' ocrrou lfltl ouanntau. CHARLOTTETOWN . ....¢______.___..-_-_ p-wm srnc1ALs TODAY Q MONDAY BULK COCONUT. lb. 49c PEACHES. 2O oz. tin; 2for. 37c MILK. 2iins 31c APPLES (Macintosh). 2 doz. . 35c GRAPES. 2Ibs. 29c COCONUTS. each 25c CELERY. each . . . 15c SALAD BOWL . BACON. OATMEAL PUDDING. lb. umnmn 29c PLATE RIBS. Ib...............4Ic CORNED RIBS. lb. 15c CORNED HOCKS. lb. 25c POTTED MEAT. Bowl 25c llapoleon and Uncle Elby I wuss, Hume's Mosu- MAeAiinn wmt A oousuz-z SPREAD or-i NAPO mom’; HNNWNGS mum-so m 001.02. stem»: worn-us CLOTHES. HIS 549MB IS A HJMBL! REA‘? DOOR t“ ‘—' THEE: HE LIVES WiTHUiG A31’. ER 22, 1949' FREE! 1 Lb. Margarine with Every $6.00 Order Limited Supply ANDREWS’ Phone 2696 38 Elm Ave. NONSENSE; NAFO LZQNI CAEES NOTHING- TERIAL P%SESSIONS. HE XESNT OWN AN QRE 1R HOUSE WITH ONLV ONE PREPARED VEGETABLE SALAD \\ ..33c Phone 2697 By Olifford McBride MAKI%' PNNT SMENPS WITH Hi8 TAIL.’ wno-snin-so? WHO SAID YOU COULDN'T BUY A USED OAR AT A LOW PRICE! ONE ONLY 1949 LIETEOR TUDOR DELUXE fully equipped with Radio, Heater, Air Conditioning, Sun Visor, and Low Mileage at the amazingly low price of $1760.00 CALL AND SEE IT TODAY STEWART MOTORS LTD. - "YOUR METEOR. DEALER" 224 Gt. Geo. St. Phone 881 H553 w. it. Queue ‘It. I '_ f; COMPLETE ‘INSURANCE ' SERVICE nuancu masseuse ‘ _. ,LO0AL AGENTS s. 0101111.“, charisma-ms. ruins IIeGIIIGAN, llnuter Iver- wsursa acumen. neat-a. names. s. norm. Mam! 3""- oan. n. "walls. NW1"- Rogers llgeneiett ' LIMITED Charlottetown m MEMORIAPA ouoaou c. MAOLIAN His many friends were saddened. to learn of the passing, n. the Prince Edward Island Hospital an Fflday Oct. ‘ith tote of George d. MaoLean of Wlnaloe, Although in failing health for the past two years, the call came as a sudden shock to his fun-lily and friends. at Meadow- bankinMarchlGEsonoft-halate James and Mrs. Macibcan of that place. In 192i he married Hazel Mac- Rae of Bonshaw and took over the Post Office and grocery business at Wlnsloe, formerly opera/ted by Mr. A.A. MacNeili, when they spent tWeIWY W0 Years enjoying the kind co-operation of that; many customers. He was able to be about the bus- iness as usual until about three weeks prior to his death. He spent two weeks in hospital where he re- ceived aili medical aid and kind nursing until he passed away on the above mentioned date. George will be greatly missed in the community, where he was always ready to help with any und- ertaking. but the 105a is more keen- ly felt In the heme. when he always ruled with love and unselfishness He leaves to mourn the loss of a kind and loving husband and fath- er his sol-rowing wife a/nd four children namely, Wlllliim Heath. Ruth and Norma, all at home. Also his aged mother, and brother Frank at Meadowbank. Three sir- ters (Elizabeth) Mrs. James Grif- fith.~Seatilc. (Gertrude) Mrs. Neil Fecguson-Bonshaw, and (Cora) Mrs. William Ling-Wheatlley Rdv- BX‘. A short service was conducted at. his home on Sunday, Oct. 9th alt 1.30 p.m. followed by a service at 2 pm. at ‘Prinity United church Charlottetown. Services were con- ducted by Rev. JR. Skinner assisted by Rev. Donald Nicholson and Rev. A.E. Piercy who spoke comforting words to the bereaved. Hymns sung were Abide wit-h Me. The lord's My Shepherd, and Peace. Perfect Peace. “In that Beautiful Land". was effectively rendered by the Bonshaw quartette, Organist-Mr. Paul Gudmore. The large attendance at the Church and the many floral tri- butes, letters and cards of sympa- thy. testified to tile esteem in which George was held. ' He was tenderly laid to rest in ‘the beautiful Cemetery alt Sherwood. Bearers were, three brother's-in- law: William Ling, Oolin MacFad- yen and James Gordon and Mil- ford Oudmore. Guy Kennedy and Stewart MhctFal-lane. FLOWER! Pillow-The family. Broken circlkMother and Flrank. Wreaths and Sprays-Sister, Olive Elizabeth and family. Cora and Billie. Nell Gertrude and Ivan. Eric Glennie and family. Isabel and Baden. Mr. and Mrs. James Gordon and family. Eddie. Inez and David. Cat-veil Bros. Lid. DeBlois Bros-Geo. D. DeBlols. Canada Packers Ltd. Rogers Hardware Co. Ltd. Lanes Bakery. J.C. Montgommy and O0. Associated Shippers Inc. Michael Bros. Management and Staff of Beaten amd MutrRae. Clive MacMillan and Bob Mac- Innis. George P. Thom/mm. Harry Hirsch and family. Am. Aggie and family. Mr. and Mrs. R. Balderson and Barbara. Wallace and Sally. Jack. Doris and Shirley Stlockman. Gordon and Dorothy. Esben and DOWONIW Amtflfi. Teacher omd Piupils of Winsloe Station School. - Highfield Wcmens Institute. Mr. and Mrs. PJ. Maclnnis and family. 0.w. and Mrs. campbell- EM. pnd Mrs. Glldmore. