, _.____-__ _.._._____ ._ rur. WESTERN GUARDIAN i}? ‘flENT-MXI. John llmmtrllfleh- _ Bell Buckskin. Water ll. Toronto Iakerl. Water St y. M _'[hi_q column ls reserved for new: of local interest but advertising of u ncwsy nature lnly be insen- i ed at I cents u word strictly pey- uliie in ulvnnue -———-— ._s0LDER-SEAL repairs auto ludlalor. quickly, permanently. Solo n Bruce's, L-1022-ll-28-2l. i JHICKEN surraa in Ken- . umtcu Church by Y. P. u. = Eighty, November 30th. L-lll7-l1-29-li. v -FOR. SALE-Second hand wall l cases and show cases. App-y Ell- ‘ man Drug 00., Ltd. Summersiue, ; p, c 1. L-1009-1l-27-3i. l _nr;w IMPROVED Council 1 standard Galvanrzel Sheet Steel I Roofing only 5‘). hlghgr in price. ' 1) w LDEDQB, 81L P806 S. ' s“ 1m L-iozz-n-lia-zl. a .-I)0N"l‘ FORGET the auction i M15 or Mac Fox Ranch at 2 p. m. Saturday, Dec. 2nd. L-ll29-ll-29-2l. l 4 v t _.vm. ARMANI) l-lerscovicl, fur ., buyer of Montreal will be buying \ furs in Summerslde commencmi; 1 Tuesday, NOV 28. L-10l6-l1-27-2. _ -BAR. IRON. Chain, Bolts, Sleigh shoeing and all sifeioh l‘(J,)B._l‘lll(-!, ct ' Shceing und all slmgh it'll: ltng su"- plies at Brocfs. L-l$22-l1-28-2l. ...-FREl‘l-B€fllllilflll 4 by 6 en- i lgrgtflllflll. with each film sent t0 I us icr rlcvcloping and printing. . overnight service. Lowest prces. . Enman Drug dz Photo Service, - Rogers’ office, Summerslde, Mr ' R. n. O'Bryan of Holt ftenfrew co. Ltd. will begin buying again on Friday morning of this week and . wgu remain here for some days. This L; an opportunity to get cash prices for your furs. Bring in your pelts to office of B. Graham Roi- gr}, summerside. L-1130-1l-29- _FOXES PELTED—Do not pelt until your foxes are prime. When you do pelt, have it done properly. Felting if marketed through us 60 cents; pciting if taken out 70 cents; pelllllfl and cleaning if taken out 80 cents; cleaning only l5 cents. Expert workmans ip. All pelts in- sured. Prince Edward Island For Pool. Ltd. Summerside. Prince Ed- ward Island. L-S30-11-l5-1l. -RIFLE CLUB ORGANIZED- The Prince County Rifle Club was organized last night in Summer- side at a meeting in the new club rocm in Harding's Garnge. There was a g:cd attendance. Mr.. George Clark presided. Nearly fifty. young men signed the membership card. Robert L. Willet was elected sec- retary; George T. Morrison, range officer, Practice shooting was start- ed after the organization meeing. -S. Pickctts Family 0n Way From West In Accident FREZDERICTON. N. 13.. Nov. 2'7 Tfckklng from Prce River, Ali-m, lo Prince Edward Island, u. Journ-' Dioneers, although in the l direction. Mr. and Mrs. Crawford| Picketls 12nd their six children near- ly met with diasier last night. , Nearing the end of their long ‘and voyage with their motorized Prairie schooner piled high with furniture and children, the Plc"etts narrowly hi! truck overturned at McGowanb Corner. Yrs Picketts suffered a. bruised ' shoulder and cuts shout the face, vh Ye her husband and ‘wo-year-olzi child, Bob. in the, c"‘i with hrr, s"!- fcr~d only Irincr injwfes. Five oth- er children in the rear cf the truck “Failed unhurt, The truck was damaged only llilhtly and the Pkzketts were ubbs to continue their journey offer the Vchicle had been righted. Th’: family left Alb=rta two m"nths ago for P. i=1. I., where Pick- ett had bought a farm. They were delayed at Regina. when all s'x children were hospitalized with Marl/rt fever. 500 O§§§§4OQ §§§§~§-O§§O-O§§% Auction Sale 0F MAC RANCH Twill sell by suction on the "emllfis. Summers?