ROASTI no ,/ custom with their Dutch ancestors, W. H. Schwartz It Sons have always set great store hy their coffee roasting. Lately they have installed the Thermalo low- temperature system of roasting—-which creates wholly new standards oi coffee excellence. The Thermalo roasts the coffee bean evenly RIGHT TO THE CENTER. The result is a more uniform roast and a richer beverage. There is more body —a deeper, winey color. Even when the cup cools the tine flavor is still there. Do try a pound of this more fragrant Thermalo roast. Get it in the Schwartz vacuum-packed tin and follow the directions. Then you'll truly have “the cup you can't forget!" gntdaqscéwa/zqmodleswte/ All the comfort of automatic heating-plus lower iuol bills with a FMRBANIQ-MORS 14 (QM. STOKER That's because automatic controls regulate the flow of fuel to the fire- bed, where every héat unit is extrac- tedfromthelower-pricedstokercoal you use. There's absolutely no waste. No chilly rooms in the morning. No more running tlown to the reliar as soon as you're up to at- tend to the furnace. The F-M Coal Stoker is complete. No costly extras to buy. It can be easily installed in a few hours. Why stick to old-fashioned methods when clean, automatic heating costs no more. lm/crligatz NOW ‘vbmr inrtnllalinn can be easily and economically made. THE CINIIJIIN FIIIlIINKSMURSE CD. LTD 980 St. Antoine St.. Montreal HA. 7lZl For Sale by R. T. MORRISON & CO. 122 Fitzroy Street, Charlottetown BIJOY YOUI. IVININOS free of . homes worries. Automatic control-l . on (he F-M Stalin nuure heatinl ermrlert. ‘ ' A ' ‘snarl ‘BIJBBEIH-IEIEI. n wtiéff; 00 s’ f " ‘w,’ M“ lg IUD < “IO-MARK” . IRUWI Will. NOT SLIP v Ask for Ilium by lame ‘ \ “En y. tiissoivlo our. VACCINE llontaguo Mrs. warm-Tee}- and Mrs. ceanrl Boehner. Montague, were rec visitors to Bummersrtd. _ Misses Sue and Miary l-iemphill. of the stat! o! the Mmrtague Pum- ishing 00.. span the weekend at their hurt; in wn. wit!» and Mrs. waiter o!» mg er yo son, Roger. o Otter ottetowtilugent the weekend hem. guests out Mrs. Cross’ mother. Mrs. A. e. Miss Brena. Reynolds. mime-in- tmlning at. the PIA. Hospital. is enjoyhlrrrg her vacation at titre homo or! paren M.C. Reynolds. Montague. bailum Bruce and Mrs. tune vi a r K some t... d... iiilwlltlrfi “‘°“‘ ‘time visiting friends in Boston an vicinity. Miss Florence Lavers. R..N.. Mat- ron oi’ Kings County Hospital, A no the weekend art her home in rgetown. . Miss Jennie Mociaren. o! the staff qt Bvudreaizlt and id. Montague, spent the weekend at her borne in Brudenell. ‘mIil/laiflhlgfi Vuozzq. Hfillfax. is parents l ontqgue. woompanied b? his daughter. Miss Helm Vouzzo. Om Friday May 3rd.. a very oessful “Blrtrgtfl was held in DBgKJn Hall. Mcntague. It was s-gonsored by the local branch of te Canadian Legion. luck in his new business. lvlr. and Mrs, Mlartln Currie en- tertained thc Senior Y.P.S. o! the Presbyterian Church on Tuesday evening. May 7th. Crakinole and other games were enjoyed by the naember-s. after uhich lunch was served bv the hostess assisted by a committee. suc- the Mr. Albert Gaudet. Fccds Ltd. rc-przsentive Marltinaes. pa d to Montague tit» week. Joining the R.C.A l" in June. 1940. he was crnp-ia cn the staff of Clark gue. A host of him the best Ql ‘The W M S of th: Mozirtagiw Unit-ed Cirurclr izeld their Thank Offering Survice on Sunday. May 5th.. at 7.30 o.m. Rsv Roy E Web- ster. Missionary of Vfzst China. was the special speaker. anddellve-r- ed his message to a llrge and 84])- priclative audience. as he told o1 ‘iiar, great country. of the work iitsiriiziacies tri "" ‘ Ccrnpound nave Cone; of the r n. *1 ip endured by the Chinese yon... ; of the dire need o! more and more work- crs. He. ntremsd the courage and ctantina as well as the humor and fortitude of Chinese. The Brooklyn Trio (it Bruce. Mun- roe and Bears) u; "d greatly to the ssrvlcc r2 rig very feel- lngly two selections “Sinners Jesus Will Receive" zirrtl "Glorious Things Of Thee Are Spukm". Miss Edna 1 riser was organist during the service. After the service the guest speaker. the ’I‘rio and friends were entertained at the home 0! Dr. and Mrs. L. A Johnstone. where a social hour and sacred sing was enjoyed. with Mlrs. H. . Da-vison as pianist. Endurance Streak Ends Catchrr Ray Muellers endurance streak 011233 conseuctive Nation-at Lesttue Home; was broken yester- day as his Cincinnati Reds team- mates nosed out New York Giants 2-1 behind the eight-hit tossing of Joe Butts. Mueller was benched for light hittinz. and his successor. Ray Lnmnnnn. collected two singles in three trins to the plate. Bogus. veteran rlghthander. chalked un his third vlctorv with- out a defeat and never was in serious trouble, as t-he R/ediegs last one in the ninth to end s Giant rally and the game. Johnny Mize homered in the nevetitli to account for the single Ntw York run. Phlladelmhta at Chicago and Brooklyn at Pittsburgh were can~ CARDIFF‘. Wales. May 10 -iCP) -~ Mat MEL Griffiths. 22, is a, gub- pcstrnlis ress at Natttybwch. Mon- mouthstiine. but cannot write her ole Health Miniuler Anerurin At a: ootntercncc of sub-postmast- ens she supported a jtggr-fluflom n-=lk.nt_< elimination of a rule for- bidding rub-pcstm-nsters to writ members or narliarnent. r {A CHEST COLD l "Ls" .S'("r"1'n1-1.s If Neglected A neglected Cold can travel fast. First, in the throat-then lower down-finally the Lung area may be affected. Fight your Chest-cold before it gets a solid grip. You can't grow new Lungs or new Bronchial Tubes any more than you can 1grow new fingers or new toes. rent your Bronchial Cough before it; grows chronic. Use Polson's Cough Syrup-it is a safe relief for stubborn Coughs and Throat Troubles due to Cold. You can often cut the misery of a nasty Cold in two by effectively treating it -at the very start. This remedy acts directly on the infected tissues and quickly reduces inflam- mation. Start now and destroy the virulent bacteria that causes the trouble. The specialized medication in this Syrur does a good Job. - Hel yourse f to get prolonged fr om from attacks -—get the proper médicine. Use Patton's Cough Syrup and start on the road to greater free- dom tront aiclorm due ‘to Colds. - Charla d lice, the one which was in use all' camcub with five twin- killings. the. Sold .-s1l-'D ' ‘ bomiy I rumsts in 35c I Georgetown Ami lilulnity Mr. Albert. Bkinner was s recent visitor to Montague. w. and Mrs. Nelson new!» and Mn. J, Waidron Lovers were visitors to Montana on mesday. A curios/d 0i feed. consllllbd l4 the st. accrues Buyina Club. 11 being unloaded at the railway sid- inrt here. Miss Catherine Fii-zierald. em- nloyee o! the Mayfair Restaurant. ttsto n. recently visited her its-rents. Mr, and Mil. Will-ll!!! Fitzgerald. here. Citizens hare are blessed to sec n new flag flyinz at the Poet O!- wintgr won gettlnl: rather the worse for wear. Miss Minnie Owen. “no has been suendtng the winter in Char- lottetown. arrive-d home a few days and and will once attain occu-uv her home here durlm the surn- mer. Miss Dorothy Cullen. Charlotte- town. was a retient visitor to Geometown. the truest of her sis- ter. Mrs. F. J. Delory. 