THE CliA RLLYFTETOWN GUARDIAN HEAVY DUTY FULL GRAINED ‘ciaituui. GUARDIAN This column is nursed for news oi locnl Interest. but advertising oi n nowsy nistnro usny be Inserted n1 l cents n word, strictly plynhlo In udvnllu. CRASWELL for Photographs _ _tw_q_t_o make a Bar- gain. Nysl"? "for I ‘satenovruint- yal nhrtoies. L-827-l0 ' CONFEDEBATION LIFE INSUR- sscs. i L-aiaz n- . BUILT FOR HARD wean THOUSANDS have been wsitins for it, Nysi 2 for 1 Sale. now on at Nyai Drugstores. L-827-10-i-8i. REV. H. B. BELL will preach on October 5th as followsz-Southlake 11.00 A. M. Klngsboro 7.30 P. M. L-ZiS-IO-‘d-ll. BIG NYAI. 2 for i Sale now on at Worthy's Drugstore Queen siren, Wort-ifs Drugstore, Prince Street, Lliarlottetown and at Semples Lrugstore, Kensington. d save. Get s. sheet and check your needg, L-827-l0-1-3i. MISCELLANEOUS SHOWER. - On Friday evening, September 26th a large number oi friends and rela- tives gathered at the Borden dance hall to tender a miscellaneous show- er to Miss Peggy MacDonald Drill’,- ious to her marriage. As inhengrins weddiri niarcli was giaged b Mrs. Ralph ilroombs the ie-to- el- corted by Mrs. Louis Hackett was led to the chair of honor which was .asteruliy decorated in pink and white. Little Fay Howatt and Mastir Geor le Toonibs, dressed as minia- ture ride and groom then canie forward and presented the bride-io- bo with a boiiquetoi mixed flowers and then took their places on each side of the bride in nicely decorated chairs while a. carriaiifl 8150 160°!‘- uted in pink and white was ivzieeicd in laden with gifts. Mrs. Cilfl-oll Howatt and Mrs. Louis Hackeit opened the gifts and Mrs. Ralph loombs read the verses and present- ed them to the bride after which they were arranged on the table Again and again the carriage was filled with gifts which were iilieeied in and presented, among them i)<‘\l g c.i.cques_ silverware, cui glass unu linen. The bride-to-be 1n it snort speech thanked licr many friends for their gifts and good W1$i195 Biifll‘ viliich she was bounced. The rc» maindei" of the evening was sDciit 1n music and dancing. l LAID To nEsT '_ Tho funeral of Dr. J. T. Collins, which was laest values ob- H“ your “wry rcduirement. oots that will Check ‘Owe-r 'l‘.licsc Worth While Features o rum. GliAlNEl) LEATHEIQ o 011. T.~i.\'NED UPPERS I F111. wEioi-rr LEATHER songs 0 sour) i.E.-i'riiER INNER sows 9 PANLW) OR CREPE SOLES ' 'i'.\l’ 801.155 (Leather or Punco). v SEWN AND PEGGED OUTER SOLES $2.95 $3.50 $395 523.12.... _ _ ._ _ _ 31 .93 $239 -(‘().\ll’.»\RE OUR PRICES- YEO THEA TRE Footsteps Tn i The Dark Coventry. ‘Thousands o! families trooped iromhno voisns insn exodus as pathetic as that d he children oi Israel. Innesido ditches were dormitories where whole ism- iiies slept under hedges and beside hayrieks m‘ in open fields. Five blitzes in eight nlIht-s set the tempera of Plymouth’; people onedgeouinst tbeeiiegodisokoi preparations. Tint this situation OCTOBER 2, 1941 - n: didnotturn iuiierisduesoths I1§Gk died-Gross.