“my 11. 1941 Mifinfififi THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN l u fl I .10.... "' ""° "" GENE AUTRY In SIJNT norm. ma. May 1s -| -—— (o?) _ About so worker; o! the, 0n Blinder. Aiwli 11th- relwveni “Twilight 0n The PAGE TEN 1 WALLACE BEERY EDWARD ARNOLD MRI. MARY JANE GALLANT _ é TODAY “The Mighty MeGus-k" NEWS - QUIZ - CARTOON Snowflake Lime Company Umited blends and neighbors learned with . vralkcd on the Job today atter a deeP ferret o! the death vi Mrs, tmo-da; notice period iol1awlng__MB1'¥ Jlfll Gflliant an old and h company refusal to meet wage in-i hllbly "Mimi!" ""119" °l chat‘ a YEAR Too tare P1111105 EDWARD-unit. - rues. - wen - N0 SHORTS - FEATURE STARTS 3:15 - s=so - 9 rnoll THE tor or event nest-setter usr... l‘ I m ron ALI. screen ENTERTAINMENTI I Darryl F. Zoriucltf ‘c1011 ASSN. . @ ilnrnt nunnt REX‘_HARRISO_N LINDA DARNELL I with tee 1.005.! - GALE sanoeacaano - MIKHAIL nssuuuv - DENNIS non rrro IENALDO - RICHARD tvou - ammo by IIIII IIRIIIIIIEII. ' Produced by W5 ll- Wllllll - .<9»oo@oo@oo@on@ow EM - Today MATINEE 2130 - evenmc 7 AND 214s Red's really’ “"9" ‘r’ ' where 0¢Il°"'5 l“, oncl adventure! "°“9l" IMIIIIIWIOIIII- uIIhBOBIYBI-ME gnorssnom . PLUS: SERIAL - COMEDY - TERRYTOON UNIS PEFIYVIM A ltio Granite” I APITOL l M011. - rues. - wen. “AIIIILT ENTERTAINMENT" ' the shooting truth about 18th Century Ln n ti n n' s lllscit hols nt horror! dinning tiolli Illllllilllj; ANNAIEE . NEWS EXTRA! l; s9- Qwo b-i-thbifitriikiwi~€yl _,__ crease demands. Negotiations vray for several months. Plant manager C. Allan Beatteay; said a majority o! ensployees voted’ for strike action but a large num- bcr voted against it. He said no ar- rangements nod been made for a‘ conference with leaders of the strikers. ter hI-m, kicked his trailing feet out of the way, and slammed the- dcor. To Graham, already at. the wheel of the car. he said, lean- ing from the window: “You'll “ro- I babiy make out for our speed now. with only yourself aboard. Stay close! There may be trouble on the way, yet." "If anyone else gets in my way," said Graham viciously, ‘there will." He swung the wheel, and the car backed quietly rustling into the grass, and turned in her tracks, and slowly, but gathering speed as she made the turn, bummed sway again upan the road to London. The second car turned and follow- ed. Martinson heard. as he got un- I der way, what ha thought was a l‘ voice, calling out shrilly from the f moor. It sounded to him, though he heard it only very faintly and elusivcly, like a Woman's voice ru- thcr than a man's. But he stayed neither to investigate nor to answer. Nor did he pay any at- tention whatever to the queer but distinct little grinding sound with which something brittle and hard, fallen in the roadway, crushed un der his back wheels. CHAPTER. XVI Peggy Finds A Clue Peggy was drowsing in front of the fire ‘rn the living-room of her parents‘ cottage and strugglingl through a, confused dream inl which she alternately pursued, and I was pursued by a monstrous Mere i Coilbri who floated about at the end of an enormous parachute. She heard the shot clearly; it punctured the parachute. which mediately began to deflate as ‘i it had been a balloon, dropping. the screeching old woman Lrium-! phantly upon hcr, and smothering , her in the whlic, soft folds. She‘ fought to gct away from it, and the dream broke uneasily into ll- , Masters 0f The ,1 Parachute Niall a I t i’ One man-he never knew who-- jwent dawn and stayed down for lsome seconds. Then one of them lgot. a lack upon his arms tram behind, and he was bent painfully (backward. He tried the hacking manoeuvre again, and but for the man an the ground it mighthavc lsuccee‘ "-, but his ankle was tea"- |denly jerked from under him, and ydown he came toppling; and the exceedingly hard surface o! the road, largely camlposed of smooth native stone breaking up through the dust, saved his assailants the trouble of knocking him out. Ihe last thing of which he was aware . ‘m- By ' Peter Benedict l ll ti. UK. EXPORTS U!’ ruary returns have been explain ———— partly by the shortness n1 I LONDON —~ (GP) - Britain's exports for lviarch by provisional estimate were valued at $330,4C0,- --_-;.