"."...l ‘nns- o... .4_> _ -_~unfil Pascale“ PIIIIIDE EDWARD TDDAY anti SAT. TAYLOR ozone: $.12. mum! MURPHY~ SiiAli- ASIIIR with can: seems LOCART- BYINGTON NEWS — FEATURETTE SHOWS 2130-7-9 cam-rot. TDDAY and SAT. snows zao-r-sus. in» QAaII-ENH TQWN“ ‘IIAIIDIIFN DVIIIM II LAUREL-HARDY CQME DY TONIGHT - EMPIRE - AIID SAT. SHOWS 7 and 8:45—MATINEE SAT. ONLY 2:30 CARTOON-SING SON_G_-_CI}_IMS_QN__GHOS_T NO. 4 "CYNTHIA" OFFERS AND TEARS 0F A FAMILTS PROBLEM WITH YOUNG LOVE A “m. one na...c..a I-ie1I have v uoio sreadywiih laugh“ ‘a llIg-Iiland Light Infantry Gets Pretty Dolonel __....._ By Stuart U-nderhill LONDON. Aux. 2o -<cP)-Tne British Army tomorrow gets its youngest and prettiest Colonel- petite. attractive Princess Margar- et who on her 17th birthday be- comes Calonel-in-chlef of the High- land Light Infantry. The appointment will delight Scotland where she was born and where she now is on holidays at Balmcral Castle with the Royal Family. She will spend her birthday quietly with a family dinnor in the evening attended by the King and Queen. Princess Elizabeth and Philip Mountbatten. But hence- forth she is likely to be seen more In puiblic. starting with Oct. 16 when she launches the liner Edin- burgh Castle at Belfast. She has emerged as A distinct personality in the last year or ‘so. Even at garden parties and other state functions. where she walks demurely at the tail end of the Roy- Hl procession, spectators are likely feel somehow warmed A bored movie audience watching a recent newsreel of the Royal vis- it to the Home Fleet woke with a delighted laugh at a brief glimpse of Margaret unabashedly demon- stirating a new dance step to some young naval officers with whom she was chatting. Prisoners Snuggle Letter To Paper (By The Canadian Press) TORONTO, Aug. -In g leg- ter smuggled out Penitentiary and delivered today to the Toronto Globe and Mail long-term prisoners who escaped ‘today from the prison, said that its only a matter of time be- fore we will be forced to do things we Will later be sorry for." The letter. signed "Mickey MacDonald. No. e213." charged that prisoners were being starved by inadequate food rations. It enclosed copy of a peflflgn F-‘leeedlv signed by 10o convicts protesting the quality and quant. ity of food in the institution. This Feiiiivll. obviously written by a prisoner with better than average education. bitterly attacked prison officials. Mill-Gen. R, B. Gibson, Com- missioner of Penitentlaries at Ot- tawa, commented tonight that he had not. received the which MacDonald suld had been forwarded. He said he would like to know how theletter was smug- rns can Raorrsroyviv WGLLABIJIAN 59W"- Q 1941 Q llonie And School Delegates Refuse To change lame sncxvnu. ma. Aug. 2e _ (C?) -- PPJnreed blKBri-‘ish Col- umbia delegates, a resolution to change the name of the Canadian Federation of Horde and school to the parent-teacher federation was defeated by a large majority at today's session o! the Federa- tion's 10th annual convention. Most delegates favcmd the present name as more representative of the or- ganization's work. | The convention decided torec- ommend to the lilfinister of Justice that adequate psychiatri: examin- ation P-e made mandatory in cases of alleged sex perverts; that ud- equals psychiatric treatment be provided, anu- that adequate pro- vlslon be made for segregating such offenders until treatment merits their return to society. i to take u second look at hel- and‘ of Kingston Mickey Mac-Donald. one of three To, Abandon Dapital a BATAVIA. Aug. D0—(AP)— In- donesian leaders prepared today to abandon their capital in anti- cipation of renewed full scale war with the Dutch as the Netherlands lGovernor-General bitterly charg- ed the Indonesians with a two- year record of "murder, arson anrl torture." Members of the Indonesian Cah- inet met in Jogjukarta with top military leaders. who made no secret of the fact they believed the Dutch will lau ch a drive soon to capture the interior cap ital city of the Republic. A moun- tain fortress in Sumatra was seen as the possible capital. MEWS BRIDGE IS FREE‘) I NEWBURN Northumbelrland.