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Middleton. Jack and Carrie. Jack and Blair MacRae. Mr. and Mrs. B.M. Sears. Myra and Willard Prowse. < Mr. and Mrs. nuclei-t. Whyne and Vivian. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Gay. W,B. and Mrs. Creed and Murray. Th9 Steal-nu family. Stephen, Annie and family. Stewart, Evelyn and family. Mrs. Crosby and family. Mr. and Mrs. AB. Roberts Lea. Stemn and Winnifred. Jimmie. Emma and Colee. Wilfred and mis. Everett and Annie. Aunt Maggie and Uncle Percy. Vera. Eva and Elm-a. _ ~ Oeril Of Thanks we wish to thank our many friends and neighbors. those who sent flowers and mull-IQ! 0f Illn- pathy. doctors and nurses at the passing of our dear hmbaud and father. - 1mg George C. lllaeleen and fatally. and Margaret Sore. Rallil 751°" Bets Fast Relief e ive treat an old afjfli.‘ cglthcuflftarrlfil-o-aone which uickly soothes the irritated sur- lflggeg of the throat. In using Oaterrb oqong you breathe a aoothllll "P"! direct to the bronchial tubes and "m"; this vapor is so full of hem iul medication that colds. catalrh and bronchltid often I9! ""91 "It ' I t use Qtlfll-o-auue c3313‘? ‘Ive: your nandletcnicl ind inhale the medicated vapor. ilundredl lay it can do your couch at‘ cold a world of good. Start toda.‘ w"), caiarrh-o-sona and get err-tho National Temperance Study Oourse-l 949-. LIIION IOU! (Senior) ALCOHOL AND THE MACHINE AGE I “Ieur Iaers Before Car Crab. Driver, ll. Held Responsible.” Headlines such as this bring sharply before our minds the rela- tiou of alcohol to the machine age. We have seen in previous luaons how alcohol dulls the brain. re- duces the power of Judgment, and impairs self-criticism. It is only natural to suppose that when an intoxicated person is put in charge of a powerful machine. the ef- fects of his handicap ara multiplied many times, and ha becomes fer more dangerous to himself and to others. The accelerated tempo and the greater power of the machine increase many times the likelihood of accident through ai- cohol. This is true of all machines, from the lathe and drill press of the mechanic's bench to the giant airliner which soars through the skies. Liquor and machinery are poor companions. Let us think particularly of the automobile in this lesson, however. as it is among the commonest of machines, and figures more prominently in our thinking about alcohol. Experience The dangers inherent in the drinking of alcoholic beverages by those in charge of machines are revealed many times weekly by reports of accidents. The follow- ing items, selected from the daily press, serve to bear out this claim. " ‘You were so drunk you couldn't remember,‘ a Magistrate told two boys, aged 2O and. l9. Their car struck the curb four times in a short distance. Drove along highway 70-80 miles per hour. Struck approaching car and forced it into the ditch. Drunk driven carfiore down length of fence and was wrecked. The two boys were unconscious and had to be carried out of the car. ‘Both had been drinking." said the police officer." “O-"ii Man was con- victed ou s charge of careless driving. The case arose from a collision just after midnight. Driv- er ~of the other car went to hos- pital with head abrasions, lacerat- ed hand and a shoulder injury. Accused admitted drinking six or seven pints of beer about seven hours before the accident. The two men in the other car had drunk a pint of beer each before leaving for home." You can duplicate items such as every week. The statistical find- ings based upon the accumulated records of such experience prove beyond question that alcohol and machinery do not mix. Take a typical year, i943, in the United States, our southern neighbour, In that year there were 800.000 non- fatal accidents. and 23,400 deaths in traffic. The total cost to the nation of this one year's accidents was seven hundred million dol- lars. Alcoholic intoxication was a major cause of these accidents. 137, of the drivers involved “had been drinking", 14% of the pedes- trians "hnd- been drinking", and one out of every five accidents in- volved drinklngl , In four typical American cities in the same year, it was discover- ed thaf. one half of the drivers in- volved in accidents -had been drinking, and one-third had enough alcohol in their s stems to be de- finitely “under tye lnfluence".. In 1940, fatal accidents among Am- erican drinking drivers were twice as frequent as among the general population. And here in Canada, conditions are fast approximating those in the U.S. One government official claims that 45% of all seri- ous highway accidents in Ontario are due to drinking! In fact, statistics show that a drinking driver is fifty-five times more likely to have an accident than the abstalnerl No wonder