nwsimi 0diau»~_--.... . .4 fir." fijrw_“§ -- VARRO - “tlfifslf m0 “The Barbarian" ‘flaw: SONGS or nu: mm" Q < STARTING THURSDAY MAT. 3.15. EVE. 'l AND 8.45 Mary hln-rtln -— too beautiful to puss unnoticed in a world of men! It might have been any. girl who chose the pun to lux- ury and richer-until she found the one man she loved . 0 . . . Usual '1‘ l m 0 I ‘ egular Price! 2 ADDED COMEDY ZASU PHTS-TIIELMA TODD IN "SNEAK EASILY" Protestant (Continued) I Mr. Paul ltiurray - - - - -- Mr. J. P. McDonald lMisses Johnson Mrs. I. J. Yeo Mrs. Archibald .. Mrs. B. stenfiford .. Mrs. Harry Miller . A rviend Mrs. James Coyle R. D. hicCrlnnell . . . . . .. with LORETTA YOUNG, RICARDO CORTEZ, FRANCHOT TON . ANDY DEYINE, UNA MERKEL EXTRA SILLY SYMPHONY “THE I'll-ll) PIPER" .\I1‘s. A. B. Cosh ........ La lifrs. Leigh Wright . . . . . . . . 8011001 Opening; Al. Cherry Valley Now-mber 6:11. a spent 111ml. 0.‘. Jlonrial‘. ' 1 21111111111‘ even 11s: "was Vailsy of 1'.l'1 . '1 1o b’ . lir 1..=v.'..<"n =1\\'Cc ,ll"l'l- ul by: rclnrlrks by 3111'» H. H. SllilW. t of Edluzltion. thfn ' nu 1310 rreple of on 11c splendid bulld- ‘.1 j.‘ 11111 (FIPCiCfi. lie made 11111‘- ers ' 1 11.1 1111.. _ l‘.\"‘C‘l'f‘(l the rill-i lllGll BANK SCHOOL 1 Honor roll for n1onll1 0i Ofiobtr i Grade X-—l,l\'lni'_\' .\l8CLF‘illl} 2. 31111001111 Livingstone; .7, Sarah Stew- , art. Grade VII-l, Evelyn Stewart; 2. Vernetta Munroe; 3, Lester Haytcr. Grade 1\'-—l. John LZ\'1ll!S[0i1(‘,' 2. ‘ Grade III~l, Ralph .\1.1rl.1:111. Grade II -— 1. 1111:1121 Stewart; 2, I Forrest Hlrrter. ‘ (lrncle I 1.J1'.)-i. hiurjorie Mac- , Donald; 2, Arnold Alllclcenn; ‘.3, Mary l-Slclvnrt; 4. Velma hlunroc. I Florence J. Hdrter—-Teaeher 1 1 ‘VIN SLOE The l;ll‘ill(‘l'5 of Winsloc are 111111113; engaged in shipping their turnips. Grade I 1511-1. Jessie MncKny. . Miss Jessie Wyatt .- Mrs. S. A. McDonald Frank Kays . . . . - - - - - - - - Mrs. Ernest liicLuren . Mrs. Fred lioule .. ; Ernest Coilin Airs. Fraser ftlorrolv . .\lrs. ‘Fhos. While . . . . . .. Airs. Joseph L. Curran .. Airs. Eastcn is‘. N. Kays .......... 1.00 Mrs. Anderson -. 20 1111's. 1". .1. 1101-11s11y .... 1.00 H. D. MaoKenzlzo .25 1.1. A. 110010 ....... ' 1.00 lcwis Ross .25 I Mm I, s. Moore _ _ _ ‘ _ _ _ _ _ mg John Riley .20 311's. .\1. n. Kenny 1.00 Airs. Anon-s oloRae .15 Mrs. J. W. McKenzie . '-—-— 1s. A.’ ’I'11per . . . . . . . . . . $2.05 All-s. Isaac Holman 1.00! Elllillllld Horne 1.00‘ 5nllmnusfic" loo M11. John McLeod .. i . i Then came the mat Flood! lwept away . . . and with them laws and morn-Is! Men turn awoke llld blood inst. Rules the wish of clvillul-loll- st Times Today liI-bpeu 1011101101: r "aprons DAWN" i THE GRIFPING SPECTACLE OFTHEAGESI WI. other sunmou 1.01s w 1 u on swmv aucxmn Contineuie were Whlt if It Should 14st Mystery 51-017 Edgu- Wallace Wrote Orphanage ‘ g, o e h tl ...... Gollectlons $5 °'= ‘K w e“ °’ Lower Prince Street T0 DI“ l _ . P, _ ‘ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ H gwmyJanles Kerry ‘ML James a on 500 Two Friends __ 3.00.11 Friend , 200i ... 2.001 1.001 L00 Capt. T. G. Taylor .. . L90 Mrs. S. Jay ....... Lower lliilshorn Street To Dali-e ... .5 Upper Queen Street To Date 1.00‘ 1.00 100' Benton! Mills, Per Elliott W. R06! . .3 ' Anglo-Rustico Women Institute 10.00 ;0_ .\1rs. Bismark Craswell . Mrs. C. S. Matheson ......... Mrs. Elmer Dunninfl Mrs. Arthur Collin -- Mrs. G. D. Steele "-00-... . Dr. Pcthick .. Lloyd Crockett .- Mrs. J. Hewett Mrs. J. Hawkins .. Mrs. David Cutler . .. .0..."