SATURDAY» Plane Dresses Near Bailey- 45 Ara Iieoflrteti Dead nocturnal: CONSTELLATION llmllar to Ono Which Crashed Near Bombay. _ . It d nine chil- Thlrty stxrgggtrxessdariiued when Illreritlgtlifch Airlines four-chimed 0y rock)’ mum? vim “Sh” °“ “ . r1. l0 miles north 0f 23121:?“ U? lane which “'3! ca dywomen a . newspeperme" a“ ' ber of Dutch Slwelmmem °l' r1215 and two Britons. Cfa-‘thed 1c _ , . hq luring a drtvin! Tamsmm‘ w H: lppfOaClllflg Santa Cruz airfield. ("i m NEWFOUNDLAND FAIR ‘$1.4- “‘ 3' A -‘;n"‘.¥.‘.T‘5P.““-'i '.' ' ST. JOHN'S. Nflfl. —- (C?) — Eeparatio ns are Zomfl “bud h" Q three-week Industrial and m Sept. 12. PuYDOSB ° better to, make Newfoundland nd mm =~ “v.2? tellers from across the c011 l’ y; represented. ‘d BT-IIDYVGIEIVEB stoma. TILBURY, Essex, Ens-A ‘Mlle model 0t the River Tmmf" " ‘ which currents and tidalhvarlatitzrrtfi "m be reprodumt H imftn be ltructed here. The m“? ‘ _ “god to help solve one of the Inkl- Iteries 0f N" Thames_wherle Jot: Iilt comes from. and “m” l‘ 5 vied along. H. B. KNICKERBOCKEB Commentator, May llava Been On Plane MONTREAL - (GP) — Fish. 1! any, in the Lachlne canal by which shipping bypasses the Lachlne ra- pids. are safe from 1111816"- The courts made it official when John Underwood. l9. “'5! “Md- 52 ‘m’ fishing there. He didn't catch any- thing. In for Pfllmlslry m, part5 of the hand are named utter planets. " s. IEEO’ TEA Make tea double- strength and while still hot pour into glasses tilled with cracked ice . . . iAdd sugar and lemon to taste. fistttttutt" 1 rte: rtumettte ctrttotue Immediate delivery on botlts, basins, sinks, toilets, soil pipe, steal pipe, septic ton-ks etc. MAIN PLUMBING OD. Dept. S Na. 1059 s1. LAWRENCE u.vo., MONTREAL ‘7/ IS YOUR BED ROOM, TOO WARM FOR SLEEP? If so, lot us insulate it for you. Rock Wool in- sulation, properly installed, will keep the sun's heat out of your bedrooms in the Summer just as efficiently as it will keep your furnace heat inside in the Winter. TWO WAY PROTECTION YOU CAN'T LOSE? For Free Estimates Phone 1012 GEORGE T. HARDIAE 15s Great George st, Charlottetown A Provincial Representative uomneau INSULATION co. or CANADA. 11o. Attica Flight Vll Glalgutl CHAPTER XVIII! WAITING — FOR WHAT? On tho veranda outside tho win- dow of the French commandant in tho fort of El Fayoum, Rupert Larrlmore and Carol Manson faced each other across a small wicker- work table. Above their heads the tricolour flopped lazily against the cloudlfss sky. Across the sun- baked earth that stretched away to the crenellated parapet at the for side of the barrack square. a half company _of native troops were being drilled by an elderly white corporal under the some what languid supervision of a youthful lieutenant in a drill uni- form of lmprobably startling im- maculacy. “When shall we know?" asked Carol, for perhaps the twentieth time that morning. It. was thirty- six hours since they had staggered. more dead than alive, through the gateway of the fort. and. quecrly‘ enough. it was the girl who. after, a night's full sleep and tho 1on1:- less hospitality of the oourteou. and bearded Commandant, seemed, to have stood that desperate journey best. ~ In a. clean white shirt-loaned" by the delighted subaltefli-Caru-ll, presented an astonishing picture of loveliness. of the incredible res enco of youth. On Rupert Lar 1 1 mom's face were lines that noth- ing short of death would ever wipe away. l-lls eyes were still sunken in their sockets. His lips twitchcd‘ from time to time uncontroliably, so that. he could hardly smoke his cigarette. "It oughtnt to ba much longer," he said soothlnxly. "They sent out two ‘planes. Unless anything fan- tastic has happened. we ought to see tho others within an hour or two now." "The other!“ Carol repeated, And with those two words it seemed to Larrimora that tho ghost of Antony Sothorn rose, likd Banquob. to make an uninvited guest in the chair which the Com- CONNAUGHT SATIN Haovy Connuught Satin for Iinlngsand cushions. in shades of Black. Brown, Rose. Gold. Green and Blua. 54" wide. Lovely Celaneses- - -'for charming Blouses . and afternoon Dresses,,,for evening GOWns , , ,for The Bride and her. Bridesmaid - MOIRE t TAFFETAS - Moira Taffeta has u Itorsa sltoa design In colors — Pink. Powder Blus, Ivory. Black. Navy. Brown. 47"wlda. $1.95 Yard $1.65 PLAIN RAYON fTAFFETA 54" wide. For linings and drapes that are cosy to saw-Popular slictdas of Black. Navy. BIua. Aqua. Rosa. Green. Wine. Gray. Brown. $1.10 yd. PLAIN CELESTE CREPE A plain Celunesa lingerie Crepe in lovely shades for Blouses. Slips. 45" wide in Melisa. White. Azure. Pink. $1.25 yd. MGDR . 8s MFLEOD A rich coldness sqtin JULY 16. 