‘ East, on SATURDAY. DEC. 2nd. It 2 o'clock n. m. The Mac Fox Ranch and 9411110- Penis consisting three acres of Bud with iffdwth of hard and 60ft w. "1 a Bungalow Dwelling 21x81 Sfiilhlfiilllafillfilflflallre 6x0, nlso baclé .. _ e. t“ be n inlng room an _ I also gazsfiom gigs, fixllmd. 21H small .7 . seven x ouses. gdi wired and boarded all over. 10f. gefrvPéflX wire. E3131!!! WDTOB. Temp. Cash. H. I‘. MORRISON. Auctioneer “Chord serious injury when their A‘ Pond, 10'! _ svummwwn. um .>“'m"'c"u scmhrr um. s-lmrlnflvnn. Mvertlllng should u rm with u... p,“ m" 5' WWI" Ill"! It any of the following do!“ u; o m» "a: “mire. Wm: an: The Guardian will be delivered to any homo 1|, gunmen“, b, qmsrflonlhwrdnror lllepetweek. Phgngugf mum." fl (We your "i" '4 u" W! Iflllwllllble for deliveries on ‘Yo... muse. u o, —BUY 90W) IBOGQ WWK IIOVQ 3,1, g’; can: zozn. —HOG WORM POWD . ior Drug 00., Kenglngwyfn at T” WARPLANES __ _(Q°.I1§ln_.l1€d_f.r°m_ page _l> ‘The difficulties are going to be very severe. The losses are going to be heavy. "N0 SGVCPQ, NEW L at Clifton Phone ISO Granville S 11. 19119 and leather L-l022-l1-28-2i. oupou scrroor. cop. Hall, December L-llltl-l1-29-1i. _.__ ._.- AND PRINCE CO No Need For Pessim ism Borden A Foxmen Are Told Judging Neamd At Show - Tr0phiesTo Bsiwarded Today NTS SCRAP new CURB-INT IVE BOOK-Juli arrived. A and novel Scrap Book to bee‘? n record of tho Imp- pe ngu in Eur-op: Lu" u" with about n ety pngel. QM! Myer uhowu lnn of e today- , Get on only 15o. O SLEIGH SHOE STEEL- l-flrro stocks of all sltel and lengths at llolmnnh. Old prices nre still effective. Buy your requirement; now. SMELT BAG NETS-The smelt fishing season will soon be here 111' we suggest that those who need new nets, get them now while stocks are complete. Call Holman’: Hardware Department. l l I HORSE BLANKETS —- We were fortunate enough to have booked our orders early and our shipment of horse blankets has arrived. We have the most complete as- sortment we’ve ever shown and the prices are No Short Victory economic pressure, however will make the Germans s,.e for peace until they have received blow after blow fr: m land sen and air. There is going to be no short cut to .. I hard, victcry in this war, trust these blows wll‘. be will be strenuous, relentless and absolutely pitilcss." 10rd efforts CANADA'S EFFORTS Milne em hasized the of Cana a and the war other domlnlons and expresed the opin- ion that “i-hls great snowball of national effort and military effi- . Chamberlain said the , Summerside, L-Mu-ll-z-l-eod-di. ciencyf is steadily gaining weight - ———- and prqierl directed will crush i -BUR BUYER at B. Graham to ieocg the erman menace." allied blockade of German exports would do the least possible injury to neu- trals “consistent with the purpose of sunning German exports." He referred to neutral protests again t the blockade and sold that “we recognize 1_ cause inconvenience and perhaps lossto these measures may neutrals.” But that “these measures for helping bring our ef- forts V.) a successful issue may vsell be worth some sacrifice on the part of neutral The lmst British loss at sea, meanwhile was the 2.463-ton steam- 23th Uskmouth which went three of her crew of 25 miss- ing. filhe cause of dUWfi her sinking was not immediately learned. A German rrport that a British heavy cruiser had been gunk was permitted to be circulated in Blit- alin for publication. Naval circles said ih knew nothing of the re- s gested perhaps it had n put ou to strengthen the German morale. Forty U-boatu Sunk In this connection British sources estimated that the British and French naval forces have sunk 30 to 40 Gcrmm submarines since the war star-ted. Germany 1s said b oes to bout 60 submarines in e Will‘ wi.