:'.‘ GE EIGHT TODAY GARSON and GABLE in “Adventun-e" SHOWS 2.30 — 7 — 9 -- COME EARLY l I PRTIIBE EDWARD TIIIIR. FRI. and SAT. ‘Ill! NEIL OI“- lll lflflll" MINI‘ SKRIWI NEWS - comanr - CARTOON i “TERROR BY IIIGIIT" Plus SHORTS SHOWS 2.30 _ 7 _ 3,45 cumroil" I TIIIIRS.—FRl.—br. .. v ‘ ~ GOLDEN or the YHIII KI" I Ilrtrmrrz" tfbTu-llnal ~ / tTfitiiiY/ltr In UIn-IWIOI ,@:*~""'3~. FINAL cuarrau or, “sacnar AGENT x-s and First Chapter of NEW SERIAL “PHANTOM RIDER” For. PALOOKA Ll55EN...WE B DIDN'T KAYO DiLL BEFORE “WBULLET HITlM-u ~~t w- asmms: w! Thurs. Fri. and Sat. SHOWS 7 — 8.45 Matine Sat. ONLY 2.30 Gm- TEX lllilbilti - llttll Tlvtvt" W!" "N" and ill! WILLS and I: Texas Playboy! ._ .. M Musical -Sports —Cartoon FIIWER LUXURIES manufacturers of luxury to increase Peru has urged to reduce production articles, and farmcrs output. of prime necessities. ' H. Baak, The Manufacturers Life Insur- an-ce Company announces the ap- pointment of Mr. Carleton Milton Frnzce as special representative in (‘harlottetown and district. Mr. Frame will be associated with lilr. B. H. Hughes with headquarters at 181 Queen Street, Charlottetown. Mr. Flume returns to the Manu- Carletcn Milton Frazee I ' facturers Life after five and a half years service In the Army. Prior to his enlistment he was the Cour panys representative in Amherlt. N. 8.. and was successful III qual- ifyitng for the Company's Product- ,ion Club on three occasions. Surplus Herring And Mackerel Catch HALIFAX. July 16 —tQP)— Capt. Ben MllcKenzie, President of the Canadian Fhsltennans Union, said today the C F. U. would apply to the Prices Board for export. Delmits to ship surplus herring and mackerel to sine ports. Capt. MacKenzles statement followed reports that 30 inshore fishing boats had to dum $5,000 worth of herring at Lunen urg. N. 8., Saturday becaluse Lunenburg Sea Products, Urnited. was unable to handle the catch. The freezers at the lant were filled to capacity and . J. Morrow, secretary-treasurer of the company said it was the first time in history his plant was unable to process the catch, Capt. Mrnltonne said baring buyers st D-Ibec and Eas n, Me, had told him last winter .2)" would take mrnlus Nova Scoflan herring for smokln and canning. He mid if it were declared surplus the Maine buyers would send boats here to pick it up HIGIIFIELD LADIES ATD The monthly meeting of High- field LfiQIES Aid met on June 19th at the home of Mrs. H. Sanderson with an attendance of seven members and three visitors ‘nes- ent. The meeting opened vith hymn. “What A Friend we have in Jesus,“ followed by responsive reading of Si. Mark, 14th chapt- er. verses 1-72. Questions on chapter were answered by mem- bers. Minutes of May meeting were read and approved. Roll was responded to with word "Father". Collection 85 cts. A lei- ter of thanks wasread from Mrs. thanking members for gift. It was moved by Mrs. G. Stet- son and seconded by Mrs. 5_ M“- Kinnon that the aid go sharcs on studio couch for the Marshfield Manse. Prog. for July meeting Mrs. Hurry, Lunch. Mrs. S." MacKinnotn, and Mrs. C. Hurry. Next meeting to be held at the home of Mrs. C. Hurry. On July 17th roll to be answered with word "Evil." (annual meeting and all members are requested to be FY1891!"- The meeting closed with the Lord's Prayer. Lunch was served by hostess and committee and a social hour followed. THREE AT CHURCH PARADE OHATHAM. England-(C P>._ Only two colonels and a lance- corporal fcll in on the first volun- tarv church parade held here hf- ter compulsory church parades were banned in Stoutheastern Command. EGG PUBLICITY CANBERRA. July l5 —tCiP)~— Every one of l2 000,000 eggs Aust- ralia hopes to Elli?