1 mandant had quitted ten minutes before. Carol sail rnothlng more. Lorri- xmore gave no expression to the shutting out perfect faith which must be of the very essence of love. He leaned back in his chair, ex- hausted, tormented. baffled by this problem of the emotions as he had never been by difficulty or danger. And seeing the infinite tenderness in her eyes, the beauty of her pm- apprehenslons that were gnawing in his mind. Yet each of them lwas thinking the same thing; that Sothem’: fate must sometime, somehow, find explanation; that there ‘must be s. reckoning. It had been possible, almost ne- oessary, on that march to husband breath as well as precious water, It had been comparatively easy for the girl to allow her natural horror on hearing Larrlmore say "Sotherns dead-poor beggar!" to dam at source any instinct of ex- act enquiry into the wherefore and the why. But with the return of civilization, of leisure, of comfort —-with the return imminent of thc other members of the party, and of Janet Manson in particular, 1t would be a very different story. Explanations would he more than desirable; they would be impera- tive. Yet the longer she looked at Larrlmores drawn face, and retidened eyelids-the more in de- tail she remembered of the stag- gering, heart-breaking courage with which he had wrenched (there was no other word to des- cribe it) both of them to safety from the closing jaws of a desert grave, the more impossible it seem- ed io her that she would ask him point blank how Antony Sothem had died. And for a hideous mo- ment, she almost welccmed the horrible thought that perhaps the others would not be rescued by those searching French ‘planes; that no explanation would ne- cessarily be called (or after all. That thought was thrust aside as swiftly as it had crept loath- somely into her imagination. But it was to be replaced by another equally menacing to her happiness. Somehow this dreadful conspiracy of silence between Rupert and that must inevitably destroy their - love. .. herself must be broken. For other- wise hour by remoreless hour. it was building between them a Dru rier of fear, of imagined horror, That last thought was equally uppermost in Larrlmore’: mind. He was no longer the man of action. He had done his job. He had 20f. through. He had saved Cami. He had almost. certainly saved the others. As for sothern, his con- science was crystal-clear. No one but humanitarian sentitmentalists with no knowledge of the facts could blrme hlm. It had been 6X- pedient that one man should die to save others. That was all. But Antony Sothern had been Carol's friend -— more than her friend. Could he admit to her I11 so many words that he had Soth- ern‘s blood on his hands With- out lnevltably losing her love? Yet. without the admission, he too knew that that sinister barrier was be- ing raised between their hearts. time weather. Mode by Marltlmors especially for QUEEN STRIKE OIIARLOITIYIOWN kafaohyanof IIIIIOEIJ. For Beauty Anti Protection Dee - TIBBETTS’ SALT AIR RESI STING . EXTERIOR PAINTS Made under complete scientific control to withstand the ravages of Marl- SEE YOUR LOCAL DEALER BEVAN BROS. 1 rteems 1111111: 1.111. hiatqlnaquamvaraislsasaadhasltah the Marltlmal. PHONE 488 file against the rough white wall behind her, the grace of he-r at- titude as she leaned with one'el- bow on the table, the sheen on her hair -—even after that ghastly march-where the sunlight caught it. through the tattered awning, he felt he could bear neither to take the risk of telling her the truth and losing her at once, nor to lose her inevitably in the future when suspicion had poisoned tn; wells of happiness. He threw his half-smoked cig- arette away. and. watching it smoulder on the ground below the veranda, had tho overwhelming ln- stinct that it was his own life which he watched drifting. a little unregarded smoke. upwards against that. fierce sun-drenched sky. El|e11'_ts_IIIary (Continued from Page 2) holiday with us, leaving our small one sombre for the moment and obviously regretful. O O O However she turned soon to hcr own amusements, gaining much en- joyment from admiring the family of pups in their box in the stable. ed northwards. Two little specks had appeared high up in the blue, accompanied by the growing hum of motors. Next instant tho girl was out of her chair, and running through the french window behind her. Larrlmoro did not move. But his shoulders squared slightly as he sat in his chair. and a. little gleam came back into his tired eyes. At least theproblclm was upon him now in the concrete. Something had to be done about it. He could cope with anything so long as It did not imply merely thinking de- sperately and hopelessly in circles. 