ocronan 24. 1940 ;_--—— SPECIALS FUR YOII Woodburws Shaving Sets - (ashmere Bou- quet Make-up Kits - (ientlemen's Brush and Comli Sets —- Sct of Cigarette C a s e a n ii Lieltier - Ladies’ Beau- lilul ilirror, Brush and (‘nmh Sets -- Dainty [lollies of Mexicali Spice Perfume and (‘i1iocne. New Service Pins Air [/0n-;~. Army and Navy. .S‘EE THESE VALUES AT llElllllN BROS. Liirioiessional Cards MURRELL & B0. ll. F. AROIIIBALD Chartered AcCmiIIltl-Ilil Eastern Trust Building Charlottetown McLECD 81 BENTLEY w. u. BENTLEY 11.0. J. a BENTLEY. ILC. c. F. BENTLEY. LlnB. AN Richmond Sti eet PALMER 81 HASLAM A, J. IIASLAM, B.A., '.L.B. BARRISTER, ETC. Bonk nl‘ Nova Scotia Chamber; Charlottetown, P.E.l. MONEY T0 LOAN IELL 8- MATHIESON MONEY TO LOAN Dameron Block. Charlottetown, l‘, E. land H. F. McPHEE B. A. K. C. NOTARY. 81c. BARRISTER, SOLICITOR Illley Building ‘hlAiiK ll. MiicGUlGAN, ICC. C. 3T. CLAIR TRAINOR. K. C. ‘ Barristers, Solicitors, Etc. AN Over Provincial Bank. lilcnmnnd Street, Charlottetown i IIELIVE ti-ione 85 P.0. Box I2 Charlottetown MocGU|GAN 81 TRAINOR BIIARLOTTETIIWN‘ r tIWO keys to A a cabin Lida Lgirimore 0 IACIAI mini vmu 1mm (Continued from page 9, the desk. h ldl . - - TT Shoulders electing wgililtlslililllistlsiljllé" ms ulilig’ ins back in the dark tit-Sgt‘; Z“1r.€2“..l‘l.‘.*i“ ’.‘1‘.’l"‘3E..’“.‘i looke- “°““°‘-’d- his-dark Wes bit. iii}- £12511’ or hiln. But how thought, careful 101. pcihaps". she must be -—Si1c must remember _ Wl1e11 lic came back to her a bell-Olly followed ivitli her 11|gga'gc_ They went out throu r 001'. Cold wind strfigkathesiiiolixliltllgi unanticipated force. She was blown "1 H Staggering half-circle no caughe lier, They stood on the Pavement in the light washing out tromt he hotel. Their eyes met, “I'm y, _ .. thogghtjgrrv s e said l “ ou were right." 1-115 - benltcnt, his slow smileeytfsfziftig? Droachful. "1 was showing oii. my- give me." Gay laughed at John approached the open door of the second-floor sitting-room in Dr. Sargeant‘: home. Mary Adams’ voice contin. ued, then broke or! as John tailed ln from the hall, "The 155i, Datlent none?" she 851K911, gla11e1i12 u!) from needles that’ tlasiied through scarlet ivool. Ive padlooked the office door." He went to Gay, settled comforta- bly in a comer of the davenport find dropped down beside her. Marv. do you think that tirotes- sionnl ethics would permit me to cut the telephone wires?" (To be Continued) HIS PRAYER ANSWERED l Lance-Corp. Albert Mayotta of Ottawa, batman to Brig. E. W. San- sorn, promised ln his prayers that "If my boss gets his promotion I'll make an offering to St. Anthony." Three days later Brig. Snnsom had been appointed commander of the 3rd Division and Mayotte obtained two shilling from hlm to burn tapers in a little French church ofi Trafalgar Square, rlllnardk relieves aches. ' tialtri to United States customs auth- es. QYHE l 7HARLQTTEIQHN o filqbipl/il! Cheap Liquor '_ As Exchange Aid Studied OTTAWA. Oct. 22.-(CP)—A pro- posal to enable visitors from the United States to take advantage of lower liquor prices as an aid to Canada's foreign exchange situatloni is receiving serious consideration by the Foreign Exchange Control Board. the Canadian Press learned yesterday. The hoard is canvassing provin- cial liquor authorities on the ques- tion but the matter has not yet reached the stage oi iormal negoti- ation. it was said. In its essence the proposal is this: That liquor in bond in Canada should be made available without excise and customs duties to bona iicle visitors from the United States. This would reduce the price of the better brands from about $6 to $2 for a 22-ounco bottle, The liquor so purchased could not be taken out oi bond or consumed in Canada, but might be shippedto purchasers at their homes by ex- press in bond. lt could thenbetak- en out 0i bond by purchasers upon presentation oi the proper creden- ori Allowed Ono