M1016!‘ o. 124a THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN PAGE FIVE E STOCK QUOTA TIONSJ I Montreal Stock Montreal Curb “(Canadian Ire Exchange "’ 5m" cum ' Abitibl Gill (Canadian PIOII) 5mg“ '2 1 a Md . “his” 1'1 s-a w" °‘°" szzr".'"'" ~- l 154 can ‘iffckb 1a l-8 11 Te 23 M ers 2 1-2 i; scan .. as: ; 1-2 m Nor Pr 3 Fraser v10 9 34 car round 6 7-! Ford A _ fi Car Pfd 24 a Imp Oil 1:21;’ cm Ind Al A i‘; if‘ Price corn 1o 14 3m Pacific ' Price Pfd __ w. Stcaznshll) é 3 4 8',I;‘,“‘§nsu 3e 131 Pfd 18 w" 9,175,, 25 1.. MINING 3,1: steel n Z rd _ is (ggfsieel Wama 131-4 To (Canadian Press) flow smith 3 1 2 RONTO. March l7— m; Nickel 3 ' Mwlggwrlezont 2g t; Stocks mo” tl ileum, as Alderman 11 ‘-2 m, power 1 1-3 Ans Huron winlgflfl 15 Amtfield 5 1.3 5t oi’ Call —2- AS11103! 4 g: };.‘“E.S.°'31¢ _ fititis w“ 1Z2 Pfd l6 8-4 Bidgood °' “glee 1 30b!" 1'11 i-a w“ Elec A - Braiorno 10 Broulan 93 Cent Pat 175 Cent Porc 1g 1-3 BAN Chester 14g (30011961185! 2% -—-——-— _ Duque (Canadian Press) East Si?“ l; b3 East Malrobic 1 “$33.1 1E 3&1? 53's‘; 2E m; scotlo 277 Gunnar Gold 35 Rpynl Bk 155 Halcrow g Nova Sootia - Hard Rock 7'1 Hollinger 1g 3.4 Home 011 19g i £1,135" MI“ g3 Hides 8: Skins itilfiiifii‘ i‘? ii Jason LIGHT HIDES 8 I-Zc J M 9°“ 3-4 Kerr Add 3 HEAVY moss 7c Ilgrlé ggg M111 $2 1' 8 HORSE HIDES $2 u» $3 Lakeshoms 13H FREIGHT CHARGES Egnixaqélgd 42g 5 mo ON 2o: LBS. OR ..,..‘,°.. 0., , '8 OVE . mu 4o 1 2c PER LB PREMIUM 13m“ "L Q13 g - acassa ON DEALERS LOTS ‘Mac n lg; BUYING DAILY AT Hit/lining: 12g 1 2 WAREHOUSE Mcx" 21° ' 102 ELM AVE- Mgwixtmers Min Corp 70 MAURICE BLOCK ymgiax, k 5g OX‘! S r CHARLOTTETOWN $131,733,; ,3 1* PHONE I448 Noranda 53 <’§‘é"1"°”°" ‘l r en 1 ‘ " “w” "’““_ Omega 14 f ' I c d Partanen 4 1-4 Pro esslona ar s was... 22 lliick ‘Crow 23 rem 61‘ McLI:'OD 8. BENTLEY ggifatgltlle 30g w. E. BENTLEY. k. c. .1. a. BENTLEY. 1r. c. ggnigg‘, 2%,‘; C. F. BENTLEY. LL. n. Senator 42 Barristers and Attorneya-at- Sheep ck __ I-W - sherritt '11 MONEY T0 LOAN gigma 1g - .sc0e 1.14 Prince Street Slave Lake 12 Steep R0 _ 10 Stra/w Lake 4 3-4 Sud Basin 112 ‘ sunlivamnlgu all? T60 IIIORRELI. & 00. new a» up." iii G11 “T98 Ii. F. IIRCIIIBALII $33-33“ g3 Chartered Accountants ' urmrarnn Eastern Trust Building pend o" 155 Charlottetown Temiii 5 5'5 PALMER 8. HASLAM A. i. IIASLAM, B.A.. L.L.B. BARRISTER, ETC. Dank oi’ Nova Scotln Chambcra Charlottetown, P.E.l. MONEY TO LOAN lmc 85 P._0. Boa l2 BELL 8. MATHIESON MONEY T0 LOAN Cameron Block. Charlottetown P- E. Island. H. F. McPHEE B. A. K. C. uoranv. m. BARRISTEB BQLICITOR m‘? Building Charlottetown. MucGUIGAN 8. TRAINOR ciilAllK u. MacGUlGAN, mo. .sr. ctam TRAINOR, u. o. Me's. Solicitors. rm. MONEY T0 LOAN Produce Prices MONTREAL. March l7--(OP)- Produce Market prices here today. as reported by the D-minion De- partment. oi’ Agriculture, follow. Butter: first grade crcamcry prints jtcbbing price, 38- first grade solids obblng price, 85 1-2; Que no 1 pas urized. rcgradcd wholesale price, 35; Que no 2, regraded. 34 l-‘l Cheese: Western white and col- ored, wholesale price, for expcrt, 14. l’ Current mccipt price western white chgesc l4 6-16; westem colored l4 Eggs: graded shipments in used frec cases, nominal. A-large 22: Ib-medium 21: A-Ipullets 19; B grade l8 l-2; C grade 18. Potatoes: whites no 1 75b .50- 00; no 2. 