~- D00, an increase o.f $20,400,000 ubovo The human tooth is simply ‘he figure for February. Low Feb- truitsfoz-zncd [i511 stoic. crc went her. the month and partly by unusually sev- was s voice which uttered strange and admirable maledictic-ns upon him; iilltli‘ that he was out, likely to stay out. y Graham bent over him. feeling at him as he lay sprawled in the lrtnlzl, He said: “Turn u li-ght on cd a OPEN SCHEDULE For Wood Island-Caribou Service rnlnnv, wuv 2 "Prince Nova" as follows: Leave Wood Islands A.M. —ll A.M. — Leave Caribou . . . . . . . . . . .. 9 A.M. - I PM. — Operating Daily Including Sundays DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME RATES: Some as I946 USYIN m 1o crcv AT 7.30 A.M. eon LATEST NEWS Itnrthumberland Ferries Ltd. E7.I@@©©@@@©@©@@@F .~J©@©©@@@@Cel Pending completion of installation of oil burners on the, “Charles A. Dunning" the service will be curricd an by the M.V.§ 3 PM.‘ s m. ‘him, quickl" And when the light was obcdiently turned upon tilB dusty countenance o! the fallen. “As I thought! It's the Yank‘: fancy boy." "What do we do 'with him?" ask- ed Martinscnl, still gasping for breath between words. “Put out? We've got to get out of here fast. What with Kirk's shooting, the whole moorland will be turn‘- lng out in a minute.‘ wtzzti make it. murder? Not on your liic. Besides, what use ls he dead?" "He'd be a sight quieter dead, i.‘ t he's the spy." "Nlaybc, but not on a moorland road whore we were expected guests. Quiet? He'd yell so loud the lcntire police force of this coun- try would hear him. No. I don't. mind a sack, a tew bricks, and the river. m- qulcklime in a cel- lan-but I like my dead men out- i-ctl thanks." "Make up your mind," said Kirk, turning the revolver in his hand. “Time's desperately short. What do we do with him?" "Take him with us. Heave him into tiic back of the fast car, and go with him in case he wakes 10o soon. He may be useful yet, ll it should come to bargaining." "It's your pidgirn," said Kirk with a shrug. NEW GLASGOW HALIFAX m me MARITIM f9“ M@Z‘I\ DAILX OPERATION! NOW ll- SUMED T0 NEW GLASGOW ' ttoss all ties Manrrm CENTRA AIRWAY IVESTBOUND EASTBOUND READ DOWN DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY READ UP PM. PM. A.M. P-M- A-M- PM. 2:15 2:10 1:00 Lv. Charlottetown Ar. 5:45 8:00 9:25 l4 l2 10 9 l1 15 ' 2:35 1:25 Ar. New Glasgow Lv. 11:15 7:35 ' ' 4- -— Lv. New Glasgow Ar. -- -- ' 3:10 —— —- Ar. Halifax Lv. — —- 4:30 Peter was hauled from the ground. and tumbled anyhow into tho back of the car. His head fell awkwardly into the cushions, low hem-nth the window, and there he was lcft. Kirk, climbing in af- ami i him I logical fragments which drilted | here and there in her mind with- i out any sort of continuity. Then I there was another sound, the mate r ‘o! an engine starting up, sudden l out of the silence; and this time it fully penetrated the sleep whichl the shat had already troubled, and I P882)’ sat up with a start, and» looked round her intently. For a few minutes she was at a, loss ta identity her surround- lugs, so long did it seem since she had been In this house. Then the events oi.