__jr__uasomr . Religion In The Home rbuowin; is tlhs text of s fol-oo- fui samion delivered by the Rn. 72K. Bimell Sonic! MA, l.T.M., lnTheKirkofbhilamlgonBlm- day: "rm Church whim in h his houce" (Oolo&tm 4:10). This phrase goes back to the time before there were special bmldings called Churches ‘The only P1109 wthere worship could be hold tinder covcrwasinahoiuexandbherreln some home in Colossae. the little company of Christians habitually mtherrsd and ivorshipped. While. howcver. this is the bare meaning or the phrase. it is obvious that when they chose the house in Col- ossce when the church was to meet they must have selected one repro- ‘nenting the best they knew in family relationships. They could not hauvcg carried the clgurch lntifma wrong , unMPDY cme. e phrase, therefore. becomes sym- boiicai of somethins ‘Pflrmancntly t-ruc in a. Christian family. We d-espcraiely need to think lbmli it in Canada today the Church that is in your house. Religion moves in different areas and organizes itself around differ- ent dental. There is personal r:- ligioin. Wlfifli we carry around with Us and live by in the inner regions of our personalities. There 1s eccle- siastical religion. institutionalized in the Church Wiiih her traditions, hcr politia. her rituals. and rub- rics. And there Ll family religion which. Whm it is at its best, floods a. home vdth light and malku the relati ps therein sacred and beautiful. It creates a. church within a house. We arc all concerned with this 18st area of religious life. We came from homa. we live in homes, we plan to have homes - nowhere are our deepest personal interests more involved than in the problem of the family. And Whfifl we step owi- sidc our individual come-ms and consider the nation, it grows daily mcrc obvious that the reel battle- ground for the moral life of Can- ada is the family. We may mult- iply our inventions and raise lo its pinnacle the highly articulated, mechanized miracle of a civilzia- tron which we have started here: we may increase our industries and sccumuinme wealth: we nuy even build great. templu dcdiceibed to K-he public worship of Almighty God and great schools founded for public cziuclticn; but, after all, “i211; this country will amount w in ilic end (ierpcnds upon what hap- pens to its homes. Let the family llfc of this nation decay and there is no magic by which the Christian Religion can be main- tuir. i. Vvlhen we think of the fam- fl\ ‘fllfll. we are at the centre 0f tiling; as individuals. as citizens, Th and as Christians. The Home ‘in ihe first. place. many people run upon the need of a church in tlizlr nousc whcn they have child- lCll of their own. An all-too-typical moth-or spoke lo me in poignant distress about her religious life~ bhe had lcceivzd a traditional religious tralnutq; in childhood, had surren- dered "ner faith during college and hi‘ gniduaicd as an agnostic, had mcvcci out. into a. fortunate mar- riage. bccn blessed wivh a fine fam- ily of ciiildrc-n. and had boon so b1 and happy that for personal a. she had not missed re- Wlm. ivorri-cd hcr was h-er an. Said she, "I have friends v ..i ‘.1190 are without religious uhosc children are being _ it up as mine are and I can~ no, endure the consequence. They arc n11 little plgans. I would not for znuvthiruz have my children crciv up so. I must have some rc- lic Jl ‘o give them. I do not. ferl i crucial nccd of it. myself but I n“ .., have some for my children.” ‘Flint mothers case represents a situaFon increasingly common. Mull ‘rs of modern parenfs have br-ril ubindning the religious train- fuc offered by the Church Fathers prrferrcd indulgence in a favorite sport to the worship of the snnctualun and mothers have fol- Iou cl them. or, becoming modern cu ‘heir own account have espoused somc “i$m". from positive atiizism in ,“-i’l’l‘l'.1l lnriifferentism. One way ' anoihs. a large proportion of ._ an of Canada today are be "i; reared without any religious training worthy of the name. When howcver, the pendulum swings far on: way. it ls likely soon to swing the ctlirr. Things are not going well with the moral character of our country on the basis of ine- ligioils family lif-e and frreligious education. Many fathers who are not partic- ularly ivocrtai about t-hemseivrs. nfhough probably they ought to be. are deeply worried about their sons. One hears parents lnnientlng in their children the lack of some- th '-- they one not quite sure ulnar-which they had in their youth. something stabilizing and direct/Ive that produced quality in uh fulnoss hi1 vb mncihing like it. They an mrblfrl thmt their children need if. Sormhtmes. as in the anxious woman's case. make up their minds tho chfilren must. have it. I 01min!’ Aim! $181131"- taho following in s letter week! “We have had s of inadequate pus-elm... quarter of a suspected for s o clear inihe :35? “$52 gaiié a? iii? in ta officers and some clergy in marry- ing couples. Lu general, clnplaim being hitknaicly acclaimed with soldiers have been mom cautious and discreet than civilian officials in marrying members of the armed. lemm- of parents." It is not Possible Ito exaggerate uhe shake which we nllluveinthismatzenwewosata new international spirit iosukix in o. new construing of mt-ermlloml life, and the world organized for peace instead of war. Bur, when we haw made our last. pim about ex- ternal arrangements. the issue will depend upon the (ruining of the ohiiiicn. . Christian Unlty We wam Christian Unity. Sick to death are we with these futilely divided Communions of ‘The Holy Catholic Church that cannot even take the Lord's Supper together. But when we have triad-e all our arguments and devised all our schemes. the ultimate problem is the training of the ohidrou. We uphill», religion pure. and unziefilcd as an effective force in the char- acter of our nation. Indeed we do. Some in the invisible conpegalt-ion may be listening in who have not been in church for a quufcr of a century, but that ivouid be truc for you too. You know tlut more genuine, character-producing relig- ion is needed in this nation. It was a financial Journal-not a prom-her -whieh said that what we need most; of all is some of the religion that mother used to marine. But Wil-LHWZ‘ in the end we are going to get it depends upon the ‘framing of the children. Win14, about the church in your house? We may say thnt the Church ought to help. Of course she ougllllii and will. We may say that the church school has lisre its responsibility DJflCl opportunity. Indeed, it has! But, after all, vrhat can be done in the religious train- ing of the children in the church on Sunday is only accessory m the home. There are no substitutes for Christian parents. "Something We Catch" 1n the second place. the mice of the church that is in the home is accentuated by the fact. that, after all, rciigcn is something we catdi rather than learn, There are mzmy l-hiilgs cvcli more prosaic than religion which thus are caught rather than taught. One can teach a child many things about. poetry ~—meter, rhythm, scansion. and me rash-but if ever you find a. youth who lovcs poftry, you may be sure that‘? he caught that from somebody. e lcvc of poetry is handed down by contmicn. So is religion. If, is a. fire that. is passed fro i one life to another, not primarily by in- struction. but by kindling. Take as a slamplc only one doctrine of the Christian Faith. t-hc sacrcclness of personality‘. Al‘. pzrsa-nnlity is sacred. our Blessed Lord declared, whether in mall or woman. king or slave, saint or sinner. The most sacred thing in this universe is personality, and it ncvcr is fo bc scorned or urcmzcd. but helped Vfhlatcvu‘ is mos’. distinctive and original in Christ's mcssagc rad- iates from that cvntrc and one cannot undersfnnd His coilocption cf God. His ethical teachings. or His practical program of life unless one understands that. Mcvcrrthtlcss. ict a little child down before ill t sflibemcnt as :1 doctrine and try (O touch it to him. Get the matter lcgicriily set. out; all personality is snared. Arrange the corollaries and malt; a. neat. dog- matic lsczon of it. How much will time child rcnlly lcam that way? What a child get-s about the sac- rednoss of personality he chiefly absorbs from the way his