‘ .1‘. aultllcrlilléil 8:45 p m __,.‘vcck by we“ . lll'lll\l‘lllt‘\ 111.11. 1n illc pic-lulu. ln support c1 "mm DY Cmneme Dime- GS? -1~.l lllv nrlvi. . 11.1mm; nllli }li\l‘l'1o0l1, "0nrl11-75 "WB- 25 5 m-t GSQ 9 98 1... .,.~.,.1;..1...p. 1p 1.1.11 11.11.1110.) mills 1501c... 1110B . 31 3 m‘ Fm“: 111ml b1 .1 11 . l.)..1.....1.., ulsulil Jeans. 4111a 5 - 4 - and 0.30 ILIIL~DQ1TCC Tunes , '. l...“ 1 , - .. , l‘. 1.1.4., ticroclt Llulllubl >11 1n 111.1‘ 111 111': :1 ' 1 .11111 11.1.... 1.11: ,f‘:lbn:‘ci 11.71., 15.11 11100». 19 3 m-i ,1,.;,. H, a $1..“- rp... 1 1 . 1..< ;> ..l_v concerns l:1c,1).l1), l1 "17 inc-g , 2a 4 m ; DXB, “H311, 1.11.1 ~11 .ll1.l lUlIIJllLC-v oi u ‘9131 meg , 31.2 in Hnnvn-v “my _ u .1 g... who unit-ills sow-lam LONDON c."1.-.n (imloguv dlill “luau-t -- 1 time» imon Lin: uc-aui l... 10:15 pm.-—Talk: “Mailers of’ “(pg _ .1.1- hdullllllltilvl and procccos Lolyypmont " Gsc, 9 58 meg 31.8 m. :\_1l_.s Qbcmn piyrbfjyvg a soplllsfl- stc 110A Lllc lull: [lull mo. cl A |;|=,R|,|_\' ' gnu cl hciriss who rnccs from one jiillll in iruulu-l. upon by Lin: Lllun 10:30 vm __N¢w_= in Eng115h_ —_ ....— . v ~ 1... .\....; .1‘... tnnngct. ulld 11c boln. DJL 1511 mm, v 19 g m ; D_]D_ i1... \\.1lt u- 51..., on 1o a ulc 11 n71, mm_ 35 4 m_: Dxg, 9 31 l. c! llllli g.l_\clv ill ruins m liounli Trip ‘BARGAIN FAEeEs HA LI FAX —-Going— FRIDAY. OCTOBER. 41116: SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5th Monday. October 7, 1949 H!‘ $6.00 FIOIII CHARLOTTETOWN Proportfonotely Low Fares from other stations Ohtldrsn 07'1"“ ""4 {"4" ‘Frelvs year: 0111176 "ALF l‘ ARE Ticket: Good in DAY COACHES ONLY For Further lnlurmullon UM!!!" any ’l'irlref Arlen! CANADIAN NATIONAI. 70 IVIDVWNIHI I~ (MHIBI, n I Mmrntmrll human niwl In .. 31 2 111... hlillllc ur.o. vvuun she lli-.lnpg 011111211.» 1f suangc young man vino‘- in t-wn 11.1.11" mun sue 1s. sue rcul- HFNTFIMAT \ ll~30 pm --Sclccl. Music, ‘K1- im. inc 1111111‘ llltillly‘ o1 111:1‘ gllllcl- I WA’ 9 68 ‘mflzhiilylg l11_ t c .l:.’.. slu- uccldcs L0 go ulur". 1....- p.11. .\lii funny lotus. llu“ snc, “l3 a t“ ‘T4, Talk lnzgmllzlllgg ‘\\ill.‘ ....u 1...“; ;11o.'.l;l's Lllc plcllllc. r I'm ‘ THH‘ m "m", J i ' uliu .1 suntan c.llll.1.\;. in"? ~ 23-4 m ‘Ulcr 1n. Anion nus brlllillllllyl M0590“ , . u... n. ‘lhwulon l-ieclunn .l..1u! Tm P‘ m " 57711111511 Penal RV‘ 1 .- .11 rwzlpulg.‘ \-.l1l.L-n by tuc luln- 96, l5 I14 mfl; . 19.7 m. lunl unu aCCllliHwL, ltun-l WATT; , _ v_________ 11.1'.\n1.<1. 'l'llc s.ol v mortal E ‘l no :|ll(l silsplrilol‘, \\'llll 11.‘. l f‘ ° "’ " ' .1. 111.11 ctuicrt-u l1l|§ How Are OOOOQQOOOOOQ+O- bionic cztrlo and j * .5. i l: .. in ufllllilvll L0 ell-- l 11114.. o1 =1 ".l..\l' l)('tllll_\ 1n nut-l lllill (lliUl. ll till llllk‘ ill‘! aUlll-S l\'l|.‘w ‘ Up 11111 ill ;lll lnlplcsslvl: nrilly ti, 111n111<-.n1.~lc1111i ov .1111: lrvulilluntili R0111‘ llllncli, creator o1 , l Your Eyes‘? . Il you Zlkl- .\‘.‘l'l r11 t-nlcriullllllrl t ll V011 3"‘ "Mm" “mlmtml p; $illF5 look piacc largely 111 July , and Ailgust prlncipauy in‘ Qhlfllloq F- G- lmumsol it Quebec. and British Oolunmis. - 0 o A o 4 o i o a o o that ill'.\l'.~ sulliif». "Urcr lllt- a of llflllll-—lltlt‘ll(thtfi,l0fc eyes Monti" ls in .11 llij." rwuunnicudccl. l t 0r rlllllllflll -' 09'1"" I 5W1?