[DI l-Ilfl ("-7 m”, subscriptions. Advertising > e:- '“‘“§'Zi|"nclil..ll.m, water at. Toronto Balleri- “Mo: it. in?‘ Th Guardian will be delivered cuflu-‘Boy at 2c per day or 10o per jirgiliimu u. reserved for new: of local interest but ndvertisin| a, a |]l'\l'§_V nature may be fluen- ‘d 5; z cents a word uttiotly pay- ‘m in alivoncd. ...Bli'1l.\('il rum POWDER soid l, ha“... L-toz-io-is-zl. _RE'1"§'lt.\'lil) ylwlu HALIFAX. mil ills. J. Frank Arnett and lis Vaitirie Arnett, returned Ill- ‘flfiL-ii‘ 124111 llii enjoyable visit to flallllix. _.l1.,\.~‘ill‘|.IGll$ for 80c. Taylor 0;“; Co., lizilSlllgwli. P. E I. L-66-9-i0-tf. 40g HAIR-Semi bungalow on Cgbildl "vet, Summerside, of g (illilil. 5 rooms down- H,‘ nitldlll colivcliienccs— Hot wIlJOUL 1 1-3 aci"es " House. if re- _ ill" to ltforloy M. Bell, 5u,,,,,,,.,~.~..l-, L-301-10-1l-2i. ‘l\‘(‘.'l'().\l CREDYT UN- . .1 iiicctitlg of the Cicclit Union Ltd., was lield oii ox. 14th, with a. good at- f nicliibers. Mr. James s presided and opened "iillll a few remarks llil- reading of the tilillllnl meeting by ‘ l. ,Ml's E. Cv. Gillis. ' s 'l\i'1‘(.‘ adopted as read. report followed and llngzlig. The inspec- UlilOlifi visited the ‘ lec-"mtly and satisfactory. The .. was given next. . . bilsiiiess amounted s64 ior the year ending Sept. iiitli. 19in. Forty nine members were lldzlrtl to iiie membership list niinual meeting. The s lwpoit was unanimous- _ d 'I‘lie report. of the Cre tuliinlitice was given by liir. Jaincs Pendergast who report- ed i_\" loalls given out during nr to the amount of $545.00. has bt-t n no bad loans. The ha... ("llllElililPU has had no dif- flclft" ‘ '1 members to use ' " ble, the only dif- M15 to have enough money lilo citimatzd. The report t Committee vras adopt- iltn report of the Su- illi(lilli(‘{‘. It was decid- nli entertainment to .‘.»r operating cxpenscs. n.» was appoint/ed to make s. Rcliiarks by Rev, , nor were much ap- llc stressed the need of lbs operating in con- . i any co-operative 11c tfsollght it a splcn- l-lit-ollrllge children to he was a strong sup- Credit Uliion alid i to assist whenever Icrs of Study groups we. pointed and urged to get - stalled as soon as pos- ll-cnd of three per cent a (i. Retiring officers "‘i and the following ‘cetoizs: Pres. Jas. L. \li‘i‘ Pros, Allan Semitic. (lei-rise Higgins, Frank “ills Ramsayl Mrs. E. o. Q RWJPTL Glover. Credit Com. irilncc. .\ James Pendergast, P. ‘if and Augustine Mac- ‘mrvlsory Crlllmlitee, Al'- nrard MiicLellan and . Personals ~31” Win. Mi who ls with His Allilwl‘ ~ l-‘lllu-es _ lent a shortwcck Mi n: lil\ llLIlll Sum mersidc. S m “y imlla MtlcQilarrie s ciit ‘it ~k>":i\'ilia holiday in us- S ~ WT... Allison Moore is 2.: hcllriavavith his moth- A. Mo S Q5313. nntl Mrs. E. E, ParkmamDr. Kdg“‘l‘ lircvil. of Montague. Miss Invite lmrkliiaii and Mrs. Gordon, ig.'°.,f‘l"""i"<i from n delightful mo- - as.» ililliillili the Maritlmes. “ATM llivri MncNeili. stenogra- i" f" Mtillfiv M. Bells office,spent I ” ‘Wk-end qt her homo in Che"- Olietolvn. 5 and Mrs. Arthur Burrows. sllmmersitic. NORWEGIAN SHIP SUNK ‘NE-iv volix. on. 16 -(AP) - flriile circles said today the 3,318- "n harlvt-cian frrigiiter Toran had llmgillllk by a svlmnrine off the loorlicglail coasLLoss 0f the 1.578- ‘1. Bllihli passcilgei‘ .lni in in"- Eilglish Channel also W" rwmvh. B; You Suffer ‘ml Iiiilnn all tho time, flWlitislllu-m with", l" “C1D overcome the cause o bPWIm-ht-s should disappear. m, your order to the boy resoomlbl: for dellvcrleg o, strange. lf‘l'S of the Credit ‘ looming to save and dimes. Father something new for the island and shill? ‘W-“lird ward with supp‘,- consul there is K. P. Kirkivofld- steamship. which we unloaded at From Headaches? ll. is lilinl in ati-ilggle along with a head that. aches A ht-lilllicho need not be on illncu in itself, hut it “my h" l‘ “’l"'"i"R symptom that there is ifltwtiflfll n(i""I'R~'i\FV m eliminate tho wast/o matter from tho ay iersiicipa to rcmova tho canoe of headaches hi’ "'5" uni liililiry Britons, neutralising acidity, rciflllflli"! "l" "l" anti inning up filo sluggish liver, and when this has r-"f AGEhl-ggl- Jollll Pflllll. l4 Water Strut Eula-Plum: I88 PRINCE court-n- Ihould In left with w, h,“ M?