parents live with each cthcr, with ‘rho household servant; with their frlcilds mid ihi. " cnrnlies. with follLs of oihe col .. other crecds, other classes. If youfiarc a child to Whom personality really is sncred acres the lines that divide us prejudic- ially from one anculicr, so that; lie counts nothing human alien to himself. l/cu may be sure he caught. that from somebody. Mon and wo- men, tho only religious tmncliing that amounts m much conshos in explaining to a child the history, the meanins. and the reasonable- ness of Scmythllig which he already has caught. If religionplflce other fine things. has to be caught, the home is the place for it. we are all the time trying to load off upon some other organization the respomwlbllity of our homes. As another has re- phrased the ancient psalm. When my father rm-d my mailbox‘ forsake me, then ting Boy Scouts will take me up. We may well be grateful for the Boy Scouts, and for all the religion that can come into a child's life from the church. bhc church school. the public school, and every other agency fnifercytcd in bhe wel- fare of children. But. after all. it in is the life that m. child catches at home that goes deepest and lasts longest. When, about 4m church in you‘ Muse? An fnthuu Matter In the third place. the import- ance of this mater is ‘accentuated by the fact that, in the home we we our children religion of some sort whether we realize it or not. Once in a while one hears thoughtless parents say that they do not. intend to teach religion to their children. Religion is an in.- and how progressive! But anybody who imows child psychology nt all lmows how absurd the proposition mlvaiifwcwlsh tmwecannot kwp a child religiomly neutzml. What do we think religion is -- a blywindownmonthesideofa house after it. la finished? Do we suppose we can build the entire house and hhen add religion as an . afterthought? Religion is not thus . on nddmdtun appended to life n. mat flu pervading NI whole establishment, and as non Is» a child is born. the home hum creating in him a. spiritual , tcochinz him buio mo- in life, nbggudes towcrgulvixfte. about, e. which -. out: km In n1 cubism OJ . THE CHARLOTTETOWN OQAQDIAN THEANHSEPTC LINIMENT of any Nliibn which he will evc P056058. Some timeagp I heard of: young woman who. having discov- ered that he: supposed husband W858. bigamisthadleithim, and, undertaking the support of hcrlolf and her child, was finding life not only practically hard but spiritually forlorn. She needed ligion and re she lmew it, but. all the truth emf M1 warm of it eluded has‘. Tine new son not fas- to sour. Her child- hood home had bow a dcnrieatfc “qpelasmss that to rise into con- bell, with habitual quarrellmg. pro- fflfiiiy. drunivanmess. and dress-i- iness. She had baoonve so habitua- ted to fear. suspicion. distrust, and iidence, faith. amdhope. the clim- ate ‘and alrmonmerve where religion dwells, seemed to liar almost im- possible. Those pxorme and eon- ventiom parenlts would probably have laughed alt the idoa that they wen: Bivim instruction to their child in the field of xielision. but they were-a. vary dastardly course of lessons, which nmde faith in God for lie!‘ a psychological exploit of the first magnitude. Our modern hOmes run the gamut from such an aibysnui pit to lovely and radiant households of the kind some of m have lcnown, where faith in God and goodness was as natural as brenmhmg. What about the dnnch that is in our ., . house. A OrIcLl Need Finally, the im this matter is accentuated by the cru- cial ne-ed of our themselves Oruld-rcn and young People today med to be tmlniad po-irmrily for independence. What some of my hearers will thirt of that is easily imaginable. To itratn children for independence, they will say. is the last thing wanted: chil- dren are too independent now: tlrzy begin eve-n ill early adolescence to refuse the bridle and harness, and one has only to watch them any- wlicre to see than Jumping fences and making the wide ivc-rld their race course. Train them for obed- ience. Teach thcm the meaning of authority. Bring ihhcln under rc- strain". Docs one throw kilos-me on the fire to quench ii. that you talk about. training youth for irri- demotion-cc? The reasons for such an outburst " for all . . es the point. ‘The cliiidrcu of today are indep- endent and ital-hing can kclcp ilicrn from being so. Th».