- Cumherlund Street Continued 8.00 .75 .50 g5 Mrs. J. Stewart . _g5'Mrs. J. Garnhuln . A Friend l A Friend . .. (XHEREITPIONS 1.00 1,00 Miss M. McKinnon ........, . 1.00 AFriend . . . . . . . . . . . 1,00 Mrs. S. A. McLeod, Villa. Ave poof should be Mrs. A. S. McLeod '_ L00] Villa Ave. ................ 1.00,’ 0 1 William D. MscKenzzie Elliott W. Ross D. W. Ross u... .50 ............ .25 .25 0 Ohrcr LePage . . . . . . . . 1.00 0 liirs. Daniel Buhnan - 111191‘ to the pmpolw’ _ 1 __ , w. o; H“. b,h-d.;ng_ the “N, | A wry enjoyable Hauowmn mm. I Mrs. AlflPfillfilOn .. . M1.. Adam Crasuell . . “ _ , \ . H, l ' yA I-‘rlcnr . . . . .. .o 5 , . d “ i’ ‘ DU‘ w: Fflrrtflxvas held at the home oi Mr. and Nnkfld Twee] _ _;_" l $1150, r1 W:1¢..~lIrs..\v__Q 111;'4;1;&OD-N°vclnbur'2nd'_G_‘R. Sevick '. .23 I ‘ "A? °é “i; , 11-111111 was crcntly cnioyod o1‘ n11- »; Yggggy ................. as .{_\;1 _1‘,_;~ ,~ on: .1. l‘ _ ' p 101d ‘lbvuz “n? ol m“ 1115s Palethorpe has returned to mcmnond street EH‘ To ha“ M o erl) rxlnu-s ‘111 Ecnndnuvslzl 1:113‘ I her home in Winsloc. after 51111111111111! __- “"7” " lililzirgzinz‘ ‘x I‘ ' '1: f v 'c\k' tBrndalbane. . ' 1 111111 11.. 11. o. w. ‘ c‘ ,“ ‘ h a i111... A. E. sm1t11 .... .. 1E2 m!‘ HOWARD FERGUSON ~ cr of .~choo'-"~- 33°‘ Th ehlldlen of 1111111100 School’ Judge w‘ 5' swwar I 11,0 1 C ‘ ‘ ' 1- _ e53’ (“Cd i m. satiifmdion ‘vlih ‘are glad to have Lloyd Diamond Mm Mabel MCI-god The funeral °r the 151° inward the 110w bzuidalg- .‘\l1l7l"1l11'l11l1‘.\1',‘back Wm, [mm agdin - Ferguson wok P19“ 5mm K111131115 . 1 - F.ll t tT D t. lnirrsllPFfd “*1!” m“ Spml" " "*1 S m ° “" 01 Pythias 11011. Rcssland. British “"”"~‘ '”°""‘“‘1 "msicnl “umbprs Fon- Mlsscs Reta and Verna Rodd spemiws Brontwood 10o Colllmbill. Saturday. Nov. 4. the ‘jaunt! or two duet“ by ‘W151? ‘Sunday m. the home of hi1‘. andi‘ l ' lillkc hall I161!!! “W595 t0 05PM‘ Ollle and Dorothy Ifgs. a duet yflurs B scum wmsloe | n. Member o‘ “an Lod N m . 1 . - . . - 11111 .- t u‘ l- 5 9° °- - lvlr-‘i W. J- Mulch and M155 Frances _ I c mom] Mme’ w“ To m: K11 ghts of Pythias. Russiand lodge bVooti. (i111: by Mlssesd ML and Mm Ear‘ uflngstoxh s,‘ M,“ Sarah stead u 1m No. 23. Knights of Pytbias, LOL. "f" *1 ‘I “M” “g5 a" ‘ s Catherincs, are residing in 12101: ms, M“, WDM, ,1, 100 No. 1708, Golden Cit-v Loose No- b}. m“: m}; fizmoilnew 1101110 111 Winsloc. ' ‘ g‘ ‘ 18o. 1.0.113. Maple Loaf Temple I" Th" rinsing of "l" a 1°“ 110 4 Pythian Sisters and 1.110 -—-— Euston Strct To Date ' - ' A11 c111 ln-ought the evening to a‘ Miss Irene slackrord is attending Magnum, old “ma”, Association c” v Summerside High School. Mr. W. H. MacLeod 2m ‘attended en nmsse. The religious ; ,~~' — ~ —- .$Ul'\'lCC at the hall and the grave- side was conducted by Mr. fbrgus- 0n's pastor, Rev. C. H. Daly. and the Pythian services by the officers oi‘ Trail Lodge, No. 23. Knights of Pythlas, of which Mr. Ferguson became a. member in 1901. Inter- ment was in Sunnyside cemetery. SUNBDWL ELECTRIC HEATERS priced a: low n: $4.15 urn on display of our clam or your dealer? Tliut extra bit of comfort is always 111010 at the snap of I swiichwifhnSunbuwl. Idealfor bath;forbedroom;for chilly early morning and intact-night hours; for any oc- casion when you wmf innant, cheery heat. Be prepared now for the cold days and nigliu‘ 11in‘ in" on their way. Select a Sunbowl today at our store or your dealer's. Prices start at $4.15. Maritime Electric C ompany, Ltd. Stretch your legs -bie'comfortable Relax in the Blissful Warmth of a Sunbowl Electric Heater 3i Charlottetown, P. E. I. the pull