....... _-_-<'-...._,... »----—-—--»-A|>r—n "'fnf*”'€4"'iififi (rfimggfly-n 1mg; ----<--4»-,-.-.-.--->4 PAGE SUD FRINGE EDWARD: TODAY 81 SAT. DAILY 3.1549 p.m. = ssruansv MATINEE 2.30 IMUK WHO'S a ynacicuiu i y. ’ AgflUN izonmson H.511 1' \ii'i'iil).\' .\ 1m "informal ion "lei-c" . . . "iifivvzird l l, Robinson” Buck in Action At Prince Edward V “timid ‘.11 action i: .1. .1.) ‘Iirtitiii-i‘ 1d G. Hooudmn Alniplcu tioni "s Ailigdzlilc 1101i, "Brolilcr u jtflvlilftiliy ut i14- Lru, is the ' unoezwvorld '1; for cui- for Rou- um-b’ include the . "o". Ufltmii girl n1 ' ,.\.'.. one LOCK a. KOULA inl; .5116 owned the Lit: Ann sothern ; . t IJA‘ llzuk ~ no rc- ‘ 1A1 duck Jludgzs brings, u. he ' so adept. atl ‘ ‘ i» even! o. infused. b is pm)‘ u. 1' ui menace, kienipil-i '1 Bellamy) Ls a. wioo open SPAAJcmI or noes so oitun of the cast 111-! i, Chum.» LLi hlorgufi Land Paul unil- ' , Juacpfl Clvllilll, loin ‘Tyler, Dick Lizairvhl Bates and many ActioiiTestern AL The Capitol 1s 1w day again uti litre, vvnera ltoputp, lpso" Bar; starrer, i boueii ill _\cstcr~ At: r211; run. ‘ second in Burr ‘s series for Ropub c, 111 Jttenipls, as frontier oudvl; and expose an , .11 the l-inplltg" of Stew, Lind oxvner who ulna ;;tli1t-o1-\\'i1y" Lil-, g i8,\\'i€.'$5n€Sl| trope.» to prove L0 the iii that Mesa City . (Quick! for their rat.- . out Don Barry 1s Just ltii to prove Linn Trail- ;ti\J‘,i4‘\\1\(i and iaw-abui-i i1. s paid killers are ' ltl _i'.il.ed Waldo provides - »i ill the role of Joytei rx‘ rt-nu-l): Ci'v'i(l—ll1illfif‘(.i l, l a111,; materially int ~ " iu<l-to-'I'1'u1l-| lcion Youngj .\'l'IlS, net-H Cobb, Iu-x Brent. . and Matty Rouperti 11.3 l s. plllu 1120111.» in airless-i ‘um-fl should b0 Sllifi for the ~i|u~11lt- i-ontzibutc-(l _b_v Nil‘ ‘-s‘k1nncti comtxiinn S 1m. ‘error. as i-xpressvrl‘. ~ . is n Hollywood 01:15.1 MINER 5 RUBBER BOOTS (vacuum-pressure cured) Water- proof foot comfort at a moderate price Just the thing for wet, slushy i Purdie-Ferguson Shoes Ltd. Tlll-Z ('.\\'Il BOOT k SHOE BTORI-I Sunnysldt, Charlottetown Tmilcross‘ rousb, . Broi/ler y . Qrchid t... ANN SOTHERN Humphrey Bogart Donald Crisp-Ralph Bellamy Allan Jenkinv “filial Siiliriifish Landings Reported (‘auxin-refill fisheries set rcconls er Hum l rco’ No: all the high mark.»- iuvliuir; up by Big Game nngluxs! ’I‘i1ke, for iinstluicre. ieecnt SW01 is coast of Caps Breton Island. 'I‘\\'o m k-encis brought, sensational l illIlfiilIgS by the commercial fisher- men. Louisbnrg “pa; the first. p51", to I come into pmninenoe. Ovtr one week-end no 10a; than 8% s\vo.d' fish were landed by commercial fishermen operating from iihi; part. In ogre-gate weight. the catch rmcli ed some 200,000 pounds. Two weeks ilzilcr fL-hcrvnen operating from Glue-e Baiv “struck in ricl1" bring- ing in 000 off {Ahe big b oadbilh; dur- ing i-hc week-end period. On uhe whole time fish taken in this insianoe vwrg a little larger individually than the Inuisburg captures 31nd ‘thouirh the catch spas. 25 less in ninnbir the ziggwgate weight wag approximately uhe same as at tihe other point. Two mock-ends’ fish- ing and 400,003 pounds of 8Wordfi5l1 landed. Commenting on the situation fir“ supervisor of fisheries for Cam ‘Breton reporctd to tile Doininmn Dcpirtment of Flslierics that. ‘both instanas ivzpresent Luger muniris o; P1911 than iI-ltVC been iliulnrlmi in any Duo-day period in m experience in uhis district", and he has 1mm in the iledcrnl fisher- .105 service for 