i I A muasnar .. . IN MEMORIAM WHKJAM MORRISON STEWART William Morrison stewart was born in Scotland on June 10th. 1886. when quite youmz- he came with his parents to the United States and lived in Philadelphia. In 1908 he came to Canada and home- ateaded in Sask. He enlisted in ms and went overseas in 1916.- waa badly wounded the following year and spent many months in hospital. In 1919 he returned to Sask. and took up farming once more. On Decembe. 22th. 1921. he married Mia: Irma Gladys MacEnchem in Regina. Because of drought and dust storms. they came to P. E. I. in July i931 and settled at Cape Wolfe ' Mr. Stewart enjoyed good health until three years ago. the Doctors then warned him of his serious heart condition. On Dec- ember 24th he was taken suddenly ill and entered the'P. E. l. Hospi- tal in Charlottetown on the 26th. His condition did not improve and he passed away on January 8th. 1952. In his youth he joined the East Trenton New Jersey Presbyterian member of the United Oi-lurch at Bsteman. sask He was a member of the sons of Temperance and also the L. O. L. The funeral service was held on January tooth in the cape Wolfe United Church which was filled to overflowing by sorrowing friends and neighbours. who had come to pay their last respects to one who was so well known and so beloved. The service was conducted by Rev. W. G. Dickson of 0'Leary 7110 brought a comforting message. To a christian, death is not an ending, but a new beginning: not a terminus but a thoroug-hfare. The Minister paid a sincere tribute to him as a faithful husband, a good friend. a fine citizen who served his King d Country. and as one uho loved 10d. lie was as- sisitxl by Mr. ileber H. llardy. the Lay Minister and by Rev. J. R. MacMalion of Albcrton. Padre of the.0il.cary branch of the Canad- ian Lesion. Besides his sorrowing wife, Mr. Stewart leaves to mourn his loss three sisters:-(Jenni. Mrs. R. W. Lapp; Hviargaret), Mrs. John Elib; and ii-Tliznbcihi. Mrs. Frank San- ders. all of New Jersey. Pallbearers were:-Allie Mac- Nelll, George Shaw, Redmond Reilly. Racford Locke. Peter Bul- Mllltsry ltinilsslon To Investigate Fires ltary commission is expected begin an investigation soon into recent fires in military establish- ments. a defence spokesman said yesterday. Meanwhile. a new fire destroyed an in cupied building at the Petawawa, 0nt.. army camp and a soldier had preliminary hearing here on a charge of setting a :25.- 000 fire it No. 26 Ordnance Depot here Ne Year's Eve. The investigating committee was decided upon recently after a ser- ies of fires in the last few months. It is to inquire into their causes and the adequacy of fire-protection methods. Yesterday's outbreak at Petawa- wa. 125 miles west of here. de- stroyed a wartime I-I-hut. Cause of the fire was not known. Charged with the New Years Eve fire. Pte. Hector Davis, 17. of nearby Aylmer. Ont., was remand- ed a wee for formal committal on an arson charge. Court tennis was played in the get, and Everett Coliiciitt. Inter- Chumh. afterwards becoming a .. yourpBiUDGEI 3 TIMES A DAY! j Cheery good morning foods for breakfasts . . . smacking-g lunches . . . thrilling foods for wonderful din- meiit was in Cape Wolfe. --A.. Z. ivitlo-nwaiu-. ood foods for hourly ners-all are here at (I0-OP SUPER MARKET . . . and all are low-prim-ti on your budget 3 times to help you banquet a tluy--cvcry day! Tht-re'lI ncvcr ho a dull lllf'llll at your house when you do your food shopping ht-re, l)f'(”alISO our bigger and better values mean bigger and better meals for your family. Robin Hood CAKE MIX. pkg. . . . V Aylmer-13 oz. KETCHUP Orange Poi-toe CO-OP TEA. lb. . . A Lovely Mix V COOKIES. lb. . . . . . GRAN(i1:;rpED SUGAR 10 Lb. nag, Sl.i5 .. Pork SAUSAGES Breakfast Sliced Fresh ' BOSTON BUTTS Smoked SMELTS. lb. NEXT TUESDAY IS SIIROVE TFESDAY SILVERSEAL Molasses Per Quart COTTAGE ROLLS . .. 59c BACON 49c FILLETS. lb. . . . . . . . . 38c 29: 23c 85: St. Croix PORK 8: BEANS Campbell's Silvcr1cul' PURE LARD. 3 I Shopping Bag Hamper ....... .. ORANGES. Iceberg 50: White ......49c No.1 Health Tree 30: '-'u'u'ul'-Tn'n'-'-'-'5'n'-'-'-T-'-'-'u'n'u'uS'-'u'-'-'.'. NEXT TUESDAY IS PANCAKE DAY AUNT JEMIMA Pancake Mi Rog. Plfg. 21 c TOMATO SOUP. rsn murr Wagner Eating APPLES. Sunkist for .Julce- , LETTUCE. ea. 17:. GRAPEFRUIT. 3lfor .. 25: sources. ronaross. lb. 23: parks surrounding French and It- alian castles in the middle ages. g i '4 I QUEEN'S ROYAL PEACHES Reg. 15 oz. Tins 2 for 33c i KIIEIPS ' ':'0R )0" "W5" 24 Horns. STOPS 090,, Dial Soap Reg. 2 for 39,, SPECIAL 2 P0? I9; .2tins 396 Zfor 23c bs.i........... 50c 690. p . 