‘ wQ-a-Qrtrrnz. 2' i. o é ,5‘ . “c; saruaoar. j __ .. August Sale , lalance ef Ladies‘ and Misses‘ SUMMER DRESSES must be cleared regardless of cost. Reg. Values $11.95. $12.95. $14.95 oouio AT $1,110 coon Watch other Racks for Red Tic- kets and see other Special Val- ues offered. . ' Children's Printed Cotton OVERALLS am) SUN SUITS llzes s to s Clearing at 7/2‘ PRICE Children's Printed and Plain -~ Colored SUMZAIZRZILIIESSES SPECIALS an» e Clearing LESS 1-3 OFF FIGURED SILK CREPE F RIAY 89 Inches Wide Clearing LESS 1-3 OFF e WATCH FOR RED TICKETS FOR SPECIALS A and SATURDAY Prowse Bros. Limited This Side 0i Blory 37 . Gwen Brlstow Author 0i "Peep Jummer" “The llandsbme Road." etc. "Well. it's like this,‘ said Fred. "N is as wonderful as you think this is going to be. There always do come times when thlnfls go to pieces on us. Eleanor. I don't care what you've got, somehow it always stops this side oi glory. Now remember that. Not ior me. For you." "Yes. Dad." She leaned iorward and put her arms around his neck. "You're a very superior person. dad. and I love you very much. But don't have any lad premon- itions about me. I'm going to be all right. I'm as happy-I'm go- ing to be so happy with Kester-J’ "Yes. honey. I hope you are," he said. "God bless you. Eleanor." The’ next day Eleanor and Kes- ter were married. It was the last week in May. They went down to the Gult Ooaet. too happy to think oi anything but that they were together. The days followed one another in dazzling mlccession. Eleanor and Kester swam and hiked, or lay on the beach in their tremendous space oi sand and sun and purple crater. looking at each other, say- ing little or sometimes ior hours on end saying nothing at all. The miracle oi their being together was endless. Eleanor wondered i! all the years o! her liie would be time enough ior her to get used to it. When their holiday was over they went to Ardeith. The servants and tenants were assembled in front 0d the house to cheer their homecoming. and. Kestefa mother. with twenty oi her cousins and friends, stood on the gallery to welcome Eleanor among them. El- eanor and Kostcr went tipstnirs. to the room in which Kester and his rather had been born. where tulips bloomed on the marble man- tcl and the great tour-poster bed tinder its canopy oi crimson silk looked like a couch. Optning from the bedroom was a little boudolr furnished in rose- wood and damask for a lady o! be- loved fragility; and as she looked around it. and back at the bed- room, and at the oaks beyond the tvindowa whispering as they had whispered t0 many generations, Eleanor felt the tradition cniold- ing her. as though she were no lmgcr an individual but pan o! a unit, like one stone in a castle \\‘:1ll. "it's so lovely." she murmured to Kester. "So—imporiant." She iclt as ii she had stepped into an enchanted world where nothing was quite real but every- thing had tho vague loveliness oi pleasant dreams. Alter Lysiane had gone home to New Orleans, their liie settled down to the leisurely plantation routine. Kestcr and Eleanor gave parties and wcnt to them. or spent long evenings alone. never done with what they had to say to each other. Now and then she gave a iormal dinner. and sat in splendor among DIVERS FIND BICIIES bery" ever attempted has ended IN CHANNEL SANDBAR in a £100,000 ($400,000) haul by divers who broke inlo a ship en- tombed in the Goodwlns. The job has taken almost two years to complete, during much oi which the divers have been work- ing 70 ieet below water in almost total darkness. They have brought up 80,000 lead ingots irom the American Liberty ship North Eastern Vic- tory, which went ashore on the TAYLOR’S i _,. MflllfWlI-I. a t; .9; WII GIATIIlIl-I was engulfed almost immediately. I DEAL, England. Aug. 4-(119111. oral-The Goodwin sands in the English Channel ricar here have always been regarded as the world's best sale deposit-more secure than the Bank of England. Riches lost there in sinking ships throughout the centuries are still locked away, Now the biggest undersea “rob- COFFEES BIIITHPLACE 575 A.D. CONSTITUTIONAL RULE oi parliament once a year. ‘If, Z» 'When wedding gifts are in order. loveliest gilt oi all is on! oi these’ fins sllverpiate scrvlces-"shown in two o! the day's most popglarpammg. Mun-w who we‘ l $110.00 lllunt wydndln felllleesl In 10am 2'6 PIICI SIIVjCI POI SIX by modem brides everywhere for It's bxqulsltc Craftsmanship and tine quality. “we - ' Ralebis _-Chelcs eI styles. $22.50 up ‘i Q3591: Goodwins at Christmas, 194d, and Coiiee is known to have been first bultivated in Arabia about Under the terms oi its constitu- tion, Australia must hold a session ‘ iirst depolt. Dnlsl u“ . "WORD g" up. t \ l5 the silver and linen with her hair plied on top oi her head and her bosom with alight with antique jewelry Kester had brought up from the vault and given her to wear, but mostly the parties Ardeith were hilarious aiiairs like this one. with everybody dancing while the phonograph played or Violet pounded out ragtime on the piano. Kesteca iriends were s gay. insouciant group, with beautiiul voices and exquisite manners. They had been iriende since childhood. and much oi their badtnage we could not. share, but she always teit that they were doing their best to make h-er ieel at ease among them because they were all devoted to Kestcr. Kestcr