0n Tuesday nittht. son cf Mr. and Mm Ray-mend Solomon was taken suddenly ill and was rushed by car to hospital tr. Charlottetown. Late tenor-ts stale his condition as somewhat imvroved. Mrs. Harold MacDonald and Mrs. E. B. McLnren have return- ed home from a visit to Ontario. Mrs. MacDonald visited Toronto and Mrs. McLaren was the guest of her dauahters. Rev. Mrs. Mel- ville Altlren. Hamil-ton. and Mrs. C. S. M. Duiitn. London. Georgetownlans visiting Char- lottetown on Ttuirsdav included: Miss Dot Roar-h. Mrs. Marv John- son. Mrs. B. H. Stewart. Miss Hel- en Batchllder. Mr. J. A. Lea. Mr. John C. Gotell and Mr. Emest Doyle. Two nrlsoners of Geontetown tall. set-vino two roars for break- inz. entertrr-z and theft. recently manawcd to cscane but were nuiclrlv apprehended bv the RC. My. They were later tried and sentenced to two years in Dor- chester Penitentiary. the intent London Actress Thrillod BY Canada wnomo, Ma-y 1b - 1GP» _ The Toronto cabbie stared at, his blmide passenger to the bolnt of. rudeness. valid. “Didn't I see youi in n Ion-don ohorv?" It has been lilo. that since Gt-or-r gina arrived lncm England on an crsvwhille banana boat. Because‘ thousands oi‘ Canadians in the armed forces saw her on London's, West End stage. the Marignv theatre l in Paris, and the theatres of Brus-‘ eels. Rcrnc, Naples and Bari-to m-rntlcri a few. l Rcmance brought Georgina l (that's her stage name) to Canada; caused her to shunt a brilliant rar- ccr c-u t-ltc London stage. She mar~ nail a Canadian W81‘ coiresnoridcnt. Allan Nickleson. on three days‘ notice in Londrm played her usual f-Ole in the musical ccrnc-dy "Irene". two hzurs after the vr-edd‘ ‘ As lcr Canada rib:- ‘lcvss" it,‘ can't et. over travellin hundreds of m es and “still be ng in the game. country, even the some Prov- ] . cc. .- "Arrd why dildn‘t someone tell me about hockey." said the young actre-us-singer. "When I saw my first hockey came I nearly went crazy. I never saw anything so fast. . so exciting. And I actually emimr- rass my friends at games because I siu-lek so much." The greatest sports thrill she ever had came when Winnipeg Monarchs beat St Michael's Coll- ege for the Memorial Cu-p. She was rooting for Monarohsflbecaiise they were the underdogs." (which it typical British). Tummy Did Flip-Flops l "I was never eorxcited in all my life and my turrzmy did flip-flops the whole way through. ‘there's here. mended by the K111! 01 N god confer on him the rank honorary general o! the Nepalese Army. services rendered by Lord (then Sir Archibald) Wavell as Courmnnder- i-n-Chtef. India. when Nepalese and Gurkha troops served tinder him. The number of tingling the Second Great War to the Lti . O00. The total vbplllation of NOD-Ill 1-. less than tmo ing r Q WEI‘. ...... o... ¢........ twirl Brier. means Flnelit;;Colrc,gl RUST the maker's of Baker's Chocolate I0 Purdue: an oq WOO!- Aad cocoa as Baker's make it uall branding y justifiea the faith gar geom- \._ tionnofgoodmokshnve glsosclintlrstfuiotrsnsmmOneeyouwounsd naming mp of Baker's richer, Iflllf nude sooocdln ttrinstrtictions on "It'll "'“'° t" P.."’°"‘é..'*“'i ' ' ‘“"' “it WWW...’ ‘°"" . or cows. . I F ‘ y ‘auhsvhr. beciunlktrlfyil all pun coma-nothing ldtlld. Icono- . . thellbtl. mical. too-the i-lb. package nukes up to 90 serving; (=3 a . ‘§$i events in most livcs—birth. mu- riaae and death. NEPAL HONORS WAVELL FOI- INDIAN SERVICE v9—(CP)-— NEW DiIiILHI. Bria Commanding General Sir Behsdur Shumshere recently pinned the Order o! the Jung Bahadtu Rana a-l cn the breast o! 10rd lnl e w.- net-ad I-iesaldhehadbeencnm- tin resent the Order to Lord neg} in reooknllblon oi the Nepalwe reta-uits an Anny alone exceeded 100.- 7000900. ‘Iepnlesv won l0 Victoria Orodaes dur- WHO WHO WHO WHO WHO ltov. Wilkinson Sparks 0n (lhuroh Life In Canada _ mfifihlfis return to En his Canadian wilt, the General Sect-gory - raters: no.1; v. A H. see-med mslffi than it is in thir country. and um it was brtnglnl a blitz" national and more generally thought church-going 1e over yo QIGIC wculd be four or t ve tlmll I8 at as m this country. He m“ a 1i" in the prairies. where people MM" lived many miles trom the neamt L; t. llli town, mud how thev manszed. even then t0 |et in Wilkinson said that the S iii Canada as far as the Bible @- ciety was concerned was most sat- had been sent to PM.