Gallon United States visitors to Canada are permitted to take back to the United States one wine gallon oi liquor (about (our quarts) without paying duty. Informed source: said it was not believed United States liquor inter- ests would find such a plan making aiiv great inroads on their revenue because. from their point oi view, the amount oi liquor taken backto the United States by returning tour- ists would be small. Whatever United States exchange accrued to Canada from the sale cf liquor at these cheap prices would be spent in the United States in any event for purchase of war ml- terials. As to the amount oi Unit/ed States exchange that might be obtained ii such a plan were put into operation the figures of $l0.000.000 to $15,000.- 000 were suggested speculatively. Big Balloons 0vcr London No Joke Now By Tom Yarbrongh Associated Press Staff Writer IDNDON. Oct. 22 -(c1=1 —l.ion- duo's big balloons, were l. 101W I- yggr sgo - "expensive toy-i. theat- rical props of a nation 918W"! WK?» bound to come down in the’ first shower of machine-gun fire. After weeks of day-and-night raiding and many showers oi lead. the balloons are still there. Last year's jokers now respect them as sentinels in silver, a. menace t0 bombers. The Air Ministry gives them cred- it for doing their job. The 10b l5 to rule out dive-bombing and keep the enemy at a distance. high en- ough for anti-aircraft guns and fighter planes at get at them. ‘They're nothing but big bags oi’ carefully sewed and gummecl Egyp- tion cotton fabric filled with hydro- gen, but Londoners are delighted to dote on their animal ways. They look like circus elephants. or well-fed gyppies in ii fishbowl. They are stubborn as mules, and in a wind they are as Dlflyllll l“ kittens. The Nazis might have called them silly-looking gas bags in the long months before the battle, but one oi the earliest "all out" raids on this country was aimed at bal- loons alone. 'I'hcy've had their bad moments. A few have been shot down. Some have snapped their cables and gone traipslng over power lines as far off as Finland. Others have snagg- ed enemy planes. They've had unexpected good moments, too. One balloon was a nice cushion for an airman descend- ing by parachute near Hyde Park. l-le and the balloon were hauled down safely. Believes llichy Would Regret Axis Alliance In this article John Evans, chief oi the Associated Press foreign seirvice, discusses the tuatlon that would arise with a Vichy-Ber- lin alliance against Great Britain. A veteran European correspondent for the AP before he took over nis present duties, Mr. Evans headed its Paris bureau ior several years. By JOHN EVANS koktcd Press Chief of Icahn Service m0 FREEZE - up CANADIAN NATIONAL cannon 00.. IMITE, Halifax, Montreal, Tononro; FACT? Vi ITVITN 3 Wlrrrrlpeg, Vancouver ed nation that would need food for the body and inspiration for the soul. Germany wouldnt be eag- er to supply much food and it would be far from easy to make i0,- 000,000 Frenchmen gladly go to war alter they broke their hearts in a surrender to get peace. 2. France might be pushed back into the war, but ti so tho famed Flanders Fields would sprout quick- as a great crop oi hate for the 1y German conqueror. Possibly many despairing people might think join- ing Germany better than resisting lier pressure, but it is easy to im- agine the silent, millions of families born of soldiers who feared or hated the Germany, enemy of two wars. “Highways 0f Tomorrow” sullen revolt oi QUEBEC. Oct. 22.