‘ Incluuvd on 11.111111» progruln £11131: alist. 4 illrl 1- sharia c1..." 1d ilvnildcrcrs 1.1 Illv 111.1111 H1111; 11n- nld, 11111.1 : l“ "ii" ‘C7149; "$32.1": 0 : '.'.'..’.‘.'il.'.'."'.’.-°..il‘. - " . ... ._ .___.___. . . . 0 lumlut “out 1,1; .\.\l.l€5 § ca" In and “m,” y“, g". 1» _ , . , ‘ llcullirs. liming llu- liim .1.» uttks of 10.0 o clull-ti August Billh, sale.- nil (‘fully z on (funutlluu slur‘ vllrds anl p un s‘ G F H h totalled 071.541 hr i. l‘1.lll|):L1l'(1 \\li1l z I I 643.058 hcnu (luring llu-Vcorre-sptnu- g ‘ irlg 35 ucl-lts of luJlr. lhe 111611.10 z n. E HUTCHESON y o Q I 4 I‘ HE CHARLOTTETfflVN GUARDIAN SCHOOL TS HAVEN Victims of s raid on the Elephant and Castle area, this wnmun, with her son and another youth. found sanctuary in a school. ll. S. Takes Steps To Speed-up Defence Program (By Douglas B. Cornell. ‘associated Press fitaff‘ Writer) HYDE PARK. N. Y., Sept. 2-i- In two steps toward revilitllizing the defence of the United Slates, President Roosevelt appointed a six-man advisory committee Sal- urday to help coordinate plans for conscription of ll1fllll)U\\'(.‘l' and up- proved a proposal for creation of the office of Under-Secretary of War. In addition, he disclosed that employment in the aircraft indus- try had more than trcbled since December, 1938. The grcalcst pcr- ccntagc gain had bot-n 111 n! 1n- tcrior slates. and lhut he cxpcclctl the greatest future advances in that same area. Four members of the advisory committee have bccrl helping with plans for the draft. whose direc- tor probubly will bl- uzlnlrri ncxt week. ever amt-c lwnsrrlptioll leg- islation was brought before Con- gress. The four are:- Frederick Osborn of New York, who was in charge of Red Cross Work with the Anlcrlr-un army ln France in lllc l:l~l wur. C01. William H. Draper. .lr., of New York. uho is 1'(‘Sl'l'\'l‘ officer. Floyd W. Reeves. University of Chicago professor. Joseph P. Harris. political science at University. The nclv lncn arc Cilunninp‘ H. Tobias of New York, dlroclrir of negro work for lhc national coun- cil of the Y.M.C.A. 11nd \\':\_vne Coy of Delphi. lnd.. zlsslslun‘. fcd- eral security udlnlnl-lrzvnr. Tl. was War Sucre! llcnry 1.. Stimson who l'~‘l'l\lllil! 111.11 til-l‘ the posiilon of Undcl ‘ tirnfessor of Northwestern Spaniel? is Torpedo GIBRALTAR. hup all" - ll was trawler, Allniranlc (.‘.'1rr.111'/.:1. tnrpedoed ‘rhursdlrv. All lhv l‘l'l“.\' but one were lost. Ollzciuls sari they believed the vessel ivas sul . by an Italian subnuirine whit mistook the nationality of 1h‘.- trawler. Trans-Atlantic Mail Culled By Many Censors HAMILTON, Bcrnluda. Sept. 23 —lCP Cnblci-A staff of 1120 ccn- sors-lnore than one-tenth the normal population of this lown- ls now engaged in examining transatlantic mails passing through this British colony between Ain- erica and Europe. Two hundred cxpcrts have just arrived fronl England 1o 10in lhc 120 who had bccn hcro ])l'1'\'10il.\l_\'. Their chief task is to censor mails carried by Pan American Alrlvuys’ clipper planes. The heavy influx of vcnsors has resulted in lhc reopening of lhrun- hotels. closed because of decrcnsl-d tourist trade, which are uscd as living and work quarters for lhe examiners. GRAIN cmcaco. $6.... 