frst ave i fi - Ww _ reported a brisk demand. Mus- - SOURIS CADETS INSPECTED Commander J.M. Paul of Hali-school auditorium Wednesday salute was taken. The Charlotte- fax inspected the smart Sourisnight. Following inspection the town Sea Cadet baad was in at- Sea Cadet Corps at the highmarch past was held and the tendance. ~ TIMELY NOTES ON FUR TOPICS At the New York Auction Com- Pany sale last week, mink was very strong and 21,197 U.M.P.A. dark mink skins were 100 per- cent sold with prices advancing ten percent over January levels. In the above sale, new seas- on’s high prices were established with males reaching $93 and $45 for females. Both lots were ship- ped by Arthur MacArthur of Wisconsin. The official report de- scribed the sale as “terriffic’’. The finest ma-~ ‘acturers and dealers were present to purchase a collection of good quality. The room, at the U.M.P.A. sale. was an_impressive one. It continued far the most important hous- es in New York City, including! the biggest fashion firms.. MUSKRAT SEALS At Soudack fur acuti le in} Winnipeg last week, mibskrat; was very firm, with ddémand| ‘from European, Eastern fan and local firms. Practigany| 100 percent of the offering c§an fed hands. — Select lots brought $1.60 to $2.00 and many lots changed hands at $1.40 to $1.44. The Western Canadian raw fur auction sales, which took place last week in Vancouver, _krat brought much higher pric- @s; a collection of wild mink Was completely sold, with aver- age lots of Yukons and N.R.C. brought $16.00 to $17.00,. and| Coast types brought $10 to $11. Some 25,000 dark and mutation mink are included in the catalo- gue to be sold by the Hudson's Bay Company in Montreal on! Wednesday and Thursday of this! week.Here are some of the items 25,000 dark and mutation mink; | 1,500 silver fox: 1,500 red fox: 50) blue fox; 5,000 cross fox; 7,500 white fox. A note in a recent edition of “Women’s Wear Daily” has the following: Fur bearing animals are found in most countries of the world, but the bulk of world production is concentrated in the United States, the U.S.S.R., Ca- nada, and a few other areas. OSLO MINK The Oslo, Norway, fur acution will take place on May 23. They have an offering of 9.000 dark mink; 13,600 pastels; 9,000 sap- phires; and smaller quantities of silver blues and other mutat- fons. A total of 700 fox pelts will| Louis D. MacLeod, Victoria. Nor-| church and these were taken to bé offered, of which the majority | man, Clyde River, Sterling and the cemetery by close friends of are blues. In Nebraska. U.S.A. trappers eontinue to make a good living. Last year they took *112,538 fur- bearing animals. Mink brought the best price, averaging $11.50 for 11,000 pelts. ’ed about $5.50 for some 8,000 pelts. precautions are that we would not care to be a retailer of furs in New York, or any of the large cities, where stealing of furs is done by professionals. DEATH NOTICE GEDDIE MacLEOD A largely attended service with many relatives and friends from different parts of the Maritimes was held Tuesday. May 5th, from Trinity United Church Charlottetown at 2.00 p.m. The profusion of beautiful floral DEATH NOTICE FL.-LT. J. M. JONES, A.F.C. A very large congregation at- tended the funeral rites for Flight Lieutenant J. Mostyn Jones A. F. C. which were held at the Cher- | ry Valley United Church on May. | 9h. Rev. N.R. Green, pastor of ; the charge, officiated and was| assisted by Padre Quigg of the | RJC.A.F. Station, Summerside, | who read words of comfort from | the Psalms and offered prayer for those bereaved. Rev. Dr. A.S. Weir inspired his listeners by his remarks from Psalm 130, “If I take the wings of the morning and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea: even there thy hand. shall lead me and thy right hand uphold me.”’ | a, 3* Ff it ee a a ee a a ee ee 2 Hy j E g eE oF vs i RES - * F E : i RELIGION BY VERY REV. GEORGE - First Mederater of the AND LIFE C. PIDGEON, D.D., LL.D. United Church ef Canada BARGAIN A BARGAIN .. EVEN TO JACOB There is an arresting flashback in the thirty-fifth chapter of Genesis. The old patriarch, Ja- cob, suddenly recollects some- thing he had long forgotten and decides promptly to do something about it. Jacob had left home under a cloud. He had taken advantage of his brother, Esau, and had incur- red Esau's deadly hate. Once we | tributes showed the esteem in| The choir feelingly rendered, |-which-the-deceased_was_held_andj‘‘Unto the Hifis,""_ and “‘The | Shaw United Church and deep regret over his passing. Bev. A.F. MacLean and Rev. H. L. Mitton conducted the ser- vice, the chdir and congrega*‘ion sang ‘6Up The Hills’. Mr. Roy n sang “The Lord's Prayer’. He was @ son of the late J.J. and Flora MacLeod, Bonshaw | and for thirty five years carried | on a business with the farmers of the surrounding area. In 1937 he was made a Director of the | Mutual Fire Insurance Company several years later he was made an agent. A developing heart weakness in 1957 ‘breven‘ed his carrying on. His happy disposi- tion endeared him to his friends and family, especially his seven — iidren whom he dearly He was a man of firm religious faith, he was an elder of Bon later Was on the board of Stewards of Trinity United Church. In Politics he was a staunch Liberal. having served as beth | President and Secretary for the first distict of Queens. He was a member of the True. Brothers Masonic Lodge. Crapaud. For the last five years he and Lord’s My Shepherd” (Crimond) | In attendance at. the funeral from the R.A.C.F. base at Co'd Lake, Alberta. were W.C. C.F. Phripp, A.F.C Det’ Cdr of CE P.E., S.L. WJ Bachan, DF.C., FLA D Nichson, Sgt Mani- com, LA.C. Waters, LAC. Fir son, L.A.C. Kite, L.A-C Mock- | ford, and LA.C. Filmour All the | above personnel were associat- les of the late FL. Jones From C.E.P.E. Uplands, On- tario, there were in attendance: | W.C. J.N. Brough C.D.. and SL’ J.A. Anderson DSO, DFC, CD. Included in the attending party 'from the Summerside Station | ; were: W.C. Limpert, F.L. G.A. Lawrence, F.L. C.E. Ross, FL er, F.O. 5.8. Cliffe. . | The bearer party, also from Summerside Station was: W.0.2 H. Rule, W.O. 2 D-H. Mitchell, F. iS. D. Ede, FS C Larsen, Sgt R.F Hoare and Sgt EH. Wood- ruff The casket was borne from the church through a double rank of} saluting officers which formed | the attending party and who. at the graveside fell in at attention tres heard a young preacher call Ja- “‘a mean sneak’’ and in his been just that. He had to flee for his-—life. The first night away from home is a bitter one for any home-lov- ing boy. For Jacob it was pecu- liarly wretched. He was alone in the open wil- derness which he abhorred. His conscience was in revolt against what he had done. He was afraid of the future, for, as he looked forward, dark clouds filled the sky with lightning flashes break- ing through here and there. Sheer exhaustion compelled him to lie down with a stonewfor a pillow, and in the troubled sleep that followed, Jacob had the vision of Bethel in which God ap- peared to him and assured him of a place in His great design. Jacob answered with a vow, for Jacob, even in his religion, had an eye to business. So “‘he vowed a vow, saying: — “If God will be with me, and will give me bread to eat and raiment to puton, so that I come again to my father's house in peace, then shall the Lord be my God: and this stone which | tment of his brother he had| Mrs. MacLeod managed the Kirk- | on one side of the grave behi-™!) Beaver averaz. wood Motel. where he remained until his death. Surviving are his wife, the for- mer Jennie Darrach, two daugh- ters, (Florence) Mrs. C.F ..Burke, Mt. Edward Road (Constante) | Mrs. I. A. MacArthur, Hatnden, | Connecticut, one son Joseoh | MacKay, Dawson Creek, Alberta. | The following sisters and |bro- thers. Mrs. John Gordon: Mrs. W. R. Jenkins, Charicttetown: | Mrs. James ‘Boyce, Parkdale: Mrs. Harry Cudmore, Craneud; Mrs. George Milford, Livepool. | N.S., Mrs. J.W. MacDonaid. and | Mrs. Clark Crosby of Bonsh?w. Stenhen of Bonshaw. Palbearers were six nephews | of the deceased. Dr. Peter Mac- | Donald. Keith Bovce. Guv Mazr- | Leod. John Macleod. Kenneth ; Senkins, John-Gordon._Interment |-was in Charlottetown. | The fotowing were the floral | tributes: the _Peomles Cemetery | Duncan Steck has a column in| Pillow—Wife, Jefinie the latest issue of ‘Women’s! Blanket—-Dauchters, son and Wear Daily” giving