910VEMBER vo. 1952 JOPJIAD BREATH ' CIEAIS COATED MOUTH; STOPS DENTUIE ODOIII Wlusl other Anllseplic can Make This Offer? VOIDOREEN Antiseptic is not a product oi the past. It contains only ingredients that are consid- ered ellective by science today. VOIDOREEN must stop bad breath immediately. It must do what we may it will under the illustrations above or we refund your money. VOIDOREEN Antiseptic with Research. Chlorophyll, Modern product oil .(ll.L5 GERMS REDUCE5 COLDSI IELIEVES SOIE THROATI STOPS SCALP ODORI CONTROLS DANDIUFFI HEALING AFTERSNAVEI I i NOTICE Because of the interest shown in VOIDOREEN by the allied medical prolessions. we will be happy to supply samples on receipt ol :1 letterhead. i i 49: - 79: oidflleen ANTISEPTIC SOLD AT DRUG STORES ONLY! liuichison's 'Book On late Mr. King, By Clyde Blackburn (Canadian Press staff Writer) O'l'I'AWA, Nov. is -Mackenzie Kingte fear of. trouble in Korea brought him close to a. break with his chosen 5- ,Louis st. Lau- rent, two years before the Korean war broke out, Bruce Hutchison re- ports in his book. "The Incred- ible Canadian." published Saturday. This is one of the previously- untold stories in the newspaper man's painstaking account of the life and times of Mackenzie King. Prime Minister of Canada for 22 years before his retirement in I948. (The book is published by Longmans Green.) . In more than 150.000 words, Mr. I-lutchlson, editor of the Victoria Times and author of "Canada. The Unknown Country," gives a frank and sometimes cruel account or Mackenzie King's thoughts. mot- ives, actions and utterances dur- ing 50 years of Canada's often- turbulent political history. The book gives evidence in a most-ex- haustlve study of the records and an intimate personal relationship with the, late Prime Minister. The book attributes to Macken- zie King a great deal of wise statesmanship, a great deal of cold, ruthless political astuteness, and ti degree of pettishness and absurdity. t Most incredible of the stories- that describing Mackenzie King's capitulation to cabinet demands for conscription in 1944 in the face or a real or imaginary threat of revolt by the army-has already appeared in print as an extract. Not Denied ' That story has not been denied supplies leotl instantly into that famous 'l'hisreKl.I1”5 look tor this money- mi... label-while i we Wt: .:;".z.”:.m-we--bout or commented upon publicly by those surviving who were con- "W, gm. gpulel ottoman ' I actually save Y9" T2I..'L9-"-'3- ” of Imam; Muwgli House pa as 0119 pound of K CEl'll(:d niost closely with tin.- stcrrny events oi October and No- vember. 1944. Another passage. incredible o those who believed they kn MacKenzie King, tells of his keep- ing in his employ a servant he believed to be a Communist spy and, (or amusement, confiding to him pretended sympathies tor Russia. - A - The Korean incident occurred in 1948, the year Mackenzie King re- signed. He had been away from Ottawa and Mr. St. Laurent, then External Afiairs Minister, was act- ing Prime Minister. The then Justice Minister, .7. L. Ilsley (now Nova Bcotia's Chief Justice) was leading Canada's delegation to the United Nations. The Prime Minister returned to Ottawa. to find that Mr. Ilsley. with approval of Mr. St. Laurent. had accepted a place for Canada on the United Nations Korea com- mission. Mr. I-iutchison said Mackenzie King was "incensed". He was ob- sessed with fear of war in Korea and believed such a step should not have been taken without con- suiting him. "Ilsley prepared to resign," the book says. "St. Laurent said lit- tle but made it clear that he could not remain if his action in the U. N. was repudiated. i "On learning this King was in- credulous. He had expected no more rebellions in the last il- lustrious months of his reign. Ils- ley had always been brittle of course and had never pretended to like his leader, but St. Laurent was not only King's closest colleague but the man already chosen to succeed him. . ." St. Laurent's Challenge But the Prime Minister "cap- itulated" at a private dinner with Mr. st. Laurent at Laurier House after the latter had said that "naturally he must resign if King repealed his policy,” and the Prime Not a powder! Not Cl grind! But millions of , iiny "FLAVOR BUDS" of lOO7o pure coliee...reaoly to burst MAXWELL HOUSE FLAVOR! 