24—-(1\Pl._ Wheat. futures fluctuated within narrow limits today; but. prices were unable to break through the seasonal highs established ycslcr- I1)’. Corn displny-ctl indcytcntlrnt strength to show fractional gains for the (lav. Whcat closed unchanged io 1 ccnt lower than Mondays 1.11111 prices. December 751 1-2~~5-fl; 1\l:1v 79 7-8~3-4; corn was unchzlngui to 1-4 cent hlghcl‘, llcrcnlbcl‘ all; May 59. and oals wclc 1-47- ll-li cents lower. wmmvao. $10171. 21-401" Export. sales of Canadian flour estimated at 1.000.000 bllsllcis \\"‘:'n reported on Winnipeg urnln vx- change today duplicating a annular anlcunt. sold ytslcrtlav. However prices closed zit lhe minimums of 70 cents a bushel for Ocl/obcr fuiurc, 71 5-H ccntfl for December and 75 5-8 rcnls for May. Buenos Aircs whcnl ol ll (fclvck was 1 1-8 to 7-8 ccnls lo\v~r, In lhe (‘c111 : gran m ct. crwshcrg- supported fl.1.\'. ."/llllll'l'|i homes purchlvcll ru- 1111.11 n1 .<:lll'\' at Chicago. and nl.|I~1.~1 . ‘o ~11 .- 1n.- barley. Onls lrndc urns 111.11. Grain clove: Wl1c:il--~O."l 70A, Dcc Tl Fi-RA. May '75 T-M. Oath-Oct 30 1-4. Dec 28l-2.M.lv 29 1-213 Barley—Ocl. 36 7-8, Dcc 36 1-8, T-fih. JUIII N War be established (lurnlg ‘pcluotis . . , llo _lW¢-ll bovs. we arc behind youi iPredict War ‘Long Drawn lom Conflict \VASHING'I‘ON, Sept. N -—(AP) --A prediction that. the war will be a long (lrulvn out. conflict, with chimces lavorlng Great Britain, was made Saturday by Brita-Gen. George V. Strong on his lctum tn Wushluglvru from n month's ob- scrvutloll in England. strong, chief of the United States gel cral staff's war plans di- vision. sul "no half way solution, no compromise solution," is likely. "T110115 can be only one of two rcsillls, either complete breaking up of Britain as all empire, or complete obliteration of Nazi in- llucnce in Europe," he added. fllliasically, lhiglish morale ls ‘ltigitf’ Strong said. “The people ;are a unit behind Prime Minister ~Churchill. TF-G)‘ are cheerful but grltnly cicternnncci to see the war through and to remove once and for all the Nazi menace from Euro- oyw. And I think they can get a- way with 1t. "Personally, 1 believe the Brit.- ish do not want military assistance from the United States as far as manpowcr is concerned. They do unnt munitions we can produce for thcnl." Terming the Royal Air Force s. "magnificent body of men." Gen. Strong expressed optimism as to its chances of winning tho aerial phase of the fight. He said the lighter pilols arc markedly super- ior lo their German counterpart-s, as are most of their planes. The production of pilots has Just about kept abreast of the produc- tion of planes and the RAF. is slroilger in both planes and pilots than at any limc 1n lhc lust year. Cardinal Sees 1Future Hope iFor Civilization tvlclul-Jl‘, Quc. sepl. z-r 1gp... ‘Fiurv uouid be rwnaon to fear for llu- future or "civilization as we know ll,’ were it not for the growth ol an "intellectual elite" studying and seeking a ruined for pressing ‘Slwlill nrnilicnls, Rodr gnuc Cardinal |\11lv¢uv-1.vc .\iil(l hero on Saturday 1 lli"llf ‘ lhcxc are rumblings in our soci- (‘al "sins urc ill the making." ilotuzlll Catholic Prunate l1.‘ l‘.. 5 SEPTEMBER 25, 1940 A Emergency Call for $5,000,000 tilc annual ('5 Hmlulvs of Quintin" French-Can- lllcvtlllg 0f "Lt-g semnln- ‘ndlan .