3"i3.29 2 doz. for 65: 15 lbs. . . 70c FOR YOUR PANCAKES ISLAND Honey 2 Lb. Tina SHAREHOLDERS THIS IS ABSOLUTELY THE LAST WEEK THAT YOUR SLIPS FOR 1951 WILL BE IIONOURED FOR YOUR REBATE. PLEASE CIITAWA. Feb. 20-(OP)-A mil; p worked his wife to death. by p' , 1? having her tote heavy loads. ' d.g;&' ' This ill-treatment lasted ten ma GUARDIAN. .Cna1u.o'r'rr:rown Strange but True .' ay 1'. n. llsoArtbnr 1.. To make voting a simplified matter for India's illiterate mil- lions, the ballot boxes will each be marked by a symbol. For instance, if Lala Lajpot Rai wished to cast his ballot for the Socialist party he would place it in the box on which was drawn the picture of a tree. A box showing two yoked bulls re- presents the Congress party. and so on. uiitii the fourteen boxes each representing at party. are taken care. Canada's oldest woman. Mrs. Isabella Sharrow. died recently in at. Joseph's General Hospital. North Bay, Ontario. at the re- markaible age of ll2. - She used to speak of people their 'a as mere youths; which remin s us that Gladstone was Premier of England. the last. time. when he was ninety! Half a century ago, the farm- crs of Prince Edward Island used to do much of the heavy work supposed to be done by horses. But an Austrian farmer wishing to save the health of his horse share. and now he is serving a like number of years for causing .her early death. g C O O l in the U.S.A. there are now than 1io,oooi cattle with iBrahmsn blood in their veins. They can withstand the heat and insects of the south. Crossed with Iour common breeds, they pro- fduce fine offspring. They make .up the worlds largest breed with their -clan totalling 300 million, In! which 300 million are in In- i din. I H. Bartey of West Calgary lbouzht himself a garden which turned out to be a buffalo grave- iyard. yielding 3,000 pounds of bones to the. acre. The bones are sold at a fair profit to a fertil- ' lzer concern. The first bone crop on the three-quarter acre garden .amounted to 2,600 pounds. These ranked all the way from large skulls to small ribs and legs. The bones are estimated to be '75 years old. and the buffalo pgraveyard turned out to be a. 1 pound, where ruthless hunters wrote 0. black chapter in the I; Western plains of Canada. I Of Indian babies born alive about 2.000.000 die each year. "Available statistics show," says a late census of India, that over forty per cent of the deaths of babies occur in the first week after birth. and over 60 per cent in the first month. if a baby dies the mother mourns for a night or two. p it the parents live near the trlver. the little baby is one" tossed into the stream without much ado. Kites and turtles fin-- ish its brief history. . . - . I F"-Willi! I-00 much over babies in pure nonsense. They are the toughest fabric ever made. If this were not a fact. not a single baby j would survive in India or China, ;where ignorance and prejudice ihas built so many taboos against 'doctors and sanitary laws that modern methods just cannot be brought Into the picture. Students of England's Eton ;C0llrae play 3 Unique form of I football. it's called the wall iitame. The field has four goals, a tree at one end and R door at. i..ic other. A team must hit tllel 3”” l" "'5 6"em.V's cull with the b'”- It -sound! may but it takes 7931 Playing to do it. Only one 8031 has been made, on the av-l erase.-one in every 21 games Played in the past 110 years, The deepest sunken mine shaft .IIearing In Halifax lestaie belonging to Fredericton and Vicinity 5...... may Outcliffe. Charlotte- town. was 1 recent visitor to Fred- ericton. Miss Duicie Morrison. Frederic- ton, wss a visitor to Charlottetown on Saturday. Feb. lath. Miss Phyllis Giiiis. teacher of Fredericton Sch spent a recent weekend at her me in Norboro. Mr. Lloyd Cutcliffe. student at Mt. Allison University, spent the weekend of February 17th at his home in Fredericton. Miss Catherine Buchanan, teach- er of Breadalbane Rural school. spent the weekend of February 17 visiting her parents in Hazel Grove. Miss-Ada Ahesm. Borden. spent the weekend of February 1'! visit- ing her sister. Mrs. Herbert Ross. and Mr. Ross. , Miss May Belle Macliennan. Charlottetown. recently spent sev- eral days in Pleasant Valley. visit- ing her mother. Mrs. Malcolm MacLennan. and her brother, Mr. Bruce Macbennan. Z. Telephone Rates- HALIFAX. Feb. 20-(CPl- Charges that business would shoul- der more than its share of rates proposed by Maritime