MARCH 25. 1953 Factory value of Canadian pro- duction of chemicals reached 334,889,000 in 1951. flclla . . Cltercly NEW 1953 PHILCO "AUTOMATIC" Atluhcomplela ya i " v of both fresh and frozen foods! Protects fresh food: at ideal 38" to 42' tempera- tures . . . controls humidity - . . . stores frozen foods at 0' . . . and quick freezes at 20' below zero. YOU'VE GOT TO SEE IT TO BELIEVE ITI' Procrastination is the thief of time. An old saying, but only too true. Don't we ai ian to do things - expect to o things - anti then decide that tomorrow will do just as well as today? We waste time and gain nothing. If we put off tidying up the clothes closet, maybe results wouldn't be terribly serious. Could be worse. though, if we postponed check- ing up the old car. But let me tell you. one of the biggest tragedies I know can be caused by a fellow putting of I sound lite insurance plan. Even one day's delay can mean all the difference between want and se- curity for the little lady you're so proud of, and the youngsters who run out to meet you as your walk tip the from path at the end of the day. Yes, to procrastinate is to steal from yoursalf- to steal content- ment. It is stealing from your family-stealing securiiy. I'd sure like to talk about these things with you, and tell you how my great rompany- the Sun Life of (Ianada -can take care of your needs. PMILCO Illl J IrNo1)efrosli'nq fN0'DI8IQ :NoBotlier1 DOUGLAS BROS. & JONES LTD. Phone 3001 155 Kent St. CASH When bills pile up, get 350 to 31000 fast at Household Finance! Loans made without bankable security. Repayment plans to fit your income. Up to 24 months to repay. Phone or stop in today for fast, friendly, dependable service! ON YOUR OWN 1 SIGNATURE 25th YEAR IN CANADA IIOIISEIIOLD FIIIAIICE D. 1. lane, Manage I SO Grout George St., suite 1, phone 2992 CHARLOTTITOWN, F.!.l. I H. C. BOHAKER Unit Supervisor Sun Life of Canada. Charlottetown, l'.E.I. 0o-op Announcement GRAND OPENING New Showroom and Offices Thursday Morning The business headquarters of all our departments has g been moved to 58-60 Fit-aroy St. in Charlottetown-Swift's, old stand. Renovations have been made to enable us to provide more and better services to our members and friends. OUR DEPARTMENTS NOW INCLUDE: MARKETING: FARM AND FISH PRODUCTS. DAIRY 8: POULTRY: Egg Station. Poultry Packing Plant and Modern Chick Hatchery. WHOLESALE: Groceries and Supplies. INSURANCE: Life. Firo. Auto. Accident. Etc. PLUMBING: Heating. Water Systems. Bathrooms. etc. EQUIPMENT: Co-op Milkors. Coolers. Refrigerators. Freeze Boxes. Washers. Paints. Asphalt and Aluminum Roofing. Fencing Supplies-all heavy farm and household appliances. Primary producers and consumers have organized Co- operatives to provide themselves with better service and better quality goods at fair prices. True Co-operatives are owned. controlled and directed by the people who use them. Take for instance. the Co-op Universal factory which makes Co-op Milking Machines. Coolers. etc. From the research and engineering departments-to production-to sales and service in the field: every step is under co-opora- tive ownership and control by folks who. like ourselves buy the equipment to USE IT. What better assurance can there be of COMPLETE and LASTING satisfaction. There are over fifty Co-op Milkers now operating on the Island with not one dissatisfied user. YOU'LL NOTICE that there are no pictures of our equipment or sale prices published in this ad. QUALITY and SERVICE is the CO-OP mot-to. You'll find that to be the best bargain in the long run. Our prices are right and all our equipment is guaranteed. Also. savings "'or profits" are returned to Co-op members. based on their patronage. - COME AND SEE THE DISPLAY FOR YOURSELF ' Chock our Insurance Service too. It's Different. ISLAND CO-OP SERVICES CO-OP ASS'N. LTD. (Around corner from Telephone Office) Oanadian Garden Service By Gordon Lindsay Smith 'lZ'l-IE LAWN -- In any garden layout. the