18 or 19 wars. [ Swordfish have been plentiful in lihe LoiusburR-Glace Bay area this i season. with heavy landing: art 1r- ‘ rwgulflr intervals. Fishing, it in in trivstling to not» , has. on all occa- szons. been best on week-ends. l-iiftp i3 on Satutdsy- and Stinday. But it is weather conditions which have account-lad for this fact, rat-her ivhcm any tendency for congrega- tions of swordfish to meet on Sun- day. Except for film week-end fish» inc. the weather encountered was {ICIIGYHHV unfavourable wih pre- ‘z hizrh winds or fog. bath of . maid» it difficult b0 locate flue surfacing fish. In Caxmdian winter; awonifbh. ta-ken by use of haJ-pcons. are foimd only of‘! "he Nova swim“ mash. In 1939 the catch totalled nearly 17W“ hurulrcrd weights and hid a manning value of close no $24.3,800. i Practically all swordfish taken by Canadian commercial fishermen are FXDOYWd to the United States miwlcet but. rhry are excellent, food f sh and Canadians ghnnld eat, more <1 111cm. The fish are shipptd Wholv, packed in ice. In rmvnt. years the brondbill has also vaome llllO prominenic 11s a big frame fish and a number have bc-en taken _on rod and we] by anglers opcra/fmg from Loulsburiz. Swift Immminz. a garlic fighter wnm liookcrl, and tiifficuig, to lniul. 11w t-Wfiffliisil found oili Cape Briton and is raga dcd as one or tho out- mdiiiq fish available to iicp sea zmglcrs. A wtfll oi’ 20.816 IXSYSCIIS wcrc employ-ed in t-hc Nova s-(‘Oiiil fisher- ic-i during 1930. Cif this number. l7. 5-H wmz- fishicnnen, whit.‘ 3.272 ywrson; were emlplotycd in fish cur- ing and cannim, establishments. Many Qualities In Army Nurses By GLADYS ARNOLD Canadian Pmss Staff Writor OTTAWA, Oct. 3O —lCP) —GO0d hcnlih. education and profcsionni lnckmoimd, character, adabtabillzy mid ordinary common sense are all part. of the business of being a . nursing sister in the Royal Cnrati- ' inn Army Medical Corps. said Miss PZHZRITXII] Smcille, matron-in chief.‘ If. in addition. the girl in blue is of mcdium helllllt and build. be- nw-cn 25 and 35 and pleasing to the eye, ac much the batter, Miss Smcllie added. However, nsgulaltloim state aim- ply that, applicants for enlistment must be: British subject, physi- cally fit for military training, un- married or widow under 45 wlthomt. children, graduate of recognized hospital and aecredltied with pro- vincial nunses‘ association. Already Canada, has 182 nurs sisters serving in Enzlandpeach thnm enlisted only after a thorough health examination that lncludm m1 x ray of the chest. Thousands (if fltppiivfliimlfi have bvcn submitt- vd for UVGPKWW. service. Mists Smell- To said. and right now more than 4,000 names uiv- on thc wltinq list, "Letters unu- mu-h (lav lrmn hivlrv- quwlflwl women in Cinnda and m;- Unitcd States m; w-ll who qg-nadaandtihealli-l . i A nurse. like a soidlcz; must know .111"? CHQBLQTIEIQYYN GHARDYA" STRESSES IDEAL or CHRISTIAN. CAPITOL TODAY and SAT DBRAD ‘DEM Tho folio i; engaged belly under which we live a democracy 1a not something itself fmpreznable to internal or ternal a tack; not something can be comfortably accepted wi osimm [AW ‘ DON"/2¢d BARRY JANET WALDO ‘GEORGE CLEVELAND »\ (ggza/(Qau PitlJll not. be protected. “In our alert. concern for the servation of our wa of life, t. in a. natural dlsposlt n b0 focus we are reluctant to turn ward to the year 1492; Shows 3.15 - 7 _. 