40-50: NB mountain no i 75's .60-.'l0: Pm ccbblera no 75's .70—.7ii: PEI mountain no i £13; dog‘; fi-wénggilntlgam _ 432:1. grim. Flofldl rcda. draw. _ Advertising Rates _ Payable In Advance . Minimum (‘Ivar-go ior Any Advortiaomenta 25 Canto Central Guardian locals. 5c word; Western and Eastern locala Der word; Announcrrrcn ~ and Coming Event; 3o par word: tluuncd "m1 and Spiritual 3c prr word: in Memorlam Noticca 10c per inch: lJata of condolence 70° P" |2:1h..rl;1v|;aéd(|::;d:h::o. Ba Par name: Letters oi i tocl ’ Toronto ses- {Iftblllixiing was agiffllt WEI! Wm‘ [the recent averages at 167.000 s ares. Intemational Petroleum and Bria tish American Oil finned 1'4 B“ gains of 1-4~—1-2 were netted by Bathurst. Power A. 13111161118 Pm‘ ducts, Dominion StONS. T-flbIB/W A~ Massey-Harris. Stcel of Canada. Union Gas and National Grscers pfd; onus widened to a point or more for Burlington SW91. M3559)“ Harris pfd and Huron and llh-ie pfd. Prices were a bit soft for Con- sumcrs Gas. Lanilleyts 91d Cflnad‘ ldn Car and Canada S amstiip Li e . ‘Origins of 5-10 cents were boarded 1;;- Brdlome. Central Patricia, Cochenour Willans, Kcrr-Addiwfl- Mining Corporation. Pie-lib“ ind Tack Hughcs. Buffalo-Ahkeritc ad- -4 d t 1s 3-4.U'PD@1‘ 6M1- frll: was iflnhieaviest trader in the gold group and it posted a net gain of a cents to 1.a1. The day's high wagoranda and Nickel firmed min- hnum fraction; Waite-Amulet add- ed 2 and Steep Rock, after reach- ing 1.17 in the mornini; 595510“ “so s: 12.2.2" r" = 1"“ can c . oiyhe actign was decTdedly dull in the western oil group. Home Oil weakened 2 cents to 1.90. East Crest firmed 1-2 to 3 1-2 and Daiivusie gained 3 cents to 30 for unbroken lots. Grain CHICAGO. March i7-(AP)-Af- ter falling 3-4-1 1-4 cents in early dealings today. the wheat market sieadicd and spent the remainder 0i’ the sessicn trying to rally. Wheat closed 3-4-1 l-B lower, May 86 l-4-—1-8, July 82 7-8-83; com 1-8 of! to i-8 up, May 63- 63 1-8, Juw 68 l-4; oats l-8 lower to 1-4 hlsher. , March 17-40?)- Hedging .pressure apparently prmnpbed by a. slightly easier trend at. Chicago shoved wheat futures prices to luwcr levels on Winnipeg grain exohangq today dE-illlife re- ports of a. fair export busirlea in Canadian wheat. Final quotations 3-8-1-4 cent lower, May wheat 77 7-8 and July 79 1-2-5-8 cents a bushel. Buenos Aires prices remained un- changed. Livestock MONTREAL. March 17—(CP)— Cattle were about 25 cents higher on Montreal livestock markets t0- day, while hogs were firm and calves and lambs wcre about steady to 25 cents Lwer. Receirptat Came. 488; calves. 680; sheep, i8; hogs, 935. Good steers made from $925M) $9.50, medium god steers $9, and medium $8. to $0. with common from $0 to $6.75. Good heifers were $7.50 to $515, medium $6.50 to $7.25 and common from $5 to $6. Good cows were $0.50 to $7 with the odd top up to $7.25. medium $550 to $6 and common $4.50 t; $5.50. Canners and cutters $3.50 to $4.25. and bulls from $5 to $7, common bulls sold ILIP I50 $325. Calves werg steady to 25 centa lower with the clcse of the week. Go:d veals made $11.50 to $12 with medium kinds from $10.75 to $11.50 and common light and just fair kinds from $9.50 to $10. V911’ 110m- mon light vcals and drinkers in mixed lots mostly 08.50 to $.75. Grassers were $4.50 to 05. There was a stronger feeling t0 the hog market but no sales were made in early trade. u", m “m. h’ "e d “u mcnt 40 Iilftll for 81.00 Apprulmnn w ry a v nnal 8 no a. Notices of Thanh and q, - c fer inch or 4c per word. Llate of Subscription F