bearers- being J. A. Mac- Kinnon. supreme representative, John Balfour, grand outer guard, Harry White, deputy grand chan- cellor. all of 'I‘ral1, and William T. ‘Irenmath past. chancellor, Walter Sanderson’ past chancellor, and Nicholas Michaely, past chancellor. of Roosland. Born in Perth, near Montague. P.E.I. the son of Dugald Ferguson, and Mary Wood. Mr. Ferguson spent his young manhood in Mas- sachusetts and went to Portland. cnnnnorrrnrowsr; qqgnprnlv Visits Sudbury ' Nickel Mines 1w days ago from a trip to Mon~ Mr. A. Lester Slurp and his fam- ily. Mr. A. Lester Sharp is a min- ing engineer and is assistant sup- erintendent 01 1110 Frood Mine 011 isudbury this summer , celebrated industry and Mr. Sharp gives some intersetlng facts of the in- gmry is taken from different camps had done." "Oddly enough the first deposit of i nickel ore actually found was not- f MI- Heme" 5- 5h“? “turned “the reward of u. ,‘ by lthe International Nickel Compnnylrodbmt. vanishing as other construction i prospector!’ lsearch. It was the Murray Mine“ ‘tmal and 5111b 1- Onwb- I" ‘hed-evealed when the Canadian Pacific; dot/WI‘ 63W 11° "filed his bmtherollaiiway construction crew was cutting its way through to lay the steel. Noticing the "red mud" on the wagon road nearby, and struck nppenxance of mineral in the Thomas and William ‘Murray, Harry Abbot and John, tho 50th l-lmlwrfil’? °1 u“ nwkelthe lot at the statutory price or $1 per acre. Later they sold it to l-LI-I. Vivien Co. and when that dnctrv 1n l" IMBYIW- PM "l 1115mm ceased t0 operate 111 1 a4, 11. ___.--__r=p (great industrial centre. instead ofi HE CANADIAN sro “‘-/|¢'."P I! Pal/x I11 E/‘znp ' wsnllssllv 01111 111111111111 srlzculs ES err.’ CHOICE CREAMERY BllT FRESH Mnm SAUSAGE 1211 is? JEWEL SIIORTENING 2 11.. 210 TER LB. 23c 1.00. Mr. Sharp says 1.00 I had the pleasant experience of dosoondlns t“??? full hfiflthot 111010 11101-0 indications 01 min- ... :*sr:1:".:..~~ o» ~ m 1n who ~75 the earth. The descent was madame and James cockbm.“ 35 in one 11nd one half minutes cnciland staked the deposit whfch now: .50 m, m; drop was rather thrilling; beam mood-s name and m pmvenl J? the sudden descent causes pressure on the ear drums makes you: voice sound strange and undistinct.“ Mr. sharp travelled for the galleries 1-00 drifts of the underground w 1-00 and was most impressed with of the miles through workings of the mines. sketches of the Jubilee Number of the Sudbury Star. which. by "l" 111 10 1110 Bfltish American 11101101, wgy, contains an excellent picture 1.00 late Hon. J. D. Stewart, Premier of .. 1.00 Prince Edward Island, accompanied . 1.00 by a message of congratulation to 1.00 the sudbury nickel industry. 1.00 Describing his visit to the mines, ‘physical “Willie at Sudburylue," m l we” t0 be 1.110 largest 0: 1110 and Ind 11mg mirlls-‘thcy came to the end of the long) e Fifty years ago Canada's supply of nickel was locked in the mck 5 rfsbed wilderness: of Ontario's un- charted northllmd, camouflaged by lowering timber and tangled un- ‘ derbrush; today Sudbury with i L00 Brighton Road Omitted from List mines, i, the: centre of the production of more '25 than 90 per WM ' nickel supply. extensive nickel of the done." ualiy surprised at trict. mond drilling and. early located here. is interesting. the ber 0f the Sudbury Star: the desired location. the Northern Ontario Oregon in 1884 and later to Seattle. He engaged ‘m contracting and built many depots and bridges on up residence in Roasland. A mem- bcr of the Baptist Church, his kept