‘ Th, guardian ma! b: bolllht dllly at any of tho following ltol-e; u. °°""H Druntm wim- m. M.“ GI"!!- 97 Griiilville 5t, E0 h "in hliuzmzzahfilfsmlegfvlfifld. 2 Your loll”- —SMELT GILL NETS 1% 1 5-16 1%. 1%. 1% inch meshxnmncd quantity m Swck 8t Braces. L-402-l0-l6—2i. —-GUARANTE ties 69c. Tayltlmil-Dlgigtg; was?" KbQEI singtcn, P. E. I ~—FRESl-I Plcardy Chocolates per 1112a 60c. Eamon Drug 00,, summer- '5 9' L-372-10-14-2l. “Young Tom Edison” At Capitol S’side Thfl man. woman or child who cannot fhilmllfillli‘ enlov every nilli- uie of YWIIH 'f‘oln Euiszn" whit-h %Dcn€d yesterday lit the Cflpllil 1198116. is not human and ilcvcl" was young, It 1s a beautifully human story of B bfly-Of any generation and any walk of life-who triumphs against the Eilfima 0f bcllig coiisitlcrtd It. has €V0l'_\"ll1i1lfl——(Olilflli‘, adventure, thrills, tclirs, lluliltiii ill- tercst and fanlllv love. As Tolil Edison Mickev Rooney shows ills right t0 the clliiln 0i‘ being an actor. ' never been nlore lovable. not evcli as Andy Hardy. klnia. Weidler has a role that d. ill".- itclv makes her a star. cr and Geolgcfilaiicirfl. as scn‘s parents. will long as motion pictures endure. He is ideally cast and has As his sister. Vil- Fay 131i lil z - .._ - rclncinbcrcu as Others worihv of silccial’ viiclition in a hand-pickcci supporting cmt are Eugene Palleitc, viclni" Kilian, Bobbie Jordan, J. M. Kci-rig '1‘, Lloyd Corrigali. John Kt-ilccp t lclii Bcvans, Elly Malyoii and Harry Shannon. Based on true-life incidents and adventures in the iife of Edison. the picture relates through ccliicdy tears. drama and thrills. the storvof a non-confornlist bov who was mis- understood bv thosc in his llonle towli and ulthiiatclv triumphed over all obstacles. v The picture has been brilhanily directed hi’ Norman Tailrog of"l’._oi"s Town" fame. and has sterling production values hv Jcliii W. Considine. Ji".. bccil glvcli also associated with the earlier iiii Icebreaker Nascopic is Back From licrtii (By R. K. Carnegie, Canadian Press Staff Wflll") orrrawa. Cpl. 1t; _ (c?)- Staunch voyager of ihc Arctic sells the iccbreakcr Nascoltifl. Cflllt- '1‘ F. Smcllie commanding. is back in the friendly waters oi’ the St. Lawrence River, having completed the 19th eastern Arctic patrol of almost 12.000 miles. including sev- erlii stops in Greenland. Mu]. b. L. MCKcalid. back ill. lils desk in the capital. explained to- day it was the longest and in many yegpects the most momentous cruise the Nosed-tile or her pre- decessors ever made. was commander Maj. McKennd of the annual auspices of the tories branch of the Mines Resources Department. The visit to Greenland was Nascnple. making the northern it'll) U115 Y?!" more important than in previous patrol lllidcr the Northwest Torri- and seasons. Whcn Denmark was aver-run by Germany, cilttlng Greenland oft from her motherland. Cmlfldfl End the United Stlilcs came to the Grcenlandcrs‘ assistance, Each country named a consul for the north- '1‘lie Canadian The eastern Arctic Pam“ K°l underway at Montreal July 17. with the Nascopie ladcn with hcr usual wide assortment of suililllcs f0‘ the outposts. Each previous trip tho icebreak- 01‘ has carried one yeofl silllpliel to trading posts and other settle- ments around Baffin Island. Hud- son Straits. the eastern shore of \(.'iiv. tiolnv been visit- - B , Cl Jcrficirl Inlet, . 