lawn is perhaps the most important feature yet it is often the most neglected. For some reason or other a. lot of people seem to think that gram will take care of itself. It will to some ex- tent. if one is satisfied with some- thing about as coarse and tough as fence wire. But fine, all sea- son green and uniform turf, re- quires some planning and regular maintenance. Without a good piece of lawn as a. foreground for shrub- bery, vines, flower gardens, paths and buildings, no garden layout, no matter how costly, will be a real success. And it is not really difficult or expensive to create a. really good lawn. Here are the major points to keep in mind: It. is much easier to get the ground level and the top soil fine before the lawn is seed-ed than afterwards, and level and fine it should be for best. results in the usual location. On hillsides. slopes should be made as gradual as poss- bile and instead of one long sharp one. two or three levels with ter- races, rock gardens or shrubbery and steps in between are advisable. Use t-he best. seed. Except for very special purposes like putting or bowling greens, the best seed consists of mixtures of several fine grasses. some of these come quickly, some do best late in the season, some have richer color and so on. These are blended together to produce uniformity of texture and color throughout the season and for various regions of Canada. Seeding should be done early. be- fore the hot. weather, or alter it in Uhe fall. Lawns should be fed, like any other Want. one good application of fertilizer, rich in nitrogen, is advisable every year or so. FIRST PLANTINGS - Even in the cooler parts of the country the first. actual plantings are us- ually carried out in March or ear- lier. This is the seeding of those things that are usually started in' greenhouses, liotbeds and window sills. Tomatoes, cabbages, petunias. asters. and so one are in this 8101113. M5-DY People don't bother with this first seeding at all, but simply buy the started plants in April or May and set out. Of the first seeds planted directly out. side will be the very hardy group of flowers and vegetables, which a. bit of frost. will not hurt. In this group are sweet peas, cosmos, the first carrots and beets, lettuce, spinach, radish and grass seed. Then there is the semi-hardy group. which includes the most flowers and the hardier vegetables. A touch of frost. will not ruin them, though they would prefer to do without. In the last group are the really tender things that won't. stand is slntrle degree below 3'2. In this 053-GEOFY are dahlias,cannas,gladio. lus, tomatoes, peppers, melons. cucumbers and so on. OK!-'PSII'EAD. Englandf or) - John Pudney, 44-year-oid author and poet. has "caves to let." Dug 25 to 40 feet deep in sandstone Ciuarries in this Kent district. about 100 V91" 980. the caves were equipped with water and electricity as sir-reld shelters in the last war. g QCQQTTCQDT MASON'S 49? 12,- Couglis CC; and Cofds I 45f -m75f ; 3,4Wf,9'II:t1Nos i3.itNits SCRUBBING (loans walls, aim... windows limbs llssii . . . waaaa ,.i..i..d floors - Ivan 0...”... H... mi. naw' SO EASY IO WIINOI ii:-til up lInt'oIloIsIy- in. it...- I and absolvlaly Ufy. I Ills. water can in If . Made of llghi, nut- AIUMINUM and luau, 1 In any life have I tinned and sand floors as sully and with sub '.OIIUVI.' WIIHI Mia. O. W. Smith. loonbavdy, om. EASIER m' OUICIII IIVTII DNLV 16.95 cam-tug mitt Ono , Ali you daalu . The Rogers Hardware. company Limited COMPLETE VISUAL REFRAUIION AND ANNALYSIS i G. F. HUTCHESON 8: SON y Optometrists 58 Grafton Street i rm: GUARDIAN. cnsatorrarowsi Co-op Services Fitzroy Street Location Island Go-operative services Limited in their new location at 58 Fitzroy Street, formerly occu- pied by The Swift. Canadian Com- pany, ls rapidly assuming a busi- nesslike attitude and outlook in keeping with the energetic mari- agcment and staff which heads up the various departments. The set-up is