-h u- have opened commission and the allies believe they can sink them es fast as the ed.A can be re lac- French no source sad in Paris today the French navy had sunk profaably 10 submarine . nln has been Brit- sinklng tthem at the mic oil t/wo or three a week since the war started. Other developments of the ed. Authoritative that fore * lfax had ‘ cow's ey rivaliing those made by early 3m, | with p opposite four ounce; a week of each modity for each not be rationed a that time consumers will be asked not to buy mOTO ‘Ihe which be down world amt cen “An Eh value bor lead lnition of Britain's re :- Nonc of us klgow how l0 we: wllil last, in what direc ion it will delvilelop or. when it is ended mischievous to k entangle ourselves closely into be um "m" .. the strength of our enemy. Comm fer-dominion is f0 be eme we rcgurd an 0f (h day source; disclosed secretary Viscount Hal- uvited Russian ambassa- clarify Mo.- corn- rson. Sugar will but than l pound a lverson u. sir ministry announced suc- cesful reconnaissance fligylgvtsmgvir Land Crews anned merchmtman chltral, carried ll survivors from the sunken merchant cruiser R-awalgln- . also 01$ landed 34 German sa n ship. The ship was from e. Germs, scuttled off Iceland by her cmw, in the some waters in which the Raw- nk by the Nazi poc- alpindi was su ket battleship Deimchland ind in unidentified ulon shin A British alnd en submarine and three German freighters, whose disposi- tion was not dibclosed. After the speech from in Parliament Clement Attlec, La- the throne er salted for a. clearer def- ce aims. Mr. erlaln be standing by our slué and who against us those circumstances it would attempt to wherein u tog}. Us ‘lot o oo schemes wlgch h: may impossible to put into q)- condition; w be crea Need All COUIIIQ "We shall need all our courufll. all our tenacity and patriotism to achieve our war aims. Let us not the mistake of under-rating ti th aviation on n8 on whidh will be in Canada, he - ment has been reached in Ottawa for the main principles and methods by which a gr eat, in- training This e utmost to our mus- for Ehgrgded out. and importance ‘tcry in the air." _________-_ um Una kid's In Gilli‘!!!- British sour- r marked low. I O O 0lL HEATERS-Anyone who ls thinking of purchasing modern heating comfort, can have one of our Oil Burning Heaters on u. frce trial for one week. This will convince them, as it has others, that oil heating saves labor. en- tirely eliminates all dirt and mess and ls the most economical. Why put up with that old dlrlv coal stove d-changc to Oil Heating to- B)’. HOLMANS Summerside or SUPREME ClFRLHPEllS No Criminal Cases- Judge Gets White Gloves. The November term of the Su- preme Court opened yesterday morning at the Courtliouseasilm- msrslde. Mr. Justice A. C. Saund- ers presiding. As there were no criminal cases on the docket His Lordship was presented with the customary pnir of white gloves. Mr. H, Bnell, acted as Court Prcthonotnry in the absence of R. H. Rogers. THE DOCKET Appeal Cases: George Sweet Vs. Lyle Brown. The King Vs. John Joseph Milrnaghan. Llvi MacArthur Vs. Watson Silllcker and Ralph Sillicker. Civil Non Jury J. Wright Morris Vs. Leigh Fol- land. Civil Jury C. N. R. Vs. M. F. Sdhunnun & Co, Lid. James Edwin McCabe Vs. Wal- ter Smith. lowers acting were: Hon. Thane A. Campbell. Attorney General: L. G. Lewis, ‘Heath Strong, K. C ; W. E. Dacby, Henri-v W. Noonan. C. D. Mar-Callum. Lowell Comp- ton, Watson MacNaught and W. geenry Noonsn; J. O. C Camp- l . Sheriff l". J. S‘. Wright s11’:- ml-tted the following report show- ing the number of prisoners in tail since the last term of the Court -wlth the offence. 