11:ll"l~o\r::" hlstlters? the Misqs ggzgorilnrggr on ‘%qn(\_§n\[\ffl Islam-l iclt this week for tllcr find m“ Ross on the 50111119". . S end oi’ Somerset Island. Mm 1 ‘Mr. Frvd Ethel-ford of New 3mm” M the m“ ‘v o p , _ gmicy developing. nllififlflii, “.15 n recent visitor t3 stiiiréieogsgmgfglfil; defldm to mm vlde a two-year stock of necessit- les at these points. One years slipilly l! "will “u the Nascopte can cal-ry- So 10f lhl-‘i patrol she rcltladcd at Churchill. “The Grecnlnnders received us with open arms." said Maj. Mc- Keand. "We cllrrlcd~matvrifl1 for a complete house with for the use of the Canadian con- sill." f headache It Alcm. Burdock illood laiiiig lilo digestive siiplltcll limlcls been nccuuipllslictl the (3% ll. 13.13. at any drilg counter. Price $1.00 0 50ml‘- Tho T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto. 0"‘- Ii .2 WEST ERN GUARDIAN 1| l l ; motored lo the home of Ml‘. AND PRINCE COUNTY CHRONICLE . CAPITOL THEATRE Summerside TODAY ONLY . ,7 .. I . "l BELIEVE m A YOU, TOM! “Even if Hi0 whole world thinkayodreaddlopltadl" The true, thrilling Itory of the , boy who grew up \\\\L "< Zwlw/ ROONEY TOM ED ON FAY """ sconce BAINTER - BANCROFT VllginlaWElDLER ' EugenePAllET-TE Original Screen Play b Bradbury Fours. Dore Schary. ugo Butler Directed by Nm-mnn Tnurog Produced by john w. Ccnsidine Jr. / diswtfiviflwfl-Msw mu- QaaT/ézz/fl? ALSO NEWS silows 7.30 AND 9.15 Allilillcc 'l‘0l)A\' tit 3:30 EiiniFiF— lids In flue. United C1iui"cli at Chateau- D.:s.ii, Province of Quebec, .- {CCUC of a pretty atl.ll..lll “(Ki-Jig zit three p. m.. October 5. 10-10 \\-'l1(‘ll the Rev. T. R. Rose lliiltcrl ill tiiarrlagc Margalet Jean Profitt, dtiilghter. of Mr. and Mrs. ti. W. Proiitl, Spring Valley, aliu ' iii O. Genciroli, scli of M." ‘oecull Gendrcli, Mon- §\\*\:\\\‘__¢~\\\-<\ ‘n. ~.\‘-‘\\ \\\k“\ 'l‘..t2 .. .1. who was given awav by llcl" ‘n ;tliei"-i'n-la\v. Mi". Basil McCoubrtiy". looked exceedingly chi/- in a strcl... ‘vligih dress of Indian Earth um‘. "coo with E0161 Wim- hllTl‘, Her v vct turban with shall -01" lcliglll veil and accessor- ies wcle matching. She wore a cor sage of Talisman roses and small mums. The couple llusro unattend- ed. After receiving congratulations and best wishes. i-he bridal party and Airs. K. L. Gilmour where a dclic ions wedding luncheon was served by the hostess Following the luncheon the hap py couple left for the Hotel Corn- wallis, Cornwall, Ontario. For trav- elling the bride wore a smartly do- signed black boucle coat with llliiik trimmings. The groom's gift to the bride was fl vcllolv gold blilDVl watch. The young couple will resid Chatcaugllay Basin, Q, where 'l1t‘ groom is an employee of the Montreal Gciierlll Elccirlc Company" Their many Island friends wish 1 ihclli years of happiness. cillFliTlZiF Is Bomlicil In Fierce Raid AIDECIRAS. Spain, Oct. l6 — (AP) -Gibra1tar, weslem anchor of Britain's naval strength in the Mediterranean was heavily attacked today by high-flying planes. Observers here were unable in determine their nationality or strength because oi clouds, but it was the most violent attack since French airmen tinder orders of the Pettiin-Laval government bombed the fortress Sept. 24 and 25. Anti-aircraft batteries replied in fuller voice than ever before —sug- gcstlng that defences of the Rock had been newly strengthend. It. was believed possible that the raiders were following up Anglo-It- allnn naval engagements on the chance that a damaged British ship was anchored at Gibraltar. The cxtciit of the damage to the Rock. lf any. could not be ascertained. Tonight gunfire apparently from WHY-shim in the Gibraltar Harbor " was hoard at interval; of ill min- utes. There was no immediate ex- planation, although it was aug- weztled that it possibly was prac- :ice shooting. TWO freightera, understood to be French. were halted during the day and taken to Gibraltar. Five other ships of unidentified nationality ivere sccn to arrive from the At- intc under airplane escort. Two other merchant ships carry- "lg troops-apparently motorized niis~azichored for a. time, but ne left shortly for the Atlantic ltcr coallng. It Wfli believed possible that in the days assaults upon Gibnltar tlw attacking aircraft were fol- lcwlng ilD British-Italian naval en- Ilflemfllll on dance that hlls Admitted BURDEN Mn. L. A. Edward-l o! Chor- lottctown who for some time ha been noylng with her husband at. Halifax retumed to Borden recent- ly where she is the guest of her ‘points. Mr. and Mrs. Neil Dar- ac . Mia: Pamela Rodgers o! Moncton rpont tho week end with her pu- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Reginald R0435- era. Among the mldents who have