retailers) grandehdren. . hints on how to protect themsel-| W?"ATHS: ves against shoplifting. He begins| L.D. Mac’ cod and familv with the following statement: | Norman MacLeod and family : Marv E. MacKenzie, “ov-treal SHOPLIFTING * >Marjorie Gamester, Montreal “Fur losses are expensive los-' Mr.and Mre. A. FE. Goent ses, and it-is_rare that furs can! Mr. and Mrs. Preston Rodd be recovered, on cars parked near the store in which people are sitting for any unless pelts. are! Mr. and Mrs. "dgar MecArthur | to Iran. indelibly marked. Keep an eye| Mr. and Mrs. Freeman Cudmore | | Mr. and Mrs. Alex Rhynes irectors of Mutval Fire Ins. Co. length of time, and even mention| Mts. Thomas R. Beer the fact to the policeman on your beat. Gunmen often wait just be- ‘fore closing, when the store is empty, before staging a holdup. Don’t put all your trust in burg- ler alarms; thieves are very clever at boring through walls, by-passing alarms which cover windows and doors. One _ retailer lost $100,000 in furs when thieves over a week-end, bored through three cinder-block walls to get (-Aat stored furs. Another trick is to! bore through a ceiling, which us- ually isn’t wired for alarms. “Beware of fights starting in your store, or of rambunctious shildren; they may be attention- getters to take you away from garmems which later are miss- ing. Beware of beautiful women: she may divert you (if you are a man while an accomplice goes to work on your stock. Only show » one or two garments ai a -time: K is not always possible to re- member all of them, if you bring them out”. Mr. and Mrs. Neif Darrach Mrs. John Gordon and family Staff DeB!ois Bros Managment and staff Nordair, Montreal Mr. and Mrs. R.G. Lefrancois. ; Montreal | Mr. and Mrs. Douglas ‘Burke, | _ Toronto a Maintenance Staff | Pilots of M.C.A. Chartottetown | Mr. and Mrs. Willard Burke Mr. and Mrs. George Hawkins r. and Mrs. Benjamin Rogers Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Clark Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Barbour Mr. and Mrs. F.T. Briggs Torento Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Mac! ecd Mr. and Mrs. James Boyce, Mar- ion, Keith Mr. and Mrs. George Milford, Liverpool Jean MacAthur, Boston . MacBeath famity, Boston. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cudmore Burke Electric Mrs. W. F. Burke and Wendell Mr. and Mrs. W.R. Jenkins Our comments on the above cette the bearer party. The service at the grave was conducted by Rev. N.R. Green and Padre. Quigg. At it conclus- ion, Trumpeter L.A.C. A.C. Lev- Reveille during which the attend- ing party saluted. As the attend- ing party departed from the slipped to the head of the flag- draped coffin and saluted. L.A.C. FS. Purchase, photographer from the Summersjde station . record- ed the service on film. ~ Only a few of the lovely floral tributes were taken into the | the deceased, John MacRae, Law- son MacEachern, George Irving, | Lloyd Martin, George Haden and Wiliam Hayden. _ DENIES REPORT LONDON (AP)—Moseow radio Thursday . described a_ British newspaper report that Russian troops had entered Afghanistan |as a “ridiculous anti-Soviet fab- |rication aimed at aggravating the situation in the Middle East.” The Daily Telegraph said Mon- day that (Soviet army units moved 60 miles inside Afghan- istan and took up positions astride the main road leading from the Afghan capital of Kabul | Mr. and Mrs. Morton Dew True Brothers Lodge, Crapaud BASKETS OF FLOWERS Warren Burns and Family Mr. and Mrs. Jamie MacDougall Clem Skinner, Amherst | Mr. and Mrs. Locky MacKinnon and Mrs. A.B. MacLeod Mr. and Mrs. H. Milligan Mr. and Mrs. Don Mitton Mr. and Mrs. K.C. Irving and family St. John N. B. | Mrs. Margaret MacPherson R.N. | Staff Kirkwood Motel Mr. and Mrs. J.W. MacDonald Mr. and Mrs.. Clark Crosby Mr. and Mrs Clayton Mr. and Mrs. Percy MacDonald. | Parkdale, i Mr. and Mrs. Lorne Good Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Gamester. Earl and Roland Taylor Dr. and Mrs. Malcolm Beck Billy Jenkins Mr. and Mrs. Bob Gray, Ham- den, Conn. Musical Festival Association Mrs. Lorne Callbeck Mr. and Mrs: Walter Pickard Mrs. Donald MaeLeod and family Agents of M.C.A. Ohariottetown, Beta Sigma Phi. Mr.