4'1 for breach of the Prohibition A t. C20 for breach of the Excise Act. 63 for being drunk and. disorder- ly. 9 for vagrancy. 1 for brcaoh of the Unmarried Parents Act. 2 for damage to property. 2 for three-t to bodily harm. 1d for Petty Larceny. 1 for Contempt of Court. 1 for resisting arrest. 3 for breach of the fishing Act. 1 for non-suppogt of family. l for SSSlllllb. A22 for breach of Highway Traffic ct 1 for Forgery. I’. for cruelty to animals. 4 for Town Taxes. 1 for False Pretence. ‘rho annual Fox Mens Banquet held in the Abegwelt Hotel last night was as usual an outstanding success and well attended. The banquet table was resplendent with the handsome silver cups which will be presented tomorrow to the lucky champion winnerl. Capt. John L. Read, President of the Borden Fox Show, presided in his usual happy manner. 'I'he ban- quet was a compliment to the proprietor, Mr. J. V. MacDonald and Mrs. MacDonald. The guest speaker was Mr. Jack Ashford, of Anning Chadwick and Kiver, Lon- don, Emgland who is visiting the Island in the interests of his firm. Ml‘. Ashford after expressing his pleasure at being once again on Prince Edward Island, told the fox- men there was no real need to be peasimisvc over the fur trade, even if there is a. war on. The auctions will be held as usual in London and bop world prices will be paid a".- cording to values, There is a, large demand for furs 0n account of a greater number of girls beng em- ployed especially in ammunition factories. The usual markets will be open to Canada, Austraka, France and Italy. Pri"es sh‘uld be firm if the price of other artces is any lnd’cat‘on. unless prices decline further there is no need to worry. In answer to various ques- tions Mr. Asbford said thiit if his- tory repeats itself m1‘: sk'ns will be scld as in the last war but there will not be quite such a cormback as there are more skins on the market. The pl"t‘n"m foxes is u novelty just now, but will never be a staple colour. Irv ansvrr t1 queri=s as to the superiority of the Nor- wegian s‘lver fox pelt ovrr Can- adian, Mr. Ashford said, the Nor- wegfan pe‘t is a better color but that th» Canadian be". is for su- perior in quality. Thore is no com- parison between u Canadian and Norwegian pe‘t. when you ilfnk in terms of quality, the Canadan belt is atway she-d. Mr. Asbford srd the market favours three quarter and full silver. Polni-s brought out by the various speakers vere: The importance of bveding for to study the fur markets before disposing of h‘s pets. Most spe"k- crs were in accord that the lighter colours are in demmd. Mr. D. O. Stewart, who is Judging at the show sold the quality was high and a tremendous improvement over other years. He advsed ranch- ers to guard against muddy offcol- or necks and underfr in breeding the lighter foxes and to seect for conformation in mulfs. Other speakers included’ Messrs P. G. Clark. Capt. Road, G. Ennis Smith, W. F. Burke. B. Roy Human, Reagh Tinney, E., P. Foley, B. W Robin- son, C. C. Baker, Layton Rogrrs, lmwcll Hancock, Breifon Clark, J. C. Mountain and others. JUDGING CONCLUDED Judging commenced yesterday at the Borden Fox Show with keen competition in the lighter claxes. Visitors and judges expressed great satisfaction at the quality of the animals and uhe interest taken in the show. Judging was completed up to class 5, with seven more cusses and championships and matched pairs to be judged today. An interesting feature of the show was the freak foxes from the ranch of Mr. George Warren of Howlan. Mr. D. 0. Stewart was assisted in Judging by W, F, Burke of Charlottetown. PRIZE LIST: Class 1, Section 1, Dark Silver. l. R. S. Humphrey, 14111! Woodside. The following number are still serving sentence. 