been spending the Thanksgiving holidays at their homes hero are Vemon Campbell and Blair Bil-ch from Mt. Albson University; Pearle Stewart, Glenn Sharpe and Wynne Chappell from P. W. College; Jack Dalziel and Charlie Sexton from igi-m llirunstanb University; and cl Chop ll and Oi from o. c. of” g“ m” Jllfr. Gordon Jay. R.C.N.V R. W110 spent the week end at his home 2:? returned to Halifax on Mon. Mrs. Norman Oatway IIiCl ion; Frankie and Wendell were visitor-g to Charlottetown on Saturday, F k faolgboéf. N. s.. rifgomiilgilllgtli i’; Elmer 611m Treiihoim and M‘; ark of Fort Lawrence, N. s" a" ‘ll-slung relatives at Borden Carleton and Charlottetolvn. Miss Dorotl; MacTavish of mt _0Vn with relatives ill Belfast "mini; to Borden on Monday Mr. and Mrs. evening. Mrs- M813’ Webster and dail . , , 1 Eli- ters Joan and Vlrgmm Spent Thanksgiving day ll B "(l . of Mr. and Mrs. J1. Jo.‘ —-A. Rains Come Tc Turn flcscrt lntc Quagmire - .-.. ~.U(‘i ltl~—l(;p l1le1~ - '-.. g " l~ ed iloiillis oi (llJllLllL have cild.. M. and scoll the qt. Over“ um llrsnai rtoltilitl Uri ‘n1’ ~ l " ¢ s itall. l t Altfikdiltll’ a ling ~ " A - Suez, qllagliille. ille lziliis t 211110 will be a 3m! sllb-Lroplca. will; E3l°’.‘§5’.d“".“. *">>1°1"'~<"<i it quickly. » .“‘- l, ladle-l “Halli. Bedouin trinestlicii so) the tin. has u. c n3. "' Cgsflcfjullllltlfn m‘) nmmhs “e ‘My nsnitill._li_i' still try to (ll-m. mcrcd cars 811d‘llillksulllwllltllig mud would be about lnlixlsslbie aim they havedliflsil tics as it. is, 5U];- Dlimlz their lore ~ . The B14115“ l_ . on the othsr iha§d< “W? 5011-. reinforced the !ral;\v.lv line _\vlllch stretches from ggatlghulfi All‘: ll-llflflll and will have "51 Bi-ibll less trouble maintain- 1m: their front llllcsi""' | 'I_‘he Italians still hold the 70-mue sérlylit or cOtlSlllfie ivitllin Egyptian hfi 01y. and fol"_the_ inst lnonth _nye_ been ciliiSOllflflillltz their pg. sliioll bv building a road, Their offensive operations in re- cent weeks have been mainlv ail-l Gallic which seem to have done little amaze. They usually flv at very, great heights. drop their bombs and turn back oilickly. i The apparent aim of the raiders has been to destroy the railhead. 151%; giéreirgustlv £20321] tlile [M331- o ie on y n ic bombers haven't hit. g Confession In Evidence PRINCE ALBERT, 585k. Oct. l6. ——(CP)—A statement allegedly giv- en to a Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer bv Mrs. Isobel Emele, in which she admitted shooting her husband. Henry Emcle. was admit- ted as evidence here iodav in the second trial of Mrs. Etmele, on a charge of murder. In the statement said to have been given to detective constable R. W. Buchanan. of’ the R.C.M.P.. Sept- 29. 1930 Mrs, Emele is quoted as .saying she fired through a hole in the kitchen door when her husband came home around noon. ls Fined; Says Hails From P.E.l. YARMOUHI. N. 8.. Oct. iC— (GE-Louis Lampcrt. who said he came from Prince Edward Island. today, paid a $25 fine and costs when he appeared in court on a charge of having failed to keep a record of the deer tildes he had pilrchased. The charge was laid under the Lands and Forests Act. damagedrwBEiilsh chips were an- chored there After nearly n centu certainly ought to KNOW legions liillst ruil if ti,“ Th. Loren‘ t t . .. .l| t SCHWARTZ C O F F E E new Vncu-Pnck I: proof th d , In drip and regular fltllldl.” o T" T m‘ ‘on,’ llcath 0f Wcil Known S’siilc Mail Driver The many friend: of Mr. Joseph A. Richard will learn with much regret that ho paused away at hi: home in Summerside early Wed- nesday morning. m". Richard was 83 years of age and has for the last 35 years been the very effl- cient mail carrier for Summerside, driving the mail to and from the post office and railway |tation. I-lo was always courteous and obliging and will be missed very much by the town citizens. Mi”. Richard served u water commissioner for the town of Summerside for six years. He had been in falling health for some time but it was only tho last few weeks that it we: realiz- ed that his illness was serious. He leaves to mourn one daugh- ter