\llf‘l.’ll study group. l l "l could bc m‘ 'lill1\' almut our‘ ‘lrm ‘ h1- siuh, "Bill I um fill- I will’ l1\' lilc fact that those iillllflllil '1». who trunk are laegiftning‘ lo h1- movcd by aocial problems." 111'. infill! Shore was need {Qrsoelgl 1111111111 and lhe restoration v upon “Christian princi- iuvl‘ Vlllcncuxe voiced np- uru on lhc corporate during lhe meeting nron University of y rc-n of 11.1 ' i l.l\\' proicssor. llrouvsor Caron explained vari- ous 1'1‘l'p'u'r1ll\'(‘ theories, ranging fronl lhe lilUll oi‘ lhe corporatlve $11111‘ :11 om- cxtn-me to a scheme 11'. -lll.\}ll1‘f‘ll professional . ..1.lI conic-rations at the Tlw Cardinal saw a 31ml- llll‘ll_\' bcnvvcn the lultcr form and the co-(>])cl'l\li\’t' idea. Prflfcssol" Cnrnn, in his discussion of corporafivcnhcory. explained that. as n pill-u hv lhc dictalorshlps it illlriltl‘. sllllfilllllllfill of the stale for .lll'i\.llv lvc, tllc repudiation 0f 111v .- . . xon parliamentary sys- ,lc1n lhv concentration of all ‘ilullloulr 1n one nmn. "it can't rvllsnnabiv be compared the Italian syslcm. because ft is hascu on liu- cxisling form of gov- c ‘ . constitutional ad- and lhe rights of in- 11c said. Age Limitwlior iiilots is Raised OTTAWA. Sept. 24-(0?) —The age lllllll ior enlisting prospective llluull (‘unuululi Air Force pilots has bccu must-ll from the age group i8 lo 28 lo the group 18 Lo 31 w coll- forln to u similar ruling of the lwyin Air F'0rcc il. was announced Sulllrtluy by 1t.('J.A.F. headquarters. "Appya-lun nlusi. have passed his 181-11 bllilniflv bul not have reached his 141st blrlutiny." according to the oliu-hll 1'<‘(l'lil1lll)f bulletin just is- sucd. Age llmils for other air crew members. llir observers and wireless ()l)(’1'll\.(>l.\ iii‘ gunners, remain un- chuluzl-ti. "Applicullr. must have pass- vd his llilh buhnot have reached his -2l1.'n1i l1ll'lll(l.’l_\'. ) A h1;1ri<|11u1'tc1's statement said lllul 1111s cnlurgculcnl ol the re- (‘rlllllllq lit-id has not been dictated by any luck of application for en- llsltiu-nt as pilots, but that the change 1n age limits was made to CHALLENGE CANADIAN flee-am T0 CANADIANS '11-: .1... CN GIVE u. maven EQUAL ¢gf5w Ounruuorvn Auuuflnstdqhmlly, Hands, careers. They hold nothing back. Unnsked, but stirred within by the urge of manhood and pride of race, they go forth bravely to face hardship, loneliness and danger, to risk life itself, in a great cause. It is your cause for which they fight. You are not flflkvll to give your own life —but you can help to save one. The Red Cross, of glorious tradition, unchallenged ln purpose, needs your help so that it can answer tanks with ambulances, bombs with beds, horrors with hospitals, cruelty with mercy. Those of us at home will not be less loyal, less generous than our fighting men. We can remind them daily of our gratitude and our devotion, through the Rod Cross. NED¢R0$$ lkwinafifinom/ keys to a cabin Lida Llzgrimore O MACRAI SMITH WNU SEilViCI CHAPTER I11 He'd have to clear out, He'd have t0 wear out, nou", wnunu, before he soul her uluun. John uflllilitl, rest- less, in lung plunging strides, along the run/cu clay-such road. 1110 ex- perunenl. was less important than what was certain to happen to nun if he remzuneu at the cabin. He'd fought that bathe tlvice belorc. and he nad no intention o1 exposing ulmscu to tnc llcccbslty of ngutmt, 11. again. __ but wasn't that nco "ty alrcauy upon lulu‘: He'd uonucrcu how he would fuel it, by chance, he should meet her again. cntmcc, asslswu by Uncle Jonn. had given nun Lulu. knowledge. 