N E ‘ppfifgitlloliricr inch. Address and Presentation $1.00. Other rotca on A F _ ‘By Frederick Gardnorwflm ' ' ‘ ’ Press i" ' IP Wanker‘ ' For Sale "l"!!! A MAID array s21 SeNiEW Much 1111mm- ~ FOB BALI -- SHORT HORN BU]. n m‘ u Y 55"" W5- " l5 "Sizer Street. L-520-3-i7-2i. - ctlwéiaigg two vkears. n. 117 ‘liducklJm-l‘: mg]? u. ‘Eur: Lpoints ‘ind today! . arm-o . L-n -3- 5-15, s mar e u man ea ers were ‘mmltilgtr. on MIDDLE “ ° unable to extend t. e week-end you. or light housc- FOB SALE-HEAVY CARDBOARD railv Ahvly Guardian. \ u-sio-a-ia-rl. W Pririliisritsi, _ "Ilaivcnn mun warn-s ' Anolv Guardian. \ L-il7-3-lB-li. Wanted ' w ‘m’? - nannnn APPRENT- ‘l ‘n; “o former experience neces- jmm "t? for information Mo‘rr mule». Halifax. u-isa. _‘ in sheets i7 a 22 inches auitabe for lining authorises. 50 cents per hundred. Applv Guardian. L-QBI-i-il-tf. Miscellaneous ORDER FRUIT NURSERY STOCK now. l". S. Reeves. Bouthport. L-ls-ii-iil-li. Novelty buttons prevail. . . . large and decorative and in a wide choice of mctifsuuilcral, uaimals, nau- tical, geometrical. Cahadian issues were steady. Dome and Lake Shore Mines. FJrd. New York Stock Exchange (Canadian Prcaa) Stocks film Am C and I" 3'7 1'3 Am Tel Tel 161 1-8 Anaconda. 34 5'3 Baldwin Loco 15 1'3 Bendix av a6 1-1 Beth Steel 3° Ches Ohio 39 1-8 Chrysler 69 1'3 Con Edison 21 3'5 Eicc Auto Ute 30 3-4 Gen Elec 33 3-8 Gen Motors 43 3-3 Gt Nor Pfd 35 1'3 Kennecott 33 3'4 Mont Ward 37 1'3 1v Y Central 1% 3-4 Nor Am Co 15 3'3 perm RR 23 7-8 Phil Pet Co 38 1-1 Std on NJ 35 1-4 Texas Corp 35 1'2 United Air 39 1'2 U s Rubber 22 1'3 U s st co 57 7-8 Vanadium Corp 28 ' West Union 31 7'3 West E100 96 Woolworth '-' TORONTO, MBJOM 1'I—(CP)—- stocks were strong throush the vanced 20 cents and Lake Shore I fence Production chief Knudsen that the 87.000.000.000 mum aid and other arms contracts would na- cessitats an‘ increase in mammal activity of 60 per cent. Montreal Exchange MONTREAL, March 17—(CP)—A flurr of activity in papers broke out the last hour of the stock market tzday. Issue; belonging to thn group rose abruptly and their performance started improvements in other sections. Newsprints to get lifts were How- ard Smith, which improved a point, and Bathurst, Pricg Brothers and St. Lawrence Cogporation preferred. Dryden ran ag 11st the genera trend and alilpped . Building Pr-ducts and equipment. securities were higher from frac- int. stocks rising be- ing Building Product-a, General Steel Wares. Dominion Tar and Canadian Car, common and pre- ferred. Asbestos turned backward in the face of moderately heavy trading. Utility issues were uneven. British Columbia Puwcr, Brazilian and Montreal Power advancing and Quebec Power sagging. Shawini an moved aihead at one but net its gain. Imperial was inner in oils and Canadian oelaclese was st-roncer in the miscellaneous dc- partment. 'I‘otal sales: 16.000 shares; Indus- , 7.800. trials, 7.500; Mine: Holllnger Imperial Oil and Imper- , ial ibbacco advanced small frao- l tions. International Nickel and Bell 1 Telephone each dipped l-2 point. The Associated Pres; average or 00 stocks was unchanged at 41.7. Denim; picked up for a who. in the foreman, but slackened as nrfcea wavered. ‘Pransfers totalled 278.850 shares compared with 830.. 