‘ to Britain be- fore thg end 0f t e year will be stamped with the name “Australia " 6O A IIIAIONTIN “i! #5097 avg: CLAIMIWYA nnesamttusotuv. Ail‘ va 6O auuulwotrr oom- mce more» l t i l i t i ‘Young Men's Assooiation. -\vas quite a "joined-of Always Another Spring By Adelaide Humph rlel . n _ "Janice is in love." Jen teased. "She has a terrific crush on that lKenym boy she dated last uzek- iend, Yes, you have, Janice. You icacft spoof me. You rave about {him all the time even ltn your sleep, You've done nothing but moon since you met him." “I suppose you haven't got l crush." Her twin scowled fiercely. "Going steady with that Perkin! lug since the eighth grade. I'm not in love with anybody. I don't intend to fall i-n love with any/body. over. I shall have loads of men in my life, naturally. But I doubt if I shall marry anyone." “At least you needn't be in any httrry.‘ her mother suggested dry- l_v. “Take the tray out for me. there's a dear. Jen, I'll dictate a while if you want me to help with lessons.“ Jen had to study like a fiend to keep her marks up. did not seem fair when every sub- ject come so easily to Janice. was as well Jani-ce co-uld let off steam: she was a rebel and a lend- er. Ht-r mother was not afraid for her. She was more concerned with Jen's quiet repression. The twins looked as much alike as they were different fumin- mentally. Only their immediate family and those outsiders who too-k particular pains. could tell them apart. Jen's face was long- er and thinner. Janictvs eycs darker. Both were startlngly ai- tractive even at this immature stage. Their eyes were blucr than Anne's-hers were a steady grey. Her hair was brown tith only highlights of the ' bright copper that made their curly tops a breathtaking riot. It was ridiculous. Anne thought, for them to talk about love and marriage. They had never laced those problems. They seemed so incredibly young. Sometimes it was impossible for Anne to realize that she had once been as young and impetuous and sure o-f herself. Though of course she had. The twins were almost eighteen, Anne had considered herself grown up when she was that age. David had been away a whole year- Yale. since only an eastern col- lege h-ad been good enough in Mrs. Sherman's opinion, for ‘her only son—and Anne had had sitx months in art school. Three more years and she and David would marry, fotr as soon as he was graduated David would enter the furniture business his father had establish- ed. Three years had loomed sn eter- nity then. But they had written every day and promised to think of each other every single nour. and there would he summers and vacations. All of this when the world was fairly bursting with prosperity. But David's father's had gone smash alon with hun- dreds of other establshed firms. He had died an old. heartbroken man at fifty, with nothing to bo- queath his widow and son except a modest insurance and a few salvaged and sound government bonds. David had left Yale ltn the middle of his sophomore year to come home and look for, a job. He had said he did not mind that. for didn't it mean he and Anne could marry that much sooner? Now they would only have to wait business until he got a start, instead of three long years. 'I‘hey had waited much longer than that. Years longer. Anne, making herself especially pretty for David. wondering why they had waited so long. It had taken David several years to get that start, of course, though he had been fortunate. He had started from the pigments up. in the Payne Paint Company. Now he was their star salesman, with every evidence of going u the ladder. But all this 119095513181! so many expenditures and prob- lems. The first, Anne recalled, had been a car-his first car- when David was romotted to selling and to a so ary on which they could have married. "A salesman has to have a car," David had said. “You can see that, can't you. Anne?’ Being a "seeing" person. Anne could. Naturally David had to have a car and new clothes and a membership in the Country Club, the later the Rottarians. and still later the Masons and the David worth while things only. Anne could see how much such connections helped a fellow in business couldn't she? David howled every Monday night and played poker every other Saturday. These activities were indulged in for business reasons too, though there were time: when Anne found that ex- planation not too convincing. Then there had been the winter his mother had decided she must By HAM FISHER JIGGS-WEIZE HAVIN’ A "rouet-t TIME wrn-t out: cmmou-‘Muewltssrsu AI~D'SLIM'AN'I1-4IN ARH otvw us A LOT 0P TROLELEII QOYi-l OFTt-IM." IACt-t OFTHEM THINKQ HE t’ vrcoa d r1. . GHiwNuZTJllnaAVOR m “he” ‘fldyto-ea: cereal you "finite only 2 tablespoon; m. 8W6 you a full serving, Tw° 8min: not just one ' ' . . t!” gszsglw preparation of Grape- malted barley. double-baked 2i’ t! Special process. This com. u.'