B. group of three buildings conveniently connected with ample truck loading space from any department. Considerable space on the sec- ond floor of the west. building is gttven over to general offices for Mr. Jerome O'Brien. manager of the services and his assistant, Mr. Leo P. Mclsaac. Adequate arrange- ments are also in evidence here for meeting the public as well as the necessary quarters for the account- ant, Mr. John Connolly. Miss Lola Johnson, Secretary Miss Freda l-fecklbert, Stenographer and other staff members. Two insurance representatives reporting direct to the Manager are Messrs. W. J. Driscoll and J. J. Miclsaac, who are full time op- eratives deallng with co-operative insurance, life, fire, car and cats- ualty insurance. Equipment Display On the ground floor of this building. the equipment display has ample room for thorough inspec- tion. Coolers, milkers, refriger- ators, washing machines and plumbers supplies are here in pro- fusion and variety, with paints and varnishes of proven value. The plumbing is in charge of Mr. Keith Carmichael. Mr. D. L. Maclnnls, Office Manager, has his quarters directly behind the floor display Kinsmen Flood Fund Reaches 324,000 With 98 Kinsmen Clubs across Canada and 24 Kineite Cluibs con- trlbuiing to date, the National Kinsmen European Flood Relief Fund stands today at S24,028.l8, it. was reported last night by Nation- al r;:sident A. Waithen Gaudet. of this City. In addition Kinsmen and Kinette Clubs have contributed to date Sl'7,774.I5 to the Canadian Na- tional European Flood Relief Fund direct where official receipts for income tax purposes were nec- essary. The Kinsmen Fund is being dis- trlbuted in England, Holland and Belgium by the Association of Round Tables, :1 young Service Organization, with which Kinsmen are associated in they World Council of Young Men's service Clubs. That makes is. total of 541,082.33 to date raised by Kinsmen for flood relief in the disaster areas of these muntries. Men's . Open In area and in direct contact. with the public on this floor. The Grocery stock-room in also located in this building from which shipments are distributed to more than 20 co-operative store branches on the Island. Fertilizers, insecti- cides and seeds make up the bulk of the balance of farm neceaities soared here for prompt shipment when and where required. Mr. Iseonard MacDonald brings to the Egg, Poultry and Ohiok Div- ision, located in the east block, the experience of many years in hand- ling such farm products. notably five years with the Swift Gann- dian Company. Facilities here sl- iow for killing and haridling 2,000 birds per day, ready for shipment. More than 50 cases of eggs can be graded in the Em; Grading Sta- tion in the quarters provided here where eggs graded by other m.- tione can be received in unlimited quantities. For the put. two months the Maritinie market for eggs has been most satisfactory as has also the demand for live chick ship- ments to points on the mainland. according to information received from the Management. Miss Mar- gvaret Hennessey is Secretary in this department. No Truth u. s. Aiding Chinese Troops In Surma WASHINGTON, (AP)-The Un- ited States Army spokesman says there is "absolutely no truth" to any suggestion that the U. S. is furnishing munitions and weapons to Chinese Nationalist troops in North Burma. Reports from Burma Saturday quoted Burmese officers as saying that Nationalist: remnants were us- ing American equipment in forays against Burmese villages and that munitions and equipment. recently had been supplied the Chinese by air drops. . The spokesman said Monday "no American agency of any kind. gov- ernment or military, is dropping or has dropped" equipment to these Chinese forces which fled to Nor- thern Burma when the Chinese Communists overran the mainland. He said, however, that the Na- tionalists in Northern Burma "un- questionaibly” still retain an ex- tensive amount of American equip- ment supplied them when they were fighting in the Second World War against the Japanese. OXFORD, England, (CF) - A famous Christ Church bell. "Great. 