v » ,...,.,__...,,‘,,,,,,\,"_ “f, wsonesoay, M - — - — - -- rue __GUAl_tDlAN,_C_l_-l_z\_RLOTTE’l‘OWN RlGI-ITIN YOUR OWN HOME See Pepsodsnt Tooth Powder give your teeth [L hill] llEliJ Don't you admire the way a dentist cleans your teeth so white? That's real dents! whiteness: and he relies on powder. For unless dull, dingy film is removed, it hardens-dark- ens-turns i nto harmful, ugly tartar. But Pepsodent p Tooth Powder is especially made with lrium to safely remove that trouble-caus- ing film . . . right in your own home. Change today to Pepsodent Tooth Pow- der for dents Wafzflwzt? was.” EEPSllllElil l$.'iilE'9_ii_|1'T00lli rowiiiiiliiiii coiiiiiiiisiiiiiiiii I whiteness! Kings of Egypt and Iran Are Divorced‘ ' Th! Wm"! rulers of Egypt and‘ If!!! hflve divorced the beautiful, fillflrns who bore no male heirs tot the thrones. One communique which came from Egypr, my“ palace proclaimed it "God's will" that the l0-year union of King Flrwk 115°") and Queen Fsrids be dissolved. Another stale-mung Bid the Persian climate endanger. Pd the health of Empress Paw. Ito. bride of smut in-ni Pahlevl 0f Iran and sister of Faruuk, and "l" "I"! "~ was amen that she: lie divorced. I-‘arouk, now g3 w“ Ililrried in i938 bciore he ashcnd. ed the throne On hi; iiqiiaboyd, bride he conferred tho name "f: grldl- which moans “pcerIt-sst.’ '9 50ft him three daughters End" EKYPIIK" IFIW. only mglg’ MIFPFI"! of the king can lnhfl-“i the throne. i t I Carleton and Vicinity Mr. and Mrs. l-Iazen Gillespie oi Carleton were visitors in Sumaiicr- side on Saturday evening. Miss Evelyn Bell and Mrs. Edns l-loivatt spent Friday of last week in Summerside. Mrs. John MacKenzie of Carleton was a business visitor to Summer- side on Saturday. Mr. Vernon Gallant of Carleton returned to his home here on Mon- day after spending a few days in llalifax. N5. Mr. John Halloran of Cape Traverse recently purchased the fan-n formerly owned by Mr. Ruse! Bell of Bcrrden.—-Csr. Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Bell oi Carleton spent the week end in Murray l-lsrbour guests of ‘Mr. and Mrs. Crilly Lea. Mrs. Ay-neit Bell and flwo child- ren are spending a few TIRYS in Borden guests of Mrs. Bell's moth- er, Mrs. Margaret Campbell. Mr. and Mrs. Irving Miitiiaxt of Carleton motored to Summer-side on, Friday to attend the "Croodivlll Sale" at I-lolmaiis. Miss Audrey Campbell and Miss. Kay Stordy of (Znrleton visited Nliss stordifls miother. Mrs. Alma! McMlcken in Hampton on Sunday Mrs, Joseph Norman and daught- er Faye oi Summerside spent a ItWI days in Carleton last. w-eek visiting‘ Mr. and Mrs. Calvin l-lowatt. Mr. and Mrs. Erie Thomson of Carleton accompanied by Mi‘. and Mrs. Frank Quigley were b\l$iilt'*.<$l visitors in Su-mmci-slcie on Thursday 3 of last week. Mr. and M11. Cy MacIiilyi-e ro- iurncd to their hcme in Cnrletuni ,on Friday aftcr speiidinil a fou" ‘assisted by Elva 'I‘i'ainor, after ays in Mt. Sieivart vi=liing relat- lVPS. Mr. Robert Tronholm of (Tape iveek after spending some time in ANNUAL TUBERCULOSIS SEAL SALE OPENED YESTERDAY The dcoth rote from Tuberculosis is higher in our Pro- vince ihnn in the rest of Conudo. X-Royis the most important factor in finding Tubercul- osis. Our oblectlve is to have our Mobile X-Rsy Uiill a-rey everyone in the Province once To provide such on x-roy tioii is costly and requires generous support on the unit oi every citizen. REMEMBER NO ONE IS ‘SAFE FROM, TUBERCULOSIS UNTIL ALL ARE SAFE Iuy Christmas Seals . .. . . . . PREVENT TUBERCULOSIS PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND TUBERCULOSIS LEAGUE ‘_ Twenty-Second Annual Christmas Seal Sale ‘Your Contribution Today flisy Save A Llie Tomorrow Hayfield, NS. Mr. ‘Ti-enholm is em- ployed by Mr. Fred Irving of Cape Traverse. well known lobster buyer. Mr. Philip Meclleod who has been employed by Mr. Elmer Fran- cis of (iarleton for the past num- ber of weeks returned to his licme in Fourchu, Cape Breton, N.S. last week. Friends of Mr. Harry Dawson of Augustine Cove and George Daw- son oi Albany will be pleased to know that they are both progressing rapidly and getting well again in the Prince County Hospital. Both men were injured in a car accident near Bedcque a couple of weeks ago and since that time have been in hospital. _ IINNOTT ROAD W. I. The annual meeting oi sinnott Road Women's Institute was held a‘. the home oi Mrs. Eph Malone cn Nov. 9th vrith an attendance of twelve members. Meeting op- cned by prayer and roll call was answered by paying membership foe for coming year. The financial report was given by the secretary. shoiving a. bal- ance of $13.40. The appointment of officers for the coming year followed. President: Mrs. Smith O'Brien. z Mira. Henry ‘Trainor. Mrs. J. C. Peters. Mrs. Herb 'I‘i'ainor. Mrs. Dan Siunott, Mrs. Frank O'- Brien. Auditors: Mrs John ‘Irainor, Miss Josephine O'Brien. Conveuors: Mrs. Pius McGuire. l\’Tl'S. Alfred Phclaii. li was decided to coniliiiiue iot- le-i-y for fruit cake to be drawn :.t ihe chicken supper for Insti- tute members which will be held rii the home oi Mrs. George Phel- nn. It was also decided to leave appointment of committees till iicxi mooring and in (‘Ollilllllef-Rifi games to raise funds for Instil- lltP. Each member to donate priz- es. ~ Lunch was served by Misses BP-rihfl and Annette McCarthy. which meeting afljourned, Next meeting will 'be held at the home of Mrs. Pius McGuire. change rii Christmas gifts. LEAK’; (‘OR KS‘ l Traverse returned to his home iastlRoll call to be answered by 9g. l i’ if the cork has hron in llie boi- ilo for some IITTIP and is apl in leak, remove ii and place in boiling ivnicr. ilet it remain thcrc until the wnicr cools. 'l‘hon. reiuin to lhr- bottle nnd you will find ll will fit perfectly. The spiro oi Salisbury cathedral, iltli foot, is the loiilest. in England. and vonsiricrcd h_\- mnny in hp i)"; most hcnuiifiil. Wilt-n vvgi-lulilvs .ii"r siuiril in Iii!‘ l‘f‘fl'ilf‘l'i'liill‘ iil!‘_\' shoulrl IIF put, lllitl nu appropriiiio coiiiniiici or \\l‘“l'l""l in ivaxcrl pupcr or alum- inum foil. Sui-Ii corn will liclp iliciii to roiiiiiiii frcsh iii appear» illli‘!,‘ (lllii flavor. i l i every two years. service to the whole populo- 35.15151... ART The art oi eiirimclling n-rlgiiiaieri iii "western Asia. ilililllS KIDNEY BEOAUSEI itiiow I cm omits on Dedilsl . in unsuspected places, (By Mrs. Walter Elliot, (LBJ. in lnndon Ceiling) Who is to be the judge oif the l¢e and stage of development,‘ things appear of the atest im-i penance. and then, as time goes‘ on, and one passes from one year to the next, the im-portsnce oi| any emetrtence takes on e new perspective. I would hazard the answer that the most important thing I have to learn is still to come. The pat- teim of life is still in the makinfl- Not that I have not learned things of greet importance in my life. but because, unless you have (aith in life and in the future, the most important things may pass you by. They are rarely labelled ‘most important‘; they have to be searched for, and recognized oiften I was brought up in the trad- liion of Liberal families of the early years of this century; mak- ers of the industrial revolution, and children of the vast. now expanding age of machinery. An age when to manufacture import- ed rs-w materials, to export ooal and steel, pnglnes and machinery, to a \\'0l'ld aching for the indusi». rial revolution, was not only de- sirable but almost a religion as expounded by the apostles or Free Trude. This policy appeared to be lim- iiless, and to bring nothing but power and plbsipefiiy to these is- lands. Food? Well, yes, food was necessary. but it came from over- seas - it came in tine and con- tainers — in refrigerator ships, and cost very little. Breakfast was cheap, and ‘long may it remain so‘ was the successful slogan of many a candidate tor Parliament. I well remember the first sur- prise I had to shake my belief in a limitless mechanical world. I married initn an agricultural furn- lly. who had farmed for genera- tions, and who will still go oii farming for generations -- Eillots of the Scottish horderlend. fann- eirs, sheep-men. for whom all the products of Birmingham. shei- iieiii, Glasgow, or Dundee were simply temporary developments in fit a current. epoch. and would change as steam gave place to EIKIYICILV, and, no doubt, later to atomic energy. I realized suddenly that. I itnoiv nothing of the land. of the grow- ing of crops, or animals, of the huge potential force oi agricul- ture. oi its endless develcpfnoni and endless aidveniure. I met the men on the land _ craftsmen, artists in their skill with sheep 0i‘ cattle. ivitii the plough or: at the harvest; I xvatched the srasoiu ihmuigh, the changes and sequence of the farming _\'Pf\l‘. and I real- ized that, com-pared lcr a field of grain, or a good lamliiriz. the manufacture of motor cars or ma- chinery was of secondary lmp0rt-‘ aiice. a Man can live w-ithoiit internal. combustion engines, but he can-i not live vrithout food. It is U118‘ that we are. and always shall be, n food-imparting country, but I learned, long before war brought‘ it home to millions of people cd-i ucaied in nineteenth-century 6(0- nomics. that. home-groom, food is a great assot, and knowledge ot the land and an understanding of; its ways is one of the most im- poriant things in life. There is another thing you learn from the land _ that you can only do with it what it ‘will do for you. In a factory, _vo\i are‘ not dependcni on the weather, or the, type of soil, or the wok, or any other natural phcnomenoini You can iurii n-n the switches andi start, the power going. and stop} it at tho iveclt-ciid; alld whether‘ it is t-he irxiile iornis of Iianca-j shire. m" the eiiziiies and steel oi Glasgow and Sheffield. il depuidsi on nix-thing except the workcirs and the managers. Til? LIIYIII is It Hard Tank-Master‘ The lniid is a insk-nxasivi- in it- self. You rimiiot ircai it like a factory: you cannot switch on ihe meathei: you cannot grow whiati you want, hut only Willil. the soil will grow for you. You cannot. leave the animals alone at the iveek-eiid, and take Saturday and Sunday ofii. You must care for the stock and respect the land. and he prepared in (Io with it. only Whfli it will do for you. Children oi the industrial revolution find this a hard lesson to leom. it is d grrai inipmiiiaiice. The sea is another great tench- e-r. Have you ever been out in a bad storm In a small boat, and wondered how long you iould sur- vive. I rcmembei- getting into a sionzn late at night iii a seven- ion fishing boat riff the west coast. of Scotland, being tossed about. like a cork. clinging to the tiller.‘ and wondering how long we could put up with this battering. You learn a lot by being fright- ened, and, not the least. that when it is over — and in this case the sea calmed down _- you feel such» a relief iii being alive unit you srsl no_ longer afraid. and the next‘ time you find yourself in similar‘ circumstances you have learned! how to deal a-iiiti them. What, have r laid so 1m Joni this: that the most Important tihings I have learned have not.‘ been from books, but from exper- iences, from the elmentii -- the. most eotiictinz of teachers. y One of the things that worries ms in our modem. standardized‘ century, is how little opportunity people. and especially young pee-l pie. have to learn anything from such teachers. ff you live in at great, city and work indoors, it your holidays are taken at But- lin’: where everything is laid on and you have no rsponsibilltlss, i! you own a motor-cycle or even a, small oar, you can get away on' your own. leave i-t standing, and Experience Is The Greatest Teacher it will not ask to be looked after —it is lust your slave. 1f. on the other hand, you are mm impatient wins? M mo‘ brought up with thii mechanical world, learning tn look after an- imals, perhaps to feed and look after- a pony (much more exact- ing than a mom-cycle). to set up your own oarnp to make your Own holiday fun, you learn the- limita- tions on your capacities - you learn to respect the natural laws. You learn that the ml exuber- ionces of life cannot be mechan- ized - Vital Lesson Learned During the War Perhaps tihe most vtial things I have learned in recent years was during the we: -- something which many pecpleunust have learned, too. during those long years of blitz in London. From time to time, I used to be extremely frightened of flying bombs and all the rest. And a greet desire to live same on me. But the mo- merit one felt like thli. I319“ "ill moment one was frightened. It you did not think about be- ing alive. then the destruction seemed to be a long way away — in fact, you felt outside it, and the exhilaration at finding onself alive each morning. end one's house still standing, was a great thing. I am not sure that the most. important thing I learned in the vwar was that to be prepar- ed to lose you life. is to save it — is no longer to be frightened‘! Where have we all heard that bcifore? Is it not one o( the ilreat truths of the Christian faith? Is it riot the most fundamental thiiii: we all have to learn? The W1!‘ made it more obvious, but it, is a fact of everyday life if one only had iihe courage to recognize it. Anti s0, you 36G. the 1716M im- portant. thing is always with lls. it may not he clearly labelicd. but, somenvhere written on it is the word ‘murage.’ ‘I'll-e teachers are there for any geneariiori to learn inn-m, and the answer to the ques- iion, a; I said in the beginning, is still to come. HILTED PAINT BRUSH To help prevent the paint from vontinualiv running down the brush handle ivlien painting a ceiling. lllflll_\' people cut a hilt of card- board which can be fitted over the handle to art as a shicld between the bristles and the hand. Compliance with common-sense lioalih rules is the best means oi keeping young while growing old gracefully. Health experts claim that. many of the physical prob lems of aging can he anticipated. The best way to prevent the degeu erallve diseases is to catch them before they get a good start. A semi-annual check-up by a good physician will ensure that. SYNTHETIC GEM Rubies have successfully been produced synthetically from pur- liied ammonia-alum and chrome- alum. - CAVENDISII W. M. U. The CavendishAuxiiiary of the W. M. s. held its November meet-- ling at. the home of Mrs, Lewis ToOmbs, Tuesday evening, Nov. 16. The devotional was led ‘by i-he vice-president, Mrs. Alfred Moore. assisted by Mrs. W. A, Simpson. Mrs. Lewis Tocmbs, Mrs. Alvah MacNeiil. Mrs. Lorne MacNeld. Milton Green. Mrs. Olaf Stevenson, Miss Bernice Axwor- thy, and Mrs. Geo. MacCoubrey. wh offered yirayer especially men- iloning Miss Cora Kilborn. supt. nurses. University Hospital, Clianiztu. China. The supply secretary read an acnowledgement of the Labrador box. , A nominating committee con- sisting of Mrs. Alfred Moore, Mrs. George MacCoubrey and Mrs. Er- nest. MacNeill was appointed to IT'S A HOT . . . that the Sim Life Assuraice Company of Canada has well ovoi- n million policyholders throughout the world. In the more than three-quarters oi a century of the Coin any’s existence over two billion ollan his been paid to polldyholdars and beneficiaries. - SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA B. O. Inhaler District Supervisor IIII IJFE IIF Glllll‘ l6 liehaionl ltreet Charlottetown. P. l. l. NOVEMBER 24, 194, ‘kw’ M; semi‘ N0 “Pussyfooting” 0n MOORE o» MCLEOD’S New“ Floor Coverings and no need to soft step our prices SEE THESE TO-DAY Rexoleum Mots l8 x 36 felt boss in popu- iur block design in Giey, Green ond Rose, each Rexoleum Mots 27 it 54 felt boss, floral designs in Rose, Green or Blues Rexoleum Standard Felt Bose Covering. Two yards wide in block designs of Fawn with Red ond Cream with Green Per running yard . Rexoleum Delux Felt Base Covering, two yard wide. Popular medium weight cover- ing, choice of Fawn or Green 1 2 . o Mounted on good quality Wood rollers iii fibre and cloth. Choice of Green or Cream background. Per running yard Morboieum inlaid Linoleum. Heavy duty, p55,, inlaid with colors through to the solid felt Eoch back. ‘Two grades in two ydrdt wide in Water Color Grey, Green, Blue, Brown and light and Elm‘ - l§ii..°,",°.."..i°' "°' 3.5O ...i 5.50 §§'..“"°" WINDOW SHADES. Standard Size Shades. SPECIAL VALUES , CURTAIN NETS. Mode in Scotland 36-inch wide. Choice of ten designs. Regularly worth to l.25 . ‘ . ' ' ' . ' . . ' I u Now, per yard FRILLED CURTAINS, White dotted mor- quisette curtain 4-inch frili ond tie backs. Regularly priced at per poir 4.75. Now, per poir CRETONNES. pieces heavy weight cre. tonne floral designs in Blue or Rose ground. ii.".'.'§.?’,'§?.”°.'.."fT‘......... 1.00 MGDRE f» M9LEOD L? bring in a slate of otiicrrs. i The Community Firieiidshlp Sec- very interesting. The Christmas mcuiiiig is to beirelary reported l7 hospital cnlis. Alter a brief meeting of ill! held at the mause with Mrs. W.A. 2i sick enlls and nine cards sent. Ladies’ Aid a delicious lunch wi-l Simpson as ivorshii) lender and The 2nd chapter of "West oi served bv the hostess assisted b! Mrs. Ernest MacNeill to offer l-ne Gorges" was taken by the Mrs. Ali-ah Mmyqeiii and Mil- urayer for missionary. president. .’I‘.h15 bank L; proving may smwnsorh COMFORTERS. 66 x "72. Cotton filled with strong sateen covering, flowered pot- tern with 9-inch ploin panel border, Regular Il.Z5 WOOL BLANKETS. White with colored rainbow effect, ends 72 x 84, weight 7 lbs. 17.00 Regular price-—I8.95 pair y __ _. TURTLE» new? T3673“ GREAT CAESAR, MR. ROLLWEL .' , wuar A izevoirius scene! ‘THAT'S MV DENTAL some / vouwze GPLATTERING / Aeomh- EGAD, MAN.’ CONTROL. vourasete! WHAT HE NEEDS TO comizoc run-r is A BATTALION OF FIREMEN.’ ' -- Ti-ie euv THINKQ HE'S a uesuvius.’ ’ o 0 o ' .-.-'~:~.~:- Iota o 0.0 o \\ a: “WII i} so .- u.____-_-