<;—- ~ - v- -.-...y-...v. , .....,.,...,r<~_ _ -vvv--vvvvvvw-wvv~rv‘vw-vvwvwwvrvvwvw- PAGE. _ EIGHTN‘ kxAAaAAAAAkk uaaakxaaaakaa TODAY ."NORA PRENTISS“ Shows 3130-7-9 A ‘AAAAAAA PRIIIDE EDWARD TIIIIR. FRI.— and SATII RDAY nssenuuseoms. eneinrsrnus osuu O b} e a e o a a a cmuuauncmnsmq iii an EDWARD EVERETT HORTON i I ‘HT%7A‘ vwv$“‘ . . ‘ EMPXR I O-O#§Q—%O—Q400—Q+Q~OOQ§Q4§+O CAPITOL TODAY “BULLDOG DRUMMOND AT BAY" Show: 3230-7-81“ *nilli. rm. SAT. i n. Oomedy - Sing-Song‘ - will"? ll orrosrerals-r ‘ llttillaend sailfish! "III" It. Montana! ll. tllllee lloarl It to ll A. I. itelhl. _ Ielleasseae. bveeealnlneat omen Oallaetd Iheeloeee '3' ltliiiilli. RASUMNY - can: LOCKHMI NEWS - POPEYE - BEAR FACTS x¢xaaaa%xka TlIIiR. FRI. and SAT. V4AAV'$$A HIGHLIGHTS OF l ‘A4 reeo+++e+ 04 o o vows o o¢ooe4o+e4e+e&e+e4+444+e o-e-ee-o-ecooo- 4+o+o++e+o+o>>o++o++ee ea-eoveo-veweo evvovo coco-s i t i E - .. 1 . THE HOOSIER ‘i SHOTS '. g o" ...-menu... - VlliillilAlIlllTlil ', CARDIN (Olliili - (OTIMISEI i LAUREL-HARDY COMEDY . SERIAI t‘; HQ~§O~¥O>O4OQ 0o 0404+¥§§§+44 one GUARDIAN. CHARLOT]; THE EASTERN GUARDIAN auanrs. MONTAGUI: Harold r. noes-r. Btflvlrt. Mile llarriet Clair. GEORGETOWN: Walden IAVII. AGENT SOUI-ll. u- L lllolnll new. hum Aux-h. m. s”... In Georgetown: The Post Office; R The Guardian may be bought st any of the following places In Montague: Annear and Llewellyn, M". c!" oper; In 8t. Peter's: The Poet Office In Solute: Condon’: and Ilorene; Mt. Stewart Mrs. (Dr) Farmer and daughter Rosemary were recent visitors to Mt. Stewart. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Smith Pt. Point De Roche. were recent visitors to Charlottetown, Mrs. George Warren formerly of Cherry Hill is visiting friends in Mt. Stewart and vicinity, Miss. Mary Hendrigan acting matron of Sourls Hospital. was a week-end visitor to Pisquid. 4+o+o++o+4 Clark Gable as dashing B11 e t t B u t l e r. w h o tames tempestu- o b Q . l ous Scarlett O'Hara! The geatest love story ever on the screen! EVERYBODY WANTS TO SEE IGDNE WITH TIIE WlNDii COMING SOON! PRINCE EDWARD TIIEATRE i ROYAL WEDDING . Coming To , Prince Edward Theatre 0n Thur. Fri. and Sat. In addition to the Regular Program at the Prince Edward Theatre on Thursday-Friday ond Saturday, the "NEWS OF THE DAY" pre- tents Highlights of the most popuior wedding in history, that oI H. R. H. Princess Elizabeth ond the Duke of Edinburgh. ®i>00%0 havelft been for years. Lower hem- lilles call for higher cut shoes, for shoes that harmonize or match in color, and for stockings that. tie the mblvrbmss. HOSIERY, SHOES MAKE NEWS NEW YORk — Fashion interest and ever longer skirt. Hemlines, stock- ings and shoes make the news. The whole effect of the three has chang- ed. They are interrelated as they keeps the eye to the longer shoe and the costume together. IP15. sometimes done with As the accent. is placed on shoes I01‘ (Bil. two dominant trends are apparent. One is toward higher ef- Mr. Harold MacDonald of Halifax. is visiting his mother 1n Mt. Stewart. Mr. James Morrison, Savage Har- _bor was in the city Monday on business. w. wiuata Mitchell, m. Stew. art, was in St. Peter's Bay on 'I‘hursday.~Mt. Mr. and Mrs. Ward Jay and Emily. Fanning Brook, motored to the City recently. Mr. Charles Bradley St. Teresa was a recent visitor to the home of his daughter Mrs. Plus Mau- Donald. ' Mr. and Mrs Wilfred Doucettn and family havg moved into their new residence on the Anderson Road Mr. and Mrs. Wm. McGl-egor, Halifax. motored to Mt. stow"; for the week-end. visiting at the home of 'Mr. and Mrs. Roy Mal-d, Mr. and Mrs. Luther Coffin are ...». 17,1‘! visiting friends in Charlottetown and the western pert of the Island for a few days. Mr. Victor MacDonald re- Drceentlve of the Halifax Herald visited his parents Mr. and Mrs. Urban MacDonald over the week end. - Mt . The following from Mt. Stewart were in the City Thursday: Rev. W. T. and Mrs. Mercer. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Garnham. Reg. Mac- Donald. Aeneas MacDonald, Louie McAskill. Th6 Sympathy of the entire community goes out to the Pigot»; tsmlly in the death oi‘ their moth. er, Mrs. Melvina Pigott which took piece recently after an opera- tion. -Mt. A card party was held in Mac- Donald Bros. theatre on Monday "ZBM- Mrs. Helen Cummiskey won the Ladies‘ Prize, Mr. Daniel Mc- Douga] the Gents‘ and consolation 80in: t0 Everett Mitchell. were in the City Monday--Dr. JR, D. and Mrs. Reddin, Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Feehan and daughter Lin- da, Mrs. Daniel McDougsl and son Lari. Mir. and Mrs. Earl Jay. The following from Dromore were recent visitors to the City: Mr. Michael McCulrk and daugh- ter Mary. John McConnell, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Callaghan, Mrs. Urban McLeod. The writer was a recent“ visitor to the home of Mrs. Douglas Mac- Donald. and looking over her flower garden she had still in bloom Petunlas, Marigold and Sweet Aiyssixn. Their garden is one of the beauty spots In Mt. Stewart in theg summer time. The many friends of Mrs. Melvine Pigott of Savage Harbour are sorry to hear of her serious illness in the Hospital in Boston. and all wish her a speedy recovery. Her daughters Mrs. Ralph Coffin and Mrs. obert Johnson and her son Ster ng flew to Boston Saturday to be with their Mothenl ...°Mr. and Mrs. Mel Upton and} daughter Debby Ann of Montague were visitors to Georgetown on Saturday. Mr. Upton is Provincial Representative for the Internation- took up residence in Montague. u. n with straps, and heels. The latter trend is def- even more with closed toes 51918 backs. Another trend, cut, cline of the platform. 1 A 3 s... hand ernbroidemd Irish C A pelr of land made Madeira SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR MO DRDIIYIAETDDAIIDAIWITIMDIIIIMJ. WIRDATAll-INTAI-Hluludllflilllll-IVIT SANDRA SIMPSON, DRUMMDND BUILDING, MONTRIAI». P.6- N°Y12MB§.K-J6;_.19.41 Christmas Special. . . i ' l ‘ THESE FINE IMPORTED IRISH IINENS MAKE EXCELLENI A CHRISTMAS GIFTS . AT GREAT SAVINGS TO YOU. linen guest towels. _ll.oe each or 3 fer - $2.95 I 3 piece not: luxuriant bath towel eet in pretty pastel shsdee of green, blue, red, and roee. The set - $2.25 pillow cues. Beautifully Iund embroidered. Fine quality - $3.95 D Bridge cloth set with Four napkins in Irish linen. Delicate pastel shade: of blue, gold, red, roec and green . “the m - $3.95 A very fine exquisitely worked Scotch lace uble cloth in s lovely ecru ihede -* - $8.95 Delicate and ewcetlisnd made Irish and Madeira linen hand- kemhiefiwiihaeofgflacy bales’. A Lin, at 50¢ each or I2 for - - $6.“; H NEY REFUNED "Tll_ltiiil|iS” I (Continued From Page D) century world, sees Canada and ‘South Africa - e new axial line {in the world (and very significant on the globe). Look at it, sometime. 'Reallzie where Scotland, on the short north Atlantic route stands. "I would guess that Intelligence and Independence are the two marks of e Scotchmnn. And aren't. ithese hhe essence of the modern spirit? I say seriously, and with ‘knowledge of most. countries in this wide modern world, that our ~| Scotland is probably the most. mod- lern of modern countries . . . i "Do you know that Scotland leads the world in what are reck- loned five tests of mOdem progress land civilisation. Urbanism (pl-v once Ultimo, Thule: down to today it. was still one of the least known and described parts of the civiliz- ed world. "But now, look at. it in your Atlas of sea and air lanes. of economic and political geography, and the strategy of recent World Wars. Scotland is on the 890i’. . - - It 1-5 Europe's furthest. on the short- clrcle to the gate (here in the“ Merltimes) to America and bvyomi ‘Iihc CPR is not no dllimb. Scot- land is like the door-knob to Eur- ope, as Europe has come to be. M“! as it will much more be when Rus- sia gets fully under way as super- Germany or Continental power in touch with the sea. "Ncrrthward the course of hiewfy takes its way . . . frrm the ancient tropics to the north temperate zones, mink of the successive ern- pires snd great cities of history a- region in the world Scotch tartan: are like Oriental rugs of the Near East........ That coast- line he: developed the greatest fish-market in the world at. Aber- deen. Scotland is famous for its large estates. but more characteristic reall are its small farms —tIo- thlr s of all under 50 acres and an increasing number o! own- ers. Animel husbandry and dairy- ing are greatly increasing and Scotland is noted for its high yields (which as every expert knows is the solution of the mod- ern agricultural puzzle and food problem.) Scottish industries are models of enterprise: the ends of the earth are brought together in Scottish specialized industrial cities; cities of jute, marmalade, tobpcco, linen. etc. ‘ The marvel of Scottish advance Memholetuni quickly clears nsni passages, soothes inflam- ed nose. lessens sneezel and sniflin and relieves sully bee colds. Jars and tubes 30¢. M MENTHOLATIJM or»... (umrom Dari/y The ilollowing from Mt. Stewart £10m. “The very name Scotland. Scotio. portion in cities), Intelligence, (lit- i crazy. education): inventions: m“; gzazlmggggrglfizfftim 7E2“; ‘transportation and cmunmfl“- animal life. the line of most hu- manity. the line of great cities, e1 Harvester Company and recently i the word . . and the ,thc plaid , . . other is toward more closed toes ,veai1-ng kilt for he-men. with spor- .niie and obvious. but it is only {like the saucy up-to-date partial. There are many smart lcoat of Our beach beauties . . . shoes with open toes and there are . and livery . again ,and better of record than the Wit-h partial acceptance, is the no- .or Caledonia, names still stickinB since the dawn of history in north- ‘ern Europe. signify a land of the farthest north; dark physically and historically . . a land of blown ‘mist. and now of smos- 0X1" m! .Ultima Thule of the ancients . . - ‘, the limit . . . the recline-Oil nim- 1 (But now as we shall see ir. the lvery centre of the midway oi the twentieth century world. bet-We!!! .th.e poles asunder of Russia and ‘United States.) Small But Potent “Scotland is little, just 30.000 lil- miles and 5.000.009 NOD16 i-Odlifl Tlhillk of the other fifth’ 0!‘ l0 Ill‘ tlonal unlis in the world. Scotland is an intense land, ...alwnys has been . . . The scotch are intensely clanhlsh (do you know what thei- signifies ‘his is high . . . of life in Scotland in the two thousand year; . is Q distinctive country . . briefly a. few thoughts. lust ran- but suggestive, of the land, its ' dom. . history, imen, Scotland is smart. . smart . . . Consider fournal informality of the tiltcl . the clinging freedom of the concealing-re- its achievements. Gentle ithe .Tam .. -ran dangling from the middle . . . short "Consider her distinctive sold- . . for centuries . . . as well ll-‘rench Zouavcs oi the Foreign Legion. or the Russian Cossack; soldiers for warring Europe have always been one of Scotland's ex- ‘ports. (People ere any country's ‘_best export . . . Britain now res.- lizes that). And herewith, Scot- -lend‘s memory of her soldiers, the most subiimely beautiful war- ahrine in the world . . . And not excepting the Indian tcmb-iiriae haven't. “Consider. the Forth Bridge first and greatest of iron canti- lever bridges (after which the French verticalized the Eiffel Tow- er and micego made such into the first skyscrapers). ‘Bridges, viaducts, canals. macad- amised roads. are characteristically ‘scotch. and the modern world has uhOglfChlfillud itself by means oi sue . “Need l‘ mention. new. those "I7 Bwlch! does. the collie (with the expression of s , ‘near of sthematlesl, or the tan-rim ot low furse and crannied root: chn-es or the many other distinctive do- Jnestlcated breeds: or oatmeal p91‘. ‘ridge staple food new replaced b bacon. u peat has been replaced by coal; orsuggelt that Scotland ll swsrlohicsiiy like a elesaue lgolf course .. . or the iskiri . . . at onee fierce and plain- tive. as has been ao naioh of Scot- tIlh life. 0r the lttltq Scotch this- tle: or the variegated colored heather of the most diversified topography in the world. And lalt- l1, consider baggie . . . recently beforeus...hash.lfyotrhdw your French: significant ef eaucb in Scotland. For a people food is basic. “Gentlemen. all time are but surface indications of the great {are about. Scotland and the lect- "aixasnumeeeueheeu toricsliy) Scotch spirit There has been s lot. last . . Scotland . with many definite and famous charac- teristics oi Holland. Switzerland. etc. "Let m mention and interpret aye. that's -the'rejMahaL Seeitifyou Sootland pio- neers msny things in modernism" move progressively north. The ideal climate and hence resources for human life is north: it re- quires a man-anode environment as the tropics do not "And English development lhas moved north, hasn't. it'.'