for stale occasions. but stood the wear and tear of every day lire. He was g, past chancellor of Trail Lodge, No. 23, Knzhta of Pythias. He is survived by his widow, two niece; Mrs. W. R. 000k of New Mo. and four nephews, Fflrnnhnrscn 01 PEI. m. o. Chester Johnson of New Redford lid Guy Fletcher of Boston. North. Yet '5 pmmeemr and mlnnig man Nickel , ' ‘ hi i ti on some‘ copper, gold, silver, graphite. t‘m- testing out s nven on worldfls ‘ , 100 Sudbuly on its fiftieth anniversary ' of the nickel industry he s81 "When you are depressed, there is nothing I should like you to think of more than Canada's mining in- dustry. vlfhat we know as “nicker ilas made the whole world pay tri- bute to a.’ native resource in this Dominion as no other product has 0 Budbauw is a. divisional point of the C.P.R.. and is located near Ramsay Lake a beautiful sheet of water, about eight miles long and varying from one to one and a half miles in breadth. Just off from the City in the center of the lake is an island on which the Honfi Chas. MoCrea, Minister of Mines, has his beautiful summer home and this lake region must; be a wonderfully beautiful place in summer when its tree clad slopes are robed in green. “Visitors to Sudbury today are us- the siiastantial appearance of the buildings lining its miles of paved street-s. It has fine stores and public buildings. A Homo dwelling ls u rarity except 1n the outer limits and many of its fine residences occupy very pictur- esque positions overlooking the lake. Sudbury‘: business section is un- usually extensive and well built for a city of this size (twenty thousand) and is chiefly dependent on nickel-copper industry, and is in iuct the commercial and financial centre of the nickel districtJand its labour centre, catcringto a. popula- tion of about fifty thousand people in this and the surrounding d.s- thei 1 d-valued 01 less 1111111 $25,000 in scat- the Mimy employees in nearby mines and omelters live in Sudbury, and residents of adjacent mining and smelting communities do siloprping there. Prospectors and de- velopment companies outfitted and still outfit in Sudbury. Industries tributary to mining, such as din- construction, X‘ The story of the finding of nickel following ’ is Qlcaned from the anniversary num- "Erlguaeurs boast of being alble to survey a line so true that 1t comes out within a. fraction of an inch of 1 . . l” property 01 1110 10101110110001 Nickel! I jnell mcclved, in actual cash was bought by J. R. Booth thel 111mm 111111; :01- $75,000. Booth $01111 Co. and it is consequently now the, 00111001131 1.1a. 01111011 absorbed 1.110‘ British America holdings. l "A former wood ranger in the‘ Ienlploy of the Orown Lands Dept, ‘Ihoo. Frood. was familiar with the feature of the 1884 he picked up infonn-‘ ation from a trapper to the effect. WESTERN QUEEN GARBAGE 'FI.OlI R llOT WATER BOTTLE SWEET POTATOES 3 LBS- 19c BROOMS 5 STRING Elli" 250 98 LB. BAG $2.29 2A LB. BAG 65c ovmsmvmnn49 r01: 1 1mm O 1:11:11 5c LARGE HEADS Free Delivery on Orders of $2.00 and Over bodiu of Sudbury so far developed. i few had much of it left when long trail. They spent freely. They speculated recklessly. Money through their fingers, an quick ,, f ‘ the hills o: Sudbury with a newly For instance’ Rmaldo Mwom invented magnetometer by which‘ he believed he would be able t0‘ detect the presence of ore. After, leflfit. $759,000.. during his career as ber and even horses were some of the interests‘ into which he flung himself with breath-taking versa- tility. And when he died about four years R80 his personal estate was, tolled bits of property." “A mining camp less like the tra- dition Brit Harte "hell roaring" minim! town than Sudbury would be impossible to find-even in the early days. The story is told of a visitor from the western American mining camps who dropped " into Sudbury some 30 years ago. “Mmtfl-‘he asked. as he looked north from the station platform, “is that fine building whose towers I see?" "That," he was fold, "is St. Anns Church.