_ MAY '4. 1949' Mile Qilfllg tlsaltitierrléah ‘Brigltbry t ' with lpene and Maserati Ilmla healthy [In] are important to sound teeth and sparkling smiles. ' 8o switch to Ipens-for Ipena is specially nude not lust to keep teeth eiesn, but to stimulate gum circulation. Try it. Brush your teeth with Ipans. Gently message a little extra Ipana onto your gums. Your rnouth tingles with new freshness . . . gums wake up . . . your smile gains new charm. Mr:'..:’.:"é:':'."."."- Be bright about your ieelh and gums Change 1o IPAN/ltsnd/ifmage s: lntnlBateurj > DEWELLIIIG IIDIISE Allll Wflllllwllllll SllllP MODERN WOODCRAFT SHOP on large lot with Planer, Bandsaw, Lathe, Saw Bench and many other tools. Good set-up for small lumber business. Also two six-room dwelling houses, priced for quick sale. Apply in person- AT rm: x and it stoma Where there is a complete line of new and used war surplus stock, including fifteen to thirty-five lb. anchors; also factory stock paints in half pints to five gallon cans. A proven paint. Satisfaction guaranteed at surprisingly low prices. 1091A», RICHMOND STREET, CIIABLOTTETOWN ATTENTION rtinntns We hove the following machines ovoiloble for immediate delivery: ,_ Tractor Disk Herrows, 24 8r 32 (Tandem) Field Cultivator, 7-ft. power lift (l only) Fertilizer Groin Drills, ll, l3 8r l5 marker McCormick-Bearing Lime 8i Fertilizer Swen . Woggons, steel wheels or rubber mounted Formoll Cub Tractor (l only) Formoll Super A Tractor (l only) Engines, U4 to 2% H.P. and 3 to 5 H}. Flows, tractor 8r horse drown Manure Spreader (l only) Hnrrows, lover, spring teeth 8r spike Lawn Mowers, rubber or steel mounted. nlwsotts stnvtct: srltrtott CRAPAUD PHONE 12-4 r. s. t. l —_ i FORSALE A GENERAL morons Itttstt. rower umrs IOB DIESEL POWER sawmus * rrenmus nuttotuc toutrueur * oeueturoas GENERAL morons": STROKE-CYCLE mounts oosr was m our await/Iona town lutuanu: trusts-norms sranrmo ‘ e - . - If youwould like s (M! Diesel Representative to tlle- cuss your power n e lineto GootispeetiJllllartlllppllances mmm. * ROAD- ELECTRIC Tellfl, , rntsrtumswaa tirr-etirrstsrrtP-Ifil- ' $1,. ,. .1 S‘ In the front ranks of sociological progress among» modern business institutions is the F. W. Woolworth Co. Limited, with its rest-room facilities for employees, o. feature- of the new store 1n Charlottetown. In the rest-room and other quarters for the comfort and ‘con- venience of its staff, the twool- worth store actually brings home atmosphere to work. _ A visit to the new rest-room would make the average store clerk of a score of years ago rub his or her eyes in bewildered astonishment. Large, roomy, well-lighted and well- appolnted, the rest-rooms might well be taken for a palatial drawing- room in a. line home. There is urns guslzollg, cnaacorrargwtg Luxurious Comfort For Employees Provided In Woolworth Rest-Room lovely leather-covered and chromel furniture, a radio, etc. ' t In referring to the rest-room {provided them with facilities for-both men and women, 1 venienocs; an official of the Woolworth organ- ization stated: “We have found that a happy, contented staff pays nell to everyone concerned. Valuable Asset "A happy staff is one of the most valuable possessions ra modern business can possibly have. We have learned through years of ex- perience that the comfort of our staff is an important factor in building the esprit de corps that results in more spontaneous sales- manship. We want our employees to feel at home and so we have many c011- scme eases these‘ conveniences are even greater than employees have in their own homes." First aid supplies are kept in the rest-rooms in case an employee suffers an accident or becomes ill. Steel cabinet lockers of the most modern design are available for clothes, so that changes from street to work clothes and vice versa, may be made with comfort and privacy. There are also elaborately- equipped dressing-rooms which may be used by all feminine members of the stall’. in echo-Q» ca, llappy-iio-Lucky l By ’ Mrs. Harry Pugh Smith "But you aren't doing anything on the play," protested Barbara. "I mean, it's all very well~for your friends to celebrate your suc- cess after it's made. Only you can't run around day and night and make one." Tony smiled. "You lust don't un- dcrstand, kid," he said. "Artistic work isn't like other professions. A fellow has to be in the mood to create, or it's so much waste mo- tion." "I don't believe it," protested Barbara. "That's the kind of hooey your gang talks, but I think real artists work as hard as anybody else." She hated to be nasty, but she was beginning to worry! Septem- ber was almost gone and Tony