—(CP)-—A pap- NEW YORK Oct. 22 --(APl - . ' _ er envirziglniz the “l-ligliivays of 1b- llltler may get the present govern murmwlu was read bv R M_ 5mm,’ ment oi’ occupied France as his al- 0mm,” Deputv Minute‘, o, Hi i1- 13’ m “gm are“ 3mm“ bu‘ “I ways, at the 25th annual convent on he does there's a ialr chance will wish he hadn't. It still is someones secret exactly “e of the Canadian Good Roads Asso- elation. “Tlie highways of tomorrow will what Genmnay has in mind about be fitted into the landscapcand will conquered France, but Prime Minis- be constructed to flowing lines un- der proper e11 ineering supervision‘ ter Churchill showed Monday he m V“ s it addressing dale“, . . a . n1 . - lhbught the Petal“ Laval govern zs_at‘_the_flrst_sesslons of the three- ment might be tempted to join the axis. He asked directly of all Frenchmen that “if you cannot help us. at least you will not hin- der us." Hitler can otter attractive terms to aged Marshal Petain ii Petain believes Hitler can win the war. He can promise France that her old Empire shall remain almost as it was, Germany taking only the Alsace-Lorraine and the colonies which France took irccn Germany after the last war. The striker- 1. Vichy as gn axis allv could swing into action what is left oi her fleet. The British fleet damaged some oi her warships and others étrel immobilized under British con- r0. 2. French colonies throughout the world might follow Vichy. The Wychologlcal influence might be to 81W Gfimflny. Italy and Japan friendly and useful access to air. land and sea bases around the world. The dliilculties:- 1. Franco is o. beaten, disorienta- day meeting, "Widths o1‘ rlght-of-way will not be meagre blit sufficient to allow for iiot. shallow ditches, and a space for roadside lmproveniciil, subgrade waters will be taken care of by storm sewers and tiling. Road- side embellishment will be encour- aged rather than criticized asneed- less expenditure. Destruction of noxious weeds and properly niowii grass creates an epidemic oi im- provement throughout tha entire community." Noting that more than B0 per cent. of traffic accommodates itself on 20 per cent. oi road mileage, Mr. Smith discussed the problem oi how the 20 per cent. of HIlICiIEC should be divided. In Ontario. he said. two per cent would be supcr-liighilvays crossing the province from cast to ivest and from north to south. These would be of the divided type. Sllllllblt‘ tor four lanes of tmiilc. and would 11y- pass community centres, although having access to them. Another two per cent. would be express highways oi two or thrce lanes which would act as tributar- ies to the super-highways. They would be built. to a considerably higher standard than local 11nd ser- vice ronds, permitting l'lllll(llll0\'(‘- ment over great distances and missing densely-settled areas. Thcy would. however, have convenient ex- its and entrances to populated cen- tres. The remaining i6 ner cent. rt hiizhivny. said Mr. Smith. wouldhe local and service roads. ioimuc towns and cities. providing market roads and developing suburban RTGBS. ANNOUNCEMENT! Ml‘. Caine. Factory Representative for Broad- loom Rugs will lie in Charlottetown for a few days showing some very special values. It will he worth your while to see these values. (Ton- tact. may be made through the store of 1940 LYGliT-IIOYPIY CROP i A preliminary (‘silllliilfi places H1,- 1 ‘VIJTC-biibifi pi-cduezioi1 of ligl l.i>1u_\ _ ' ‘in Canada for itl-l0 at 2:) per cons ,lowcr then the crv]; n: 1g g1 ‘creases 111 1 l'0{lll. H.111 luv e1 inur oi the 1111111 p: c, 011$: vinoes. Q11. In Srislzatclieivan, the ‘ ("ill per hiw ‘ca. t‘.ll' . \\'il\ ull- n; 131,. . iiimfzcr or ' r1 sill Columbia Aiwfllllllt‘ Pro i'l1‘(l to b1 l‘ pro {' v 91V‘! uvnv nanfltl fi. IS THE woizioiroiz f nniincn GUARANTEE POLICY GUARANTEE FORMS FOR YOUR PROTECTION confidence, born oi precision workmanship and highest quality materials, enables "Monarch" to otter the most iibeval Guarantee and Adiustment Policy Naturally, the extent oi the _Gueunt¢¢ period, in time, varies with capacity oi Battery and type oi lniuiillOll, Full Stock 0i Automobile The Rogers Hardware llo. Ltd FREE CITY DLLIVLRY. Accessories, “iinlesnlc mui Retail PIIONIZS I05 - ljtlii. ‘crop is expect-rd to br- alxmf lii p97 I11 cor than .11 lfl 7&1 S1111ilarly, mar. . '