- moro vigorous and worth While they" are the more independent they will be. but they are not being trained for it. Tiicy are going out as though independ- ence were on casv mutt-er to handle, whereas of all fin; a-ris it is the finest and most difficult. Life is liken tree ~ every timfl 119W b-nanches come there mint be stronger roots. And youth in our generation has branched out -- one can fairly 1i." flWR-km? a" night. and hear it branch out - into new lib- erties. new responsibilities, new self-expressions beyond the power of any in prevent. No Substitute People someitmes talk as though this expansim of life into new lib- erties ivcrc a substitute for iclillion ' and made it less xicceecsiry- 0m might, as well talk about branches being a substitute for roots. Branches require rocifi. v HOW can we drive that lesson homo on our young people and can their pursuits? There mover could have been c. gen/emotion before which more specifically and crucially nceded tiraininq in iihe meaninG and handling or if ‘ random- Evary summer when we 80 to wimmry. we find some trees that have blown down — boo 1118M branches above ground and not enough rootage below around. And every fall when we come book to the city we find lives that have broken down for the came reason -too much strain. no; enovlli sfaunchncss: too much modern lire, not enouoh oven wlizwn- 501M of you who arc not oonvmmwmily religious but who do cure about the moral welfare of tahis notion may well list/m to Jot-n Ruskin 0n with that of domestic and indiv- OUT OUR WAY WHY M07HEE$ GET GRAY 21mm. oumnu liil atria m: w. cumm- a Mal-use, Mlibyll scheduled for this cvenfnl at also p.111. Atlnntic time. KNIGHTS or convince soc- ial even Brown, cLOolunhn loll this y evening st 9 o'clock. IILI UIOWN A’! IOTA-I»! ._ A film dea-‘ilns with the Jawfli- Arab oomlict over shown At the tteto OWN! Sound. Onwflo White. Chailoiibabowfl. . MAGISTRATWS COURT -__ party. aupr-"rir" bold" Magistrate George J. T11 0.. yesterday. eedy, K. charged with being lntox ated in a m4 public place at Rustlco, was fined $9.50 or l0 days. A vagrant from Tatamagouclae. 11.5., was given a suspended sentence and ordered to leave the Province. Two men, char- Mon‘ lng with the l’ Co: t A "i" °"l In September P/O J h Mc- Ivor wu officially pruufi dead. in from Iceland in November, .1944. , P/O lVkIvcr enlisted in the R. C. A. F‘. in i940, and after receiv- ing his navigators w overseas in Janua , l . R. .F. Coastal Inland. he flew his fimt. tour of operations from bases is Scotland. ling-land. and Russia. Following this tour w“ um» having been reported ' on an operational flight ged will; fidiinB Oysters in the Ellt loge area), each fined five dollars. LAID To REST — '1!» roman: of Amt-l Iifiarie Paoli arrived in the City Saiturday evening and were conveyed to the residence of hot par-exits. Mr. and like. 5.1‘. Pool. z Water Street, from Whore the furveral was held yesterday after- noon to me Hanan Catholic Demo; nary whore service was conducted by Riev. Louis Doupln. The pail bears was: Isa Gills. Don Mc- lvfvally. Ray Connolly and James 00d. WIN CLOTIING DRIVE - Major T. B. Rogers, Provincial Resident of the National Clothing Campaign reports that collections are cf- ficially at an end and thin, the warehouse used for the his loos keenly. P/O Molvor leaves to mourn him his wide, the founer Helen MiacNeil-i. and their son, Peter. 