345 saruansv MATINEE 2.30 fifably consider some aspe 5'50 ~ CARTOON _ lessons useful to the livlnz. sERIAL a; COMEDY , Manofldeu > ____ _ other time n “_ short history of our countr $1] I 211W‘. the IIIEIIOITiJI-Chifif l conscious of the power of 4c . " anti efficient, but not conspicuous- "$100 find mom! 1M8 "Y; "Perhaps more keenly than at any in the comparatively Y0“ i <18 the nipreme 1y important business of discovering 1 - T716 shocking impact of re- cent events has roused the Ameri- gpéi lpeople to the realization that in l in ex- th- out ever being clearly understood or something priceless which need ere all Our attention on the chaotic present \- and the uncertain future. Occupied I by the obvious peril of the moment, i time back- and while this reluctance ls understandable, it seemstome thaton this anniversary of the discovery of America, we who , are rediscovering its soul may pro- ' cts of the ' life of Christopher Columbus; like I others of the greut dead, he hasleft,’ i’. we are . dens-of ' lilDlI‘ power for good when they are’ ’ N urscs today are highly framed evolved and pursued by men of Ellen-tr] o 1e 1y better than those of a genera- IPDW" 1°!‘ WU when Vie? M? 0°11" ceived and inflicted upon the world W?" iii-FO- Plvsvn: facilities for {fujuhig 1,, Canada are nmch gwm | by those whose lust b0 becomemore during me Fm“ Great than inevitably causes themto become less than man. “Christopher Columbus man of ideas-ideas of such ‘vvhelming proportions that '\vlti'. _and the general cducnrzonnl iiUYOi is hiuhrr, SiiQ said. “'85 l tho meaning of selfdislcipline, and .210! rattled or emotional in an Lreasmy 0g opportunities !"l"f‘l‘-F'"f‘l- Jlli‘ ~18 l" IPIIWUUIC many generations have since . work, the army nunsc must be‘ quick t Jqvel-L cool and eificin ” i fi'.1i<‘.'S and p; touch. able tn ivurk with 'lhan a dreamer; he had the sing the a over- they gave us a New World and opened a which en- He was a dreamer andtmoifi Q11 humin spirit that is the essential ingrcd- State police 1141s received the txhanks lent of greatness, the ruggedness 0f of the Canadian government for his m’ CANADA THANKS HIM Trooper Bentley of the New York So far as appearances go. taking soul that lifts dreams into the realm prompt action when a. R. C A. l‘. pride in their appearance Ga well OQflCCOmDIl-shed fact. is pritrie 1m their \\';‘Il‘i(, isldtesirablo. l m lglfgdgrg irgrllkfislgggaigwe f; ' ' - .5. . . s. '. ’ , nff.‘“,f,,§§,,‘§§,,,,,,f,§"§_,'§§ “Sui: 51.1,‘? i the western ocean reveals the met- .-fim “'15 “Jail o» Orgongl ‘ tie of the man. For weary years he ' - ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ p ‘ had trudged the roads of Emrope. meeting sometimes politc scepticism, sometimes sha-rp rebuff. At last. there seemed t0 be an end-a suc- QIIEEN SQUARE SCHOOL "on," no“ 00,0“, before the King and Queen cf fprrlrii will lhei. 8mm" urn s 11m w e s an e , Gr?“ X7"1' Don Macdonmd~ 2- means by which he mighxtgsbring to lwlme lhcdmmld- 3» Frank Cwtel- fulfillment, the ambition of hislife. 10- “Among the conditions that: Cir umbus stated in this dramatic mo- Graxie IX: —1. Edwin Steele. 2. ment was the requirement that he Melvin Richard. 