had nothing to show for it, not e thing. She did not like to neg him. She was in the unfortunate position of being the only person who did nag Tony. Both his family and his friends told him he was perfect. They said Barbara was likely to injure his creative spirit if‘ ahe tried to drive him. She was not even sure they weren't right. forced Tony to turn down an in- vitatlon to a party.. She got down- right hard-boiled and said he was going to work that night or she would know the reason why. Feel- ing like a fool- but determined to go through with it, she planted her’- self beside his typewriter and there she stayed. It was a horrible ex- perience for both of them. She might have been an old maid school teacher, Tony a bad little boy whom she was keeping in af- ter school and. humiliating ss it was, her ruse accomplished noth- ing. Tony tried. I-Ie tried hard. he even finished Scene One of Act two, but when he read it to her, it was all wrong. Five weeks after he geve up his Job, Tony suddenly realized that he was sccompllshtrtg nothing. I-Ie was more despondent than Barbers. had dreamed he could be. "I'm going to do Act Two if it kills me," he vowed. » "Maybe that's what's Item. Maybe I'm too critical. Perhaps if I go right through, instead of trying to get an opening scene to suit mo, It'll work out. "I expect so" faltered Barbs-re. “Anyway? ssld Tony Firmly, "I've tormup my lest sheet.” He put in two weeks. Wvlfll‘. his teeth gtritted. He. finished the second sot and reed it to Ber- bera. Theo-e was no use deceiving themselves. It ‘was no good. “whet. the heck?" exclaimed self. After this I'm going to sneak up on its blind side." ‘What do you mean?" stam- mercd Barbara. "I've got muscle-bound or some- thing," sald Tony. "I'm trying too hard. From now on I'm going to let nature take its course." He stopped spending hours over the typewriter. If he felt in the humor, he worked. If he didn't, he went places. He played a lot of pool and a few games of golf. He ram around with the gang at night. He read and went fishing and drove down to his mother's oc- caslonally. He lost his haggard look. People told him he was do- ing exactly right. CHAPTER XVIII Tony's friends ‘still thought him a genius. In fact they considered his inactivity for the past two months as proof of it. _'I'hey said genius is always unpredictable. They said you could not lay down hard and fast rules for an artist- llke Tony as you could for com- .mon everyday people. Tony ex- panded under such talk. with his friends to inspire him he had no doubts that eventually he would finish his play in great shape. He was forever discussing lt and quite sure that the next morning he would be able to get his idea down on paper but he never did. Barbara, listening to it all, worry- lng about expenses, worrying about She made a scene one night and -h0w much longer she could hold . ha" job, had to clench her hands to keep stlll._ She knew she was not herself. Shedid her beet to fight her nerves and her depression. But sometimes she was cross she could not help it. Sometimes it. was that or cry her eyes out. to keep my chin up," she told her- se . Unfortunately, in mite of her- self, she could not keep from re- senting ‘Dolly's attitude. While she was making the living and doing all the housework. he was gaddlng about. having“: Jolly time. told herself t he did not mean to qsonga on her, such s. thing never occurred tn him. Nevertheless it was her money which was ply- ing the bills, her money which was providing -treets. for Tony and his ' friends. And finally she was ptro-. voked into throwing it. up to him. _ “Got five dollars. sugar?" Tony asked ‘one afternoon. "I told the crowd to drop in after dinnI. Wends thinks she's got Just the . operlirlg line for Act. Two. And we'll have to have cocktails.” Barbara's face was "Yes. I have five dollars, but it's three days till pay day. and why should I wine and dine your gene? ' ‘f mean-after all. I'm not. running ‘Ilony scurried. your money. I sort of had the im- pression that what's mine is yours and vice verse. I didn't know you Tony. "I'm tired of punishing my- were keeping books on it. Dot then _ 9m- o... ‘t-‘mt g and _ "I've got ' She . like flint. ~ "fforeotitwes' you have never liked my friends, have you?" Barbara tried to keep her tem- per, but everything she had bottled up inside her came to the surface with a bang. “No," she said sharp-- 1y, "If you wont myopinion, they are a. bunch of chlselers. They don't amount to "enylhlnil If"! never have and I'm sick of putting up for them." Tony turned quite white. "Mey- be that's the way you feel about me, too." Greet