- peopie into the highways and by- way: with Canadian gifts oi blui- kets and soup and beverages. NONI QIQGWOOI FEATURING Errol Flynn MONTAGUE, FRI. ,3. MONTAGUE, SAT. 4. SOURIS, MON. 6 Personals Mr, Oliver Gallant, Oyster Bed Bridge was in the City yesterday. Mr. Alban Gallant of Rustler) has arrived home after spending the weekend in Saint John. Mrs. John T. MacAdam, West 5t. Peters accompanied by her sister MHIEMYB Paid a visit to the city Wednesday. The many friends oi lVIrs. Jack Large, will be pleased to know that she is convalesclng nicely. after her recent operation in the Prince Ed- ward Island Hospital. Mr. Charles Saunders returned to his home in Charlottetown 'I‘ues- day night from Truro where he was the guest 0t his sister, Mrs. J. H. Slackford and Mayor Slack- ford. Mrs. Clifford Rose and son Mr. Lincoln Rose who lirive been on a lzirgely attended, was llPld yester- day morning from his iaie Yi-‘Ei- dciice, Vernon River, in St. Joa- _ chim's Church. where Solemn Req- ‘uem High Muss was celebrated by i-4; No. 1 wholesale price 33 5-8; Rght Roi‘, Monsgiior Alain-ice Mc- N0. 2 s2 "t-s. iDcnald, assisted by Rev. n. v. Mc- ezistern Kgnzfe, Damon. Rev. F‘. Cass, Sub I i Cheese: ivasterri and Monifeiii Jlcaccn and Rev. Joseph Trainer. twhite, price to factory, _..__ iilelivery for citrreni make 15 5-8. Master of Ceremonies. Present. in ilic Sriiictiiiirv were: Rev. M. J. l\lCN'l‘Rf<‘.:‘=I., 0.1. 1 ~ till" ——l“.‘0- job; west and east white wholesale diice iiizirkct Hurt» us ‘Hirice l6. which price is applimliio smith, D.D.. Rev. Louis Callaiilflii- q DCWUTL- }to cheese manufactured on mil ai- ;D_p__ Rev. I‘. NlflVlllllfill, D.D., Rev. i" M-"iy 25~ i941. i0!‘ 5hil-‘mflii i0 ‘Charles l\l"Ciil‘lll\', Rev. J. A. O'- the United Kiiifxdcm. IBrieii. Rtv. Jcs"pli Rooney and Rev. - graded siinments of-iwmz; 3.1.0. lilarDimulrl. up. Rev. n. Gil- lis, D11, assisted the ChOiT- The filll€fll prncee d to Clitirloitetoirn where llliTrlilflllli took place in ti“? Roman Catholic Cemetery, where “ sorwce at the grwr- was conducted ‘ by Monsienor IVIcDcnald. The hon- orary pallbearers irere: Di‘. A. A. Allziii, Cardigan; Dr. Preston Mc- ‘i. ‘ I ._i2. rge 39: A-medium 37: pul- i (“il- 11°35 28 l-"—29 12; B grndc 30 ~31; 32- C grade 25. j’ i“? ‘tl- Iiityre. Montague; Dr. W.J.P. Mac- éuill til -.‘.Iili"ii. Dr. in), Johnson, Dr. J. _ i), McGuigaii, Dr. GP. Deivar, Dr. ‘Wendell McKenzie. Dr. G. L. smith. Dr. B. C. Keeping and Dr. 'i‘l'.c lhrr)" Prince Nova is now llilCk 0n the Wood JDSPD)‘ A. MacMillan. The actéve in 211m“ lg“ ::;‘.::":r..?" island zit l l1 .-\..\l., and .5 1.31. lil0m Cari 0o Rglmud Hynes. View, Gun,“ L,’ Cmdr. J.J. Connolly, Wm. R. Con- 9 A..\l., l 123i.‘ illill a mi. nolly and Chas Connolly. Bcginniiig Oct. ii the first sailing will be at 6 A.M.. NURFHIBMEEZRLAND FERRIES LTD. hecp Mlnnrd's in the home. REMOVAL NOTICE The Empress Beauty Parlor is now located in their new quarters, The Hughes Block, 2nd floor. Phone 1604 short motor m. to Mrs. Rose's sis- ter, Mrs. Max Currie and lvfrs. Emanuel Gallant, left yesterday on return to their home in New Glasgow, N. S. Mr. Mex C"ri'ic arrived in the Htv last night to a-rcomrwvy Mrs. CurrW. who has been the guest of Mr and Mrs. F! J. Gallant. Ed- vtard -'~“"cei, on return to F"'"l0l’l- ton, Alberta. "iii/we the“ reside, Sci. leopard tact-rigor! R. C. A. 1",, has nri-‘vcrl l~~m~ i» vvfiltfl his fnv. ‘ouch vftli his mother at Duvwiin. mvg 1=~.