52cc are now residmd in Sumner- urpoae is closed. However, should lagers be WM further gifts of clo they may be sent collect throug the Post Office. The bundles should be care- fully wrappcd and addressed to “Canadian Mutual Aid Board, 13 Clark Rouse Aircraft, Lakeburn. Monown, N13." A.Y.P.A. CHAPEL SERVICE -- scrvicc of Evening Prayer was ooh- ducted by St. Pam's A.Y.P.A. 1h the Chapel on Wednesday, Oofobdr 24th at 7 o'clock. ‘Ric President, Mr. George Anderson led prayer and Miss Arme Duffy rend the led- sc-u, Part. cnc in a series of Bible studies was given by Miss Mary Lawson. showing that the Bible was givm to us by God in th: form of two wgfamevms, or ‘covenants’ for the salvoition of man. Miss Eleanor olapp was organist. After the clos- ing hymn, the A Y. gathered in’ the Roxroatiom Halli to inflow-lube; thizir activities for the coming months of November and December: POLICE COURT — At» the City Police Court yesterday morning there were five cases of drunk and disorderly. Two were each fined $10 and costs or 30 days. Two had their $10 ball estreatad. One was sentenced to l5 dnvs. A drunk and incapable was fined s10 or 20 days. In another case of drunk and 1n- wllflbic the accused was released m order to report to Halifax. ALLAIRIF-McKINNON —A vcry pretty wedding was soienmized at Si. Dun-stairs Basilica, Charlotte- town on Octobcr 103b, when Olive McKinncn. daugizter- of Mrs. Lena McKinnon. Iuirviaw. P.E.I. be- came lllc bride of Donald Allairc, son of Mr. and Mrs. William AlLalrc. Ellydcr. N.Y. 'I‘h-o ceremony was performed by Rev. J.W. McOairdlc. The bride Was attendeiiby Mrs. Roland Alclzonl, and wore a street length finals of powder blue, and The four delegates who are to at,“ timid the local Council meeting d? Kenslngtmi were reminded they will rep. the opdnioou of she association. TO SUPREME COURT - The preliminary hearing of Stanley Gordon Pursey. Ciaytpwn, charged with manslaughter in connection a. triage coca with brown accessoriaa. She wore a oorscgc The bridesmaid was attired in blue and had o coocaoc of pink roan. The groom was aratonded by Mr. Azthur -’ * After the cere- mony. the wedding breakfast was carved at time Quom Hotel. at which the immodiake relatives and friends of "he bride were . . with the death of Lawson Ewan MoCa/rdle Crosby on Aug. 12, concluded be- fore i afternoon. The scc was com- mitted Ior trial at the next sitting of the Bureme Court in Charlott- town. G. . Holmes a cured for the Crown and J.B. ohnson for the accused. The Malpcque Road on night. of Aug. 11, 196 Lawson Ewen Crosby as he alighbud from at cal}; driven by Joh aya y, Ins struck truck driven by stun Pursey and dial a short time latlr 1n the Pl. Island Hospital as a result u; the injuries received. ART SOCIETY MEETING — The opealnz o“ 1, of o! the Pdnoc lidvwurd Island Art u religion. Junta col What about the ohm-oh hi your house? AMI!’ "Now to God the mm. God tbs Son. and God the Holy Gthoot. uaibed by us and by the whole larch. as in most. due. the Kin!- itie Glory, hill RETURNED HEROES HON- Olwll - A very enjoyable party was held lit the home of Mr. and his. flan-y Weak, liiotts, on Thursday evening, October 26th, inhonor of seven Pleasant Valley servicemen who have recently re- tumed from oversessflrho guests of honor, namely. Donald Mac- K , Clarence Stevenson, Ira Mac- Lolnn. wliTkS Robertson. is Weeks, MacLeod and My smith, took their pllcls of honor while all present aimed in n". Mr. omne Wlgmore and after giv- oct-ecl n: clmimian, ing the boys a. very interest! talk hciiléiailod upon ilk. A13 a well w- presautod such o yo havoc wfflh s lold of; ring. Qi? They Are Jolly Goo Fellows" was heartily sung, followed by the Nat- ional Anthem. Lunch was served by the ladies and the remainder of the evening was spent in dancin". The many friends of the boys wisli them the best of luck. _...__..______.____ Mn. RJ. McDonald. and - her, Lflbsrlliba. rctulgucd 5h n y waning mm a. ‘p sum o day Mormon]. _____ CillrlesL/Ilfulinwwlwl" NILQIQM i ..;¢~ ‘. I r . “resumed he £32233 solfie 1 r I ' assistant to Reconstruction Minis- ' In . author , tion of atomic bombs. . of rad roses.‘ since their capture. 