thin Professor Joslyn Rogers. of the University of Toronto, makes the statement, "Drunken driving has succeeded war as the BMW" scourge of modern times." Science What experience proves. science explains. Alcohol gives the driv- er a false sense of confidence. It dulls his caution, and puts him in the mood to _"take a chance," which he would not take if he were completely sober. and which can eaally lead to disaster on the road. Alcohol impairs the work- lug of the “middle brain". w that the messages which l0 b")! "id forth from the brain to the sense organs and muscles become con- fused. For this reason. the driv- er cennot judge protifll! u" ‘m’ -tsnce between his car and other cars, or pedestrians, ahead of him. With some drivers. alcohol causes color blindness, so that it is dlf» fieult to obey traffic lights pro- perly. Alcohol restricts the field of vision. so that the drinking driver cannot see until later than normally the cars which approach from the right or left at an inter- section. Alcohol may prevent the eyes from focussinl rllhtl! to- gether. so that the driver lees double. and is not lure which of the two objects he sees is the real one! How devastating this would be in a modern traffic tangle can be left i0 your own imagination! Then, too, alcohol interferes with what we call reaction time, that is. the time it takes a person to give the proper response to an! eenpution. The testing of reaction time has been the lubltct of many road to better health: Se tnd T!“ ilus ll nil d"!!! '31?! experiments. Under ordinary con- “ELQQ l "W!!! "EM! 9!! II- these from your own newspaper- spend to a Ill!!!- lueh as a light flashing. La cue-fifth of a second, but when a person has been drink- ing, he takes longer to respond. His reaction time is slowed down 6 per cent an hour after drinking 1% glusas of whiskey. 12% af- terfliglalseaandflfiafteriti glasses. A change of 34% is eon- slderabla. It means, for example. that if a car were travelling at 50 miles an hour, it would take about l7 feet more road space to bring it to a atop. That 1'! feet might make all the differmce between life and death, as you can readily imagine. Alcohol in the brain is the enemy of safe driving. That is why raihroadl, bus companies, and air lines lilt "drinking on or before duty" as a very serious ef- fense, often punishable by instant dismissal. Not only does experience prove and science explain the great risk involved in drinking before con- trolling a machine, but drinkers. brewers. and. distillers admit itl "In one city on Christmas Day, four hundred car owners hired garage mechanics to drive their cars for them. They deliberately unfitted themselves to drive their own cars, and took safety precau- tions in advance." The brewers and dlstlllers. alarmed at the pos- sibility of a public reaction against the growing number of drunk- driving fatalities, are doing their utmost, by propaganda and ad- vertising. to put across the mes- sage, "If you drive, don't drink. If you drink, don't drive." This is one issue, then, upon which there is no difference of opinion. Drinking and driving do not mix. How much better it is to abstain entirely from the use of a substance which, by dulling the sense of the one in control, can render any motor car an in- strument of sudden death! QUISTIONI 1. What is the effect of alcohol upon eyesight? 2. Give three reasons why I drinking driver is dangerous. Pupils 12, 1s. 14 years answer question one; l5. id, 1'1 yearn au- rwer both. LESSON FOUR. (Junior) A MANUAL I03 A. KING By MARY I. MILNE If you have decided to be a doctor when you grow up, you want to be a good doctor. If you become an engineer. then you want to be a good engineer. You know, too, that your mother wants you to be just as good a doctor or engineer as you can possibly be. Mothers are like that. and a1- Ways have been. In the Bible we read of a mother of long ego, whose son, Lemuel, became king of a coun- try called Massa. in Arabia. Lemuel whose name means "dedicated t0 God," was a handsome and clever young man. Everybody liked hirn and showered him with gifts and favours. He could choose his friends wherever he wished. The Bible does not tell us much about him, except that his mother was a very wise mother. She had taught him from his boyhood to be care- ful about the sort of people he made friends with. She wanted him to choose good friends. who did not drink wine. Then it would be easier for Lemuel to follow his mother's advice. and never. to drink liquor himself. Lemuel had something better than advice from his mother. how- ever. She set him the example she wanted him to follow. She had prmnised God that she would not touch strong drink. She