Mrs. Benjamin Gallant and t/wo sons Matthew and Joseph in Summerside, and one son outside the province. sincerest sympathy ls extended to bereaved. The funeral takes p1ace,on Fri- day morning at nine o'clock from the residence of Mr. Benjamin Gallant, Notre Dame Street to St. Paul's Church-S. niilitiiioli (Continued frorn*page__1) was most unlikely that there would be any tigrcenlent in this regard." After Oct. 3 he had read and analyzed "the rather" critical review of our war effort bv United States Journalists" and he "learned later lvlill stiilic anlazcliiclit, and silrprise that _ilic inforlnatioii given me re- spectlligthe St. Lawrence waterways negotiations W115 incorrect, ut" at least iliai. thcrc had been a change." At-co"."<iliicl.i', l1i‘l1ll(l wired Mr. K1112 Oct. B. tillti. evcry facility to til-Irate public questions should be lifinrdcd when parliament met. 11c said Mr. King replied by let- ter defending the arrangcnlent made Oc‘ il under which parliamentwould meet. olilv formallv in November. But. he colliinllctl, Ml‘. King added tlla‘. if ('ll‘(‘illllé;ifll1C€S before Nov. 5 should so change as to render ad- visable the reassemblilig of parlia- mriit not fol" the purpose merely of a further lidlollrnlnent but for pur- of gcilcral (liscussion, then the the Prime lvfinlstcr and was that parliament l‘f".'ii(‘fl and a iiciitsis- sicii clitcre, llpniv “I ivcls niv-pziriiig to reply to that letter." Mr. Hanson added. “when I read the press report cf the an- nouncement of thc Prime Minister Oct. i4. Apparently in his view circ ' at. " have rhanfleti and the c. "s arseli end the nov- orrmlqii cltercrl its vfeivs. we r am content Whatwcr adopted." with the col Japs May Attack liong Kong To Block Burma Road TOKYO, Oct. 17- (Thurs- llay)—(AP)-—Japiin may use force not only against the Chinese side of the Burma road upon its reopening, but also ag- ainst the British Crown Col- ony of llong Kong if transpor- tation of munitions to Chino. is resumed via Hon; Kong, it was claimed today. Both routes, the one from the west and the other from the cast, are within easy range of Japanese bombers, the name sources contended. Circles close to the Japanese Government said they expect- od "an important announce- ment" within n few day: on the situation. A further indication that forcible methods may bo em- ployed came from the Tokyo newspaper Asahl, which in n dispatch under n llong Kong daieline said the Japanese con- sul general had warned the British authorities that Japan considers ‘ ‘ _ of the Hon; Kong-Chungking route s: l separate lflecmenf. from that governing the Burma road. The Burma. road ha: been closed for three months under a. British-Japanese agreement now expired. Aashi said the consulate gen- eral had made clear that J:- pnn Interpreted the oloflng of the Hon; Kong routs n: "ef- fective; indefinitely." British officials rejected ouch an interpretation, It nald, and intended to resume shipments via Bong Kong to the Chlang Kal-Shck forces simultaneous- ly with the Burma road re- opening. FIREMF" ‘JAY SERVE OVERSEAS OTTAWA, Oct. 16 —(CP) —Con- sideration is being given to the en- gagement of Canadian firemen for service overseas in combatting fires caused by air raids, Defence Minister‘ Ra lston said today. He said communications had beegtary formations. in tho bualnm Sch m cola. And tilelrdellcwlhu: FEZSUMMERsIDE GUARD WAKE III’ YOUR LIVER BllE- And You'll Jump Out of Bod in CLO Morning Ruin‘ to Ge Tin ilnr nhould pour out two pound: o! liquid bile into yourhoweln daily. If thll hilt hoot flowinl freely. your food doenftdilefl. It iult decay: in the bowels. Gu blunt: up your nomnch. You get constiputad. Harmful poison: a into the body, and you hi! lone. sunk on the world look: punk. Amara bowelmovernentdourft YIIIC it the ulna. You need lomotblnl work: on the liver n: well. it Luke: thou Iood- old Carter's Little Liver Pill: to get than two pound: of blla flnwin: freely and make on feel"up and up".l*llsrmiesn nnd gentle. f] lnlkc the bile flow freely. They do the work of ulomal but luv: no colonial or mercury ln Lltflo