‘ Gt. 63°. Jtngland — (C?) — Newburn ' lBridge. built in 1893 and last re- fmaining toll bridge across ‘he WE’RE STAGGERED The buying tornado struck us full force --- we expected crowds -- but not the huge mob that literally swept us off our feet. Yowstaggered us folks, but we are ready with more bargains. NO TIME FOR PRICES |nd,,,,,,.,.,, prep... In fact, stock is going out with such incredible swiftness it would be useless to quote prices. Join the bargain crowds and see Values OI A Lifetime Bui Hurry, Sale Ends Briefly REENDAUS LADIES’ 99 ilueen River Tyne has been declared freea “ycu do?" 5h! asked uncertain- “Ann. you'll be struck dead for ly. petition lng hori" ‘alone! And 1 ‘ sayigoorl night, don't you. Mr. Dris- said A~in with such convincing sLm- SléCli lies!" Sirah protested, shock-i "Darling. I E . Tracy said violently, certainly dol Ized how it was slmvlv SWMIWW "You let Sarah all olJI lTlOfley and irllllls ‘OT "m"; think we'd better i1Ild——W'?il. I hated it ever. more! Ann's eyes blazed I here-J’ she broke of! willed "will . l 1,1 l. "Th.- woo-o-e-eo ryslfglriiffunler easy won“ been doing, and ypll are ',., d" i ' l g .ti ntr-and-det time - ‘l 1m N“ — .1 ".l““.' .. Headline lady lggigiimifil'i.i.'él.illlE’.1"i.§.§€§;.3321.3" " ' I .50....“ o; laughter that bordered‘ Ann manual-c u dim will» "It- BY ‘gerilously on tears. doesn't sound very’ excitirlilg." sh; S c‘. sat erect her eyes wide. hdmiftad. "but it will Pm >1 YWQY“ Georgi; (jug: lncggfious, -your iClVlCP nearly alwuys doeol I at“ time In the little LittInB-room. 100k- . c» her eyes were ,ways liavel 1 used to be afraid qfilns Into 5N ~- ml , “Stop buily- it-and when r grew up and m- ‘Wllm "Kl l W" m“ “Emb-“i LAUGHS I CANADA PROVINCE OF gled out. and then he declared: “In connection with complaints. I have visited the institution sev- eral times in recent months and have heard no complaints about the food. They have a very good steward there. But food is always a subject for complaints by con- vets." coll? It's been-a very gay evening wliclty that Sarah could not doubt and I've had a lot of fun ——but—I'm beslnmne to be bored-J‘ l For a moment they stared at Sarah demanded sternly. "Young each other and then they will ma-ll- "l? You 50in; to let her get laughed and Sarah held out he!‘ away with LITIL stuff? You're not arms and Ann wen‘ into them. and the man I thought you were. if you they hugged each other hard. do!" Again they had forgotten Tracy Tracy ignmed Ann's little gasp and he seemed quite content limi- and tor-iced down s! sareli and gsked this should b-- so. l-le sat Wawhlnz STIRRING EPIC “As stiffly, 'Woul.3 you suggyg that 1 them, amused, curious, yet with OUTSTANDING CA ST - PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND IN THE PROBATE COURT i Attractive Elizabeth Taylor takes The 5;: filly of Allswt A D- 194'! e step toward growing up in her In Estate of VINCENT ngwgsl; M.G-M plume’ “cynghh-L" CROKEN late of Charlottetown In arresting mama of an adokscen; Queens minty In the said Province girl's first love affair, now showing fllfmfll! at tihe Prince Edwaird Theatre. As a girl v/hose over-zealous par- of Middleton in Prince Collin)‘. Farmer. deceased, intestate. ents and domineering uncle deprive Prince County or any Constable or her of the normal relationships of literate Cynthia doesn't _ stand much chance at snairing her ..WHI-IREAS