“ last. year, and at one meet- I18 for M000 was him. Brtoadcamng was used in the churches tar more Greet. Britain. and is much more over . A. . - 0! slgllltlnstslf visited the 9.2.1. Auxil- lu-y qr the Bible Society list 17% cember.) - BR . ___ m’ p that flit Pfoiloftlon 0! h“ Orders“ ‘n mwgaggmg‘ into the $181211 Kenny tltfl of infantile Daralwlfl- - Bimt 1w nskedeiror the trtveotltttion on hfl‘ w; cnocotars om. at!“ 3m try ‘Cocos. Tout?” Children love ltl Make it inn like cinnamon your. but instead of mixing cinnamon ( and rugs: to spread on the r\ bnmrod tout, substitute »- Baker's Onoos for ttuhainnl- mo... Grand b: n time snack! LPIQGMQfOmMQIIQb return to Brisbane after five years, in America. ha. ‘inmost. “i‘*....“°...."‘°.“ it either Airstraftnqtazr America?“ m fonned the. Kenn . rnericn and littered the late Pre- paralysls victim. to meotinqrl" Mr. tuittlon isisotary. 'I"he um . s the Society from" _ sident Roosevelt. a in her methods. i» n: - ll. J. IMBON ' OPTOHITIIIT nttinu out! tlévtiilyins utm- he spoke. n dhtqtw -1 when handed t0 st than it ls in than here. malty count- be remembered that til w Wilkinson and Mrs Montana. I. I. l- n = to t» II a. u on“ l“: I r. at QUEENSLAND TOPRO I PARALYSIS TREATM new. Australia. my 1o- The Queensland muggy; etc- iv entrainment um IIIUGHTORI 081cc Conueotol with . rm Australian nurse is constantly searching the markets to brilll. 79" those hard-to-get items oi footwear which have been so scarce these “last few. years. 3 STYLES __ MEN'S WORK BOOTH BROWN AND WHITE SADDLE OXFORDS 80 PAIRS ‘y TENNIS SHOES mENis KNEE and V4 RUBBER BOOTS CHILD’S WHITE SHOES WRIGHTS nothing like that. in Britain.” Georgtrta recently mode her first white appearance in mtmda. A soprano. she wasaieottued artist at ~ a qbrorito concert. A newqzaper music critic. noting her songs were most beatrtitul. said: "Her voice is purest. llgh@ soprano and her enummation latultlress." Geo um. tail and lust, 24. likes her we to mnada. It was at Halifax. and she and her husband had ust stepped off the boat. were awai lng a train to the east in the station mi/tinda. ' canadlan sailor touched his Gem-gin d. "I was such a ‘ireart-warmln: wel- com‘ " Before Rolng into "Irenef Geom- lnu tourcd E3‘; t and Italv with it in Ix-trdon the day before D- Day. show towed Europe, went; close t0 the lighting lines. Georgina feels it a "pity" that Canada. because of iris scattered. ‘population. has no great stage rife. such London or New York. "But I think the theatre Can- ada. now tihat the war is over. will boom as much an it can," she sold. " undreds and hundreds. c! can- adians never WW iettitlmate stage until they went overzcas- am t-irey 0t to like it. Thm were always may oi on leave in the VUNUUI London theat- res. and in the war amiss. IGNOBANCI NOT BLISS —BEWILI)EBED MARINE MELBOURNE. Mistralll. Msv 8 -—tOP) - m. Armriean marine has dished out a Dorothy Dix-likely gull-y to Meiimnne‘: town I. .8. Wootton. I-Ie wants to mow ithewnsmsrrledwhilehewssirt Melbourne in i943. ‘the letter trttn ., fllttfit— "Will be sodkind Mo 01,303; YQQI IQN’ l, N’ H’ 0 whether or niurui £0.11. v. see not r Frederick a. m. bgfic: .. wu ea LP.“ fir“... "‘ M. “m... . st Btu. 1st Metres?" ' m- w a the tfioizrélstlfi We think we have the largest selection of fine work boots in P. E. I. All have grain uppers, bend outsoles (or pnnco and solid leather in- soles. Women's slid Child’! brown and white sad- dles. Rubber sole and heel. Sizes 11 to 3 and 3 to 8 2:95 to i STYLES WOMEN'S BROWN AND ' WHITE SPECTATORS $8.45 to 38-5" JUST RECEIVED 50 Pair Men's V4 BOOTS 5.25 10b Pall- Man's truss moors you A wide choice of Child's. Woman's; Boys’ H"! Mirna’ ‘ '1 TENNIS SHOES -~ to’ "' ‘i r y. . Brown. fit-i hittlliéllixtll "hilt. lat}