1 Tom", will be restored in time for 2 the Coronation. The bell former-i iy w-as tolled each night with Ii: number of strokes corresponding to the total of original students, but , has been silent for years. , Dorothy illit's Oolumn7- ; Continued from page 1 children, and though I know he in happy. ANSWER: Your chances of ha hands, and depend upon your ou- you have doubts about so many thi successful marriage is slim. ness to make many sacrifices. Miss Nissan cannot: reply persa love with a man .10 years my senior. tied to him. I know 1 will have to He is a widower with three x-cs me, I wonder if we could be I have always had all the material things I needed, but mar- forfeii many of them. MARY T. ppy marriage are entirely in your n capacity of adjustment. Since rigs, I would say the possibility of In nrdnr to be is good stepmother to three small children, you'tl l'iPP(I complete devotion to ihe youngsters, the patience of a saint. a nature fr It's a tall order, but tionlt ronsidcr marriage unless you have the qiinliiieaiions for such a union. ec from jealousy, and It willing- nally to readers but will answer problems: of general Interest through this column. f DAILY CROSSW ORD uitlituii '.l:ilIl.”i ACROSS DOWN 19. Haul 1 1. Point 1. Vegetable 21. Breach of land 2. Malt 22. Verbal 5. Wan beverage 25. River (Min) 9. Drswing- 3. Bard 27. Peasant room 4. Boredom (India) 10. Levels 5. Bench-like 29. Lair 12. Clean, as seat in 31. Kind feathers church of wood 13. Consider 0. Hall! 31. state of carefully 1. Wreaths of ideal :- 14. Gold (Hen) flowers perfection Yulordars Autos 15. Vat (Hawaii) 3!. Plaything l1.Kind of 17. Measure 8. Hire 35. Glass with i cornbread mnnamese) 9. Blemiahes nstcm o7.Undivlded I8. Spinning ll. Discharge 36. Horse 48. Grassy my a gun 39. Flutter! meadow 20. shake- it. sack 42. stud 00. Girl's name spearesn character 23. Depart 24. Stupefy 28. Attic 28. Cover 30. Wages 31. Metal DTOj0CIiIQ 84. Bulky timbers 37. Close to 38. Enough (poet) (0. Little child 41. Slow tinder- hand ball (Cricket) 43. Bark. as a dog 45. Exist 46. Bobbin 49. A thin fabric 51. River (N. Fr.) 52. Concluded 53. On the ocean M. Chair. y TILTLV CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work If: i A X Y D I. B A A X I iaLONOF.lll.LOW for the three L'a, X for the two NTYAOIB. IADACOIB WGNII IYTKJOH. THANK HMK ."W?E5?F4BF,- ' one letter simply stands for another. In this example A is used 0'a. etc. single letters. apoo-, trophies. the length and formation of the words are all hints. 1 Each dav the code letters are different. A Crypfiigram Quotation L if A G C 8 N U A .1. MC! ITDO KG! OJTC VMC-. !'esteriiay's (jriitoquote: novlrt ox 1'o'.t;: mist:-1:, twp .-7-ixsstiroeftcit A G'?0D,l4'AD-I i.ovi;- I . PAGE ELEVEN Thevie Marveiils Theyi-e L The DAINTIEST Sodas ever. made I . ALWAYS ASK FOR arven's IN YOUR FAVOURITE VARIETY OF BISCUITS Listen to "KNOW YOUR MARITIMES" Monday through Friday CJRW Siinimt-rsitle At 9:55 -10:00 AM. 712210;? IIFFEB ii i lNIlIAlEll GIASSES . Iauzxzr PLUS 2 BOXTOPS FROM KELLOGG'3 BRAN FLAKES 1 0 Your initial fused to glass- ranli wear oil. I 0 Beaded tlm-resists chipping 0 Popular tumbler styls (Ambassador design) 0 Weighted liasc-lit-Ins keen ill!!! from Ilpplllll 0 Regular water glass size (M 0l.I x K i rsoniillved I as your silverware. Here is s set 0 8 initialed glasses in the same pattern as Kelloggls famous -5 place settings. Get. yours now for Just S1.00 and .. 2 box tops from bigger, crisper. better-tasting Kcllog 'i: Bran Flakes. Look for complete. details on use ack of the Kellogg's Bran Flakes package. Now your dinner glasses can be its Na ironflsr Koliogfs liirin n we are no ilrlii imui 'I7llv.rl ru- IIl(1tiIIrm.INI jm I will mi-mire-. l"lnv m-er! iiv u xlill-crrrrl pm. rrsk. Inn. Ifiirnv It rlIng;:'s llrnn I-”IiiI.i. ujlvrs.