“?'°n_8lves that distinc- "y different Grape-Nuts THERE'S concentrated unlike any sun¢iPen¢d Wheat and wl.,. .,....,».<;rAtlt¥r/1/rs mb/“lmfls 47W l/vll a M/servinq l flavor, sweep-gran, satisfying. package. grocer-k. You'll like the smart‘ new modern pflckigt filiisfic-Nui — truly l4 to 16 servings in every Ask for Grape-Nuts at you] mama n“. u... h" . A ""5"" QT Gloom! Food. go to Florida for her neuritis and David had been obliged to con- tribute. "Sometimes," Anne had said, "I wonder‘ if your irlolher really wants us to marry, David.“ Not that Aunt- bcgrudged Mrs. Sherman hcr share of sunshine though 1t mcnnt another mst-_ ponement of their plans. but Anne had felt for quite a while that 1f Mrs. Sherman would make a few sacrifices silt- could show her love for hcr son more effectively. Then, to go on with this count- ing up~or rather. backwards-- there had lacs-n the’ your Dzlvld had had an appendix operation. Certainly that had been no ones fault. Or the terrific expense in- volved along with other debts now that David was such a suc- cessful young man. It had been in the cards that David would be successful. Ho was marked for success. Steady. serious, ambit- ious. popular. friendly, cleancut. Oh, she was in luck to have David, Anne thought, hurrying to open the door to his ring, to offer her lips for his kiss; he was worth waiting for any number of vents. a lifetime. She never failed to teel a quickening of her pulses when David took her in arms as he did now. though perhaps a shade cas- ually. even dutifully. He was so unutlerably dear. So good to look at. He smelled of cologne and cigarettes and carried himself with such an all‘. He said. "Hi there. Tubbl" as he had every Tuesday and Thurs- day and Sunday evening for the past seven or eight years. calling her that because she was so smart- lly slender. "Hi yourself." she said. but not In exactly the same tone in which she usually said it. For tonight was somehow special; something out of the usual run was going to happen. absurb though it might be to feel so sure of that. m They had waited long enough. she and David. They would decide tonight exactly when they would marry, She would lead up to it shamelessly, if necessary. for suddenly it seemed important that they decide. They must nwser again believe in David's words- that there would always be anoth- er spring. This was the one.,No other would do. Anne was so certain of that. that David must see it. feel it, too. They went to a neighborhood movie al Anne's suggestion. Silo never liked David lo feel he must spend a great deal when he took her out; indeed, she liked him ’to feel that he must not. Anne said she wished they had walked, the nightwasso inviting, so urgent. The Gibson girl and man were were in the moon. The air heralded spring, like a trum- pet. "We can still ride," David said. holding open the door of his sed- an, “even though the old bus l: a hit rusty. Next time 1 take you out, Anne, we'll go in style." “In style?""Anne repeated vagu- ely. the music still humming in- side her head. Then sharply. "Da- vldi you don't mean-you're not thinking of buying another new car this spring?" “I'm not thinking about it. I ordered it today." l-le got in be- side her, threwnhe car into gear. He seemed in a hurry to get start- ed. “It's a beauty. Anne. You'll be crazy about it. That new shade ff blue; not greenish. silvery. Wi h light grey upholstery. Oh. it'll do us proud." "But you don't need a new car." Anne's voice was too quiet. The music had stopped humming in her head, that singing expectancy had stopped inside of her. “This car does very well. You only bought it a little over a year ago, David’ i "A year and five months." he corrected. "You forget, Anne, how the