8. Roland Hen- be given the rank of Admiral. That negscy, condition his r0 a1 sponsors refused to accept. an Columbus, with everything else that he had sought- his for the rig-with the ac- complishment of all his dreams hanging in the balance-would not compromise. Gravely he took his leave of the court: of Spain, set out again u Vn the dreary road that had lecl 1m to what. must then have seemed the crowning disappoint- ment. "We know, of course, that. the sovereigns gent. messenger; to bring him back; that they agreed to h conditions and that; he did, at ion last, sail upon his historic voyageo l discovery. "The 5i nlflcance of the incident. however, les notin the happyend- ing but, in the uncompromising re fusal of Columbus to abandon principle. Call him stubborn, u reasonable, vain, impractical, fact- less, ambitious - his imperfections have been thoroughly explored and‘ minutely recorded bv little men Who are uncomfortable n the presence of greatness-the inspiring fact re- ma ns that. under resure almost‘ beyond our unders anding, Columq bus, who had. neither wernor 11-, sources, stood before a. ng and my fused to ielcl what he conceived‘ to be his r ght. It appears that 1m inspiring sort of man discovered the New World. Test of Moral Stamina Grade III:-— 1. Charles Cheverie. 1, 2 George Keefe. a. Cyril McDonald. In our rediscovery o! Amelia“) what the American way of life Grudc TI: —1. Jfimes McGee. 2. means to "5 and “hat “s preserva- . .. - ti t Eh i101 world. Henry Aisenault. J. Roland Blanch- wgnnytgyamag? g‘ 51581 gmmhm Grade VIII: —1. Allan Noomm. 2. Jackie Murnaghan. 3. Wing Wong. Grade VII:—I. Kenneth MacKcn- zle. 2. William Ready. 3. Cecil Mc- Eachern. , Grade Vffz-l. Ivan Dowllng. 2. Thomas Flynn. 3. Henry Coady and Eugene McNeill (equal) Grade VI:—-l. Fred Coyio. I. Phil- ip Murphy. 3. Urban Wedge. Grade VI:;1. Allan Doyle. i. JlKk Rieaclv. 3. George Wong. Grade V:—1. Mark McCvufgan. 2. Willie l-Iennessey and Louis Thin- or (equal). 3. Everett Beagan. Grade V:——1. Maurice Flynn. 2. George Ranaghan. 3. Charles Lund. Grade rv=-1. Charlie Can-non. I. Milford MacAulay. 3. Fred Ma,- lone. Grade IV:»-1. Donald Brophy. 2. Edwin Kelly. 3. Billie LA-onard. Grade III:—I. Dunstan Drew. 2. Billie Sfull. S. Billie Guerney. 3rd‘ fairly comparable £0 hthfli» will’?! Ci b d fh‘ GU01‘? 9 Grade II: -—i. Francis Roberts. hglgma‘ 31mm)?! me which 1g 2. James Hughes. 3. Clifford Ready. 00d because it 15 sound at, the core, Grade II: —1. Terence McWade. gem, on me egemany true wncep. 2. Hobby Illiifcrty. 3. Bobby Trniuor ‘ Lion of the relationship of’ man to and Amby Atkins lvquali. man and of all men to their Creat- ___... .__. -_.__.____ 10,3 1113f, philosophy of the br0th- narnmnanl strum. c0. nusv erhood of 111w under the Father" hood of God. is our greatest. treas- Ngw yQRK, 0C1; 31__ (Apt ._ ure; it. is infinitely more valuable Emu-y Darwin-mun by Bemiehem than all the metal n all our mines. Slccl Corporation in the United lhlm all the crops of all our farms, Stzitcs Tfldllllilillflllb program was U18" B11 U"! “W131i ""51 “u” m?’ rzlioxvn toflnv in n comuany an- {JTOGWIB 9f B11 m" ‘ndlistrleé- n. ‘nouncr-mcnt unfilled orders at the S l-he Eimfflmfli 0i 0H1‘ T181", w 11V‘! end of September exceeded $1.000.- a5 “'99 men~n°i always {We "in" 000.000 and. the quarterly earnings 11816811113150!‘ DOVWW- 01' 4155911503 were the second best. in its history. or the 11 and Wwkllvsfes W Whicm Directors declared a dividend of humBnlt-v l8 helr-buwwlvl free $1.50 a share, brlnglné the year's Call 0U!‘ 501115 0m‘ ffin- h ! m payments to date to $., compared ABBiH-ii F11“?