1 014 last Friday. Market analysis saw a further r0- covery signal in the statement of dg. l Look l Your Mirror ‘ A message From The Newspaper Publishers HON. W. A. IUCHANAN, CHAIRMAN RE are some horhnely truth! very few of us can deny. One of them is this: “Free men can’t STAY free without a free press!” » _ . Unless you have the simple facts about the everyday things that happen around you . . . unless you know when your government goes off the track, I unless you know whom to praise and whom to blame, whom to support and whom to kick out of their job, democracy just won’t work! You know all that. It would not occur to you to deny it. For the same reason it probably hap never occurred to you to do anything about it. 1 And there's the rub, there’s the danger! Its name is complacency, smugness '1 z J But you say, “no army is yet at our gates and God willing, never will be.” You say, “where’s any dictator trying to make me goosestep in a funny shirt?” And mostly stop there . . . I Yet there is a threat. It has many aliases, many disguises. In one of therm this villain looks a lot like what you see in your mirror. Yes, like YOUI Granted you’d know if your liberty was sud- ‘ denly taken from you. But is your ear to the ground for the first signs of a gradual, piecemeal, almost voluntary surrender? That’s what usually happens first! Currencies NEW YORK, March 17—(CP)—- lilac Canadian dollar advanced on tho free foreign exchange market hero today, closing .18 3-4 ti a cent higher at 84.98 3-4 cents. (Ottawa. Foreign Exchange Con- trol Board rate 9.00-9.91 per cent discount.) However. other major world cur- rencies tumed downward. The Swiss franc. tho German benevolent mark and the Hong Krng and Shanghai dollars all registered slight de- clines. The pound Sterling clcsed at 84-03 1-2 for open market cubes. Markets At A Glance (By The Canadian Press) Toronto-Mining and industrial atocka higher; western oils steady. Montreal-Stock; closed higher. New York-Stocks closed unchang- ed. Winnipeg-Wheat 8-8 to 1-4 of cent lower. New York-Cotton and rubber low- er; IIIIII’ and coffee higher. Eve Defies Adolf LONDON FASHION COLLECTIONS TRIUMPH OVER BLITZ Before they left England for Buenos Aircs. eighteen mannequins displayed to a group of South A- merican diplomats the modcls es- pecially designed by nhie London Fashion houses for presentation in Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay. This. the first Lmidon Fashion Collection. goes out. triumphant from the midst o! the ‘blitz’. Time bombs isolated for a time the sam- ples of the fabrics assembled for a preliminary selection. High explo- sives damaged their new quarters; and. after the samples had been in Bit by bit, restriction by restriction, rule by rule it grows. Each rule at the time very logical, very necessary, very happily accepted. Then I . suddenly the bonds tighten ever so little more, and freedom is gone! Today we have a free press. We get the facts} ~ Editors can say exactly what they think, whether you like it or not, whether they’re “agin the gov- eminent” or not. Both you and your newspaper _ , can still Committee speak out . . . l 5- t 1 And don't forget that this free press which; we all so easily take for granted, gives us ouri economic freedom, too . . . assures us our right to\ buy as we choose . . . makes certain we have the 1 facts to buy wisely. Without the open market: place you have in freely competitive advertising, you’d constantly miss bargains, be soon with- out a standard of values. Without it you could easily be the victim of monopoly, the dupe of I I r regirnentation. You want an uncontrolled, controversial,_ public-spirited press . . . a press free to grind or‘ 7.. to blunt anyone’s axe. You’ve got it. The prob- lem is to keep it for your children _a_nd your children’s children. “But very well,” you say, “what can I do?