11o loll as nod iclt \‘.'llt.‘ll they parlcu six yt-uzs ago. ‘there WELS Sulllfitillllil, UCHHJlJll 111C111 WillCll tune and separation haul not allered, more vulu tnuu 11.111111 been three years, 51X yeius ago, because they were more mulllrc, now, more emo- tionally alvure. Not that he haunt been c-nlotlon- llliy Lflhdfl.‘ U1 1101' LllllL blliiillllil Silt.‘ L1 plantation. It had been easier. then, to c10sc_9,_door in his nund, for reason, during long hours of logical if rebellious mousht, had convinced luni that the door must be closed and locked and the key thrown away. The key? John turned. realizing that he had reached the village. Wily had Uncle J0lln made mat gesture‘! hc wondered, walking more slowly blwk toward the cabin. Hf d known. of course. o1 that young attaclnncnt between himself and U115‘. 1t probably hadn't been dilll- cull. for Uncle John to read his thoughts the mornmg after tno party in New York when he, John, luui nislsled, stubbornly and not very consldcraueiy, that they return to Cambridge at once. And Uncle John loved (lay. He had lor her a deeper nliectloil, perhaps. than for anyone in the world except him. But Uncle John should have fore- seen. he thought lrritably, that ilollnng of lasting value could conic ol that attachment, l-le was rom- antic idealistic, in the way of n1; avnflrflfloll. but he was neither sen- tilnental nor impractical. He must have seen that. he, John, and gab- riella (Jffillfllll lived 1n different worlds, that eucll would be a stranger 111 the nlulospherc familiar to the other. Perhaps though, the thought continued, when you were dying, such things as wealth or a lack ut it. the differences in view- pomt which wealth engendered, the distinctions and sntagonisizls it raised set-tiled relatively llllllllpofl- ant. Uncle John had known he hadn't long to llvc when they'd gone to New York. Perhaps during the following wrecks, ullcn his grasp on living had loosened, some wis- dom had come to him which. by the gesture. he had attelnptcd to com-, munlcnle lo them. Perl1aps~13ut the wisdom which 11115111. come with death was. xiow, of no practical value. l-le and Guy had. in all probability, u great deal 01 “will Lo do. Thou‘ divergent courses were charted. had been de- lcrnuncu. he supposed, long uclole they met here at the lake. That rum-thug was RCCiLlfliLlLl and had no nuiucnct- upon the dlrcctluh 01 tilt-ll’ spent a1, Lllc cabin ultll unclc JUlLll. ne should have clculcd out then, he told himself u. mile grimly, 1n- stew 0i prolonging what nelluu 1n- conforln to regulations now in ef- lcct in the Royal Air Force, with wilich (‘wunatiinns graduated from lhe Brlllsil Conlnlolnveltlth All‘ 'l'rulnitlq plan will serve. TO Olilt GALLANT SOLDIERS When the Motherland called in hcr soldlcrs 'l‘o (zcfclld hcr from Hitler and woe; You boys answered with willing i. l"i(‘lll' And 111-.