small town life. high her one-girl rebellion. blundering uncle out of the housel Ir all adds up to diverting enter- tainment punctuated with moments of tenderness, the humor that stcfiis from (he exaggerated traged- ies of the very young, and hi-gihly Itim-ulating performances upon the part of Miss Taylor. Wilt) is rapidly merging as one of Hollywood‘: jisti-riguished X01111"; stars. GYPOTEB Murphy, playing‘ her perplexed lather. Ma-ry Astor. in a sympath- etic mother role. Jone Lockhart. as the pugnucious uncle, S. Z. Sakall. Spring Byingtnn. James Lydon and others Robert Z. Leonard's astute dir- eelZ-on makes full use of the PW" lurgsqup gtimnsrhl"rfl of small-town family li-fe and the director has kept his story moving‘ at an Inter- esting pllCc. ‘Cyril-hm l5 l‘ 71mm“ spun drama whose characters will be recognized and flflifll/Pd by everyone in the family from grand- ma down to thc youngest movie- (oer. MocDONALD 8r ROWE WOODWORKING CO. LTD. BF 17' [R Ry/lfll/VG MATERIALS true _‘seeutire WECII; from the date here- ,of that u true copy Int-root he forth- Jvith posted In the following Public :Prlnce county aforesaid fmd at nr iii persult within mid county GREETING: upon reading the school Lolihario until she takes petition on file of Ernest II. Strung matters into her own. lhnnds. When 0y summu-qdr h, she does. a bombshell explodes, in- volving her frustrated father, her unhappy mother and other mem- bers of an extremely difficult fam- Ily. But before atlas finished with Cynthia manages to got her first kiss. wins her father a better job, simplifies mun" life for hor mother and kicks her Prim-c County aforesab, Bairlster-at-laiv, the ad- .mInIstr-\tor of the above named hereby the community. hhews. the first Marshall of Abilene. This character is actually based on that of Tom Smith. one-time New after set forth: You nre therefore York cop who migrated to Abilene YWIlZfl-d to cite all persons and cleaned up the town. Co-starr-I rd In the suid Estate to be ing with him is lovely brunette Arm and appear ‘ncfnre the Judge pre- Dvorak, who served as an ambul- senf. at n Pro-into Court to be held ance drive in the Court llcuse in finrnmeside past four years. She plays, to per- In Prime County. lu the snld Pro- ftction, the role of Rita, an ullur. l ‘Vince on Thursday the eleventh day ing song and dance entertainer at: of September next cloning. at the one of the frontier town's most pop-' hour of Two 0'CIr.ik afternoon of ular tavebns. i the same dnv to shew cuuse lf any they can why the account! of the said Estate should not be IIINIFOKI and the Estate rlnsi-d as prayed for In said retltlrn and on nlotfon of Ernest II. Strung, Esq" Proctor for said Pctifnnrr. And t is hereby ordered that I cnpy hrrcof be forthwith published In some newspaper In Charlottetown nfcrrsald on»: In each week fur at least four run- places rerpr-ctvej’. namely In the hall of the (‘nurt House in Sum- mrrzide afcresrirl. at or near the store of J. F. Mortls in Klnkorn In near the stare of James P. CnlIsZh- an In Kinkora afiresald so that nil persons tntercstrd in the said Estate as atcremld may nave due notion hereof. WITNESS Ills llonour Harold Leonard Palmer. Judge nf the said Probate Court at Charlottetown In Queen's County. the day and year first above written- By the Court. E. Margaret Palmer Registrar. “ DIIEEII STREET MEAT going 7.0 be stud. anyway, ycox Sarah began vigorously. I r in Britain during the- a dozen chances to sell." she pro- ’ tested. fled. I knew vou loved 'he place \ and Wanted to be married froml Hake her cut of this beautiful place something ‘veiy like tenlleffleas l" Against the comm“ background into some diitky little Qphfmns__n|h1: 2W5; a, l.:.k that managed to of t city of A-bilene, Kansas, as it was ack in the pioneer years justjh" Wt °l ""5 after the Civil War. Producer Jules Levey has set. his current produc- id°wn i‘ milk“ W" if" lpflii-fllents—" Ann cheerful y "I Can lull’ B 11111’? tlon based on the Ernest Ila best-seller. "Trail Town." The film is titled “Abilene Town". '1 Won't let Yo“ do and depicts in stirring dramatic W”! 