mileage piles up now that I do some out of town selling." He had had some nearby towns added ‘to his territory- "I ot a marvelous dcal. a swell trade-m allowance If I put off buying a car much longer I'd he losing money." Anne did not say anything. She was doing a lot of thinking. ' "You don't act very pleased." David said. He mighttalmost have been urging her to argue. "I can't act what Ldctft fcci. I hoped." Anne spoke slowly, guard- mt; not only her words but a rising tide of rebellion. "that ou'd do something else this spr ng if you had extra money." "It isn't exactly a one of extra money." David's laugh was silort. th ngs I really want to do." “Lord knows I wish there was (To be contlnugd] DOROTHY DIX SAYS:- Contlnued From Pale 2 One young man. a fine character. ma» otff with my How Wow» he could never see her alone. We hesitate to M669! mvIiBmn-i 14> u" homes of the rest of the crowd because we can never pay back, for no one can ever really have any fun in our house. What can we do? it SALLY ANSWER: Your problem is a very common one and it is one that it is almost impossible to solve without woundin8 Th? T991398! 01 "W" you love and do not wish to hurt. But it is one that. in hgstlce to your- self. you have to do something about because not only your happlnesl bu your chances of making good marrlaxes depend WPOH V0111’ b91118 Bblt to gather your boy and girl friends about you. And you can-not do that if your family m omnipresent and I they spend the evenings remlsclng about when Johnny out his first tomb 50 years ago, and how sick Mamie was when she had the measles u s baby. The trouble is that old people set lonesome and 10M M ew- pany. and that they fail to realise that nobody wants to listen to their twice-told tales and that the quickest way in the world to drive their daughters‘ boy friends away is by boring them. My advice to you ls Just to talk this matter over frankly with your ‘runny. ‘They don't want- you to be old maids. and if you cm make them realize that they will do it by airways being on the spot. liq will clear out when the young people arrive. I + some lying around. I just told Oli he car was reall a nccessitv t that I'm travel ng some. Yo simply got to keep up a from" David was explaining Willi a show of impatience. "If you want in 19f on, I mean. You've no l'fIf‘Zl mm it costs when I'm on the rnw.i_ entertaining. liquor. dinners. Yjll can't land the orders unless you do. Why, a man_can spend a flity in a single evening and not kngw where its gone! That's nothing ran]. ly. Notthntlbegrudgcit when i: turns the trick-and you imm- Anne, I'm leading thc sale-s records again this year. If I come out lop: there'll be a neat little bonus in it 101‘ mé- And then," he glanced down st her now because xhe still tlo silent. “I can do m; FIRST Iii’ Illlt WIT I ll PiiSl Willi Lilli Announcing the New l94ffzi¢deé ERES Canada's first completely new post- wu car- the dramatically difierent new 1947 Studebaker! It's low! It's long! It's luxurious! It's your dream of’ a postwar cu come true- thrillingly new from every view-a melody h’: metal l Here's more than radically Idunoed new post- wur styling. Here's the world's finest motor car ride-remarkable operating economy-i full I YOWlI. WANT TO Si! MID ‘TRY ‘IIIISI POSWMR STIIDIIIKIR ADVAIIGIIITS Inclusive new lolI-Qflnll] helm! l llelellvo new "bled light" lnoinnonlluloi ' lnholve new plenu- suspension with he!" up!" oalul 9 h; olntvonow IOw-lypovnitvolromnisolelllls- elusive new coop will new windows don around 0 lulu!» new INY-lypo Ollnetlae vooltnlng m: out»; v swan nulls-mu 1mm with ' UHQY-oibtbesl 219 omit George so»: measure of’. Studebakel-‘s famous top-quality workmanship. ' Right now, we're showing the new 1947 Stude- baker Chnmplon-freeh of!‘ the production lines. And almost. my day, the distinctive new 1947 Studebaker Commander will also be on display. . The crowds are big-hut come in anyhow. This a is Canada's first genuine, fully tested postwar our. Makeoure to be one of‘ this first to lee it. » I '1'. G. IVES CHARLOTTETOWN- Distributor for P. a. Islshd PM" 1117