Liver Pills by I'm. Alk for Carter‘: 15$ G nunnl Stubborn!) refuu nnythlng Kensington And Vicinity Pte. Frederick Arsenault of the P-E-L Hlizhlanliers left on Monday Tittlgrrijtllirv‘ hill um f“ Nov“ his héme here‘ e y fur ough at Mr. David Gorman has returned i0 IB-illme his studies at S. D. U. in Charlottetown after enjoying m9 yvlzlezend and holiday at his home M1‘- sierllflfl Beatozl of Charlotte- towawas a business visitor to Kerislngion 'I‘uesday_ MI- ROY Lockhart, wireless oper- ator. who is stationed in Moncwn, N.E.. and is now on his annual lmndilvfi. orient Tuesday in gen. » ~ - lMi-IIL.’ 0.0. acquaintan- cos‘ An enjoyable bridge party, under the auspices of the Kelisington branch of the Canadian Red 0mg; Was held i-lie the spacictls home of Mr. and Mrs. ' rtlnii Cook Tues. day archaic. ri cven tables in play. the iuckv rs were Lad. dies h: PFlZf‘, .\ as Kathleen Ready. Ladies consolation. Mrs. George Bfcflliliig Mens 1st prize, Mr. William Marl-can, Mcng con- solution Ml". W. F‘. 'I‘aylor_ A dainty luncll at the crliclllsioil of play Sflrvvd by lilc indies was greatly colored by all. l Mr. William Chrini-pion left on flrllcsdav morning for Summerside to take up his duties with R. v employed. Albcrton Mr. ervil Matt-bowl, ltudeni. at Summersidl Academy, spent the gehanksgiving holiday: at hil home IE. Miss Margaret Matthews Ken- lslngton, was a week-end visitor to hi: home h e. Mr. Alirederibley wl: l. recent vis- itor to Summerside. Rpv. Dr. W. V. MacDonald Wll a recent visitor to Tlznish. Messrs. Thomas Gallant, Lonely White, Clifford Chandler. Richmond, were recent visitors to Alberton, the guest: of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Mc- Quaid. Min Mary laslie. Bouril. was : recent visitor to Alberton. Professor Garfield Bennett, of P.W.C., was a week-end visitor to Alberton. the guest of his mother. Mrs. D, Hart. Maura. Gerald MoQulild. Frank O'Connor, students at S.D.U., were week-end visitors to their homes here. Dr. G. L. Keefe was a recent V15- itor to Summerside. Ml". Bus. Ramsay left recently for Saint John. N.B.. where he is to be Miss Mae Malley left recently for Charlottetown. where she will en- ter the City Hospital to train as nurse. Miss Mailev carried wilhber the best wishes of a host. of friends. Miss Marv MOQuaid, of the C.N. R, Telegraph ofilce. Summerside, was a week-end visitor to her iloille here. Messrl. Fred Millman and Rae- burn Corbett, who are taking the ISO-days military training were re- cent visitors to their homes here. The regular weekly meeting 0i the First. Alberton Boy Scout. Troup was held in their meeting quarters l_n the Masonic Lodge building on Fri- dav evening. hiccup‘: opened with Flag Break and Scout Silence, fol- IAN? - M55! be; 21.1. sbavinq barqain Gitlllihf scum ulcuizlumouvl llllmoit iuzoi sluvlquu ENMAN DRUG C0. Summerside iiliiiéniln On and after Saitlllwiliy‘, Ut-tllln-l 19th, our business will lie <il.lil...l-i<'li in our own building Just Llvllxs tile Street. We take this opportunity ul ex- PTCSSTHg on. sincere. tllailks iu each 13nd every (Jl-t.‘ who vuntrliiulwl in any nay in llie growth ullll ivin- tclialiec oi out" business, llurilg i118 Past eight and ii ilali‘ years. We inienu as iicreicioro iu wiry an complete a line its pusJblt u! general mtihllillllllht, grtuluaiiv- de- veloping certain lines inure fully. BUGS-Wife want klggs as lie u" in touch wiili l-lgg healers on the mainland who are iillling to pay high [lril-cs ior shipments of uiii- form quality. We trust that (his change at this time may incl-i with tile lippruvul 0f lrur vustomcfu, as illl-rc tile 25"" advantages in operating ciillrl-iy lowed by a lively game. The Pat- roi; thcii adiourned to their respect tive corners for inspection, and roll call. which showed 12 Scouts pre- sent. This wtis followed by a stalk- ing game and a fifteen-minute _in- struction period in second class First Aid. Rev. s. J, Davies. s.M.. then gave a five minute talk on D11?!