~--‘m.u “tlnq l: or‘ Ali‘ an", tw- Mo'i"~'"in ‘Few Ontario airport on Sunday last. w», o...» .i....>,,,i 9; War:25 Years Ago Today a (By The Canadian Press) OCT, 2. l916-R.urrianians cros- sed the Danube south of Buchar- est and invaded Bulgaria. French, scrbian and Russian troops cap- tured four villages in Ceriia Valley, Macedonia. Russians made przgress in stubborn figiiiiiig near Lutsk on the Eastern Front. Currencies NEW YORK, Oct. 1 —tCP) The Canadian dollar and the pound sterling finished loggr in relation to the United States dollar in to- days dull foreign exchange deal- ings. The Canadian currency de- clined 1-16 oi a cent to a discount of 11 8-16 per cent while sterling was 1-4 cent lower at $4.08 8-4. (Ottawa foreign exchange control board rate 9.00-9.91 per cent ais- count.) JUST ARRIVED Fresh Stock Of lleeillers liamiies 65c per lb. HUNTS CREAMY TOFFEE HUNTS SALT WATER KISSES I pound box 19c CARRUTHERS HARD BOILED CANDY Pound this 35c Special NOW 1S THE TIME T0 FORTIFY YOUR- SELF and FAMILIES against COLDS-We have a large stock of Cod Liver Oil-Vitamin Preparations, etc., made by reliable firms —Parke Davis-Squibb: -Ayersi.s—Abbotts. If you do not know l‘ “°“" ‘iii-u- SIM" u“ $2 VITAMINS If ow Tiwélhnihl" w m“ 1—— -~ rmaker. Buy igom reliable manufacturers. REDDIN- BROS. Red Cross Special n; can.“ linuunan IONDCW, Oct. i,—A hsli-iriilllon bombs have fallen on this small country, yet it is possible to travel 200 miles from London into Devon without seeing one heap oi rubble, one wrecked building or even o. crater. I forgot the horrors of bomb raids ssthe train thundered through Wiltshire, whose lush low-lands slope iuxuriantly up into the woods. flocks oi sheep looked like toys from a child's Noah's Ark. Yobels sat 0n five-boned gates sloepiiy amiable, doing nothing with en- grossed thoroughness. Two hundred miles of rustic serenity, tranquillity and peace dramatically terminated at Ply- mouth, l. bliiaed city oi tffllflll- It is now nearly six months sir-ice the first blitz caught the city fathers pro, ‘. They had failed to learn the lessons of London and ACHES Drive out Tint first blits brought the 0on- adiim Red Orols right to the ion- front of the Plymouth picture. It never has shifted. Not a week passes without waminfl of enemy aircraft making for the city, either- torudiroctreidoronrmiteeise- when. And every night osmium Red Cross gifts of food and cloth- ing are dispensed among the 150,000 left in Plymouth. Last month gnu. merits were distributed to 8,0!) pie. Itoidntnzidsivorothsstaiiion "Hike me to 21 George St." I knew itssthe addressofnRed Cross clothing depot. "Ain't no George St. now. sir," he growled. I discovered the clothes depot had been demol- ished with s. large stock. Replenish- ment: were poised down from