—Gentlo- men. I want to“ say emphatically that Canada is a super-Scotland. from these points of view, and. to be intelligent about Scotland means to be a better Canadian. "Canada and Scotland are most vital in the new dutlook of the Empire, “no closing events of our world-era will be played out in the North Atlantic. The southern hem- isphere and the vest Pacific will wait. History Recalled "Just e trifle of history . . . The Scotch repelled all invaders -Ro- mans. Scandinavians, English‘, made use of French relations, won independence, and finally, shall 1 say, ‘imoved in on" the British Crown, and put the St. Andrews in commerce and shipping is the vast increase of 20 and l0 fold in these from i756 to 1806: then 5 and 6 fold more, in fifty years, and in the twentieth century doubled again. ‘ There is little need to speak of_ Scotland: record of pioneering and production in modern ship- building: by for the largest oc-- cupled group in Scotland" are the metal workers in Scotland the Industrial Revolution climaxes ... ln lhlp and engine building machines that make machines. But even more than in the realm of material culture. Scotland is out- standingly modern in her human Jlenomena. Her population is small in numbers but is intensely active in process. and has char- acteristics that make it the most modern of all countries... Other Features l It! density is moderate. 1U per sq. mile. but it is one ed the most unequally distributed in the civ- lllzed world. Rural depopuletlon from the Highlands and metro- Oroee forever integral on the Brit- ish flag. One of the principal marks o! an area favorable for a high de- velopment of civilization, is where land and water most do interpen- etrate (with land the major part). What about Scotland? It is pink- ed round the edges. and cut up and corrugated like a wash-board. lt ls most diversified, horizontally and vertically . perhaps most of any like area in the world. A land historically of natural strong- holds and castles of feudalism not. even "castles in Spain" mdre so Only three hundred miles long and of extremely varying (width (HO-BO); an exceptionally long coast line; large foreshore and continental shelf (and fishing grounds oi all kinds). no alnous hills; average all islands (186 of them. close-in lakes (vparden me, lochs, ie.. en- tended rivers) Clyde-Forth flats between. Scot- land ls therefore‘ highly end has become a-great suburban region for England with Bslmoral. As a result. for the ‘canny Scotch. Scotland has been a lend of engineers intelligent and handy men. remaking the earth more to suit space end time binders... by roads. bridges. canals. rails, engines. Consider that most rlnarkabia cross-country Caledon- ien panel that ‘flay railway viaduct miles long that Forth Bridge. And have you noticed Scottish names of pieces, vivid geographic nines but always with a human touch‘ in them‘ places embroid- ered with the romance oi daring deeds Hungry Hill. In the last two centuries. and largely in less than one, almost a quarter of the country has gone back to deer forest. Yet Scotland has really no forests as such. One hell of all the lend surface ls now in rough graling land. Only ene- elxth is arable. It has more sheep and better than an‘! other like part more than 40 miles from sea. a land of many hills and mount- elevation 1,500 ft; 5/6 Highlands (average elevation 2,500 ftJ. and 1/6 Low- lands. A country where the sea is and far fluns), and the land is all In that incomparable panorama from Stirling — historic heart of Scotland. one gets an eyeful of all Scotland - a sea oi hills and glans on either side. and the smiling scenic. beginning epolitan congestion in the central ‘ Clyde-Ibrth region, has been ex- ceptionelly rapid. Glassovl. bimoet wholly in the nineteenth century, and largely in latter half, has be- come one of the fifty greatest