‘ the day came flooding lback, with the giddy rush of things seen in retrospect, too fast; in their flight fbr reality. Pater was out on the moor with Super- intendent Barker and his men; and the hour of the run must sure- i 1y ba approaching by now. She l for ' lottetown at her rest-dance, 133 Kent. increased wggg; had hm; ummllfit, where she resided for the past. i“ you s. The deceased was born at Rus- tica. P. E. 1., on November ‘.1, 1810, the daughter of the late fr. and Mrs. Maurice Gallant. She married Joseph Octave Al'- seneult in 1890. who predeceased her in October, 1918. There were thirteen children born of this un- ion. In 1031. the deceased was married to Captain Emanuel Gallant of! Tignish. The late Mrs. Gallant was a Christian woman of sterling quail- ties, possessed of a pleasing and friendly disposition which endear- ed her to all with whom she came in contact. She leaves to mourn her sorrow- ing husband and the following children: four sons and two daugh- ters, namely, Camille, Mfilllftall Eric, Windsor, Ont; Arthur and Louis, Charlottetown; Bernice, (Mire. Leonard Dryden) and 100111.15 R..N., Jersey City} N. J.; two sons, Elzear and Wilfred, two daughters Zllls, and Edna and three infants predeceased her. To mourn her passing also are: her only sister, lvLrs. Abraham Peters, Kent St., Charlcttetoun, her brother Mr. Nicholas Gallant, Boston, Mass, and three grand children. The funeral was held on Wed- nesday Alprll 30th. to St. Dun- stan’; Basilica where Requiem liign Mass was celebrated by the feet-- tor, the Reverend Doctor Patrrtl; McMahon, who also conducted the services at the grave. _ The pallbearers were: Mo..srs.' H. Frank McPhee, Patrick Mc- Tague, H. E. Cantwcll, Byron Brown" Edward A. Gallant and William J. Brawders. Interment was in the Roman Catholic Ceme- tery. Following is s list at Masses received, Floral Tributes, Mwsages o! Sympathy. MASSES RECEIVED Reverend J. Clarence Pirtrc. Jus- tice A. E. and Mrs. Arsenault. Mr. and Mrs. Byron Brawn Mr. and Mrs. Alex Brawn. Dr. J. D. and Mrs. McGuigan. Dr. J. E. Blanchard and Fain- 1.13’- Mr. and Mrs. Wendail McDonald and Bernadette Mr. John A. Duffy. Mrs. Andrew F. Murphy. Mrs. James Brown and Family. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Gaudet Mr. and Mrs. Frank O'Brien and iamily. Mr. and Mrs. T. H. O'Neil, Moncton. N. B. (2 High.) Mr. and Mrs. Angus ,Pinoau. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Brawtiers. Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. Shannon. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Brown. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wood. 'I_‘he Hughes Family. Mr. and Mrs. Picton R. Motto!- mac. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Hornby and I Fan1llY...._ a Mr. and Mrs. Henry Peters. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Latter. Mrs. Elzear Arsenault, Detroit, looked at the clack, and found the l Mich hands showed twenty minutes to one. Very nearly zero hour. Pet'- »ha.ps she had actually heartl Gra- ,ham’s ca: go by on its way to the l try/st. l Her father, shaken out o! his lcustomary calm, had heard her llstory through with proud excite- gment, and then insisted upon ga- ing out to sec the dispositions oi g the law. Ho was still out there: My“ a Hogan somewhere, and she did not cx- pect to see him again until of the moorland, that there had been something wrong about the sound of that car. She had found it familiar, and it had recalled the grey car which she remembered so clearly u Graham's: that. so But she had recognized instinctive- ly, without thinking much about it at the time, that its note had actively begun wl-thln her hear- ing, and soared into the crescen- do of full speed as she listened. That meant that it. had started up within earshot of the cottage. And yet it had not passed