. :__;_’;T._.._.__u . -__._____-. BERLIN AIR LIFT LIFTS CAR ' A smal‘. automobile is lifted into the huge (2-74 Globemasier, now taking part in the air lift supplying Berlin. The car was flown back to hankftirt on the mammoth cargo carrier's second return flight. The sky glfiflf had carried a coenpiete rock-crushing plant. to the b0- leagilered German capital. N tPhoto by NBA-Acme nan correspondent. Joe Schuppe.) N. r. svm\'.sv*ciu>rs . SILEINT sona JERKS‘ i NEW YORK, Allg 28- lCPi _ — Perhaps it's an effort to com- pensate for lIllZlIEl‘ subway fare: perhaps it's to ussuaae the tcm- per of Sllb\\'l\_\’-ll§.{‘l‘S about w em- bark on that jam-packed journey] home. l Silcn‘. soda. jerks have been placed at the l' ‘ger subway sta- tions. They serve soft drinks with precision. nuke change. offer the customers liIS choice. mix. drinks. ail llll> with never a frown or harsh word Put a nickel in the slot; of the automatic drink vending machines and a paper cup appears under a soon/t. and the soft drink yoil choose is poured to the right; level WIDELY DISTRIBUTED The l0 or more species of ivalnu: are widely distributed throttgliout North and South Am- erica, southern Europe. northcrn Africa and Asia. PUREST OIL Borne of the “world's purest oil comes fmm Tartakan, off the coast of Borneo. \ Hard Unloading ILL 6c W “Blue Coal" ruminciz SIZE A. PIBKARD 8r C0. PHONE 240 ,_ Coal Today ASPHALT. ticl ltfrc’: cf rccl prcicidtion . . ugoirist WEATHER ded into the surltoce. Yeors of 11' ville . or thc LOCKNOTCH patterns. Phone l7l COLORFUL JOHNS-MANVILLE OF TlMEl Tlhe sccret cl this extm protection is o tough felt base soturotcd and coo-ted with asphalt-plus o cover- J-M Asphalt Shingle-s give your home THREE essen- proteotion against FillRE irig ct irccistrvctilvle, cclcrful roclk granules securely imbed- bccked by o riu-me that is known to millions— "Johns-Mon- We have those shing-‘es in stock in the THREE-lN-ONE We w"l be pleased to give you complete information on tiny rovilng problem you may have. L. M. Poole 6: Co. LUMBER — BUILDING SUPPLIES cos »~;@ code-t oQwo-ao SHINGLES ond ogoinst the RAVAGES protection for your root . .9. —- l72 By Ken Reynolds lion-how connffl __ "l no in tho Guoidion Wont M: you're, soiling your power The Queen's Holiday BY f Elizabeth comm ill Very few of the American "Sytnpothizers" rwhom the baron promised her nond ooaeewd it her receptions; those who did come were a strange looking lot. But the Ielwodian refugees con- tinued to visit in droves; by the time she had lived at the manor for a month she was used to seeing certain faces appear over and over. lShe trad supposed that she saw all the callers at the manor. Indeed it sometimes seemed to her that. in the course of a day she saw everybody in the eastern United States. But: one day when she was crossing the hall on her way to the long drniwingroom, she heard her butler arguing with someone who had asked to see llier ind was apparently being denied, Elsa crossed the broad landing hastily; but just inside the draw- ing-room door she turned to peer between the curtains at the stranger. He was a young man, obviously an American. To her eye there was something very at- tractive in his alert yet easy PR1‘- ridge, so different from the mil- itary stiffness of the young of- ficers who surrounded her - a hearing which the baron, too, re- tained in spite c-f his advancing years and rheumatic joints. Many of the younl: Anrerlcans On shipboard had carried them- selves that way, she remembered frcin her hurried glimpse of them. There had been one young man in particular -- bow the countess bad scolded her after- w-ard on the night: when Elsa, in- toxicated by the first fresh sea air she had breathed on the en- tire voyage. dropped her hand- bag almost between the feet of that particular young man! This person looked like her shipboard friend. 1t couldn't. be the same man, of course; such coincidence didn't. hampen. No 0X19 had preceded her into the draw- ing - rot-m. Elsa drew a lam! breath of resolution.‘ Without moving from her sheltered post. she called back through the curtains to the butler. "Does someone wish to s68 m9? Bring me his card." The butler brought her the card. "Theodore V. Latin". R931 Estate,“ it read; hilt there was the name of a firm ln the lower corner. l‘ CHAPTER V Elm glanced in the mirror fiver the fireplace in be sure that her hair was smooth. Then she said u. the butler. "I will nive the gentleman five minutes. Show him in." She had hardly started down the lenqth of the room toward her state armchair when she heard the baron, attended by Lieutenant Fritz Kftlllltffir. (""119 clanking down the staircase. Elsa scuttled back to the shelter of the curtains and tried to catch the barons eye through the doorway. That august eye. TWWGVPT’ had fastened on the intruder. Follow- ed closcly by his aide, the baron strode up to Theodore V. 111310"- Real Estate. and demanded to know what. he wanted. "I want to see the