4t for breach of the Prohibition C A . 4fovrbmeechoffl-iolbrdseAot. Parents Act. 1 ilor Rwlstlng Arrest. 1 for norm-support of family. 2 for breach of the Highway Traffic Act. 1 foc- Yhlse Pretencs. 3 for being drunk and disorder- Respectfully submitted, F J. 2 for breaking and entering. 1 for Capias. AND HERE'S SOME MOCK TURTLE SOUP~ THE RECIPE WASNW‘ RKH ENOUGH 5O I ADDED E. WRIGHT. Clue 1, Section 2. l. W. B. MacArthur. 2. B. B. Humphrey. Claus l, Section 4 moan h Clue 1 Section I . Roy Woodslde. , Roy Woodside. Class l, Section 6. 1. Roy Woodsido. Class 2. Medium Silver, Section l. l. W. B. MacArthur. 2. George Warren. i Class 2, Section 2. . J. C. Mountain. Nil u: l E E Class 2, Section 8. l. W. B. MacArthur. Class 2, Section 4. 0 colour; the necessty of the rcncher. R. S. Humphrey. Class 2, Section S. . J. C. Mountain. 5 é r Class 2, Section 6 1. Lowell Hancock. 2. and 3. Roy Woodside. R. S. Humphrey. Douglas Bell. George Warren. W, B. MacArthur. Claus 3. Section I 1. W. B. MacArthur. 2nd and 3nd Douglas Bell. 4. John Myers. Class 3, Section 3 rnwmv-n . J. C. Mountain. , W. B. MacArthur. Roy Woodside. . Douglas Bell. Class 3, Section f. mun»- J. C. Mountain. J. C, Mountain. W. B. McAi-thur. R, S. Humphrey. J. C. Mountain. frowns» Class 3, Section S . Lowell Hancock. J Mountain. . Roy Woodside. R. S. Humphrey. Claus 3, Section 0 J. O. Mountain. Lowell Hancock. Roy Woodside. Harold Stewart. W. B. MacArthur. R. S. Humphrey. azvvhlflnv-A fuss-r Cllll 4, Section l. Pele Silver l" ifwé“ $0.65.‘ . . . um ey. 3rd and 4th, Roy Woodslde. Clue 4, Section 2. . Lowell Hancock. . Roy woodside. . Cecil Stewart. Gui 4. Section I EONII-l +“Pr .5 . B. _ . . R. B. Humphrey. Chas l, Section l . R. S. Humphrey. _ Lowell Hancock. . Roy Woodside. . W. B. MacArthur. (Bu: 4, Section I Roy Woodside. J. C. Mountain. Keith Compton. J. C. Mountain. Ilowtell Hancock. dawn-buns ‘anew 8. R. B. Humphrey. Use Minn-G's for when. __ Sheriff of Prince (guilty. TILLIE THE TOILER — - A DECEPTIVE APPEARANCE GOSH,THI5 1s AWFUL- .At Class 8, Light Medium, Section 1. has YOII AGEING IEFOIIE nun nun Why Not Study the Mmezl Bonn men and woman, though no longs: young, utillvpirallierve much of gvq-fl wing f th i 792.11%. ‘lhzro are ml-Ypii. ofai: pup!‘ circle of friend; you: own Otberu have I diluent outlook; they ooomto grow old before their time. lotus unmlun briefly u nut: oif ufhln Lin“: too oflnn aim uuwnl Ill“!- Ill open mind.‘ at or from cause they Ire . m“. link ofl the muck . of prmmurc an day. What foollubneul You .1’. be “rem ' every day and still bu conluputc i Bmynnwsirsfnrzi-rezisw." plpu". you are fortunate you wfll euea mulls llld diloomfort ' more than like y you "ulaw up". uufler e men mllBfY of incomplete rent at nights; you become irritable. n Salt! has im- F can n! “Turn! vuclggible. highly; refined min l our y requrras u some 10...; to lulp-kzop you feeling at your best. Tho Knudsen habit ll such u limpla. cou- vnninn lnexpenlive way. You take rust "the little d douW-tuutelass in tea. coffee-or in g glue of water. Nu Product in the store: todu h morefinodern '. none more carefully prep! _ Why not start