‘and Mrs. R. FE. Dean, Three esque sounded Last Post Pand® Even to Jacob a bargain is a ter is it that .thofi shouldst not vow .than 3:4-5). Ian McLaren, im one of his no-| . vels, reports one of his favorite characters saying that -vows. be- have set for a pillar shall be God's house; and of all that Thou shalt give me, I will surely give the tenth unto Thee.” TO FULFILL IT bargain, and in Genesis 35 we see him long after God had giv- en him far more than he had dar- ed to ask, going back to Bethel under God's command to fulfill the vow he had made to God that first night away from home. So it came about that centuries later a wise man among Jacob's descendants wrote: “When thou vowest a vow unto God defer not to pay it; for He hath no pleasure in fools: pay that which thou hast vowed. Bet- that thou shouldst vow and not pay” (Ecclesiastes longed to the Old Dispensation we, in the New Dispensation, do make vows in the most solemn moments of our lives. There are our marriage vows when two young people pledge their faith to each other. The hap- piness and fruitfulness of mar- ried life depends on the two keep- and had no place in the New. Yet|- ing that vow to the letter. There are the baptismal vows which many parents take when they dedicate their child to God) in baptism. 3 By whole-souled keeping of that vow parents can mold the char- acter of the child, more decisive- ly than they realize before he can choose for himself. In fact, they can shape spirit in which his own decisions will be made. | There is the pledge the soldier gives when he enlists in the army | for his country’s defense, and the way our men kept—that—pledge has made history. We remember how Luthef kept his plighted faith:—‘‘Here I stand; I can no other: so help me God.” SOULS COMMITTED A vow can be a mechanical and superficial affair, but in| those high moments when youth |put their lives into God's hands ‘and await God's direction, their souls are committed to the posi- tions they take and the course of their lives decided thereby. It is on life’s high levels that our best decisions are made, and our effort through the common day is to keep our course on those heights. The world can ne- ver forget R. L. Stevenson's, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and the two types of character so sharply contrasted and yet found in the |same man. J. M. Barrie has, in his own whimsical style, given dramatic form to the same idea. The Gospels describe St. Peter on the Mount of Transfiguration vowing eternal loyalty to his Lord, and then describe him deny- ing his Master in the hour when that loyalty was most deeply need- ed No man who really knows him- self can be hard on St. Peter. It is the task of every follower of Christ to keep his everyday course of conduct true to the ideals he has seen in his visions of the right. It is here that we need Christ's guidance and help most deeply. Men buy Life Life Insurance —ermoena 111-115 Grafton: a .Rivers, Quebes “SATURDAY DANCE PARTY“ SATURDAY, MAY 16th —AT— THE CHARLOTTETOWN HOTEL | Tickets available from any Lions Club Member or at the Charlottetown Hotel. FICKETS 2.50 RER COUPLE MUSIC BY LOWELL HUESTIS AND HIS ORCHESTRA “Celebrate Your Anniversary by Attending -Qne of These Dances” eS ons Ae eee” ee ee ee ie fhe Guardian, Charlottetown, Sat, May 16. 1959. Manned ’ ' MONTREAL (GP) — Manned Said, Necessary RECEIVES LL. B. Calvin Wood, son of Mr. and Mrs. Parker Wood, Charlottetown, received his Bachelor of Law de-|- gree from Dalhousie University at Convocation on May 14. Mr.' Wood is also an Honor Graduate of Prince of Wales ‘Col- lege. Mr. Wood is articling with Mr. A. James Haslam of the firm of Palmer and Haslam. Erring Ring Comes Back PASSIAC, N.J., (AP)—The ring that liked being lost now ig, the ring that likes being found. Last. Friday Mrs. William Geair had said with great resignation: “I guess the ring just likes to be lost. I don’t expect to get it back.” The roving ring, a wedding band, was lost in 1914. It was . found in 1958 by Mrs. Geair's sister and returned as a 44th anniversary surprise. But a bunch of boys stole the ring from the Geairs’ pet shop last week. They told ar- resting policemen they lost the ring in an