1! Then Carol gave a cry. and point- Dorothy Dlx Says - (Contlnued from Page 2) 1H8 violet doesn't get anywhere these days. We haven't noticed nny men going out of their way to hunt up the hidden flower to wear in their buttonholes. The one they plucked was the one that planted her- self right in their pathways and bumped them in the nose. Shall we teach them to be domestic and thrifty so that they can make their husbands comfortable and save their money? Well, ob- servation shows that it ls not mother's little helper who gets the Fairy Prince but the best rhumba dancer, and the maiden who catches the masculine eye la not the one who wears homemade clothes but aha who looks like a daily hint from Paris. Look about you. Who are the popular girls? Who are the girls who always have dates to burn? Who are the girls who get married in their first or second season, and who have their pick of the eliglbles? Are they the girls who are best fitted to make good wives and help- meets? Are they the girls who are noted for their sweet and amiable dispositions? Are they the self-sacrificing maidens who make over their old frocks so mother can have a new dress, and who help Lake care of their little brothers and sisters? Nay, vcrlly. The girls who are fitted to make the best wlvea never get to be wives at all. All of us know dozens of lovely. gentle old molds who can cook like a chef and pinch pennies Qlke Hetty Green, who are witty and entertaining and would have spoiled husband to death, yet who have been passed over by men for lazy, extravagant, stupid little shrews who happened to have peaches-and-cream complexiona and natur- ally wavy hair. Of course, we are all awfully proud when our daughters develop into splendid characters, and we boast about it when they are fine students and carry off the honors at college. If they are goodlookers, they may be able to live down a reputation for brllllancy, or if they are super- naturally clever they may have sense enough to conceal it. but the fact remains that men prefer feminine brains scrambled, and there is no arguing with taste. The only consolation- the intellectual woman gets is that she ls good company for herself, and that's lucky. for It is most of the society she has. Nor does a wife get any more percentage on her virtues than does a girl, so for as men are concerned. The best wives are rarely the best loved ones. Ninety-nine times out of a hundred it is the exacting. de- manding, gimme wives whose husbands grovel before them and kiss their feet. Take the adoring wife who simply hasn't a thought of herself where her husband is concerned. She considers it a privilege in make a burnt offering of herself on the kitchen stove preparing the dishes ho likes best. She stays at homo with the children so he may go off on pleasure trips. free and unttammeled. Her whole life Is a perpetual sacrifice of her tastes. inclinations and desires for hlm. , Does he In return simply worship this self-abnegating saint? Not a bit of it. He comes to think of her as nothing but a doormat and kicks her around like one. lie doesnt In the lease appreclatawvhat she does for him. He thinks that she Ia an eccentric who doesnt. care to go places of amusement and have pretty clothes, as other woman do. And there Ia tho women who Is a real helpmeet to her husband. Very often she has more intelligence, more ambition. more vision than he has. and she makes her shoulders a ladder on which ha climbs to success. Does ho repay her by eternal gratitude and devotion? Sometimes. Not very often. Frequently ha deserts her for I Y0"!!! Wflmlfl WM hill" got caiiouses on her hands and a stool? In h" 559k ‘"1" lflllhlfll 31"" Oll- (To be continued) n Ii Wa have all seen Plenty of old wives pan-stoned off on a little ali- mony whila the second wlfa blew In tha money they hglpag‘ ngkga (Elan It seems nowadays that the only WI)’ l W"! "D ‘("9 ‘l’ "I l Y keen“ 1.1m m poor he doesn't attract the gold-diggers. o’ So thla 1| why 1t 1| ta attcournrlns. :1 M I W°"""'- 9° m‘ Y°‘" wisdom turns into just plain dumb fool s he'll. DOROTHY mx popmiunlxaaanotroplypalaoaallytaraadaaqbutaetllanawn 9mm!" qt ‘Qnflfll labeaae, through ha: aalann. F IRE-SALE TODAY at lhitAlllAY-‘S OROOERY 79 IIPP OIIEEII SI’. And then finding need of compan- ionship she carried them pup by pup to her mother's kitchen to play with thcm there. "Aren't they the handsome-st little pups you ever saw?" she appealed to Jeanie, hop- ing for the best for them and her mother rather fearful for her neat. house now shining "for Sunday" nodded and chuckled "they are