- Dl 080D Y 0 9v with $1.50 in all of 1939. ‘WhiCn Americans have held so long ' s in the September quarter that they may Smlleflmes have 5P‘ equalled $3.60 a share. Against $3.07 peared to be not very aollifily 0on- ln the June quarter and $1.10 a 9610115 0f 1W lmpnfiauml-‘l me" has year ago. gradually developed and spread a11- other philosophy which is 1n direct and deadly conflict with it as a. lie must ever be in direct and deadly conflict with the truth. It has been tagged with the cumbersome title 0f "Tbtalitarianism" but. it. can be accurately described simply at n philosophy of slavery. "Because it is no more in the na- ture of man voluntarily to yield his libert than it is in the nature of a. blr to fly into a cage. it has been Inecess for the DFODOIIHdEFE 01 this ph osophy 0f slavery to im- press it upon their victims first by deception; then, when false pro- mises have failed, bv threats, and lfinaiiy, when these ave been re- alstcd, by force of arms. The first phases of the recess have been completed in arge areas of our world and today we are horrified observers of the third phase in all its frightfuinesa. christian Democracy "flmidity in the face of llhrmlls has never been, and. is not now, an| American characteristic and it is highly probable that we can sue-i cemfullv muster the essentials cfi ule uni: resistance to force. But. we wo d be tragically mistaken if we believed that physical courage and the mobilization of the mntcrialscf| ph sisal defense are alone sufficl: on to uaun tho reservation o; RAIL FARES Tlll AK Olfl-QIIAITII IQ IOIID TRIP U0: From noon Friday, Nov. I, to 2.00 p.m. Monday, Nov. 11. IKXIi Leave destination not Inter than midnight, Tuesday, Nov. 12, 1940. (Binds!!! Time) Minimum Spechi Fun I54 Tklm and Hawaiian/min any up»! _ CANADIAN NATIONAL v.11" ' “y, : ,, "-- 4-, ‘Al-u. r 7 f- cessful end-to his quest; he stood‘ plane ivaa forced down by 10o and headwlnds at. Lmvvllle, N. Y. Whil: the plane circled overhead, Hooper Bentley rounded up 500 motorists and mid them shine their head- lights on the field so the snip could land. our liberty. "That liberty was won by who wrote into their declaration independence their belie! in a Cro- utor who 11nd endowed ‘them with inalienable righis; by men who, in‘: the support o1 their decimation, not only pledged to each other their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor, but expressed their ‘firm ne- iiance 011 the protection of mvinc Providence.’ “As our liberty was ‘won, so only will it be kept: by belief in a. Cre- ator who is the source of rights; by living with our fallow- men in a relationship of true Liroq fherhood; by active faith in the protection of Divine Providence. "On a , suffers the figony of frallricidal war. we in the New World which Colum- bus discovered, whatever our per- sonal religious beliefs may be, ls,1 am oonfiflent. hear wllh Slim?!“ i thy and iuiderstandlng thll cace—one of many made Dunes; Plope Pius since the out- break of tie war:- "‘Wo cannot. cease to oxhprt all the children of the Church. Hi1 HOiiUVSS snici, ‘to pour forth with indefatigable fervor prayer: to thl Sacred Heart of our SRVIOUF. m“ King of Peace, so that He may D0111’ our. the rivers of His meekness and humility over peoples now 1n con- flict. so that. He may restrain the cams e that. reddens the fields and the cTtIea, so that He may inspire the rulers of nations with those rand thoughts of peace which oomo Tram the heart. that the may ceaso this cruel struggle of m8“; di- struction and may OPE“ the Dal-h w sealed not by glen for Y tred and revenge but. by the imprint of the noble malestyo! justice?