7' Utterly unlike old-style jlinstants"- a just nquiek-to-Ex; but . tastes so deliciously diferentl : us 5 10095 pure coifee-no addedll Donltldelay-get your iar atyour grocer's today! . Thou only instant coffee with that I UO"O'I-L-T0-u'I'I'II Al?-DROP flavor! regular size iar of this amazing new coffee! I Tl-II7. CIM " 73' AN. (III A Di -OTTETOWN Minister had replied that resigna- tion was unthinkable. "This aiialr. so carefully hush- ed up. marked I. watershed in the political lives of King and St. Laurent," Mr. Hutchisou writes. ”King was no longer the dam- inant power in government. He was too old to fight. St. Laurent, the rising man, had challenged and beaten him." In a different vein the book de- scribes "the comic side" of Mac- kenzie King's obsession with the danger of Communism. It appar- ently came from a conversation with the Prime Minister after the 1946 es-ionage trials. "One of his servants. said King. was a Communist, probably a spy, and this man he watched with continual amusement. To draw him out King would talk at length about the virtues of Com- munism. pretending a warm sym- pathy for Russia. . . Actually it was nonsense but King enjoyed his little game oi hide-and-seek." Mr. Hutchison accepts as true published reports of Mackenzie King's conierences with spiritual- ists and that he died believing he had communed with the dead, in- cluding his mother and President Roosevelt. . This intriguing story of Mac- kenzie Klng follows the bachelor politician from his birth Dec. 17. 1874, in Kitchener (then Berlin) Ont., to his lonely death at Kings- mere on the evening of July 22, . Midgell and Vicinity Church Road school was closed on Tuesday, Armistice Day. ..f' Miss Freda Maccallurn and Miss Joan MncEwen oi! Char. lottctown spent a recent week end at St. Peters Bay. Mr. Leith Sanderson of Church Road made two more trips to Nova scotia the week of November 2-8th. Mr. and Mrs. George Jackson and . Mr. Stanley Jackson of Brackley and Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Masher of Suffolk attend- ed the funeral of the late Mr. Homar James of Church Road. Friends oi Mr. Tom Cullen of Midgeii regret very much to hear that he met, with a very unfor- tunate accident while working on his farm with his tractor. In some way the tractor pinned him against a tree, He was taken. to the Charlottetown Hospital where he was found to have one leg broken above the knee. Latest re- ports are that he is resting com- fortably. Friends here are wishing him a speedy recovery. Mr. Irving Sanderson of church Road left Friday morning. No- vember 7th, for Halifax where he has a. permanent job during winter months. summers at his home here, resumes his duties as freight handler at front every tall. His who is employed in Pictou. N. s., spent a weekend with him here i-ccently. the the and He spends the Haliiax water son, Billy, Pa ' gllli;:lz'l'e1l melt in your mout. Church ' Doughnuts! Gingerbread! g FREE gives new recipes. Write DwightuL't.d., Sun Lifg Budding, Montreal. CANADA'S FINEST CIGARETTE 1950, alter an illness that had weakened and wracked him through the last two years of his life. NEW YORK, Nov. 17-(AP) -- Mlnot Jelke, 22. heir to an oleo- margsrine fortune and major fig- ure in a New York City vice probe, today pleaded guilty to illegal i ossession of two pistols. Jelke also faces a, nine-count indictment charging' he influenced women into prostitution and lived off their earnings. fillers New Improved DOMESTIC SHORTENING 2 LBS. FOR CLARK'S Pork & Beans Large 20 oz. tins 2 TINS FOR BANQUET In on i SARDINES 3 TINS FOR Delicious Cocktail Mix MIXED COOKIES CLARKE Large 20 oz. tins ' TOMATO JUICE E TINS FOR Washes Anything SURF Lon. rim. auALirv and EC0NoT.7l "lEl.iVE'RY TNO7 if mlv xx 75': . - Serve your family the tastiest foods-and save your- self a pretty penny in the bargain-by doing all your load buying at CO-OP SUPER MARKETiwhere qual- ity and economy go hand in hand. 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