Duchess of Grnntheilm for a for: minutes, if I m-gyr," said Theodore V. LRYW" with a slight smile. Behind her curtain Elsa Blflrlfifl It was the some youmz man. Though she hm; heard his voice so briefly on shipboard, she re- mrmlvered it very well. ' The baron did not answer Teds smile. “Her Grace does not re- ceive visitors." u "Ob, this isn't n social call‘. explained TEd. "ThlF hm“? l‘ 5° [M out, nf town~it‘s rcnlfy so in- convenient to reach-that it. oc- curred to me the duohes ought to have an apartment in New York, ton. I cnuld show her some very nice n-partments, all furnish- ed and fitted; large or tmall. according to whether she wanted just a place to spend the fright alter she'd born at the theater. nr derided to splutlilfi R b" Ind do some entertaining." "The duchess does not. enter- tain," said the baron. “and her arrangements have afready been made, I will not. fietaln y-on any longer." That wasn't n kind way lo 2e‘. rid nf such a nice young man, who hiu-l made the Inn; journey out from New York just to fumllh her with something ho thought she needed. Ted made some further remark. which Elsa couldn't. catch crver the beating of her own heart. She bad cwne to a great and impul- sive resolution. Without giving herself time to reflect that: she would probably be scolded for it afterwards, she left the drawing- rnom and crossed the wide lnndinl! diagonally to n. small onteronm where Lcucaclinn refugees com- monly waited for their turn to kiss the queen's hand, She wu so nervous over her own daring that. she wont very fast; indeed if she bad been n commoner you might. o most: have said that she scuttled. ut she did not hurry so fut. that she had not time for s. good look at. the stronger. And one sow h'rn look at. beri He must. guess who ab; win, of course. Dured she hope that. he remain-bored her from bin glimpu 0n shipboard? . She was fotld not to know, Juni. inside the sntomom door nho stood pqntifil as i; ah; had run a mile, and still clutching Theodor V. layman's curd. A minute later she heard the door clone behind him. The baron and Fritz cloaked into the state drawing-room. flu thrust Ted‘: ‘cord into tho bosom of her dress. The one good thing about those dignified draperies which the" boron mode her wear NORlH nMueicA/v LIFE L. S. STEVENSON NPANLH MANAGER IIO RICHMOND ST. JMUTUAI. COMPANY was that she could have con-. vealed a whole archive in their recesses. She had a magnificent wardrobe. i-f you cored for clothes ~of that kind; it. we: duly cm- broldered with royal crowns in dozens of different places. In that ward-robe she displayed her- self’ only to refugees and con- spirators. She had a husband. of whom she asked nothing better then that he kce-p away from her. (Prince Paul hadn't put in an ap- pearance during the few days she spent in Paris; evidently he in- tended to live up to his side of their bargain.) She was a queen with nu throne; yet she had all the drawbacks of royalty with none of the privileges. When she went to her room to change for dinner, she laid Ted's card in a small drawer where she kept the tfew relics of her past. that she had brought with her frown Leucadia. rm. days after Ted's unsuc- cessful expedition out of the manor, Baron Gottlieb suddenly left. the prcmlses. “Important Business." he explained to Elsa, "Very import- ant business!" ‘ "Are you planning to leave us?" Elsa tried not to sound too caged‘, "Only for a short. time. The focus of our loyal party ls where Your Highness is." "Oh!" said Elsa, “Well. don't try in hurry. You must save your strength, for all our sakes." After the barons departure life at. the manor relaxed perceptibly. The countess Van Urk was deaf to Elsas hints that a week in New York would be a pleasant change for the two of them, But the crowd of refugees had thinned: and except when the baron wired for more money, Elsa had no papers to sign. Sipring was beginning to get tinderwav: the shy reluctant. spring of northern latitudes. Afternoons as well as mornings now Elsa walked about the grounds, watching the buds swell on the trees. feel. l"! a lift in her heart at the promise of the season. Always Carl Walked with her. (To Be Continued) COSTLY PESTB One female moth and her fam- llY can destroy. in a single year, as much wool as it would take a dozen sheep to produce, Read oll about if-sco i! of your Ford Deoler‘l The longer; lower look! Ii loo/n like a luxury car! Big cor quality in ovary detail! ‘Iwvo hundred Boy Scouts from all ports of Great Britain. this summer paid their own fare and expenses to Torquay, and in some cases gave up holidays, to take part in a large-scale good tum. They helped with the soiling events at time. Olympic Gamel. Sea Scouts manned two fast mot/or launches. one carrying press and nowsa-eel men, the other act- ing as n tug and fire craft. They also manned 14 dlnghies carrying c-ut. ferrylng and messenger duties. On shore they worked as fire pickets. messengers and guides. Two motor-cycle