Telegraph and Telephone Company were heard before the Public Utilities Board here Tuesday. Company officials defended the rates. Final stages of the hearing of the company's application for increased rates across the board are expected tomorrow. Board chairman J. A. Hanway said he had received a letter from a. Sydney business man which stated that rates for a measured telephone at his place of business would be increased 25 per cent. The unidentified Sydney nian felt that residence telephones should bear is greater share of the in- creases, if approved. The chairman said the company set the rate, not the board, which only approved or disapproved. He had calculated that the increase of his private residence telephone would be from 33.35 to 84.85 under the schedule. about 50 per cent. General Manager A. M. Macxay said that under the "old" rates. Sydney business houses paid 34.3 per cent of the total steel city telephone revenue. Under the pro- posed raiea the percentage was calculated at 34.9. LONDON. Feb. 20 - (Reutcrsl Hungary today appropriated real "Capitalists. other exploitcrs and oppressive elements". a. Hungarian news agency message received here said. Compensation will be paid in some cases. such as when the owners are unable to work and their sole in- come came from the property, the report said. ' I sly waiting for a street-car.” . o . Whirlwind by Norma Newcomb x CHAPEB TIIREI Part Two sally scurried up the aisle to the lobby, laughing as a loud gasping sounded behind her. she.atopped laughing when she reached the street and turned the corner and hurried to the stage door. Jimmy was just go- ing inside. Running out on her as though she were dirt. I-ier tem- per, held in check by a great exertion of will power all even- ing, finally got the better of her. Eyes siiappng. she darted to the door. swung it open and dashed inside. almost bowling over the attendant. "Just a minute. lady." he roared, catching her arm. she did wait that minute, long enough to see Jimmy hurry over to B smiling Dronda. to see him catch her up in his arms and kiss her, to see the girl shove him away and hit him with the vase of flowers she had been carrying when she'd made her exit in the final act. The blow caught Jim- my on the head and he staggered and landed with a thud on the seat of his gray sports trousers just as a photographer's bulb flashed. "Is the guy nuts?" demanded Dronda of one and all, not nearly so sweet now that the curtain sep- arated her from the dearly be- loved public. f'l'il kick his damn teeth out!" "You can't go inl" roared the attendant. turning back to sally. 'Go in?" She tilted her chin haughiily. "My dear man. I have no desire to an inside. I am simp- Sally was wrenched from her peak of joy the following morn- lng by a concerned Mike White. He rang the bell, he pounded on the door, he shouted. Sally, startled when she realiz- ed that ii. wna phlcgmntic Mike who was raising all the rumpus, scurried into her batlirobe and raced for ilie front door. Thus it was she who received the brunt of Mike's indignation. ”Of all the dirty tricksl” he shouted. "Anything for publicity. To hell with a mans career, to hell with anything but proving to the world that she really has al- lure enough to drive a man crazy!" sally, scared to death that he would have npoplexy, at least, took it dccp breath and cut in: "Mike, control yourself!" some of the craze left his eyes. But he was still irziir. still 'too full of words to subside. "If I don't give her rt kick where she deserves one I'm a monkey's uncle.” "who are you talking Mike? For griodiicss sake, aboub you're Don't Neglect Slipping I FALSE TEETH Do false teeth drop. slip or wobble when you talk, exit, laugh or sneeze? Don't be annoyed and embarrassed by such handicaps. Started In 1934 It nowrtaches I FAnu:.i:.ii-i. an alkaline (non- acid) powder to sprinkle on you: plates. keeps false teeth more depth of 750'.) feet. . e . The period between conception. and birth of the opossum is onlyi 13 days! A mouse takes 21 days, 9. pig four months, is cow nine. horse 11. the elephant 21-22 months, and man 280 days. Westerners have the notion that s brown-shelled egg con- tains more food value than a white-shelled one. That's noth- ing but a superstition. or shall I say, rcgional prejudice. Gen- erally the contention is that in the world is in South Africa. I 1” "I9 -70h3nn5siburiz sold fields. . -,g.: .BUCKlEY'S MIXTURE Thursday - Friday - Saturday llYL Regular 1.75 SALE Spring if ."l s. A. McDONALD , brown shelled have the better flavor. Anyway they bring it higher price in the West. and White! MD the browns in the East. But. there is absolutely no difference in food value or fia- VOL We have heard pulse and pa- tience treated as piuralitea, much to our astonishment. - Just what do we mean when we use the word o'clock? It is an eliptical expression. contracted from "of the clock":-"At seven of the clock"-Spectator. '31! five of the clock"-Shakespeare. ' ONS 'ing of S'!Clll'lty and added com- firmiy sci. Gives confident Icel- fort. No gummy. gooey. nasty taste Bill Mu .9 . FEBRUARY 21. 