Grnnclmemo was a shrewd shopper but she never knew quite what she'd get for her money. In e twinkling today you can get that. ‘ wonderful ready-to-cat, cny-to-digest cereal, ' Post's Grape-Nuts Flakes . . . distinctively dif- ferent because made from TWO grains-lun- ripened wheat and malted barley. I Your family will adore the famous Grape-Nuts flavor in the form of crisp, golden flakes. And Post's Grape-Nuts Flakes prpvide nourishment they all need . . . useful quantities of carbohy- drates, proteins, phosphorus, iron and other food essentials. Your grocer has Poet's Grape-Nuts Flakes waiting [or you. ml, BERNARD-BARTON’ WEDDING At a very impressive candle light service the marriage of Miss Elln Bernard, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William K. Bernard of Maiden, Mass, to Ray S. Barton. son of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. A. Barton of Everett, Mass, was performed on Saturday evening. The wedding took place at the Glendale Methodist Church, with Rev. Harry P. Folger, the pastor. officiating with the assistance of Rev, Franklin Lewis of the Church of Christ, Everett. The church was beautifully de- corated wlth huge baskets of white carnatlons, roses, etc, the en- ilre color scheme being white. The bride given in marriage by her father, was a picture of loveli- ness and chose a white satin gown on train and n finger tip veil of illusion caught in a crown of orange blossoms. She carried a beautiful bouquet of white roses, combined with stephanotls and gardenlas. The bride was attended by Mrs. Robert Marineau of Waliham. Mass, as matron‘ of honor, and chose as her gown cerese taffeta, complemented with a matching head piece. Her bouquet was pink carnatlons tied with cerese ribbons. The groom was supported by his brother, Ellis Barton of Waverly Street, Everett, and the ushers in- cluded Earl Barton of Long Island, another brother of the groom ands cousin of the bride, Elmer Bernard of Lynn Sh, Everett. The bride's mother was attired (To be continue) in sapphire blue crepe contrasted with sliver beading, silver slippers. and a Corsage of camellias, while the groom's mother wore chiffon velvet in deep wine shade, with corsage of camelllas. A very talented singer of Everett. Mass, gave three selections during the ceremony.‘ The reception followed ln the church parlor with more than 200 guests in attendance, with Miss Hilda Barton, sister of the groom, gotvnerl in brown crepe with touch- es of gold, ln charge of the "guest book." 1 Mr. and Mrs. Barton left for “lashlngton, D. C., where their honeymoon will ‘be ‘spent. On re- turn they will reside temporarily with the bride's fanglly until their Medford Hillside home is ready for occupancy. _ _ The bride was graduated from Everett High Sch l and ls em. goyed by John Ha cock Insurance o. The Broom was also graduated from Everett High and ls employed try Esso Standard Oil Co. of Bos- on. * Many beautiful gifts of money, sliver, china. and furniture were received. - Out of town guests were: Mrs. Harvey Bernard of P. E. Island, Canada: Mr. and Mrs. Earle D. Barton of Long Island, New York; Mr. and Mrs. William A“ Pyle n! Auburn. Maine; Mr. and Mrs. Nel- son E. Miller of Providence, Rhoda Island. The bride's mother, formerly was Mattie Colwell and resided at Ken- sington, and are frequent visitors- now of P. E, I. \' / 010R unwrap nrvn Y. r. s. On Wednesday evening, April If. 1949, the Hunter River Presbyter- ian Y. P. S. met at the home of Mrs. Stephen Burns. Miss Joyce Nicholson led the devotional per- iod. Meeting opened by singing hymn "The Lord Is My Strong Salvation," followed by etriptul! Judges l6, beginning with the 18th verse was read by all. Rev. Mr. Nicholson then led h prayer. Miss Nicholson then had s reading called "Sampson The Gui Awey." Hymn ‘Take Up Thy Cross" was then sung. ‘The lord's Prayer in unison brought the devotional period to s. close. Busi- ness period opened with president in the chair. Minutes of last meet- ing were read and approved. Roll call was answered to by I5 mem- bers and three visitors. It wee decided to hold next meeting in the church. The following eommittoe were then appointed for next meet- ing: Devotional Leader - Mrs. Mary Billlphant: Prddram Oomv mittee — Miss Joyce Nicholson end Mrs. Robert L. Smith. Mrs. Doo- ald Nicholson paid her fees. Oolloetv ionwes taken which amounted. U $1.11. Memory verse for next Wei ls Isiah 1-18. The meetin_'elolel by repeating the Mfzpeh benedict- ion in unison. Several games enl contests were enioyed by s11, s-ftfl which lunch was served by the hostess, assisted by committee k charge. . OIL GASOILIIIIISI