19V" U?‘ 01d Dlli¢t‘—" fashion the violent feuds between! the arrogant cattle barons of the Sarah in the tone of a fianipirafor. period who strove in high-hanrled-"Yve always leather‘ itl From the ' fashion to keep (he sreadlly amv- first moment t came herr. as a little ing homesteaders from settling in ‘young urlde. barely seventeen. and thought it thr- glon-minst place I'd . Prominent in) the cast is Ran- ever Stmn! Your grandfather and dolph Scott portrayingDan Mat- ,I shared it with his parents and ‘brothers, and the older it grew | ,the more I dsliked it. I always 'pianned. ever since your grandfa- {thefls death. in sell the thing the first cha 1ce ' got!" "Certainly nail 1 suggest you take be l; llctle puzzled too. old Place that's] “I've had an offer of eumty thou- “d mm “m; for one plare," Sarah told [Mm for Andrew and l-Iartha. We But Ar-n out in. "Oh. no-Sarah who; they've always’ wanted; and it! You've al-|1 can take Janie with me. to the apartment; it won't be much Willi! said for her to take care of mw-and ‘h! ‘apartment-and of course. W" 0B!‘ come along. loo. if you like" 5° me hadn't forgotten h.m. aft- er all. ‘Tracy told tiimwll. Ind m" her dirk eyes atralahtlv. "Well. of worse. I'm coming along," said Ann almost he'll!"- ently and a little too carefully lavolding Tracws eyes. "Where else iwould l go?" Tracy said hesitant-Ly. “Well. I don't like to intrude. but I have l “Conflfientlcfly, my dear," Ann stared at her, r-wund-eyed. "But~darlin8' You've bccn offered ‘ugusum i° 0min“ Ann Igqked at him coldly. "Oh. are you still here?" she sniiltd 2n a .. - I b te sllfllTlFle- Sarah nodded. I know-but Iflffinen“, glean.‘ be “ma... sald Sarah gently. uer eyes sparkling a little. Rude? After who‘: hes been to me?" demand-id Ann hot‘! “And what was he to vou?" Him! couldn't soil until you ivere mar- New Dfficers Atlantic Wholesalers anoint avanp mxon Sons of the late President J. L. Dixon of Atlantic Wholesalers Limit- ed. who at a recent meeting of the Board of Directors of the Company were elected President and Executive Vice-President respectively. Edgar Sarah with interest. M c “'°.'.“....“'. armed‘: ".l‘°'l a mic": m ft the m ning.‘ said Sarah» i’ yn‘sp an or rig a o e A n u AM collapsed on e glider’ And ytftllre going to do exactly as she was well out of the marl-age.‘ ' And that uas that. p» a week she leased Sarah and ~ald good night. But Sarah as: on for a 1on8 about her lit-s. The rews of Llyn‘: elopinent with Lissa. created. of cotu-se. a mild sensamn among their own frienclis. Lyn’; patient-i were distressed and tearful; Ann's friends were frankly curious and afrncst as frankly re- lieved. She was a little disconcer- ted to realize that most or them "Insolent. Contemptous. Bully- m‘ Anf oflp] things." answered Ann hotly. "Sound: like good mliffllil i" husband-making —" bell"! Bflrllle mg qygny um! one said cool}; “Th” 10kg h” grown a bit tirt- some, ssarah- let's let the rnan so home 1nd get some sleep. After all we can always take him on I881"- whcn we feel like it.’ ‘Iracy stood up. and said polite- 1y, “Alwgyg at yqtll‘ service. Clay- toni It's be"?! a most enjoyable evening I don't. know when I've had a more—lsatru-:tlve one." And he went quickly out of the room. Ann stared at him for a mo- ment, wide-eyed. shocked. And then she loosed back at Sarah, and said like e hurt crlid "Wliy—l1e's gone!” ' "Well. what did you expect the mien to do - hang erourd a little ilonger fer you to bang hlm over the heart with Insults and denun- iclatlons’! I quite looked for him either to strangle you or turn you across his knee with a slipper." Sarah told her vigorously Ann said In small. bewildered voice. ‘I know-wut-Saruh, I was so sure that all that kept him from CABMAN FREDERICK DIXON but Ann was vn her feet nc-w far-i 5 f . I ‘ _ "wit! an ' “ MARKET llenry Peters, Prop. MEATS. “I81! and VEGETABLES Phone 2296-2297 l2! Queen it. is’ ‘A. l. 5 A. Dixon, the new president. has been with the Companyaml its pre- decessors the Eastern thy and Peed Company Limited ulnee 1828. lle was granted leave of absence during the war years and served In Italy and Northwest Europe with the Seaforth Bushland of Canada. When l he was discharged from the armed forces he was appointed Alalstant General Ma of the Company. Canaan P. Dixon Joined the Con- pany In 1932 serving with the Amherst and hloncton branches until he was transferred to the lleatl Office In laekvllle u Supervisor of Ae- eountlng in i935. Five years later he vvae elected Traaaurer of the Ceil- pany which position he held until eleeted Incentive VIne-Pndtlent wantin: to merry me was ~— Lissa. And -- i‘. wasn't Usiu at an - all -— tt-waant even Lissa -- was it?" "We-e-ell. y-e. I think it was - for av/ntle. MIWHY." raid Sarah slowly. “But Fthina. too that you frightened him a Jttle." "Sarah — what, am I going to do?" Ann millil- Meltea hard water eel aefl Cleans long char and: dissolve letter even In cool water Mlldev to Innis CUTS DISIIWASI-IING TIME Bwnvs Economical-Ivy using hall as much or two. anywiy. [Jyn took up his duties at the hcslltal. and Lissa was entertained at teas erd lunch- eon: as befltted a brand-new bridl- Ann came Into the oliioe late one afternoon after a particularly trying afternoon of Interviewing a visiting celebfty who had been too "cage-y" to yzeld it decent inter- view. She lapped out the story with lac-t tongue in her cheek. CB“?- fully went over it to be sure there was no QVIdGvCQ of the 012111158 in vrhich i‘. had r-gen written, and went to lay it on '.iracy'5 desk. He put dcwn the telephone as she reached the desk. And she saw that he looked a little grim and preoccupied. I-le hesitated a mo- ment scribbhng somettvng on a slip of paper, stood up. called to might. be working late. an gil- n! armed HERE'S ALL YOU no. .. just put a few teaspoonfuls of VEL in your dishpan (about half as much as soap). Add water. VEL gives the water amazing new cleaning power that lasts long after suds dissolve. VEL removes grease faster, more completely than soap-in hardest water. Dishes, glasses sparkle without the touch of a towel. And VEL is milder to hands, free from soapy alkalisi idling reporters and the paper. Then he one o.’ the handed hfm ifollowe: Ann lnck ‘o her desk and said quietly. ‘Get you: hat. mn- I'll buy you a dinner." "Thanks," said Ann curtly. "but Sarah is expecting me-“ “Not now she isn't." Trw! 0b Jected. "I telephoned her that - something had ccme up and yo! She looked down at ii m. Dll‘ Z195, and he. silly heart plunged dqynwmd. They had maintained "tuce ~ince that telegram hsi come; atie had not been alone wi- b him sine: that nigit There had be '11 no conversation he- twcen them that Rte whole world might not ttrve heard. And she had, w; a crazy momert. hoped that tonight's date-and then she saldcurtly: "Of course if it's blISIHHP’ (To Be Continued) l/Ei. keeps stockings shearer. Ioieller! lIyI Gail Nencyfed. Tamm- "My nylons stay lovelifl‘ Ion er now l wash them wit gentle VIZL. I u! uat a teaapoonful of EL n the basin, add luke- warm water . . . dip and ueaue a few times, and I. washes nylons and nbdiea fresh and sheer as no . . no dulling sol? Q-v-vf-