called Lemuel, "the son of my vows", meaning that she hoped he would promise God the same things. “It is not for kings. O Lemuel," his mother continued. "it is not for kings to drink wine; nor for princes strong drink, lest they drink and forget the law and per- var-t the judgment of any of the afflicted." If a king spends his time in drinking, he will certainly become careless in looking after the affairs of state. and may easily be unfair in dealing with his people. The king should always care about the welfare of even the "poorest and least important sub- ject. and should speak out for the rights of those who can't speak for themselves. “Open thy mouth for the dumb in the cause of all such as are appointed to destruc- tion. Open thy mouth. judge rlghteously and plead t“ "" " of the poor and needy." "You cant’ be too careful." his mother warned Lemuel. "More people are drowned in the wine- cup than in the ocean." What is important for kings, is Important for you. too. For you are a king! You are king over IIITl-I LAXIITIUE .AIITACID‘ rt .’ ,-- -. - ~ e - fwh-ich do YOU want a a a Y ,-. ,.._ ./ EVEIPYO NE HAS SOMETHING TO SAVE FOR . .. it may be a new ear . . . something for the house . . . the education d your child . . . or just the confidence and satisfac- tion that comes from hav- ing a nest egg oi savings. Mayheyou have found it dificult to save be- fore, but there is on easy and profitable way to get siurlcd. Buy a Canada Savings Bond. You'll find there's a denomination to fit your particular pocketbook, because you can buy a $50, $100, $500, or $1,000 bond. And of ourse, bonds can be purchased on convenient terms through your company's Payroll Sav- lugs Plan, or a! any branch of this Bank. Canada Savings Bonds (Fourth Series) pay 2% per cent interest each year for ten years, and can be cashed at any time if you need the money. As little as $8.46 will start you buying a $100 bond. Ask for more dotnils at any branch of The Bunk of Nova Sculls: 5A SIGN 0F GOOD FRIENDSHIP T. F. Mitchell, Manager, Charlottetown, P.E.I. your own life. What you command is law there, and your life is what you make lt. You cannot rule over your own life wisely and well if your brain is befuddled. You cannot fudge properly be- tween right and wrong. between good and bad unless your mind is clear. It takes only a very little beer or wine to fog up the brain of the drinker. That ll the first thing that happens. because al- cohol gets into the blood vuy soon after lt is swallowed and is carried by the blood to the brain. People do foolish things, and sometimes wicked things after drlnkingAhin-gs they would never do if they did not take liquor. No king would invite an enemy into his castle, where he could do the king most harm. l-ie keeps his enemies on the outside. Shake- speare was one of the world's wis- est men; be asks “Why do nun take au enemy into their mouths to steal away their brains?" The enemy be means is alcohol. Do you know that "Hap" Day, manager and coach, and Syl Apps, former captain of the Maple Leafs Hockey Team would not have s man playing on the team who drank liquor‘! They know that the team can only play their best when they keep their minds clear. They frankly state their belief ‘that no athlete has any business drinking liquor. You may never be a hockey player, but you want to be the best you can of whatever your trade or calling may be. Your mother wants you to be your best, too. Keep the enemy on the out- eidei ' QUESTION! 1. What did the king's mother say about a king and strong drink? Z. Would you find it helpful to make such s promise as his moth- er wanted Lemuel to make? Give reasons for your answer. Nine years and under answer question one; 10 and 1i years an- swer both. Mrs. Arthur Pilre Is AUowei Bail . , Oct. Quebec air disaster murder case, today was allowed bail of $500 after her preliminary hearing on a charge of attempted suicide wek adjourned until Oct. 26. Mrs. -Pitre is described as friend of J. Albert Guay, Quebe jsweller charged with murder i the disaster which took 23 livel with a Canadian Pacific AlrllneQ 22—-((7P)—MrS. plane crash Sept. 9. Guay 1a ace Arthur Pitre, key witness in the cused of the murder of his Wif one of the plane's passengers wh died when a bomb exploded in th aircraft. ouloltiss - RY KEII REYNOLDS E . 16-21." i?! "New you've done if — forced me to ruin the for sole foduy in the Guard-ion Went Ads" picture I offenq .114: euv m ms BAND woo ~ . l is sour our A sou-re, , woo can m a-ros wtu. . "E PLAYING we rture _'_I‘HERE OUGHT TO BE A LAW _ ki-ITWE GUY WHO 1.0016 SOME- THING LIKE LITTLE TOM ‘INUMQ ALWAYS SEEMS TO BE TOT ING- by Fagoly 6' Shorts; a THE BIG BASS DRUM! O