‘ ‘Ho-w mcny churches have you?" "Five" W115 the reply. "And 110w msmy dance halls have you?" “None" said his informant. 1 c" “Well," the visitor commented. “in our campwc have five dance halls and no churches." This is told simply to illustrate. the difference between the mining’ town of Sudbury and the usual mining camp. I _ Few cities of its size can boast of finer stores, public buildings and schools and they should endure if n. solid foundation goes for uny- thing as the city is built on an uneven rocky plateau. Low roiling hills of the same solid material gird it about and extend in all di- osion, and it is not difficult to tell l8 dicnte. , The (drive to Falconbridgc, aboutf S 12 miles, is a pleasant one, in and fl between roiling hills of rock, then us the mine has only been in op- eration about four years. The gen- eral manager, Mr. Ernest Craig, has his beautiful home on an eminence jutting out from the side of a hill with terraced lawn run- look up and down the wooded vslc for miles. Falconbridgc is another romance fifty wars ago a survey party locating the line for the new Canadian Pacific Railway, then being driven through of nickel. Again quoting from the Sudbury Star: "The first suspicion wilderness. went miles off their proper emu-cc and instead of passing m the 5011111 of Lake Roan-soy. named t0 1.110 were it not for that error there 1110 last 10p 0r 1110 Northern Pnclnmwfivld- P9111111». have boon no Sud- Railway. 111 1am he went w mu.,bnrv W “loblfllo "o 5W1 nnnlvcr- British 0011111111110 and in 1922 100x wry this veor- It was a serious mis- i take, and might have been a costly one. Yet it proved a very porten. Christianity was not ccmethlngjl-Ious blunder. for because of n, ‘construction engineers. 50 years ago! this summer, 11nd to blast their way‘ lthrough a strange OlltcrOpplng <11. rock three miles west of 1,1130} RCJIXBGY. "That peculiar reddish. outcrop. tion camp oollod 11v0 md prosper. and '- Bcdlord. Mnsachusetts, nnd Mrs. nine was nickel-copper Ore. 11. 1,0- Vorne Higgs of Napan, Nova Sco- camo flit MUITBY mine. the dig- Benjcmin covery of which started that Iever' l-L of prospecting in i883 and 1884, Rllllllharson of Gleichen, Alberta, which ordained that the centur- "Eudburjr should a 1‘ ning around it, from it you can; , gmcul drift m1. covers the creot-f i qyrost 0f the pioneer prospectors» er put 9g Falconbrldge lOWIJAhlpHI turned over fortunes in their time I om bodies exist 51mm“- go those. previously discovered on the North and South Nickel ranges. mode its appearance about 1906. Whom "161 of the known ore bodies his search took him eastward along the south "contact of the nickel bear- ing eruptions. In Falconbfldge township his instruments register- ed a decided “kick" and to confirm its accuracy the inventor oom- menced active exploration of the immediate vicinity. A shaft was started which was continued through heavy overburden and clay to a. depth of eighty feet, where the last straw of difficulties was reach- ed in a. thick bed of quicksnnds. some 18 years inter, near