1 ‘EH11.’-315,123.11!‘Eliilliil m‘ ...-‘s--x=s,ltriiiyql i i i. 5»g_~,-~_,__.._.-_-...? l,‘ . <...--_.-..,_._.... j"f_'_“f!.'2f'.'f."f"ff‘9 sEFTEMBER o. 193s "irrocK QUOTA m}; CHARLOTTETOWN T10 114111!“ In d u stria I SharesClose High In N.Y. (By Frank lifnelifiiien. Associated‘ Pram Financial Writer) (A. P. By Guardian's Dpeoial Wire) NEW YORK. Sept. ii-In the most active osaturdlw turnover since Rb. 10, 1934. the stock mar- ket churned irregularly ahead yes- tardny, scoring gains of as much as three or mom points in a few thinly traded issues. Measured by the Associated Pness ' average of 60 stocks» the market ad- vanced .5 of a point to 49.9 a new high for the year and the highest level reached since Feb. 23, 1934. At the aiming prices, the average of industrial shares stood at the highest pcint since the early aut- umn of i031. The forward progress of equities was held in check to some extent by the weight of profit-taking which appeared following the gains since Wednesday. Financial circles were impressed with the report on steel production by the American Iron a‘ Steel In- stitute. It showed output in Aug- ust 24 percent ahead of July. the first time in several years that the August twtal had surpassed any preceding months of the year. Transactions totalled 1,289,960 shares for the two-hour session, compared with 2,155,100 shares in the five-hour trading on Friday. Although" the majority of stocks coasted forward for gains of frac- tirns to a point or more." s few is- sues bounded up around 3 to} or more points on limited transac- tions. These included; