l' mun, May 2|, -:. FOR YOUR INFORMATION we announce the arrival of Mr. E. M. Dennison Iwqmwkmmmmuq JOHNSTON APPROVED CLOTHES SAT. May 23 FRI. May 22 and THE Oné Elizabeth Had Hard Time DOEION, May 18.--(OP) - Commenung on the birthday party of Princess Elizabeth, who some day may be Queen. the Transcript says: "It all carries one back to the (‘bye just 400 years ago, when another Princess Elizabeth of Eng- land, later to become a famous Queenolthei-eaiimwasachllda little short of three years old. Her mother was in the Tower. to be beheaded in the course of a few weeks; her father had no love for her, he had wanted a son. During the next 10 years she was to see hlrn lightly divorce one of her step- mothers and send another to the block. Her elder sister Mary. watched her with a Jealous, wary eye lest she be preferred to her as claimant to the throne. she was a centre of intrigue by self-seeking politicians, pulled thLs way and wasn't poi's6ncd." .- ‘ /7 7 i. l e ll us - fi - tchr;”.n th Der p same of state W I / V’ E _nc * “She wasuust 10 when bet E / ,LooK wads l EAT GRAPE-Ntfis - (X father married for the sixth time. % -—'[‘ LL SHOW Tl-I05 "‘ \‘ ‘\ takln for his wife the Widow ~ Oathegrine Parr. To her the / LAV5 WHAT SPEED R “E t, ./ Princex Elizabeth owed the only / ‘_ §- . I M]|“wmu_ "_ V glimpse of motherly affection and 6 = 5 ’ ~ " l ' care that she had ever experienced. \ O — ’ L L N l “Perhaps she, too, had a 10th 7 . birthday cclebmtion at Hatfield, -—/'-, 1 ,. ‘t x 1 but if there were Norfolks or Sey- 7% ‘ I \,~- ,6 u moiirs or Norlhumbcrlands at the E " __ ./\'. #5”, party we may be sure that they . - ’ \/7 G tasted the birthday ciike wltli dead- 1’ X """‘. 9 ‘ 3" ly fear in their hearts, dllly-dally- \ K j / ing until the Princess lite a piece LA I " ’ \ § w herself and they could be sure it 1‘ ' A . - " - ‘ Amp BETTER 331591‘ (Homes , BALANCED Nou-R\Sl-\MENT in com: HEAPIMG TEASPOONS or GRAPE-NUTS ,,/. Ghost Olympics wiTH MlLl<,Ti-iAt~l THERE‘ is N A ssavme or CHICKEN. ‘ (By Gayle Talbot) , , , , _ _ _ . I;//4: , (By ghee Amclatig tPress\ And yet the wonderful nourishment in Grape-Nuts isn’t half ‘ 2? nail on thé anivers, the story. The nut-sweet Grape-Nuts taste is the favourite flavour f;:}a’{‘“l;‘a‘,‘j<1f(:’51*’aL““&:’e *‘;mfi!‘x_,;“e;‘g‘: of millions. And Grape-Nuts is specially prepared for easy diges- -////L and watch are cream of the En'n- tion. Costs only about one cent per serving. Get a package today pire‘s crews sweep past, has been '4/’ chosen as the site of this summer's ‘ {F0111 Y0“ 8"°¢"- ‘015'mpic regatta under Nazi rule: éf: ' / Canada's best olirsmen will com-r Dete in the world contests. ; The royal pavilion still is there-., near the finish of the beautiful,- MAD F|RST IN LINE ~ BECAU TI-\EI2: is MORE-ENEY E IN CANADA °Si/IO wsewwyragt > J MA! 19. 1935 ‘:1 ws’/riled 1'51 THAT'S EAsY ,1 \ 0 On the above date the Johnston Special Representative will be here. We urge men to inspect the fine British woolens he brings with him . . . the season's newest style trends from here and abroad. two—kilometre course, the lone and: unpainted reminder of the glitter- ing days be"0re 1914. A great new grandstand has been erected and several spacious boathouses in. stalled to accommodate some 200 5h91L“‘. but the Kaiserls old box has ’ been Permitted to remain in all its the stadium and their homes at was, in other words, the last word. ramshackle glory. Olympic Village. would not be ob- Only now—and every Californ- I‘ W35 Slliikested to the guide structed by vegetable trucks and tan is entitled to gnash his teeth that chancellor Hitler might oc. other vulgar traffic. at this statement—-the Germans Curry the pavilion with his entourage While the sprinters and shot- have knocked together a better durmz the Olympic races. “Nobody putters are spinning to town on one. They might have lued 80V9l'“' W111 occupy it." the guide said, their own private highway, the ment funds (which they did); their =Nuts rape on the market are heated during manufacture, and although slight losses may occur in the calcium salts and proteins, the actual food value is not, to any extent, im- paired. The following are the ap- proximate equivalents to one quart of whole, fresh milk: 18 3-4 ounces A. Cipriani to protect this industry. After being told that cheap labor in the East permitted the sale of the imported shirt at is lower price than the local article, Mayor cip- rianl explained to the delegation that it was a aififcult kstuation, u the cheap shirt were being brought JUNIOR. RFD CRO58 FOR NEWFOUNDLAND C WN. Mal’ . 18- (O.P.)—M‘iss Catherine Mclean, director of Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick Junior Red Cross divisions, will to New- Consult with the representative on your clothing needs. His experience and advice are at your disposal in the selection of stimu- lating new apparel for Spring and Summer. M“ke “memo °fth° d“°- W ‘ cold” truck drive“ and “her motorists muveumm Olympic vmagm with ted ilk- 5 un whole foundland next fallto assist in for- in from Kong Kons. 9. British The crews, fighting for the of less importance will have to takeilts artificial lake and 159 solid, fxafiorgowdeg: 3.3-‘ :un<;5S sklm_ mum,“ of Jumor ma Cm" mute colony. Mayor cipriani agree the situa- KELLY £9? MacINNIS Charlottetown, P. E. I. efiefizhaiedesh banana Parliament Members r Visit Gold Mines (0. I‘. By Guardian's Special Wire) , LAKE, Ont.. May 13 _ Twenty-two members of Parliament Donned Miners’ safety hats, slickers and high boots Satur- day to receive a first-hand lesson in gold mining at 2900 and 3500 feet underground as they visited the Lakeshore and Wright Hargereaves Mines. The contingent came from Ot- tawa, headed by Walter Little manber for Temiskaming. His colleagues, at a ' nquet in the evening, paid a warm tribute for his move in making them acquaint- ed with the industry. To some of the Nova Scotians and to Major Gerry McG'e'er, of Vancouver. it was an old story, but for many it was their first experience underground. In the evening they tertained by Reeve were Carter en- and !t.°.sXest:‘9$.=.d’.°.i4t§ other officials of the Township of Took, the banquet being followed by series of brief speeches in which the problems of a community that in 10 years has grown from a. population of 5,545 to 18,000, were outlined. Donald Mehennan, Inverness Richmond, N. 3., assured the meeting of the deq) understand- ing of the problems of mining on the part of the Hon T A. Crerar, Minister of Lands and Mines. Members of the party included: Donald Mclennan, Iriverness Rich- mond, N. W.; A. E. Maetean, Prince Edward Island: G. T. Purdy, Golchester, Hunts, N. B ; W. M. Rush. St. John Albert N. 13.; L. P. Robichaud, Kent, N. B.; Peter Sinclair, Queens, P. E. I. :__—_———— WHEN DOGS ARE DOGS SZEDED, Hungary (OP)— Own- ers of 522 dogs were summoned to court with their pets to decide whether common or pedigreed for tax purposes. NEW VIM FOR OLD MOTORS Whether it's your on. Inter-boat, station- ary farm or other engine, our method of re-grinding cylinders and fitt- tlng in overslre pistons and rings never fails to restore the original power, P09 .3“ smoothness of o|!¢!'8' uan. For details 81 wart l.TI}. 3. --'33‘? N g.. championship wan by California at Long Beach four years ago, will be quartered in a magnificent island chateau a short distance down the river from the race course It, too, knew better days back in the youth of Grunau, and many were the gay parties held in its spacious hall on 11109 nights, but for the last decade it has been a day school for Ger. man children. A fleet of motor-boats will whiz the crews back and forth between the chateau and the boat houses. Buses and nutomobies will be at hand for the hour's drive into Berlin. Seldom have Olympic crews raced over so beautiful a stretch of wat- erway. The Dalime, about a half- mlle wide at the regatta course, makes a slow, swinging curve over the two kilometres. but the course itself is dead straight, and every foot of it can be seen from the grandstand On both sides of the Dahme are trees and sweeping lalwns of es. tates. with wooded, brightly color- ed hills rising in the background on the far side. It's a lovely stretch. Photographic appalatus, snzippini pictures loo to the second, will all.’ the judges in unravelling close finishes. Hitler Provides Road to Olympia (By Gayle Talbot) (By The Associated Pew) BERJUIJN, May l8—For a nation capable of digging a private Olym- pic suiliway all the way from the shady Unter (en Linden out to its mammoth new athletic plant, the mere closing of one of Germany’s main industrial highways during the period of the Olympic Games in August, when Canada's star ath- letes will be entered. presents no problem at :11. Olympic officials simply men- tioned to Adolf Hitler in passing that they would like to rope off the highway between Berlin and Hamburg for a distance of some 13 miles while the games are in pm- grass. The ruehrer said llll%b|1l. why? They explained that by doing this tn could make certain that sev- thousuid visiting athletes, to the dirt roads and get where they are going as best they can The arrangement undcbutedly will not prove popular with many an angry motorist, but it is safely assumed they will not write any angry letters of protest to the pap-‘ ers. “Don't worry about them," said‘ the Olympic guide. “They won't, lose more than an hour making the‘ detour.” , To make doubly sure the aLhlctes’1 cars will have clear sailing. the Olympic highway’ is being widened. for all of its 13 kilometres. to traf-‘ fic can move four cars abreast. There even is an ingenious ar-' rnngement to avoid traffic jams at; the village itself. Each car or bus.‘ after rolling up to the main en-l trance and unloading its youth, will scoot right into a tunnel that pass- es under the highway and comes out in is parking lot of Ibo acres or so on the other side. There will be no backing and tuminz on the main road. Just at present the visitor to the village gets his eyes full of Ger- man military might. He passes a new military air field, with field- grcen sentrles at the gate, and then he skirts ii farm of tanks and arm- ored cara, all camouflaged and im- patient looking. All along the road are encountered groups of march- ing soldiers This phase of German life prob- ably will not be quite so obvious, however. in August. still, there were more helineted soldiers and ‘permanent structures, might have been designed primarily as an in- cubator for German war birds; but the fact remains they have raised the Olympic ante again. They have taken every new. worthwhile feature of the Los Angeles p'n.nt—eveii importing ex- perts from California to get a final CIK-—-and have added to these the fruits of their own ingenuity. The result would have bewildered the ancient Greeks, and it will prove I tough mark for Japan. or whatever nation gets the 1940 games, to shoot at The Olympic office staff has for the last two years occupied three full floors of a large office bulld- lng out in Charlottenburg, a few miles from the stadium and allied structures. They work like beav- ers, all of them, attending to cor- respondence in a score of lang- uages. At, last count they had received promise of 3800 entries, and by June 15, when all entries must be in. they expect to have around 5300 from 49 nations. They don't even like to discus the poxibility of a boycott of the games by any country. Health Value of Dairy Products Milk is the most nearly perfect Black Guards on hand for the winter gamu at Garmisch than seemed absolutely necessary to some observers. Makes New Mark In Games Setup (By Gayle Talbot) (By The Associated Press) BEIRLIN. May 18-What imprac- es you most, after three solid days of riding and walking and climb- ing over Germany's vast Olympic plant, is the sudden realization that, four years from now, some unfortunate nation will have tried to build a better one. The use Angeles plant, just four yenrs ago. set a high standard. It was 3 sort of four-minute ini‘s "Hm! dtldll. a regular Joe Louis whining back and forth between -5.