Bristol by anything on tour wheels. ‘Three empty houses were com- mandeered for depots. Next night they were among Plymouth! ruins. Now the Red Cross stocks are do- centrallzed in 80 houses 10 or Io miles from the city. Biiliiiiies go first to a. central depot at Plymouth where they are sorted, repacked demothed, card-indexed and oent out the same day. It. is possible to know from the records where every article goes. A fleet o! cars is on duty nightly transporting required items from the reserves to shelters. Repair 50,000 Homes Already the authorities have re- paired 52,000 dwellings, which is 10,000 more than Pylmoutirs total because many have been bombed and repaired more than once. A small army of demolition workers never stops work. The centre of the city is a depressing scene of devas- tation, with fine avenues of stores wrecked, a magnificent Guildhall gutted, the old parish church o! Saint Andrew's in ruins. Private houses now are stores with hand- barrows forming street markets. Across the shattered front of gut- ted Saint Andrews is n huge, one- WOYCi motto: “Rcsurgam? Arid on Phmouth Hoe stands the statue of Drake, looking 0n the Nazi-threat- ened water as rzitm as when he in- slated on finishing his game of bowls before annihiliatinq that other armada which nursed the quant notion of invasion. Send your contributions to your 10ml Red Cross branch. Provincial D‘vis’on, or to ihe headquarters oi the Canadian Red Cross Society, 95 Wellesley St., Toronto, Ont. Souris Exhibition (Continued) 1 Pint canned Starwbcrries. 1. Mrs. Brent stead, Bay Fortune, 2. Mrs. George MacPhee, Little Har- bour, 3. Lois Reid. Rollo Bay. l Pint Preserved Raspberries, 1. Mrs. J. B. Matthew, 2. Mrs. Theo- dore Robertson. Red Point. 3. Mrs. Foster Garrett, East Baltic. 1 Pint canned Raspberries, 1. Mrs. Joseph Neale, Bear River, 2. Mrs. J. B. Matthew. 1 Pint Preserved Cherries, 1. Mrs. J. B. Matthew. 2. Mrs. H. G. Matthew. 3. Mrs. M. S. Hubley. Canned Chicken. 1. Mrs. George Campbell, Rollo Bay West. Canned Beef. 1. Mrs. stead, 2. Mrs. M. S. Hublcy. Canned Peas. 1. Mrs. Edwin Reid. Brent ‘ soveslk. YOUR llllllll l!!! KEPT Whenyoo beoomescussomsroltbellsnksprlvsureiszionslilplsss °“°""'bmh°dmdl°“mhfiififliymretbstyourbusinuswizh sliolsnkwiilbcheidlnsuiassceoaildcncs. ymhukhummlihimluiiilll$ibulnooncwllinowwhss kis-nnisupni. You noyhmsrssielsdsndnoonswili bslsewbsr-nslssfyq You msyplsnl sectlsllwisb lie Bank for safekeeping and noon; g1“ will know-wnluspslllm. No one k privileged so lowed: upon liils confidential reisdoosiilp of the Bsnlr and in customers-n relationship which compares with char between doctor and parlour. IINII "A IAIII IIIII IIlI-l- IOGOUIII III WIIOOII" sun-rs IN iixcsss or oru BILLION DOlI-All Charlottetown Branch: A. I. B. BELCHER, Manager private OI‘ HONTRIII; IlTAIl-IIISD Ill‘! Ill Crockett, sour-is, 2. Mrs. Brent Stead, 3. Mrs. George MscPhee. Fortune. Miss Haszard judges. and Mrs. Tait, FAN CY WORK Pair Blankets. i. Mrs. Wlghtxnan, Lower Montague, 2. Mrs. M. S. Hubley, Lower Montague. Counterpane knit. or crocheted, 