1h. rind h C M0l&! Included In. Poatiotlno Plan - crow-gloom l many haul-hon thlrllllillto on my "Wt oo.w y imofl t illml: m i‘; m" punt-Imps town wor- Om‘- i m and folrmilea, uud particularly in coastal nrfaoo pI-i 1:01. hon boon dooluud surplus by than: nndnowmupforlcle. . ~ t laid durinl continued debate on his navy department. es- too tima . ‘Hie oorvottu Ind flit fsiimilea wen built for l would lob and, n for u the navy was oonoemcd. future plum did not oontamplm rotninln‘ them. A number of frig- ltel, Icmvwhlt in!!! than tho m“? were heir: retained for u-a purposu. Study c! the naval estimates was shortly liter Justice Miri- Gnorgc Mcllralth. parliamentary tcr Howe, tabled orders-in-council inWlfifl-flons into the affairs of Elder-ado Mines, sources of bufc materials in the construc- Tho first order slid there was reason to aupwae than may have been lnoguluibhc in connection with 0PM ions of the mine. expro- Drinied by the Govommnnt in Jan- uI-ry. i944. and with the dug‘ -“‘ c! the ' l products. e sec- ond ordor filcruaed m, p0 Government investigator, J. Grant Glassoo, Toronto. Mr. Abbote ssfd that until con- ditions of sci-vice in the post-war tomes are decided upon. personnel will receive pay and allowances on the scale established for wartime service. .___.__1_.__ Lays Fault Entirely 0n Germans B! GFDBGE TUMKEI. NUERNBERG, Oct. N —- (AH- Robert My, Nazi Jew-boiler who hanged himself Thursday. left l statement today calling for n. "com- plaie reconciliation" of Gcnnnn mtf-Gemites and Jews. Icy‘: statement, declaring the Nazis "have forsaken God and therefom were fo by God." asserted the Nlzis themselves must tell the youth of Gmnnny that an" " iris-m was a "mistake" be- cause "the youth will not believe our opponents." The one-time German labor lea- der outlined a “plan" through which. he said: "Jews and Germ- ans can live together" and Genn- uny can "solve the Jewish prob- lem .. 15y’: document. released after he was buned in an unmarked grave, . "They haw to find the courage w conauer themselves. They have to show their people the way. God has taught me that in my cell in Nuernberi? " Icy was one of several of Nuern- bmz prisoners awaiting trial who have professed l ‘ in religion azlllll SOON! A rovolu-‘W tionuy. new line of modern insecticides and fungicides and Herbicides to help rid your garden of insect pull. fungus diseases and .. “is. my. u-i s... IIIK POI ‘INI “II? GIQIF With Major Hoopla ~____~~__s_.~¢~_~_____ Diced pen-ed loqlmlllinbeflsm NUQWK! 800d was sadly missed by her sorrow- muncly, Mrs. fotwhown. Mr . Oovaheul. lotlnwwn. Lea, student The i“ i-sewoo. bohhe resident of Montague, P.E.I., Mrs. Cyrus Moore, tember homestead. Iii-don m“ resided Mrs. Moors Christian character, and out her life was an ardent sup- mer the United Church. 16311111161’ days she was active inois, U.S.A. and came 123$ $16111 YOUIIQ. moving to Rnscnca gist! minister to be stationed in Moore ywrs ago. gunigzflchiiildaan. all living: Arthur Mus. Bert Y.M. . . the Rt! 161w Bishsprilc. )Sask., Pa?” s ., m. 1n ‘Biverett it the old Montague. mourn their loss. Bulpm of Beaverbroo, ward Bulpim Mrs. Eva Crawford also of neat-h. old homestead 'andd I'm Newt Relieved of Rheumatic‘ Pain” Tooulfid this ‘magi didn't bengcin the callus or or pains when stoned. It fornicate for him t: he got relief when the pain had become acute. Here s his awry “Inowfceluxfifilfigeandhl mnnot raise en mu - Before Jilin; Krunchen m rheumatic pains were pretty bad. u won-iv sboutiny Job and the ‘ - But got a tip to try Kruschen. After taking the first bottle l felt better. Since then I have had two more bottles l now enjoy my work: for I have no aches or pains . . . to lchen."-~Mr. A. H. Yo! will note that one: Mr. A. H. started tho Krusclien saline treatment he stayed with it. Follow his example _ OPTOQER so. 194s, ____ canon,‘ "at e "Thanh n you, Grcndpo Kruuhu . . , if you too arc bothered with rheumdg pains. lumbago or sciatic ‘ s. Take Kruschen faithfullé an m; as you feel it is needed. ive it a chance go p overcome condition! in your body which have probably taken month; u, develop. lf you are like many other sufferers. you will notice a gradual im. provement in your health and a less- ening of pain as you continue u. treatment. Just take a pinch o: K schen in a glass of lllOt water first til" '5 in the morning, as o as needed, and i Mr. A. l-bjoins witlirys in wishing you ‘ a lspeedy return to your old. pain-free so i. Kruschuhblnd Wciiflin stores. v ‘ , .'