“ for the winter months. Meeting closed with the National Anthem and Scout silence. lI-lolrliali Co., Ltd. with whom. he 11115 TPCCIIELY been employed. Set. Walter Duggan, C.A.s,ll'_ linstructor stationed 1n Charlotte- town rcturnerl to resume his du- I ties on Tvedav after spending the holiday at his home here. l lvfi". and Mr ‘Peter ill-l" w», and lson Geor" nactotrc" in Charlotte- lfIWn cn Tucwlav etching, 1-1, iPole Faces l Murder Ciiargcs l TORONTO. Oct l6-—(CP)——J0hn Kluk. 30-year-old Pole who re. cerltly was confined in an insti- tutlon for criminally insane, to. night faced two charges of mug‘- der. His second alleged victim, John Plachedko, 45, died tn h0g- pltg today. uk is alleged to h ' m Plachcdko in the neck 2:“, gl during an altercation in the lat- ter’s home. He fled, evading pg. lice and rcappearing two days lat- er at the home of Art Borisevitch. There another argument ensued, and Borisevitch was slain. This second shooting touched of; one of the greatest manhunt! in 'I‘0r0nto’s history and a few days . later Kluk was captured in a lane not far from the Borisevitch homo. He told police he had taken ro- 31180 in n noble nearby and y“ hiding in o. hay loft while the po- lice search surged around Mm Athloncs Will Visit llooscvclts Over Weekend WASHINGTON, Oct. l6.—(AP)- ‘The visit of the Earl of Athlone. Governor-General of Canada, his wife and daughter, at, President‘ Roosevelt's Hyde Pflfk home this Announcement o: tho vlhlt w“ made at Quebec. where the Govern. or-Generai and his wife have been staying. Officials here said the visit would be informal in contrast to the for- mal visit which the Earl of Ath- lone’; predecessor, Lord Tweedsmuir, Dnid to President Roosevelt in Wash- ington ill 1937. While the visit was sold to have no political significance, officials described it as further evidence of the friclidlv relations between the two countries. sent to London regarding the pro- posal but no decisions had been reached yet. He added it is not a ‘military matter and it is not pro- posed to enlist firefighters in mili- s g S: it mgkfigywili be informal, officials... A Re ulem Mass was celebrated . on Monday morninll by Rev» DY» w- l V. MacDonald. asisoed bv the choir. lof which Private Ralph Mllfblly’. C- lASR, recently killed in Englflml. was a member. {Conference 0n Tourist Industry ls Completed OVITAWA, Oct. i6 —tCPi —Rl_!¢- cmmending increased aDPTWYXZI“ tions for tourist promotion work by Dominion and provincial govern- ments and transportation agencies. a two-day conference rm the will" is‘. industry ended tonight. Final session of the conference was confined largely to adoption of resolutions dealing with Varimlfi phases of tourist promotion. In addition to urging that all tourist agencies should increase their advertising appropriations for 194i, the conference decided:- 1. The Canadian ‘Pravel Bureau and the National Film Board should cooperate to frame a program foi- production and theatrical distribu- tion of technicolor travelogues. 2. Mom accurate and complete i statistics on tourist travel should be compiled, so n. better picture of the industry could be obtained and pub- liclty and adve could be handled moi-o efficien y. I. Tourist ldl/Cfilllfl and public- ity campaigns should conducted on n year-round basin; Canada was losing tourist business by sporadic drives. The conference instructed the Travel Bureau to confer with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation to secure ts recommendation rc- garding the production of all-Cari- adian programs of a type that might merit use by networks fl-i the Unit- ed States for a period of 26 weeks. The conference stressed the im- portance of the tourist. industry u part of Canada‘: war effort. em- phasizing thui the industry vras ona way of procuring foreign ex- change which could be spent in the United States for war materials. ........ t“....'h"r. .. UITAWA, Oct. i6 —(CP) —D. Leo Dolan head of the Canadian Travel Bureau. tonight said the number of toili-Lstr entering Can- ada from the United States during the pest eight months showed e drop of more than 2,000,000 from the same period last year. Dolan said the eight-month io- tlil this year was 0,825,000. He es- timated that the total for all 1940 might reach 14,000, 000000 Early in the year it was esilma - ed that the tourist industry would be worth 3300000000 to the Domin- ion this yiear, Dolan said. but ac- tually the intake would not be much more than 32501100003. This would represent a decrease of bc- lwccn $25.000.000 and from i939 ACTRESS T0 RIARRY HOLLYWOOD. Oct. 1G -—fAP) —, Actress Helen Mack said todziv she} would marry Tom McAvity Holly'- \\'00(l advertising man. "within the, next few weeks" and would give 11D’ iivr screen career. ft will be a sec- ‘ ond marriage for both. rarauTls-i-JREF l" mono. us, on. 14—(CP\ __, - James Eagles. of Ixmdondcrry Mines. , -ilcar here. died today of injuries rc-, he was struck by an automobile driven by Water B. Eagles Saturday night. A coroner's ‘llrr returned a vc-‘dict of accidental ' dcath. ivith no blame attached to} the car driver. ceived when $30,000,000ldcall azii 1.400 inii. under ollc rotii‘, ihcrcily l-lizilililig us to serve inure cffit-ieiltiy and elon- omiraily. MACKENZIE A: CO. Kensingion, P. E. 1. l L-4l8-10-l6-2i. (Continued from page 1) _-.. . . . 3 northwestern city Eldliiillléiltdlill] face shelter. and there were undo termined dead and inlurcd. Other raiders were over Wale: and other western sections. The Mldlzuitis llMl soliie CHSULnilOS. All day the (itriiians had scouteo out the devastlilltlii wrollglitrn Loli- oon and clscivliere 'I'uesoll_v night in the worst attack of maliv days. urtp- ‘pllig tew bombs iii the daiiie-J hours. _ All dav long rescue squads cu] into ruins to rescue tlie liiliig en- tcmbed and recover} i116 bodies o} the dead. They lay in the heapsy 'rubble that YCSICIKlIiY vi-el-c hospi- als. churches, factories, air raid shelters. a college. apartment ‘hous- es, a youth hostel and the building: of an historic square. The heaviest lol; was taken by two direct bomb hits on a 1v»- stoi-ev school house. used as all all raid shelter. Before those still alive were dug from the ruins. rubber tubes were pushed through tho wreckage to feed them. Others. when the bombs struck. were blown into the strcei. wliero ambulances picked them up. g There was no estimate 0i the 08M! BERLIN, Oct. 1'7 —\'I'hllf5d0S') - (AP) -Nazi sources claimed today that several hundred German war- planes t/ook off with bomb car- goes for England (lilting inc last few hours, with London their main probable goal. (Iondon dispatches said that the capital was enjoying one of ltl quietest nights since September. (In New York a British broadcast- ing corporation announcer was heard saying lhat. the !.‘~:1iil radio went off the air Just as the an- nouncer was saying "London wu heavily bombed last night .." German radios usually go off the air when a raid alami is sounded.) were old men. \\'0l11C1l and clilldrcn. Fifteen boys, asleep lii the base- ment of the youth hostel when it was hit. were found ‘alive after res- cuers had given tiicni up for dead. Three others were (it-ad. An undetcrnllilcd number of east-endcrs were bvhcvt d lrtlpileci in the cellar of the bombed crllmuv- B1111. -perha1as-.--drowilcd “iihfliio- titty-ref! from broken water 11mins. _ An apartment house was rlilpcfl to pieces. and a pastor asleep in m6 basement of a lliilrcii next door crawled out to filul lhe 'i\\'i>li’(l bodies of the deal: liixti 1l1ll1l‘(‘(l. inn- ncd in their bctis bcilcliiii blilfi.) and blocks of cclilrctc. Still another bomb alidcd damaged office bilililliil: \\l1l cue squads were trying to H‘! I " l14‘1‘f‘ Oil I inlured Five werc kllcd v many iniurcr others \\("'i‘ sti.l 111.5- sing. In lh: some .<l‘(‘TlUl1._§i Jill nixirinicnt hnllsl- in!" W“ ‘wrcckcti anti a row ti: 1i knock- ed_(‘lf)\\'11, A iulhl he lirndifiil 110 polwolis “as \ belitvcd tha" mam" Oflit Iliichils . [in aliv r ‘did no‘ llpimlacii of the o'er-ct raids iii PM“ - bor. Urligllriv w ‘s to bllv (‘fiiilllmfnt for 50.00’) " ‘lcrs and E~ ‘F3 trays to rn "e the nioliqi" O-ORIIEN VANCE THURS". \ . l. ill. flllslc by U1." New 17cm:- yvmql with »\I. illillVllJiil at llu- piano. ETwl-lo-ls-"lf. ‘I u». n o rifle-rec» ‘