cities in the world: second city of theilmwire: and its metropolitan region (it is only 47 miles to Ed- inburgh) now has nearly two- thirds of the country population. Glasgow and Dunferrnline ere notable for city planning and municipal enterprises. Glasgow is one of the most compact of all great cities, the main city of small area. and contiguous suburbs - vvhich makes for greater value as e basis for better civic financing and administration generally. Being an emigrant country. largely to England, where the fig- ures do not appear as emigration. population gaining recently only 3 per cent in a decade. But expert of population is a great as- ln the earth. has increased three fold in the century; tile vital conditions show lowering birt-hrate, but also death a [rand combination. is the genius of this 1100710. It II expressed in religion. in educa- tion, ln luw. in marriage, and in their literature. No country has ao complete an established religion, of so democr ‘it sn ergsniltlon- the Presbyterian-yet with control in the lest analysis by general in- nan in Scotland where lord and all eat together and voted so. The Scots he has many unique fest- uree o! demoeptle character Women have been oateptl Ncognillil in in and education. free romantic marriage is unique not?’ Ifltllltl Ill I education before it was thought of Scotland heron almost stationary set. as I have before suggested, emecially where thou Scots come to be sitting on all the best places Unlike most other modern coun- tries, Scotland's people are 80 per cent native born; latterly the Irish are coming strongllt. The population rate. Infant mortality is high. but the largest groups in the popula- tion are It-Iii. The marriage rate Freedom from formal‘ restraint terest. Democratic Parliament,» one!!! The proverbial leottieb law of and very modern in rit. ls it. universal elsewhere. and has manifold the University population or England or any other country; the bcst ed- ucated and most reading pess- antry and population in the world. and so hes always led in publish- ing of books and newspapers and journals, The spirit of this people is en- shrined historically in the works of Sir Walter Scott - the spirit of her past; of Burns in the vern- acular snd about the life of the mon people. This is notably democratic and modern in its spir- it and ideals expressed. Patron Saints King David and the Psalms-till! rugged slnning saint, is quite ll much the patron saint of the Scotch as is Saint Alidffiw- 5"“ Andrew. in the Gospell. "I I fisherman whose insight is the hi’ to the greatest miracle in the 00l- pels - where the hungry are M from the example oi left-overr- Saint Andrew havina W" “i” °"' to recognise that left-over: ere l fact of lite. Saint Andrew went i» Russia and became the PHI!" as in Scotland ~10? all this sreat nation was then ills edge of the world, and “he l" gone into this PB" F’! “n m world" to preach the KOSWL Tm strikingly different St. Andrew! cross on which he was 1118mm back in civilization. is most gru- 'phlc tribute to his independent manliness oi! Willi '- l“ It m: bodies the form of litter heiplell neu for a most manly slllm- h Gentlemen endlfiéoltcglglrngegl. :0 spirit of human n l _ enterprise is the will! °l s" g. drew and is the modern splrll- M Scotch have it They havzhn let modern ehsnl! ml“ m‘ Scotland awaits e Ill“ lira“... future in the world as it s d li lng to be. Perhaps Scotianputlrlzu have ll I disagree on whet the spirit i" '“ how it is to be embodied in ti!" tleih century Institutions, m“ But mere occastiiiellllllanfnl". n: loyalty to l m0 enough. Strongly inteliifllahic" ural ties will have to wind lotions between Amerlcaw Old Countfl- PM i" " war will be e struflle CllltuNl. We will need an inmllgfe?" IIIY- 3th‘! "It" Mo“ diam’. we can be bell" 9"“ l. , u r have said. Gaff“ m much a super-Swim‘ saint there saint. keeps even.~ _ ‘n! Scotland is a country of rugged North American ctznllggsugr I" individualism. of canny intelligent a lerzfl‘ sole l" ° n ,, , p“: independent , ‘ . The Scotch al world oi todaynd M. wen sra atter-ol-fact. m ruashue- eounm- It 9‘*°“‘“ __ the nineteenth century u" w q, u well a have denai