1. Mrs. Richard Kickham. Sour-is West. Afghan, l. Mrs. John Aitkten, Fortune Bridge, 2. Mrs. D. J. Mui- lin. St. Peter's Patchwork Quilt all cotton, 1. Annie Bruce, East Baltic, I. Annie Bruce, East Baltic, 3. Mrs. Richard Kickharn. Hearth Rug all wool, 1. Mrs. Jo- seph Neale, Bear River, 2. Annie F. MacDonald. Elmira, S. Mrs. Felix Peters. Rollo Bay. Hearth Rug any material, 1. Mrs. W. B. beard. sour-is, 2. Mrs. i...,)_ Home, souris, 3. Annie F. Mao- Donald, Elmira DOOYJIIBB, an material, 1. Mrs. George Campbel, Rollo Bay West. 2. Mrs. G. H. Mellick. Souris. 1 Pair Wollen Socks, Island yarn, 1. Mrs. Joseph Neale. 2. Mrs. Richard Kickham. 1 Pair Woolen Island Island yqrn. 1. Mrs. Joseph Neale. 2. Mrs. RlCllilFd Kickham, 3. Mrs. Joseph Walsh, Souris. Pair Hand-worked Pillow Cases, i Mrs. Francis W. Deagle, Lower Rollo Bay. 2. Mrs. John Altken. Fortune Bridge, 3 Mrs. M. 5 Hubley, Lower Montague Cull. Work, 1. Mrs. Francis w. 8 Deng . Buffet Set. 1. Mrs, M wetter. worth. East Baltic. ‘i. Mrs Wight- man. Lower Montague, 3, Mrs, M Gloves, 2 Mrs. Frank Poole. 3. Mrs. George S. Hubley, Lower 3 5h , 3o , _ _ _ v Hagzu-d and Mr, T“: MitcPhee. - Sofa Cushion knt or crocheted, cileeiiym-idgewwg, M" w B Judges. I ' Canned Beans, i. Mrs. Roy 1, Mrs. A. A. Adolphe. Lower Mon- Needlepoint, 1. Mn, John Ajtkgn (The 3rd,) . i With Royal Canadian Navy i illoughby" @II'IOMMUIII I a . Malcolm MnoMilian, Wood Islands-Prank. W , Novelt for gift or bazaar, 1. mo. J. W. rennan, 2. Mrs. Joseph Neale, 8. Mrs. John Aitkon. Fancy Apron, 1. Mil. M. l. Hub- iey. 2. Mrs. G. H. Meliick, s. Mrs. Francis W. Deflgle. Filei Crochet, i. Mrs. Specimen M. S. Huble , 2. Mrs. W. B. Creed, tague. Sofa Cushion, embroidered 1. ma. Foster Garrett, East Baltic, 2. . M. S. i-Iubley, 3. Mrs. Joseph ale. Luncheon Set, 1. Mrs. A. J. Mac- Donald, Soui-ls West, 2. Mrs. Tom Muilally. Souris West. Cross stitch, 1. Mrs. John Ait- s. Mrs. wis imm- lren, Fortune Bridge, Annie Specimen Lace knit. i. IBI- Bruce, East Baltic, wightman, i. am. M. S. mibloy. Runner, white or colored, i. Mrs 5991111118“ Cfofiilfli DOi-iY. i- ill’! M. s. Hubley, 2. Mrs. Francis Wiehiman. 2. Mrs. John Alt-hen. l- W Deagle. 3. Mrs. Francis Mfl J01"! Alike"- Dongle, Knitted Dress o! suit. any yarn Tea 010th, 1, My; wighmm, 1. Christina Robertson. Special Peters, Lower Morita e, 2. Mrs. Benjamin prize, Mrs. Iielix t.» a ‘roars-s... GET MORE EGGS AT A LOWER FEED COST Witla tlae Ful-O-Pep Plan Q Put your layers on this common-sense, economical feeding program now. Firl-O-Pep Egg Mash the Ful-O-Pep Way get just what they need to make eggs. It is a simple, labor-saving feeding method. Just K each of _- Ful-O-Pop Egg Mash, grains. With its liberal oatmeal content it supplies just; _, what hone need to produce more eggs and, ca! ’ the Ful-O-Pcp Way, gel: more eggs at. n lower feed cost. Fut-o-Pnp Hens fed whole oats and scratch No wet mash or supplements needed. seamen CENTRAL CREAMERIES LIMITED AUTHORIZED QUAKER FEED DEALERS Giarlotteiown Snmmersido PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND Souris