; 1 PELT VlNG STATION Our Charlottetown Receiving Station for this season will be under the management of Messrs. Bowness 8i Sutherland, Massey-Harris This Station is now oren and the management will be pleased to recs pelts and issue official receipts for same. ‘YIIJIIIIIIHIIAIIIIIJ #31 e. i at Y: WINTER. GOOD TIME FOR REPAIRS Repair delayTparticularly during l seeding and harvest often It is 9, wise time policy im- mediately after the fail work has‘ been completed to make a list o! the known parts to be re laced and repaired. Under the con itioiis that exist aird are likely to exist for the wars duration, it is wise to order parts well in advance o! their actual need, otherwise long delays are likely to occur. As far as possible, repairing show". be done during fall and wii.;- r when there is not so much work to be done outdoors as during the growing season. Repairs that cannot be done on the farm should be taken to the blacksmith or other repairman in the fall and winter so that his work may be more even- ly distributed throughout the year. in overhauling machinery, all bearings, axles. and similar parts SliliJWt to wear should be taken Mlflft and examined carefully. Any that are not likely to work well for another full season should be re- placed. Other parts should be thor- oillzhly cleaned and examined, mkinr: particular care to see that ilir‘ lubricating parts are working well. Parts that work in the ground such as cultivator shovels, and discs should also be el-lecked that are cracked or badly worn should be replaced. Others may require sharpénin to insure best results for the fo lowing season. A reasonable number of the supply. on consignments. quest ll Archibald Street well. GLOVES, fabric and kid ....- COTTON DRESSES HOUSECOATS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. $1.98 to $12.95 THE FASHION SIIDPPE Great George Street i~'T%4€$%¥€§'153§€3€@€$$#€ 4€%€@_ g chosen implements all kept Min-gt 5"" Mum“ R055- lclass working condition will do R" LINGERIE SLIPS. .... .... “$100108!” PANTlES79cto81J5 GOWNS . $1.00 to 84.0.5 PYJAMAS $1.00 i" PURSES .......... ..............$l.59to$6.35 .. $1.00 to $3.95 F Pretty Colored Wool Mitts and Gloves Blouses, Short and Long Sleeves . $1.00 to $1.98 better work m than many machine indifferent working order. i________ OMITTED TO SAY HE WAS MARRIED DUNDEE. Sept When a 22-year-old night in Septembe h t i on the platform. r e me a g her. proposed and was and the same evening fastmoving love sto married, so William Webster ____.______ BOTTLENECK IN LONDON Until i750. there was only o 0T0 All Ranchers & Trappers The strong and upward trend of the Fur Market is your assurance of a good Market for 1943 and 1944 The demand for furs of every description far exceeds Fur Traders and Ranchers who have sold out early last year have lost as much as 100 per cent. Eight years of successful selling and marketing of raw furs by our organization speaks for itself. We solicit all or a portion of your coming years production. Our terms remain the same. Liberal cash advances up to 60 per cent if required We have cold storage facilities, cleaning and storing free of charge. We pay express charges.‘ Shipping bags and tags supplied upon re- PRIVATE SALES MADE DAILY MARITIME Fllli POD-L LTD. F. it. MoLAlllE, Local Representative BUCKLEYS MIXTUR I ~_ t , oluswlu. for pbowsrnivhl- = . 3 — (OP) — D soldier joined a queue at ‘l ma“ “am 5mm)"; gown of Ivory satin with net veil He met her again Mill'- mlddfly. went for a. walk with er ' length There w“ only onfyfilttf‘: alga‘: with matching headdress and car- forgot“, tent)“ 8M he w“ already ried a. boquet of pink roses. The for three months Vi? o! 0H0 bridge crossing the Thames River in Lond n. ltlilllllll. lilllltllllll -l‘lslsoolmnnhreservelforllfl ,0! local tnterflt, but u"! i‘. hv'§"§|'iu'§"§'u:”mlcuv wo- h advance. UONIIDIIIATION IJII INIUI- ANCI MT l? > § -<:-1 W. M. l. MEETING — Nomeniw Missionary Auxiliary Jrinity United church was held in learts Hall Thursday s iymn 3i, “O Worship The King Jllss ll. Puncher r “dod at the piano. The scripture road by Mrs. study period those taking par the reading were as follows: Mrs. J. Pickard. Before the WM’. Mrs. H, Newson, Today in the midst of war. Mrs. L. Dustin, Tomorrow after the war. The meeting was