‘ ll iili BRINGING UP FATHER food, containing more of the nutri- onto the body requires than any other article of diet. It stands first as a source of c|lciu.In—the mineral necessary for the development of bones and teeth, and L3 also valu- m.ilk powder plus 2 ounces butter. Cheese is a concentrated milk product, and although very differ- ent in form from milk is very simi- lar in niitrltitive value. Serve cheese with bulky foods such as vegetables and cereals, cooking it at a low temperature. well ripened, or what is termed "old" cheese will impart more flavour to cooked foods than milk cheese. Butter is a. superior fat for bak- ing. Good butter has an incompar- able flavour, and it gives a rich colour to cakes and cookies. In Western Canada all creamery but- ter is sold according to Govern- ment grade—F‘lrst Grade, second Grade, Third Grade and No Grade. The grade mark is stamped on the wrapper. Graded print butter is also available in many Eastern cities. If you want the best butter, buy First Grade—-the grade mark is your guarantee of quality, High quality dairy products- mllk, cream, cheese, butter and ice eream—ra.nk among the first of the healthful foods and should, therefore, be as generously used as ties in schools of the old colony. Newfoundlsnd's health and edu- cation authorities applied to the Canadian director of the Red Cross some time ago for help in introduc- ing Junior Red Cross work in their schools and Miss McLean's services were offered. Formerly director of the Junior Red Cross in Prince Edward Island alone, Miss McLean was appointed New Brunswick director a. short time ago and will be in charge of work in both provinces. Before her appointment as director in the sis- ter pxovince, Miss Mcleari had al- ready conducted promotion and or- ganisation work for the Junior Red Cross in New Brunswick. tlon was serious and said one of two things must be done—either the local article be given preference or tariff walls must be raised. But. he added, the government was not likely to put tariffs on goods being imported from I British colony. The West Indies wii lbe faced with this trouble until the will , ible solution has been out into effect, he said, and that was "the West Indies must be able to 171°‘ tect themselves." “That is tell is long wry 0" If-4 it will continue to be so until ‘I get federation and self-gowflh ment," he declared, addin8~ 111 00"‘ cluding the interview, he would appraise the government of the situation. _____________. BAILWAY EARNINGS MONTREAL. Que. May 18--1“ gross revenues of the all inclusive Canadian National Railways 53'5"” for the week ending May 14. 193 were $8,815,336 as compared with $8,306,916 for the corresponding 99’- SEEIC PROTECTION FOR THEIR JOBS PORT OF SPAIN. Trinidad. May 18 —-— (C. P.) — Fearing competition from countries of the Far East was too keen for thier employers to cope with. scores of girls working for one of ’1‘rinidsd's leading shirt factories marched to the Town Hall income allows. 5 SAIL able for the proteins ,fat, sugar and vitamins it contains states the Milk Utilization Service, Dairy and Cold Storage Branch. Dominion Department of Agriculture. Pasteuriaatlon is the process whereby towns and cities can be av- eured of a. safe milk supply. T7 pasteurtse, the milk is heated to a temperature of 142 to 146 degree. il'., held at this temperature for 3‘ minutes, then cooled very quickly. During the heating process disease producing bacteria are killed. has been subjected to great pru- aure, whereby the fat globules are broken up tosuoh minute particles that they cannot rise in the form of - ‘med with brass knuckles. It cream. The various concentrated milks I-fomogeninud milk in milk which i Hickey & Nicholson and appealed to Mayor Captain A. OBS AT SEA lod of 1935. an increase of 5308.470. (“Ti Sailors at sea are guided to safe harbors by certain fixed constellations and not by sensational shootmil stars. If you are at sea about the right ipe tobac0° for you, try 1!. & N.’s BRIGHT OUT. s mild On- tario leaf has guided countless pipe smokers to sooth- ing, aromatic pipefuls of sheer smoking eI1J°Ym9“‘- Try a paper of BRIGHT OUT todey—it's the smooth- est smoke for a dime. _ Tobacco Company Limited