where tllg Edison shaft; was sunk, another larger shaft was started and after going through the same difficulty finally entered bedrock. It was later learned that had the Edison shaft been continued for another 20 feet, it would have landed on the Fulconbrldge ore-body at its widest point, where it is approx- imately 100 feet acres." Was this a. case of prcdestinaflon, forordin- ation or just plain "bad luck?” In 1928 the property was pur- chased by the Llndslcy interests for $2,500,000 and its market value at the present time is something like twenty millions. flour miles to the west of Sud- bury is the Great Copper Cliff Smelter costing $20,000,000 with its stack 510 feet high, inside diamet- er at top 45 feet, total weight 15,- 600 tons, the tallest and largest chimney in the Empire. Nearby is the Ontario Refining Co. Nine miles to the north east of rectlons, showing by their smooth Sudbury is the Coniston Smoltlni surfaces clear signs of glacial er. 8: Refining Co where monei metal produced. now so extensively in many cases 111 which direction used for autos. sinks and where the Blaciers were moving as the rust resisting surfaces are neces- corrugations on their surfaces in- nary. Twenty-eight miles north of udbury is Wapnapitae Lake. a ne sheet of water about twenty miles long and something like 12 up an incline and you are looking to 15 miles wide. A small arm oi doom on the mine and smelter. All l the lnke deflects to the south and the buildings are spick and spam! its mirror-like surface and clear water reflecting its tree clad slopes and pebbly beach the day the vis- itor saw it was a delight to a. lover of such scenes. Twelve miles from this point around the lake and a half mile from the shore is a small wooded island. On this Mr. Sharp has a summer camp where his family spend the summer months. boating, bathing and fishing. In the summer evenings when the west- ering sun drops down near the BE GOOD TO YOURSELF ASK FOB STEWABTS BREAD f rum wzlom - ' SANITARY BAKER-Y. , FAMOUS QUALITY 1 Stewarfs Bakery ‘ Phone $11. Kent Street 1 dance and quiver over the shim- mering surface ot the lake. vaca- tlonists and visitors are alike en- MEXIC- \ HISTORIC DONDON , SITE TO DISAPPEAR IDNDON, Nov. 14.—A corner of Southwark, on the south side of London Bridge, which has retained some of the characteristics it posses- sed in Illizabcman days, Ls to dis- appear shortly. A court order has been made to Moss-Alley, teddy-court, Taylor's 1yard, Princess-buildings, White Lion-alley and Skin market-place. These comprise a net of alleys lead- ,1ng to Bunkside, near the site of Shakespeare's Globe theatre, and the famous Southwurk bear gar- dens. ' . I The urea. was acquired a few years ago by the city corporation as an entrance to the proposed St. Paul's Bridge.‘ Now that this pro- ject has been abandoned an elect- ricity power station is to be erected on the site. l .__.________. “No, you can't see Mr. Jones," smmpcd the sharp-faced woman at the political canvnsser at the door. “But madam, "I merely wish to find out what party he belongs to." “Well, then, take s. good look at me. I'm the party he belongs to." ._________._. ::A Poul“ of it: Own-Dr. Thomas‘ Eclectric Oil has a subtle power of its own. All who have used it know this and keep it by thcm as the most valuable liniment avail- able. Its uses are innumerable and for many years it has been prized as the leading liniment for man and that, beneath the moraine and horizon and its slanting beamsLbeat. ruptured with the beauty of this Mi Q1