/ Momoriam INA BfRBEll/IS I Q1 Thursday, Oct. 111th them ully away at Wins-i dallflltor of Mr. and Mrs. Ar- thur Roberta. Although she had health she parents. broohers and sisters, Gordon Good. Char- Roland. overalls. and M. P.W.C. funeral was held from he: residence on Saturday, Oct. and was oonducbed by Rev. er who spoke comfort- bereaved. —-______. MIG. CYRUS MOORE An axed and greatly respected Passed away on Se - 1946, at. her o where she erett. beautiful ‘through- 17th with her son. WM B rter of the Methodist Church, In hler n .M.8. work and often Attended branch. ' was born in Ill- t0 The decea her parents when 13 years She was a descendant of . Buipftt, the first Metho- In 1090 she married Cyrus who predeceased her seven Their family consisted oburn, Mass, Jennie Shepherd), Maiden, rvisor 1n Ata., Helen Eva in Moss Bank. Charlottetown; homestead, Un- Road, Montague; Georgie, Dollie MacDonald), also in (Mrs. Albert AF, Calgary, on (Mm. Two brothers and one sister also They are Roy N5. Ed- of Roseneath and Rosc- Her last days were spent on the were she was patiently and tenderly cared for her son and daughter-in-law. r. and Mrs. Everett Moore. Tlhe funeral service took pl-JCO Wednesday afternoon. Be t. M: the lloms of her son. wi merit. in the Union Road y. Her pastor, Rev. A. s. Adams. as- sisted by Rev. Paul Richardson. officiate , they were assisted by ir of United Chum. which she had so f-afbh- fully attended and where she will b0 only missed. " e not d , she is just away." 10-30-11 Card A Of Thanks rm family of Mrs. Cyrus Moore wish to thank all the neighbors CANADA "'7' raovnvcm: or PRINCE EDWARD 151.41“) ‘I IN THE PROBATE COURT The 17th day of October A. D. 194s In Re Estaw 0f LAURA N1‘ . OLSON info of Dundas in mg: County in the will Province Widow, deceased. tech ' To the Sheriff of the County of Kings County or an Comflbfg o, literate person withili said County GREETING : WHEREAS llpon fietltion o? file of enz o o Cllldifgn in County aforesaid, Machmlcfunfg: Administrator of the lbovs 11mm] Estaw praying that s citation may be issued for the purpose herein. altar set forth: You are therein“ hereby required to m; all "u. interested in the said ma?» be and appear befon the Judi?’ pr» held in Charlotte- _ ty, In fho said l rivvince, on Monday, the third day of December next coming. u! the hour of eleven o'clock fcranoon of the some day to shew cause il any the; can why the Account: of the ssi Estate should not be and the Estate cloud u n i l" l" "it! Petition and mason of Donald McKinnon. Esq" Proctor for said Petitioner. And it la hereby ordQi-gd m“ g "I10 00m’ hereof be forthwith ub- lshed in some newspaper pub - ed in Charlottetown aforesaid once in each week for at least four con- necutivo weeks from the data hereof and that a true copy here- of be forthwith outed in the foi- lnwln public paces resgectively. name y, 1n the hull of t a Court House ln Charlottetown aforesaid. at or near the store o! fll eased in Dmidns uforolnl or near the store of M: McLean in Brld etown County nforesni no thlt l]! snnn Interested in the laid Enact: - as aforesaid may have duo notice thereof. WITNESS His Honour Hlrcld Leonard Palmer, Jud e of the laid Probate Court at hsrlomtown aforesaid, the day Ind year first above written. Bv the Court. (son; c. nmncsnnr raunzn, Rfllliitfll‘. (L. S.) 10-30-11-6-13-2031. Completely extermin- stes Ilcdbnn. , roaches. I-‘leu. Silver ~ fish. Crickets. At Eaton leading drug. hardware Slpson, ' or write new» cooperative stores. Products. Toronto 4 “wfirrrcn __T_ Horses ‘for Fox Feed. Highest Prices. Write or Phone LESTER JOHNSTON Fortune Bridfl- and friends. who so kindly assist/- ed unmin their mother's illness N . soiiiuii ‘ It lo expected that the admission of patients early i be received to of recommendation should i application. ¢¢#*¢‘ AAAAAAAAAALAAAA v WW vvv \Hn%fi'- mam. Hospital will open for till n November. Applications will. November 3rd for positions on the nursinf stal and also for a cook, kitchen help‘ and janitor. A letw n all cases accompany anvil MELVIN J. MeQUAID, Secretary. v v Stan-cl; radon» M. HUNTER MURRA RIVER and Y HARBOR ' Are Open Dally to Receive Small, ‘Scabby No or Cull ‘Potatoes Dela! A