In- deed!" and allowed them to re- main until later with assistance tho pr ‘on was returned to the barn. O O O The puppies‘ birth was without any doubt the most important hap- pening at Alderlen this week. The taking of grand-daughter's photo, the building of t1 carrying-rack for the truck, the sIorIng-In-part of the fuel-wood and even the amount of wecding- accomplished fades into nothingness compared with the hap- plness their advent afforded. James himself was summoned In haste from the hoelng that morning to search out the scene of the sul- pected confinement, and it was he of the still boylsnllnes who, crawl- Ing beneath a barn retrieved Tlppy, grand-daughter's esteemed pet and her off-spring to the number of seven, and brought them out. of the dlmncss to tho delighted gaze of the two children that Waited. O O O We expect, since the cats at Ald- crlea are allowed their fling at re- production without curtailment un- til the cat-pan is crowded and our numerous felines wash themselve- complacently at many a doorway or grain-bin so "ln due season" In- stead of only Pard and u caaionally Tippy at the gateway keeping watch over the comings and goings of the place we shall have a row of alert canines, among them spot- ted fellows in» bewitchingly pat- terned coatl as well as two sable ones, one black as the darkest night nnd the other sporting a white vest and tic, and oli just “dawg" there! O O O And now James has come "hams masts 1121111 Regular $8.95 to $15.95. 6 Misses‘ Suits, lag. $29.95 For ._._..... ..EacI1 For l Dozan Figured Tea Shirts, lag. $2.59 for 2 Dozen Blouses F_ar Qhaaaaaaaaaaaaaa- TIE IIBSES ' Illllleaatt. Assortment of Mines’ Dresses, Sizes IZ-Il, $3.95, $5.95, $7.95 and $10.95 e Slack "a vmt, m. $12.95 _ . . . . .. . . .EacI1 "‘O'IIIIOIIIIIO ..... 2-00 $6 orr 1111111111.: or com again", back to his ain lngleside and armchair from a pleasant out- ing. Rounding out their busy week the formers this evening went. to attend the racing meet in town drawn thither by their mutual In- terest In the Sport -of Kings, an entertainment which la losing some of its appeal to James. Though he admits that he finds himself "not so deeply interested in racing as once." he has enjoyed his evening abroad. "You'll never guess," he offers, "who I met in the crowd?" And It ll to tell me of greeting’ i’ friends of long-gone years now holidaying in their native land, the handclalpa bridging the interval of absence and reviving for all old scenes and memories. So many of her sons and daughters are home at this season of vacation, come again to catch the clean tang of the salty air, to walk again familiar paths, to look upon the faces of their own folk ahd friends, and al- ifllether to marvel over and rever- ence the enchantment; n! our and their Island. We enjoy John of the Lilacs‘ descriptive lines of tribute to her enchantment: O O O “Homeland. where time's ever- lengthenlng fingers, Paint in reflection a picture ao true. Binding the hearts of her sons and her daughters, Fast to the crescent-shaped Isle of the dew. O I Fragrant with perfume of flowers and clover- Sweet It her aummer breath-laden with charm; Kissed are her shores by the whil- perlng waters, Guarded her beauty — by God's mighty arm." O O O Until Monday - - - Diary - - - Good-night. - - - JULY l OLEARANOE SALE of 31188581 and CHE-DR EN’S WEAR TNIIRSIIAY- FRIDAY — SATIIROAY JULY 14th» 15th and 16th DIIILDREWS IIIEAIi' 3 Dozan Dresses 1-3- yrs., clearing at. each Reduced to 3 doz Dozen 19.95 ass 1.19 5 Dozen Cartons, 7 to I0 yum. to 5.95, clearing at.........NALF PRICE 2 Dozen Cotton Dirndl Skirts, 7-14! Y"- Claaringat - 1-: otr esuuct or colts mo ' 11.1.1. a e11», Apmt. Ion Wash s11 . Print Sun Suits, Sun Hats, ‘m! Overalls, clearing at HOLMES anti BRADLEY u 1.98 tor-Each . . . . 4 Dozen Dresses, 3-6 yrs. leg 2.9! and 3.25 tor......... e Chubby Dresses, m t» tots-HALF 1111c Dombeti While Speaking In Calcutta <- PREMIEII. NEHIU 1 Pi\ Minister Nehru of lntlll waar Ianeviotim of attempted aasasab nation when a bomb was IIIIOWI whllc ha was addressing a 9'15"" meeting at Calcutta. Socialists snld other left-wing factions hat! ear- Ier urged a boycott. of meetlnl and were said to have Olllfllml a counter-demonstration. MORE BEDS FOB Tl max - (or) - Newlww iarliltlAYtas betiun a 110E911?!‘ buudm‘ ‘ program aimed at doubliflt m‘ number of beds for tuberculosis m. Leonard Miller. direct-m‘ ° Newfoundland medical service! told a meeting here ‘of the Owlfl" Ian Public Health Association lhfl tuberculosis is the provinces bil- gest health problem. 506 ....179G I .OO 1 .49 Dresses, 1-3 yrs. leg. 2.9! 1 .00 tintl 2100 0°- .......1o¢,2k.50¢¢~179°