despatch riders were attached to the Games Headquarters. From Rabbi Abraham L. Fein- burg of Holy Blossom Temple in Toronto, the Canadian Boy Scouts have received the following mess- age: “Since the most valuable and permanent asset of any country is the character displayed by its inhabitants under stress. the Boy Scouts Association may regard itself as an instrumentallty of the highest rank; it has fostered the development. of those human traits on which a. nation can rely in crisis. "During the forty years of its existence. the human race, like the Israelites, has wandered in a wilderness of conflict and spir- itual confusion. Yet the" Boy Scouts Association steadfastly up- held the ages-old stabilizing prin- ciples of conduct to which it had been dedicated, carrying its message of service and co-opera- tlon across national boundaries to gird the earth with one ideal. "Younit men will inherit a dif- ficuit and dangerous. but poten- tially ivonderous world. If they learn to practice the Boy Scout Code. tomorrow will bring the fulfilment. of man's dream of Peace and plenty. Front and back “Therefore. I congratulate the o not: are actually ooh-wide. ORB AID IAOIIAIGI DNHQI" FORD UOIM QMPAIY G GMIARI. [IND JOHNSTON, Ltd. EAT/l; TIE I C {SIM '1 Q I MANUFACTURED BY, Central Creameries tn. CHARLOTTETOVYN SUMMERSIDE au<§i_s'_r_a_1_.__194s ‘éaow-‘ommcfdéi/zzof/ you nu Luann non will“ ilLtlyggirgou .-...usr mfnuovunurl“ SOURIS Believe Bells Do Not Expect War ' From Berlin Crisis By JAMES D. WHITE (Associated Press New: Analyst) If Russia figured that the Ber- lin situation could get her into war now, she could hardly afdord what is goiniz on in the Balkans. Possibly Moscow underestltmates what is happening both in Ber- lin and Belgrade, but that. is customed to winning at chess. One must assume, instead, that the implications have been weigh- ed in the Kremlin. Thus it would be dangerous, from the Russian standpoint, to flirt with war in Berlin while _\foscow‘s political offensive de- velops a hot-box on the ru ed Balkan roadbed. In Communist history the ac- tions of Belgrade are something Boy scouts Association on its birthdiay and fervently pray that. its influence will grow from day. to day." flasks-J??? A H's a dream on the lnoidq tool ‘Lounge cor intorio! Sll l1‘ Al’ YOUR FORD DIALIRW SHOWROOM! hardly the way of a people ac-' Thorn’: 57% mom iuoblo space in tho Iuggap compartment. new -_ a Soviet satellite defying Moscow and, to date, getting away with it. Not. only has Marshal Tito of Yugoslavia been excommunicated from the‘ Communist hierarchy for heresy (that happened in July) but he has refused to re- pent and nc-w is hitting back by accusing Hungary and Romania of plotting destruction of the Yugoslav state. Gone is the pretence that it's all just a row inside the Com- munist Party. This is between governments, soy the Yugoslavs. who now have done just about everything but attack Moscow it- self This is hot stuff, and the word from Belgrade is that Tito has burned his bridges behind him and can never get back into Moscow's good graces. The reason, if; is said, is that Moscow will not consider the idea of his being anything but a pup. pet and that he will not. consid- er being anything but: boas of Yugoslavia. It is said that the country seems to be solidly behind him, and that any attampt to liquid. Hi6 him at this stage would 195g Ylliloslavia for the Communist world. However, the theory that Titol can never return to Mngcnw’; -__ bnscm is subject to power strat- egy which sometimes lnfluent-n party lilies decisively, Let any ab, vious threat of n third world M; arise, and Russia's necessity 10; safeguarding the Balkan flank n] her Communist (‘umpire “cum come inio play. YUEOSlJIVlII has meant a Soviet shore on the Adriatic. Ytlgcslnvj are good lighters and - under Tito -— ciifcctivc Corrmunlsts. Tn inst the-n would he to tlirou sot-at,» that Adriatic frontage. and pull the Russian line back to Romgnj; and Bulgaria, where the fighting tradition is not so certain, The cifcctiite front might h] the Russian border itself. This is contrary tn the Soviet taste Int‘ protective liilffcr areas, ivarni water ports. and flflynlygg bases from which to fish in 31;" political NTMGTS like those ol France and Italy. Beyond that. nvcrld Communism seems to be flOlllg tiifnlifil] Q test that anay have much influence (in history. That tcst i; to see whe- ther it can tolerate any hflllonal irecrlcm within its so-calletl 1ft- tcrnaiioiinl framework Yugoslavia may tell the talc, and the test looks loo important... regardless of Moscow's air of uncontrcrn - fnl‘ it to be run 1,1 conjunction with any scare in the Kremlin. real war- Throo people ride ln comforf . on front and roar seats. ' OO "Hydro-Coll" Spring: on both front wheels. . a "Para-Flex" Spring! i of r r. ' I. Thom "Magic Action" King-Size Brakes are broken you love to touch! While nldowull tlm optional at extra cont when nvnllobllv Charlottetown