“ Suppose you start with these simple things: first, read your newspaper regularly, and read I it carefully. Keep posted on things. All these _ free facts do no good in your wastebasket! i: Second, think about what you read . . . recap- ‘f’ ture the old fun of arguing the big stories over the back fence with your neighbour. Make sure - 1 he knows how the free press is his shield against ; oppression. a '- Third, be vocal! 1E fabrics were finally chosen to an orchestra. of sirens. planes and bombs. Next, the City fires destroyed certain of the fabrics. These were replaced. Then one manufacturer had to salve his material from a. warehouse wrecked in Manchester. Throughout the winter's alerts the organisers 0f the Collection. brought together by the British Colour Council, have met in a beauty parlour. in railway stations. taverns and cellars. Never havg there been such odds against anyone "delivering the goods". ‘rhey have done it on time. and it was a proud assembly which at last, in a Mayfair salon, saw in strict secrecy the final rehearsal oi completed models. Among those there were His Exwllency Dr. Tom- as 1e Breton. the Argentine Am- bassador, and Mademoiselle lo Breton; His Excellency the Uru- guayan Minfstor, Senor Don Daniel Castellanos, and Madame de Cas- tcllanos; Madame Mones de Ar- ragao. the wife of l-lis Excellency the Brazilian Ambassador and Sen- or a Flores Piren. Commercial At- tache to the Argentine lhnbasy. QUICK RELISII A relish that is quick to prepare but none the less appetizing is made by grinding raw canberries and oranges and adding sugar to taste. Two small oranges are about the right proportion to a pound of cranberres. flanked Meat: Planking the main dinner course dresses up the simplest meal. Tr)" the savoury meat loaf plunked next time ou serve it. loaf first, p ace on the plank. sur- tercd crumbs. and mounds in oven until crisp, green salad. Saving Your Fine Curtains To prevent bag before washing. rescued intact from the debris, the out the dust. thoroughly, soak cur Bake the round it with small cooked onions. tomato halves sprinkled with but- oi mashed potatoes, reason and plar» tatoes and crurnbed tomatoes are lghtly browned. (i1:- nish with parsley and serve w1th a sheer curtains. or curtains that are weakened from long use. from tearing in an auto- matic washer. place them in 1 pi!- low case or strong mesh laundrv First sllhkll ,i_......--*I"’!_',"_~ .-.».‘ r ta-ina in cold water for about one \ hour. then wash in thick. mild soap , suds and lukewarm water. Do nci agitate the machine foo long; dc- pend on the suds to loosen the soil. Rinse in clear tepid war/er ‘mil, the rinse runs clear. Without ‘ twisting, press out the excess ‘water by hand or wrap curtgins in hewy absorbent towels. l. desired, a little starch may be added to the last rinse water. Dry on a stretcher. Output Tobacco Industry High Value According to the latest Census of Industry statistics of the tbacco industries in Canada for i939, the output for the year. including ex- which reprments an increa that of the previous voar. Cigar- ettes formed the main item oi nro- duction with an output of 7.163.433,- 00) valued at $57.277.062. Smoking tobacco was next in importance with an output of 24.709919 pounds valued at $24.498.1i1. Cigars came next with a production oi 135.825.