amusement park. A janitor read of the tale of the ring after finding it in _a city park. Mrs. Geair and her truant classrooms, teachers’ rooms and the principal's office were dam aged. . Police said the boys allegedly involved were 13 and 12 years of age, both grade six pupils at the schoo. The report indicated that most of the damage in the school was done with hatchets taken Heart Repair Sought For Boy BOSTON (AP) — Ten-year-cld John Stark of Digby, N.S., came to Boston's Children’s Medical Center Wednesday in the hope doctors can revair a heart defect lhe has had since birth. Two years ago, another Digby lad, Billy Patterson, underwent euccessful surgery on his heart at the same Boston hospital after a trip financed by a Canadian Legion fund. John Stark's trip was paid for in part by the fund on her heels, picking up a ban- Planes . emphatic “‘no.” Like Woman OTTAWA (CP)—Azellus Denis (L_ — Montreal St. Denis) said; Wednesday in the Commons a; ~ new Canadian stamp design re- minds him of a woman sitting Amid laughter, Postmaster-gen- eral William Hamilton said he is sorry to see aspersions cast at the first stamp designed in Can- ada by a woman. Mr, Denis had, completely missed the signifi- cance of the design, which port- rays a “symbolic woman” tend- img a tree over which a globe is poised. Fresh waves of laughter oc- curred as J. W. Pickersgill (L— Bonavista Twillingate) asked what a “symbolic woman’ is. Commons Speaker Roland Mich- ener said he better not let Mr./; Hamilton run the riskjef reply- ing. The new stamp was designed by Mrs. Helen Bacon, a Toronto housewife, to commemorate de- velopment of the Associ ated é. ¢ Johnstone SAYS— are going to die but because their families are going te live. ments for future delivery. Let's telk it ever. Edwin €. Johnstone; B:A:,;€:x:U., Provincial Mgr : Street, Charlottetown, P. E. I. Ask about our complete range ef Group benefits. ring were reunited Monday. The ring is going on a chain she'll wear-around—her-neck.— Charges Decided On Vandalism HALIFAX (CP) — The Halifax county school board decided Wed- | nesday to instruct RCMP to lay) charges in connection with week- end vandalism at junior high school in suburban Armdale. School board chairman George Burris said results of police in- vestigation into the vandalism were given to the board. They were dealt with at a special meeting. Police said two juven-| From the mountain tops we) can see directions and goals as; we cannot see them in the val-' leys, but it is.only on the lower| levels that the dream can be) turned into reality. | Moses received the law on the Mount, but when he came down| to join the people whom he was| to lead, he found them worship-; ping the golden calf. | Many have been disillusioned fim the same way. But no true man accepts degradation as his, destiny. | The place that Christ wants to) fill is beside him in the services; of the common day, giving the! cup of cold water to the thirsty, | and carrying the loaves which | Christ has multiplied to the hun-) gry—both the starved bodies and) the yearning souls of the people. Taised in 1957. Hospital officials said John's trouble is a ventricular, septal de- fect. Doctors must study his case to determine whether they can repair a defective wall separat- ing,one of his heart chambers frofh another. His. parents, Loran and Mar- garet Stark, came here with the boy. TALL CHIMNEY A copper plant at Sagazanos- eki, Japan, has a 570-foot chim- Country Women of the World, an international organization founded by Mrs. Alfred Watt ‘of Collingwood, Ont. It includes var- ious Canadian women’s organiza- tions. The stamps went on sale Wed- mesday for the first time at Stoney Creek, near Hamilton. Yeur Roxatone dealer - M. F. SCHURMAN CO. LTD. Charlottetewn - Summerside ney stack built of reinforced con- crete. SUMMER we Insurance not because they is money bought en instal- rae, ; ee Typical shot — with normal lens. Subject LOST in the \ distance P. 0. BOX 1600 MacDONALD BLDG. einem A A RE A CLL APE MARITIME CENTRAL AIRWAYS For Moncton ‘5:55 a.m.—11:00 a.m.—4:00 p.m. For Grindstone, Magdelene Island ...... For New Glasgow and Halifax . 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