‘ CENTRAL BEDEQUE SCHOOL ll i i the School Report of Cgxxrgrgefilcgiue for month of Sep- tember. IENTOR. DEPARTMENT Grade X.-1, Nora. McKexmn; l. Ruth Johnson. Grade IX.—-l, ivmry Johnston: 2. Austin Johnston, Demon H058- e ual.. “Grade VTII.—1. Peggy Sharron; 3» ; 3. Ruth Cwsflflflll- V I.-1, Edythe Clark; 2, mm Arscnaull; 8. Stanley 5mm" unit. Grade VI.--1. Willard HOW-f; 2. Preston Green, John Johnston, equal: 3. Elmer Gallant. PRIMARY‘ DEPARTMENT Grade V.—~1, Leona HOOD". AS LOW A5 n s uv s n s n I u DIIIILDTTETDII h osrrs iq-P-“(lsflocatco mom,‘ , WHOSE Mom u it ? Q4 _ i i HAT mm?’ money in the banks! The money cam fully put away by you and you: neighbours in savings accounts. The money you could have spent today but wanted no keep safely against somq éuture need. The businessman‘: money for us: in his normal Operations, . here are more than 4,846,000 bank deposit accounts, savings and current. Within these two classes the great majority of deposits are small or of m°de“°° "mu"!- (I But you'd be wrong if you assumed from this, that the rest of the deposits an owned by the few! Quite the contrary! Th, railways, for instance, ha" deposits in the dmrtered banks-and (ha; indirectly includes rho whole population of the Dominion. The trade “mm” m" d°P°'*"- Millions of policy-holders share in the ownership of imunm“ °°mPmM “W5”- (LAM don't overlook the deposits of what P°°hi “m1 °°'°P°l’1dW0; churches; municipalities and municipal hydro commissions, adaool dllcricu; school children's penny bank saving; dopoaizodwidzthocinnorodbnnlugmdoommudnlandminlngompom, “m” WM‘ V“? "k181i!!! of lhnzeboideu, lug: and small, all over Canada, Truly, money on deposit in Canada's chartered banks is owned, in fact, by you and your fellow-Canadian. In W", l! in peace, Canada's Chartered Banks 1min uninter- nipted, ‘their useful services safeguarding d¢P0;ti:|;-’,' gum“. facilitating die nation's busineu — looking forward to peace’ with freedom u tho only Jun bub of enduring proupedq, THE CHARTERED BANKS OF CANADA - 2. Ger 1d , day when the Old World gq ° Gm“ M”! G“u°m'iJ° 9"“ "- kc-l-lld-IWI 0N0!!! Grade l Of-No examinations. H g 1&1‘! G Perfect attcxidanoe-Nora. Mo. rincipal-Ruth lvfontgomery. Grade 1H- liP-J‘ Corgi!!! Ibordqfienna, Ruth Johnson, Ruth Crosa- Assistant-Hazel M, Green. our Alanna -—— » fine Crossmanfi Liman, Fred 513911511111, gmniey _..________ .. W er n’ 3' comma M m $1‘? "535 fiiifigic °""§l ciiliifn’? om- .-1. Jimmie Johnston. mmé HOefiaper, naifiiiommn, sail A m“ ma“! “*“°“'“'“ Grade At-l, Arthur Arsenault; ne Green, Claude Hogg, Georgi: Gamma an maple w“! auger, sugar bee-ta and bee!» mats migar, hobacoo, flawwi, m‘ and tow, and homey. m1 Gmntonnglexandér-“Greten, fiexgrd - , n an , a on .Q*_d!_l_1ii_<?3_1'_\ld_-1o_hii.s_t9§;_schuxman,_BfH1y Callback, Haaen _ __ _.__ h Trlldxlnx nrvsfllwllv up and down the channel, mm IIQ u» "am; British coasters" which mm submarine and air nlluck tn keep British luppllod with the thin‘! lho needs-food for her PBOPII’ Mil export goods for overseas. This convoy of little freighter: lraih Ill own balloon barrage n insurnnci against- dlve-br-mbers. Grimy and unromlntlc, the lrlmps of the ‘u. no doing a supreme job unlit-r fIrI- nl‘ Y!" "Ion rnidern In (he dark overhead. Perhaps tho molt Important mingle welpon of London's air ill-It'll" ""1 *1" PMWW nvw flu mm plum ma, mum old helm- b! will"! 11°"- An null-aircraft mediator IOIIOHIII out with Ill unllfln sound mechanism the r