told her n dozen times a week that he had never been so happy. They had but one argument. when Eleanor insisted on being given a regular allowance ior housekeeping. Char- scteristically. he said. "Buy what you need and send the bills to me," and it took her two ~hours to convince him that she could not spend money with any degree o! wisdom unless she knew how much she had to spend. Kmter asked then. "All right. how much do you want?" Eleanor sighed; she want- ed whatever it took to run the house, and was aghast when he told her that Cameo and Mamie had always done the ordering and he had simply paid the bills with- out. keeping any record o! their monthly totals. At last she got out oi him that Ardcith had produced about eight hundred bales oi cotton last year. and that a gross average price ior which gave the plantation a gross cotton was ten cents a pound. income oi iorty thousand dollars. How much oi this was clear ahe did not know, and it was impos- sible to make Kentor be deilnite. .ao in despair she halved it. and though this did not seem a large income Ior a place like Ardeith she considered it adequate. She asked Hester it he would give her six hundred dollars a. month ior housekeeping. Rater said, "Cer- telnly." but as she was lure he would forget to do it she drove to the bank with him the nest morn- ing to see to it that he‘ made the (Continued) Theovenlngbalerelleennrwas manledhelsentierhss. REIIEVE n ANNOUNCING A Bigger And Better MlISlB DEPARTMENT . Many Additional lines Now h Siocit Including VIOLINS - eurrans - accordions HARMONICA! -..|sws HARPS - Etc. Complete Selection of Violin And Guiln} Strings- and Repairs. Come In And See‘ Our Showing HOLMAN'S I CNARLOTIEIOWN STORE RUSSIAN-BORN WOMAN "I tell the women about Am- "VOICE" T0 SOVIET erlca’s marvellous kitchen equip- NEW YORK. Aug. 4- (OP)- "Gavorit New York..." and Mrs. Ekens Zhemchoozhnaya. Bates is started on another broadcast to Russia ior The Voice oi America —Lbe oversee! broadcasts sponsor- ed by the United States state department. "New York speaking..." and the people in Moscow and Siberia are listening to Mrs. Bates. "I search the newspaper ior merit-toasters. mixers, waflle irons. "The Soviets say American wo- men are ‘slaves’ I tell them oi the interchange oi students. . . about the line schools here." Mrs. Bates knows what appeals to her Russian audience, ior she was born in Russia. She leit in i928, although she didn't come to the United States until l0 years later, What ll she returned to Russia at' human-interest stories," "I broadcast dress items tor women. kindergarten details mothers and labor news ior the workers. now? "I“d be one little squeak-purg- ed!’ she says. the for Mrs Bates‘ says she knows the Voice broadcasts have been most erlective-"Wewe been under con-i design ior her newJavings carn- stant attack in Pravda and other pfllgn, Russian newspapers." lvlirs. Catherine British ofilcials disclosed that menl- WFIDI] Ottawa has ordered 83.000 eoples ‘"15" Ind ""7"" NW”- Th‘? oi a poster showing a child's head Rusalna people are “starved ior truthiul news," she says. “Our general theme is ‘Liie in America.’ We tell them about wo- men workers in United States families. their homes. wages. div- ersions and home liie. We outline American educational iaoilitles. culture and art." I with the slogan: saving ior." THE INSECT KHWGDODI kinds o! Insects in the world. BRITAIN EXPORT! SAVINGS SLOGAN LONDON, Aug. 4—(CP)—Can- ada is borrowing a British poster MEDIEVAL INVENTION ‘- ~< ~ PRIOES TRIIL THE Aoin or 0N SALE SATURDAY Y ETOHElJ-IN BITTERNESS IN rune: stones . LOWER PRICE STORE tamer $1.95 SWIM SUITS ' Fashion's newest fad — Leopard and Tiger Skin bathing suits —regulor 7.95-—Tal<e them away Saturday 2 I For ..r-......_a---.--..._--|.._..s LADIES' $6.95 SKIRTS Out they go Saturday at $2.-ne\v length skirts in colors also ‘£.'ZI'.§Z'§°‘1.'.'TY'.". 9°. .31.‘? .'.?'.'.’i . ._...... . . 2.00 Girls’ 98c Blouses. 2-6 49c More Lovely Silk Slips $1.49 Boys’ $3.95 All-Wool longs S2 ‘liihenllle Beach Coats $2’. Men's Sporl Shiris $1 m LADIES’ sronr Newest 1949 SHORTIE coats —evcy below hull price for o linol close-out. Swagger new styles and shades 5.00 COATS. RAINCOATS TO $32.50‘ Shortiss, Full Length Coats and beautiful new Raincoots- Isr and away below hall price! We've really o clipped the prices lore sensational Saturday bargain I -...........-- NOW DRESSES TO $19.50 Down again go the prices on this Season's Iinest dresses to 12.50. it's a dress bargain unmatched -- it's ' another sensational price-cut . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. I NOW DRESSES ‘TO $35 Once again we smash the sole price on the loveliest dresses in the store-real, amazing beauties to $35. will go z on soIeSattmIoy-enepricel I ' MEN'S STORE BARGAINS EOLIPSE ALL Men's $2.75 WORK SHIRTS . $1.69 Boys‘ LONOS, $3.95 all wool . . $2 Men's $2.25 SPORT SHIRTS $1 Men's TOPS, SHORTS . . . 59c Men's SUMMER CAPS . . . . . . 25¢ Men's PANTS to $7.95, . . . . . $3.95 sPoiir COATS A $8: .22.. $12.95 l $15 MEN’S SUITS .3112. $14.95 l n22. $24.50 l elf.» $34.50 TNEjREENOAL 90. 00-101 OIIIII ST. i“ IT. IEOIII $7. Supreme bargain smash of u-ll time! Brand new, lots arrivals. "Everybody has somebody worth l There are at least 750.000 know! Spectacles were invented by l monk in Florence, Italy. in 1135. i. _ i