“ Just walling to meet the 1 foe. You galluntly donned the colors; land proud are we all to say We lluvc '1ch men in Canada now Who surpurs those of yesterday. i limping 11nd praying nil the while. no tunticr who‘. may come between mu ‘full muy lake ll wilh a sluile. ‘You are all fighlulg together l-‘rr Frwdrun and for Peace \’.'llh Grid's help, (lolng your part So lnls bloody war may cease. And whcn this war is past and l won llv our Canadian boys. of fame; Youluii nun rvluiu wiih glnddenetl n-urls '1'.» _\u‘.1r homc und friends again lliul .~luu1l:l you lull lo come back I ulih llu- rcsl. 11v uuing inn: l.iic for your Love .\l1l_v \\'1' nil nunl again when the Roll is czllicti On lhul W'l1!ltll"lllS land ABOVE. tended to be a. week-end visit into a stay of three wccks. lie should have loft bclore the day she'd turncu ncr uukle vvaliung with him through the woods anu he'd carried her to the cabin in his arms. Atler that nothing could have induced him to lcuvo. lie remem- bered with u lccnng oi wilderness for the ulnoccnl. nruor of their re- lationship which rescntlncnt could not cltuce the wcck hnlch nod fol-l lowed. ill.- rcmcnlocrt-u saying good-by lo hcr at the station in Machlas, straining for a lust glimpse i in the transient grief of ptirtlng, tears gliilcriilg on ner lashes, hcr uiide sweetly curved nlouth lrcnl- bllng 1n un eilort l0 smile. "I'll sce you soon, John," she'd salu, clinging to ins hand as thcy stood together 1n tllc vt-stibuw oi thc train. And, sustained by his presence. too much in lovc uilll ller to $011-$011 01' question. "Yes, vcry soon," he'd rc- plied. y But hc had 110150911 her again un- tll he'd pone with Uncle John t0 New York for her debutante party.- l-lcr mother had tnkcil hcr abroad that fall after hcr summer here. She'd w-rltlcu to him at lengthening intervals during thc first year. from Geneva whore she was in school, lroln vuriulu. points on the French Rlvu-vu win-n ilcr vacations pcrlnit- lt‘(l opportunities for travel. lied been relieved when lhe letters stop- ped coming, glad lhut he 11nd been on a canoe trip in Canada when, nearly two years laler, the cable- grnm announcing her return to Amcrlcn had arrived, glad, too, l —l\'|.~.ry Murnaghnn, ' 50 Dorchcster, Street. ldmtown, PJLI. though he'd watched the mail for weeks. that she had not answered his formal note o! 01-] ol her lave, young and oclcnselesslc separate lives. He was going lo Portland to take over Ur. tiurgcuiliis practice for u ycul‘ in puylllcllt for loans which had enabled hlln l4) complete his medical course at. Hor- iutru. Alter that. if he could inun- lage to support hllnselt‘, he was going on with scientific research. 'l'herc were bclore him years of work which he loved. of loneliness winch he accepted. Gay was to marry Todd Jnneway— 11c had nol. allowed himself m think of that until now. His thoughts had moved wari-y, dodging that painful fact. But 1L must be 11100“. souluciv and ilonestiy. The incl. nlusi. be accepted and removed from his mind. He'd known. of oursc. almost as soon as the en- gagement had been announced. He'd lilought he had accepted it. He'd been able, during the summer, to look at camera poses of Gay and Todd Jnneway with interest not too intolerablv mixed with pain. 'I‘he1"c had been a great many of them. It would be an important weddln . Todd Janewny was connected wi the private, bank in New York of winch his father was president. The uancway estate on the Hudson ad- Jolncd "Dunedin," the Graham estate. 