the cat- tage. It had receded. It had, in fact, set off at speed in the wrong direction. The lessons in driving with which Peter had filled in the Idle periods o! their days togethd had made her hypersensitive to the various sounds a car, well handled or mishandled, is capable of producing. (To be continued) TIIIRSTY FIRE LONDON. May 15 - (AP) —1"ire swept a Waterloo Road brewery today, exploding 460.000 bottles 0i beer. DISTRIBUTORS FOR PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND ATLANTIC WHOLESALERS (Eastern) LIMITED the , drama was over. Her mother was ~ asleep in the chair opposite to her l lawn, and the sounds which hadl disturbed Peggy's sleep had noti touched hers. It occurred to Peg- I gy, u she parted the curtains and . looked out. along the dark spaces far as it went. was all very welt. , l Mr. and Mrs. Daniel McDon- aid. Mr. and Mrs. Alyrc Arscnault. Mrs. W. J. McIntyre. Mr. and Mrs. George Peters. l Mrs Kathleen Hennessey and‘ fFamily. l Girl Friends of Camilla and !Pauline. Mrs. Florence Bctts. Mr. and Mrs. Allan Doiron. Mies Louise Arsenault, Jerscy City. (HIghJ Miss Rose G. Ryan. Miss Frances E. Gallant, Rox- bury, Mass. Mrs. Prank J. McDonald. Mr. Hubert Blanchard. Mr. Percy C. Pope. Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Gallant (High). I Mr. John Hughes and Family. Mrs. Margaret A. Martin. Miss Anne Duffy. Mrs. Margaret Mwarlane. Mr. and Mrs. Beloni Gaudet. ilk. and Mrs. Everett MrKlnhon. Mr. and Mrs. Frank G. Payne. Hilda, Louis and Eric. Mr. and Mrs. Fred D. Steele. Miss Gertrude Steele. Mr. Harry Hermann and Family. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Palace, Jer- sey Oity, N. J. Mr. ‘and Mrs. Frank Haugilcy. Mrs. John Birch and Family. Miss Angie Blanchard. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Peters, l Souris. Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Oantweli. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Gallant. Souris. Mr. arld Mrs. James Duffy. Captain-E. Gallant tl-llgh.) MI. and Mrs. Austin B. Connoi- Mr. and Mrs. A. Peters. Miss Lois Hennessey. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Arsenault. St. Thomas Aquinas Society. Mr. and Mrs. J. Connolly. Mrs. Elizabeth E. McInnis. Mr. and Mrs. John O. Howell. Mos-ell, P. l2. I. Mary O'Connor, Gaspereaux, P. l. 1. Mrs. Ci. A. Huxford. S. Devon. l. Mile !. Mullins. New York 04y. Miss A. Callaghan, Cambridge, Mass. PDOBAI. TRIBUTE! Pillow-The Family. Jay-lattice. Spray-Maia and Hilda. Q-ay-drthur and Claire. Wreath-Camille and Eric. pray-Miss Dorothy Dover. 8pray- Mr. T. B. Rogers. Bpray- W. P. Bchurman A: Co. Bprey-Iirnpleyees B. E. Mutch O0. Ltd. . Qpray-R. I. Mulch and co. L d. quay-Mr. David McLeod. may-m. and Mn. 0. McMi1~ Ian and-Family. ‘a Bprasbiir. H. Gallant. Spray-Airs. John gsundars and Family flicker of hope. Let the yougstereal Greece know that you in Canada believe in their future. TOO late to know his native land. But YOU remember Greece in 1941 . . . her gallant stand against the Axis. Today the Greeks arel struggling to rebuild their shattered land . . . to give their Citizens of tomorrow —— their child- ren — a chance to hold their heads high in the community of nations. Every dollar you give for Relief to Greece strengthens their M...» OPEN THE DOOR TO HOPE. . Joulhold the Key Soalyoueodrlutleasloduyloilnilkloloflefireeeehnnhtnhyowruunvdy whcybrmeAeHAeleydloniolMCoIrbutIeudehdUoA-Inheuvnlu. .v.w¢.