ht away. GlVB Kruschen a reel tun during the next few months. Prove it for yourself. ell drug counters 25c, 45c, 754'- uuy country Msgr. McDonald Passes Suddenly In Vancouver Nouns wuvcouvm. Nov. l5 - Stricken with a heart attack while aha wifh his brother. R181"; gnnr Jose Basil Mc- Donald, 67, rector of St. Edmuntfs and dean otf orth Vain- couvor bistrict, died esday night at the rec . on avenue. Fbmher Me nld was born at to being ordained in 1896, studied at St. Dunstarfs College in Charlotte- town, P. E. I. Srt. oseph's Univer- shty, ‘a New Brunswick and Laval He was later in cluarge of dioceses in N. D.. and Seattle, and mine to Vancouver in 19ll. For the newt fen rs. he ministered to settlers a Ocean Falls. Pcwei Rilver and other B. C. Coast points. pointed rector at St. Jrch. Vancouver Heights and his next mp intment was to Holy Rcs- ary Ca edral in 1926. H4 continued in that char e un- til 1929 when he came here lake change of st. Edmunds Last year their McDonald was honored by Pose , when he was made a umestlc prelate with the title of m or. (Patriot please copy) Ganadzfs Grain Assumes New Value To Allies WTNNIPDG, Nov. ZS-(CP) — Canada with wheat stocks current- ly estimated at. 400,000,000 bushels. today assumed a. key ition a: l source of luPPly for Allies as Britain and France fought the menace of German sen warfare. At the start of the war wheat exports to the United Kingdom dwindled to the mere odd ship- ment, but. at that time authorita- tive sources expressed the opinion that Britain panned to maintain the Canadian stocks u a. reserve su PDIY. Today and on Monday, inni- peg n eixdhange dealings re- vealed. the United Kingdom and neutral countries dipped into the Domlnlmfs overflowing wheat bins with nearly 10,000,000 bushels of wheat and flour for overseas ship- ment. Export sales today totalled more than 1,000,000 bushels with what values at Winnipeg increas- ing more than two cents s. bushel in the futures market. Canada's ximitv to Imrope has a mark advantage over the long routes from Australia and the Argentine, menaoed by rman U- boats and surface raiders of the sea. Early in iihe war, Britain sought wheat stocks from dismm ports but now she is seeking the near- by su lies in Canada. Add ng to the importance of the Dominion?» supplies are develop- ments in the Argentine where un- favorable harvestlng weather has deteriorated the new crop. -BUT HOORAY~IF SHE COOKS AS BADLY AS THEébIlzOBODY’ LL MARR you: Knucbe ldhilianmgu to mankind n. almost - ' Est Point, P. E. I., and previous ' UMB-RSIDE ‘GUARDIAN - UNTY CHRONICLE . +0 v Q z It's Winter! DRY DLEAIIIIIG , Mi||’s Modern and 0| Water Street "Most Critical” _ (Continued from pap _1)__ dependence. A bitter Russian Press campaign against Finland ensued and was climaxed Sunday by a Soviet pro- posal that Finland withdraw her troops 12 to l6 miles from the bor- der. The Finns replied they w*uld do so only on condition that Rus- sia did likewise. The Russian pro- posal foliowed allegations 13 of her soldiers were casualties of Finnish CSDIIOIL (Tess, Soviet New Agency, said today removal of Srviet troops the distance‘ suggested by the Finns would put the troops "ln the sub- urbs of Leningrad?) The Soviet action in denouncing tho seven-year-old non-aggression pact was the most shocking blow to the Finns in the "war of nerves“ which has gripped the Baltic states since the German-Russian parti- tion of Poland. The pact was concluded in 1982 and nrpplemented the following year with an agreement defining an aggressor. Subsequent pacts-in 1931 end INS-defined the Soviet-Finnish frontier and pledged the vwo. gov- ernments to good neighborly ro- lotions. Soviet Attitude (QBBMAQQlQQMPIILA; musdng tiho frontier by a Sov- betwcgfi I forced and threw the Flnnim - taohment back into thedr own terri- ory. Three Flnnish prisoners were mk- en, and some weapons and equip- ment seized. 