1932 not making sense." "nu Romantic liittriagl that's the girl-Dronds Moon, in person. Have you seen the morn- ing paper?" Before she could say no he shoved one into her hand. She opened it. and save a startled squeak as she saw a duet! Jim- my Kennedy staring up at her. "Msaher gets his from Romantic Blitzkrieg!" the caption read. "Dronds Moore triumphs. againl" she laughed. "How wonderful. e "Wonderful?" he gurgied. "Do you know that this could mean his Job?” It was then that she to earth-with a thud. "Mikel" "sure. You know how Mr. Per- kin is. we have to be as well be- haved sa the personnel of the other airlines. Do other airlinea' first officers get their pictures splashed onto (rant pages like that? They don't. And so out Jim- my wiil go on his ear." f'But. . . P' "Doggone it. why didn't you stop him from making a fool of himself? I knew you didn't like hint, but I didn't think you would let him ruin himsel4!.." O I 0 daily swung around to Helen. "Does it give her address?" The red-head looked and nod- ded. ”she has an apartment at the star of the Wind hotel. Hey, returned. what's cooking? "Maybe Dronda Moors, dari- ing." 0 I I The great star was having breakfast in bed when Sally rived. "I came here to . . . " "save it." interrupted the star guatiiy. "Darling, have breakfast with me. I see you had a hard time getting past my manager. A regular spitfirel Now I've seen everything." chuckling, the star hauled her to a chaise lounge done in white and gold and press- ed her to it. "But you took a lit- IF I-1;”! tear in 3.. want you gm Miss Moore.” - m" ""7 "Story?" glhat i;il:n- you hit lug M - pu cit lg 1011. was Mogrelsou m''" l" ."nu snswer is no. son-,,. And though she pleaded rived. the answer running; "m At the door, mood: was spoil: getic. "Sorry, sguy, Bu, look: don't hold it against me. 1' I gal from the East sidsmwlf? ridden a couple of lucky 5,"; to stardom. I don't even mg i good. Bill runs the show, 1 dam and what Bill says goes." i To be continued -mm... DOUGLAS. Isle of Man, you ,0 -(Reuters)-Members od ih;,'!' land's ?..rliamem. oldest 1.93m: ture in the omnmonwealth. had ,; sign their loyalty address to Que... Elizabeth II a second time. -11,. ancient quill pens they tum M week leaked, making the signggum illegible. The members gig-npd um yesterday using their own mun. tsin pens. 25' - 51.25 '.:SQIdDAKhu,&g.y.ho.& NIW Chloroph II, toomras I W Fluradene tie pushing around too. Here, let me fix your dress oh, oh, its got .:a "It's Pllsorlollod" Balance of Small Group of LAI)IES' SUITS- to prices you canlt resist. Rate. or feeling. Get l-'ASTi!:E.'I"l-i today at any drug store. family. Iell wltll PRICE. 9 sands; "Education Sets EDUCATION WEEK MARCH 2 - 9 to Its Own Valus'lV FREE I FREE I Regular Regular Total value 8121.00 for ...e............... With each IIEEPSLIEEP Mattress we will give you 79.50 SPRING-FILLED IIATTIISI SPIOIAL Total value cotton for THURSDAY, riiiiiiiv and SATURDAY SPECIALS! WINTER COATSmNOW FUR COAT Prices reduced regardless of the cost. reduced to clear at .......... .. Children's Winter Coats and Snow Suits reduced Just arrived another shipment of Martliit Wash- ington -crisp cotton housedressos. all sizes int-lutling half sizes, also is large order of Orient lloso (licatiii Skin) In the leading Spring shades. We lnvlteyou to come in and look over our new Spring stock of Coats, Shorties, Suits, Dresses and USE OUR "LAY-AWAY" PLAN. A DEPOSIT WILL HOLD ANY GARMENT. The GREENDAL Co. Ltd. I50 GT. GEORGE STREET V2 price 310.00 Y0lI SPEIIII IA; OF MY Ill BED! "real sleeping comfort. Slumberking Ribbon Spring. silver Ribbon Spring. 044.50 for 810.50 for The money you invest in I Mattress Is an in- estntent in your hedtls and the health of your Do you riao In the momlng more tired than when you wont to bed? We offer you an opportunity to provide your- TIIIJIIS. -Flll. - SATURDAY ' With each BEAUTYREST Mattress we will give you 99.50 IN-I9 333.00 0Ii00IiETT All STOREY lul.