(u. Tl-l irsmn LAMBROS Barber Shep, Toboccanlst, Shoe Shine Parlor Corner Kent and Great George Street. IS ACE DONATED BY IVEESSAGES 0F SYMPATIIY y Reverend Clarence Pitre. " ‘Reverend Sister M. Paula. I Mr. W05. McLure, M.P., Ot- ‘tawa. - Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Reid ' Miss Jacqueline Arsenault, Que- bec City. 1 Mrs. Harrison. Windsor, Ont. Mr. and Mrs. Aubin Gallant, lwheatley River. ' Mr. Edward Hughes and Pam- ily. Amherst. ' Sisters of Precious Blood Man- astery. Ml‘. and Mrs. Jrialifax, N, S. l Mrs. E. Saunders and Family. , Mrs. L. G. Anderson. i Mrs. John Bell and Emmg l Miss Joyce Warren. I Miss Jeanne Walsh, B. N. ‘Bridgewater. N. S. Miss Madeline McDonald, Am~ horst, N. B. I Private Duty Nurses, buy Medical Centre. Ml-ss Irene Arsenault, Bummer- ‘ side. Mr. T. S. Murphy. Mrs. Henry Hayes and Mary. Miss thleen McEle. Miss sry Gunn. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Anderson. 1 Miss Florence Quinn. I I Wilfred Mclsaac, Jersey Miss Auldene Arsenault, Sum- moi-side. Mr. and Mrs. Willard Muttart. ‘ Mr. J. G. Wilcox, 8t. John's, Newfoundland. I Miss Adele Hughes, Amherst, N. S. j Mr. Charles McKenzie, Calrfar- nla I Mrs. A. J. Biflin, New York City. I Miss Isabela A. Mullins, 1t. N., ;New York City. I Mr. and Mrs. Jack Watson, lun- . merslrle. Mrs. E. Nicholson, Summerside. Mr. N. Gallant, Boston, Muss. Mr. and Mrs. W. Walker. Vic- toria, B. C. | Mr. and Mre. a. '1'. Clarke, North I l Sydney, N. B. Reverend Harry McLeod. B. J. l Mrs. Harris and Family, Wind- - sor, Ont. I lln Memos-lam . 1a loving memory o! ‘ nlbanll. Albert l. Wise. ‘ May 11th, 1000. I You bade no one a lest farewell You said good bye to none, The heavenly gates were opened loving volae qflfCune." A Your life h a beautiful memory Your death h or silent grief l You sleep in God's beautiful sarden I 1n the sunshine of perfect peeve. l 8o we have you hbofs keeping [The rough road carol! o'er , iAnd ens-dear (other vvelovedlo we»: wlsodied I i I I well flea onlylfllleonhlere. ‘Fondly numbered by Ilia Wile anllenlly In Memos-tam In lovinrmonmry of our. two darling little boys who departed this llfe on March 12th. 1M5, and May 15th, 194.8. They were Just tsvo little white rose- buds, Two sweet littla flowon from birth God called them home be Heaven Q Bedoro they were salted on earth. ‘ Sadly Minced and Always Remem- i bored by their Mother and Dad, I ' Mr. and Mrs. Peter Mulligan, j Kinkora, P. E. I. I ‘ And Aunt Theresa MoGaushey- lln Memorials! I In loving emery of my porentli Mr. and Mn. Uzalah Boyce, who placed away, 1944. | ‘ It singest low in every heart We hear 1t each and alt- A long oi’ those who answer not However vve may They throng the brealt We lee them as of yore- Tho kind, the brave, the true, the sweet Who walk with u: no mom lnvingly ltosnembered by Her Daughter, Georgie. ease of the _.~.. In Momoriam 1h loving memory of MR8. GEDDII: COFFIN who pulsed away May 17th. 1940. Ever Remembered by Husband sns Family. In lowing memory o! my husband Alexander E. Champion, who de- parted this tile May 11th. 1045. l never thought when we ewoiu that. morning, The aorrow that day would bring: But God gave mo strength 110 bear l Courage to flea the blow; But vrhat it meant to lose him Na on; ever know. In Heaven, dear. I'll find you When God's great Will be done. We'll strand unoe more side by sides when be calls for me to come. Sadly Mined by Ills Wile- uoaru AMIRICAN m: l L. S. STEVENSON . lranrh Manager “r. 14o RICHMOND st.‘ ' All Profits for Pelicyholdsrs :1 CUAI BUSTS the job. IAIII srnan FUEL _0|L some IIP m." But Insulation Costs Have NOT Gone Up! Therefore now, more than ever before, it will pay you to have us Insulate your home. Clip this coupon and we will tell you ‘how much it will cost. Your savings of a thir or more on your fuel bill will soon pay for _ tcnlfl I D_c¢@—¢—cnna§ IIOMI INIIIIATOIP" LIMITID _ Iellls MINI» Illlill. lave latte. Pleueltvemealevtimeteeahstilattnlwllwlo. ....... ..................... NIH ...,.......- some IIP