then opened for business after which was brought to a close by the President. - WOOD — R05 WEDDING — At the Porwnal Parsonage on the evening of Tuesday. Nov. 30th. inst, and at. the hour of 6 o'clock, by Rev. D.K. Ross, B.A., Etta Mar- dallghter of D. K. and the late Marv s Evelyn Ross. became the bride of Edward Jones Wood, son of Win. Henry and Mrs. Wood o! Pownal. The wedding march we. played by Mrs. John MaicRae, sister of the groom. The bride was given away |by Mr. W. R. Shaw. Deputy Min- ister of Agriculture, and was charmingly attired in a floor length caught with orange blossoms and ‘carried an arm boquet of sweet ,heart roses. and maiden hair fern The bridesmaid el Mac- Donald of Cornwall, wore a floor gown of powder blue chiffon, groomsman was Mr. Alex MacRae of Waterside. During the signing me register Mrs. John McRas sang very sweetly, "I'll Walk Bo- 'slde You". The accompanist was ,Miss Verna Wood of Charlottetown. Following the wedding ceremony a bountiful buffet lunch was served to the immediate relatives and friends. Mrs. Elizabeth Wood of" Charlottetown poured tea and Miss Etta Munroe of Providence. R.I., aunt of the bride served the ices. Misses Isabel Inga, sally and Verna Wood. assisted in sewing. The rooms were decorated beauti- flllly with pink snapdragon and white chrisanthemixns. Many handsome and useful gifts were received by the bride and groom. They left on the night of their marriage for a short honeymoon and on their return will reside in Pownail PEI. we wish them fivery happiness in their wedded e. L-Opl. Goorke E. Smith and wife have return to Ontario, after spending his furlough with the formers parents, Mr. and Mrs Edgar Smith, unter River. DIES AT 1M PERBRIGHT. Surwy, England, —(CP)- Mrs. Charlotte Armstrong 104. sister of Col. Haversham God- win-Austen. discover of, Mount Godwin-Austen, 28.250 foot peak in the Himalayas, died at her home here. MONCTON. N. B. L*4 % @ 130 Kent Street. Summerside Canadian llational Silver Fox Breeders’ Association Bldg, ve your \ t \ \ s \ \ \ \ l l i Prince Edward Island \, BROS v IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII) " uovvluusvs sou THROAT FROM ACOlI AI-MOIT INSTINTIY use safe, lest-nah‘ - Full directions III each package nun/notice: S l R | Bk“, L. . ..... "o... u.“ I lot-ll i... m.- llAYlR (Ross A FEW MALES ‘ PLATINUMS MARKED SILVER! and STANDARDS ii. CUDMORE , n. Jlio President. Mrs. W. H. Jolm- the who an was in the chair. The opening with | livebmslvea that.’ 051i, contained in Each of ire“ draft boa-rd i" Oflloetbuleoblflli ‘II-IE WN GUARDIAN iilr. vim. 0m i To lhr v-OOQ-O-OOOQQ Oryeo g QQQQQQ. I! 1 Theseus Plots UIAYIII Y It. Winkle been look the l’. lid mm tllii‘. . iii... la found that most oi the other men were already there. ~ Thme members of the board. in- cluding the clerk and the chairman, l who was clad in s. blue American , 1e ion uniform snd made a very- cial a pearsnoe, sat Minn a‘ saw, recognized him from his pic- ture in the paper. A few of them gave him brief antics or nods, tentative invitations to being oom- rades in arms. 0i- recognition that he was in the same boa: with them. lvlr. Winkle couldn't decide which t W8... More men came in and seated themselves. Jack Pettigrew arrived and sat gingerly on the edge of a chair; he didn‘t look around. Mr. Winkle counted, to keep his mind busy. and saw that seventeen were present. all were here except one. lMost of them were very young not much more than half his age. A few were in their early thirties. From the list published in the paper, giving all the ages, Mr. Winkle knew that he was the only one above forty. He felt lonely. Ail heads turned as the last of the draftees appeared. ‘ Mr. Winkle knew Freddie ‘Iindall from having seen him decorating the main street of the town. He ‘was a fixture tliere, like one of the lamp posts or a traffic slsn. He was twenty-eight. handsome, with a thin dark mustache plaster- ed across his lip, and his clothes _ were too flashy. Freddie was a prominent mem- ber of the deprwsion generation. He had come to maturity when there were no Jobs to be had. Once | having formed the habit of not! working, he made it a career at which he excelled. It was his boast that he had never earned a nickel in his life and never would as lone as his family's mony