1t was all eminently sult- nble, he supposed. He'd met John Janeway at Gay's party an ha been impressed with his friendly manner and blond ood looks. Oh yes, it was all elnnently suitable. Gay's dvstltly. (ictermincd at her blrih, an eventuality which no chalice meeting could alter or el- fucc. The cigarette he had lit and neg- lected had burned his lingers. The smart of physical pain routed mem- ories. brought him ahrutly to his senses. What he'd been thinkin was madness. Uncle John ha not intended em in have a stolen week ma»; III h in mods. <| And he'd been Drfiilllilplllfms in u. sumuig that uoy hnc, u... my, thought or (lt-slrc, Besides, Lilcre n, Miss Oliver- _ N0. not too Dftihillllptliuus, revert mi; t0 Gays poslble drought we desire. He'd seen the cxplvsbloll m her eyes when she'd lOukur throught the litmpllghl. lor lhcnl. At u word, u 14c antagonism \\lll(‘l) nu.» 1.1.. guard would int-ll. and v1.1. 1lAJ'-l'(2l1Clllll|,' _ coilsequcn‘ how. perhaps, than in the past, s or» lion they met u.» u. mun and .1 ntuzau and would l1t‘\L‘1‘ nit-ct again. 111s resolution \\il.\'\'lti1 ,..> he owned luc- dour llllu "mt- z-nlcut-n. Knowing tliul, sllc nus Lucie sttlllud to give the door she had lrptiirtl an especial slgiuncunce. llc ' presence ill the utlnospilcit- kitchen and more ululcrnnl‘ periulno thut 111.141 tin.- an llkliilg scent. A light buln... 11.1118 dying-loom. 11c uuuiu hi‘. Al» U1 there. nt- pusscd Lilo duo: u 11‘ laoc uvcrtcu. Anti then 1n: her voice culling his lunhc. having ins resolution so lnlt-suvvivfl- 1y HLLbLIHtCh, nmucilst-ly ..:... loy- lllliy lcllcuutl. ‘licllu, 11v oil-Ll llulll Ln.- way’. '1 Lllouglil. you uclc 11o- '1 aln—ul1uust." one sat Mimi ill I 1o‘- against uctlpctl cUalllUII-s 1:1 .1 will“ p.10 o1 L111: couch bcsluu the htural. W011 B. >011. wllitu uoolrn loot- tcilcd cause up around ucl M wlLli tong slcclcs and n cvl tcu noon. l1\;l' “an... lllc . - tnc uunp icl. upon ucr lUvoU-Hl 0t rcu-uluhll 11.111, ill;- hli against n11.- t-urlc o1 uci time» =11" slullcu up nl. llllll uluusli). i"- "W" lure oi, llltliUlllltob ul ll\i min; \\-) 090p billc cycs. ‘tou :llu11.l: bt- u. o... ‘ lid uulkcu to tllv lllltflltlLLf ill ~\ll.\.l]r\ i014 snc 11,111 evict-any pmtlu Uillltcll ltUUw-f it Doll o1 ciiim you ulum ornougu; l... tum at lngut.’ v ,_ ,_ "its ucuvcnly. Ncw 3v» "i" been u uhisulll lurnuuc. y, “inc Pllliflln fvlwfl u lltnl .~.1»y_.\ 11c ucn. U\t‘l llil‘ 1.1141111 i111 .11.....L..e lnukulp. u c uitclllu; nolsc u. .1 toxins. , .. '11s 111011 lcnlly llvlJilti-Hi- ‘So l vc unucisto . , she laughed suddenly. ly. "Must we lulk about the 1 1110f?" she. uskui. u rle rose to u slillltlllly! W-i “l: stood looking tlolvn >111 not, lulu» 1W resist lhe uni-will ul her sun... vim suggest. a sublciil. no suiu. ‘I an-tuu 1 ruuaeu m Wu 1mm“ P", ‘lhe smile slowly iiillil-‘lilp s)": bccn thinking olnUiltlt’ J11‘ m, m said. "l was 10111911! ii’. ‘ " have come for llls luul-r.l.. l,“ my, "It W115 l)l'l‘1l\' ell-Rm‘ on,‘ on.“ loge turned out Youuu - "M" m hi“? ‘fmvapcd 1L \<~ l was "BTIL I vlvnlhd huu- lUlll - in Bcrmut u." _ (f0 be Conilnucdv __ -.._§--— »-— pup... bouts connccliul.’ limxat South Africa. and _ bflmiglgd iralln, have a maxltnum 200 miles nn hour. max-ii‘ ti