0m hour lame:- near "Hill 3042", rifle fire broke out from the Fin- nish side. soviet troops did not re- turn the fire, however, which wan siaid to have been from two Fin- nish soidiems who fired fl-ve shots. The third incident occurred when two Finnish artillery shells burst 500 yards within Soviet territory as marked by post no. . rmd small ps o Finnish intfon- tr£atten13 to crom the tron-tier. ut they were met by rifle and fire and forced to 1e- machlne gun inf/crim- of Finnish treat to the territory. THERE'S l O£QQFOQOOOO-QO~OOO+" Clothes Cleaned the NEW Odourless way Phone 166 OH MR.SiMPKINS,I CAN TELL BY Your: EXPRESSlON rum- YOU'RE ENTOYING m. AND ,. v1%¢$%v Dress Up! vvvvwvv Select your new suit and Overcoat NOW! _0ur stock of Overcoat: zvéuw! J Made up in the "-4 LATEST MODELS From smart English Cloths - . . - AALAAAA --..--.---.-.- AAA . w-..."sew--.""vnnnnwe--- Suit Patterns Run the entire role of what's new in smart mixtures, fine stripes, herringbone, checks and solid tones. DEPARTMENT Dry Cleaners othiers Summer-side D rAAAAAAAAAAAA‘ .... ‘AA ... A . "Hnwvv" . eec~e "seem--. .--e:.ce- 0'1 cm "M QIIQMWI W411i 9%; have occurred near Vidiltczk ( ed- lltsa), north of Lake Ladoga. The broadcast added that the Soviet on the frontier m the far nor . scene of the first clash, had been strengthened, and that there had been no Russian ualties. Borden and Vicinity Miss Jean MacIsaac, student at P. W. College visited her home in Borden 0n Saturday. Miss Bernice Sharpe is visiting in Springfield, the guest of her aunt, Mrs. Hyatt Haslam. Miss Beryl Dorsey of Borden spent the weekend with friends at Emerald. Miss Slnle Cur-trio of Nina Mlle Creek and Miss Selina Currie of New Dominion visited Borden on Thursday leaving by the ferry on Friday morning for Montreal. Mr. and 1M5. Harry Crosame-n gaere visitors to Freetown on Sun- y. Mn. Cecil Stewart and chub-cu Audrey and Charles motored is Charlottetown on Sunday. They were accompanied by Misses Pau- line and Eleanor Maclsaac. He: friends are sorry to lcaru that Miss Iaurs. Ouon, littb daughter of m. and Mrs. Wil- llamhOuonlsq-tlitolllwlth pneu- mo . Only one family has suffered from scarlet fever here and as they have been quarantined. It is hoped no mom cues will develop. The weekly meeting of the Wo- men's Social Club was held at the homo of Mrs. Albert Jay on Wed- nesday, November 22nd, with the president, Mrs. Cecil Stewart in the chair. ‘There were eight member: present. A report of concert was given showing proceeds of $231306. It, was decid -‘ to hold u. eruckcn supper and bazaar, arch member to donate something for the bazaar. One of the members was asked to get material in Charlotte- town to make things for bazaar. Proceeds of meeting amounted to $2.4M. Next meeting to be held at the home of the President, Mrs. Cecil Stewart. The weekly auction party of the Borden Women's Institute was held on Thursday evenlg in the town hall with five tables play- ing. Ladies prize was won Mrs. Julian Herring, gents, Mr. esley MacLeod. Consolation prizes, Miss Annie Perry and Mr. NeilDarrach. After lunch had been served play- ing was resumed for freezeout, which was won lay Mrs. Cecil Stewart. A_ By Vvestoven LOTS MORE.