held out. Now the war hail come along to eye lighted on _ Mr. Winkle. He slamed his suitcase on the floor, eased his frame gracefully to a chair in the reali- row and greeted Mr. Winkle, "Hello, Pop." One man tittered nervously. A fevw smiled without conviction. Jack Pettlgrew, who ust then looked lfiilélhda stared. other! id no a en on. “w. Winkle w... indlznwt- It had been bad eno h to have cer- tain people laugh a him. But. ho hadn't expected one 01 It draftees to make fun of him. He decided that Pieddie Tindall didn't know any better and VIE-Slit worth bothering about. But Freddie he instrument of something else that really touched him. For the frst time Mr. Winkle told htllmsei that] h: wasn't old. The o ers were us young. The chairman of the draft board looked at yils watch and then rose. He made a little talk. while tho men all listened attentively, except meddle Tlndall. who gssed in- out the window. chairman explained that ad all been chosen fairly. strictly accordi to the selective Service regula oris. being sder." he concluded, "is lnted for you, snd you r911 to obey him on he Th to“ your bfgriduotion‘ yglentfir. se ormein unon . wnlm-t While. wlii be Wlir lead- er." Mr. Winkle was flattered. Ho no r u» mponnbfllt . It all heipotflke no mind off kin- " ' 11mm leaned toward . ....."**.o.-i" i“ m“ sew tail. he was £- lng to have trouble with Rod o. DQII“ '0 U “P. ~ The mail?» the l the ket. es 1;” l!" ll. J. llll0ll llflflolll' Gills IIIUIII. Ill. "- Wllflm“ Ielloyl do. l! lppstnlmem oases-rose _ t‘? Illa’! bl ' h.‘ .' 9E! -__ “ 771a bee? things" come in small pd¢kdges-" The men tn your roster of family snd friends '1“ agree unanimously that the best things do q‘. h small packages if the “things” are from ons- “u”, tilon of small snd suitable gifts for males of all qq and testes. Ohoose from a large assortment of: ... , TIES - SOCKS - GOWNS - snuzrs .- stoves Y“; 5-8 sure ti, find MUFFLERS - BRACES. arc. something he w 947.93’! omrs uv ‘.4 WIDE PRINCE RANGE! C w | oki g Lisle, cotton, wool, and ,~ Attractive handkerchief Mouefyflerauzlso ovesv Twit“ M” l“ “ti”? “'- a and tie sets. Priced from dressy in silks or wools °°|°m ‘ $1.00 $1.00 up 59¢ "P THE l GREEN DAL CO. table at fmnt of room. ‘rlhrey shuffled pivpers wi h e grave ’ _ E0 GE ST a . _ The draftees, themselves sot on MENS WEAR PHONE 1500 144 GT‘ G R collapsible chllars auiég with uneasy - . exprc on; rna e ween rc- _ 4- . A A _ , _ s Rgltigllfltaglligh other and the men *‘ - ' ‘ ' ' ' " ‘ ' ' “l i '- __ _ __ e e ~ dioFi? nis'i.T.fi T':,M*T;r-‘—if—- ,_ d si-a a1‘ m s iwid“ Nxr-roxvhmgéfnyg} tlhemniwg ti}: own Papers, and the: lnsgtrlizrtiond The 5e33, willcmlldi .3‘.‘...‘ii'é$§"ii’.' '.i‘,f'i'.'.’é“.aillé'é.‘i'if ifhrllfitbnitgé- nonsrmvvhgec. 1 - (on - ' ve war prisons: shared a bottle of ale bmved b1 King Edward VII in 1902- Allctlm. ed by the Red the rm int- tle was purchased for silos; Antique dealer John Rushiner m. asked the five servicemen to slim is with him. ‘Hie ale cost sits mouthful. about a. number of other documents 7°!’ the 870119. The clerk was read- ing one of these, his warrant of Blltiwflil’. when the American legion Band burst into smuid out- side on the street. The clerk had to raise his voice m make me rm of the warrant heard, ihev all tlrooped down to the first rendition took up another, ation. four abreast. in back of the at the sight of the group or draft-| band, Mr. Winkle was laced at w» There was a scattering of air, thelr head. out in front a1 by him- plause from the crowd. Mr. Winkle 5e11, 3e didn't care for this dis- SQW that some of the people hadl tinclion, but he couldn't refuse it. little American flags, which they] The attention thus drawn m him, Wlved. and the noise and the staring, Those who carried suitcases piled cheering people, bewildered him. them in the cars of the draft board (n; Be Continued) Checked and “Bltllflllliflll for axon “Evereedy” Flashlight stony" must pass the some mu foo quality as in pie-war years. Remember, too, the date-line on the jacket is your guarantee offresllnesl. When you need to ee-lood you! light, choose the batteries which for more than s qua-bee century- “Bveready" Batteries. l —\ "They Last Longer” ._~.- . _. q A Canadian National Carbon Company Limited "llllil! MOMICCI Winnipeg Vsnqsw"