- 000 valued at $5-4l1.054_ followed by chewing tobacco. 2.577890 pounds. valued at $2,184,537. and snuff. 836.955 pounds. valued at. 01.149262, The number of establishments re- porting totalled 8t. tocaicd bv prov- inces as follows: Prince Edward Is- land. 2; Quebec 5i: Ontaro. 20; Manitoba- 1. and British Columbia, 6.These plants rcprescnt-sd acapiial investment of $60.135.0-i2 in fixed and current assets. Thev furnish- ed employment to 8-158 persons who were Paid $7.733.023 in salaries and wages. 823001.316 for materials and mn- 341064.707. ci 81's and tc acco- cigws. and snuff. i"c1':as's-_i9l n iwé e also othrr tal ~I'.' ‘I Lido anything but” The plants also spent tainers. and produced goods with a net selling value at [he fac‘or_v of _ Oi the establishments report 11g. 45 made cigars onlyl l7 made tobacco on‘y: 8 made tbacco and cigarettes: 4 mad: formed and til ars: l made snuii oniv; 2 made in acco and snuff: 2 mad:- tobacco- cirrgttcs- and i made the number of employers. 3100.570 in salaries and wages paid. $120546 | 85"?“ membfis 0i DUI-Y .4 Get mad every once in a" while. If you smell a dangerous restriction corn- ing, speak out to the government. If you know of a story we miss, or a fact we get wrong, or a meaning we seem to twist, speak out to us, your newspaper. Write, phone, wire, take the future for granted! 4 I! NOTE The Newspaper Publlshen Commliioo, speaking through its ehalmm, wII bring you one o! these lmiliuiionul advertisements in this space each weelcfl Clubs, patriotic societies, business firms or Individuals who would like reprints may have them by writing io the business office of this newspaper. I materials used. and -4 inthecostod t1.762,194 in the net value of pro- auction. The tobacco industry" also contri- butes materially to tha agricultural economy of Canada. Oi the mater- ials used. amouniing to $23-00i.3l6, i"... i813 was l0‘. Canadian raw leaf tobacco alone. In the manu- iacuare of c.g.1rs, 2.171.995 pilllildl of Canadian tobacco was used; 17.098763 pounds in the manufac- ture of cigarettes and 23.436134 pounds for sanokixrg and chewing tobacco nnri snulf. Cellophane Bags For Apple Storage Favourable comments from con- sumers and dealers have been re- cite duties. wlas valued at 590500.244 ceivod by the Horticultural Division of Central Experimental Farm. Ottawu $5-50l.944, or over six per cent a 0\'e‘cn the use of cellophane bags fur the storage of nnpirs. During the month oi January. 194l- thr last of 10f the McIntosh apples stored in iccllcphaife bags wore sold. Ii; has ibecn observed that the cellophane wveflni! ietaincd the natural flav- our and full moisture content oi ‘apples. mid it was further not lthat the apples did not mature al YIlDlCIIv as ulth other container: thus prolcllgillg storage life i BOMBS MISS ENVOY This B the Pera PBIBCQ hotetl Although there was a decrease or 1 ISWRWI- W119i‘? W0 huse seven in the number oi establish- ments reportinsz ts ccmoared with the previous vewz". m. capital la.- vested was $655,011 higher. 11m.» , bombs fXplOdCd in an apparent at empt to assassinate George W. RM! "r-i. who has been zecalkd fro hispost ea British minister to B 1 garia. Handel escapzd inju though thru- Turks were killed the Britil were injured. w; {sag-gr Qflcvrwgvaz 1 _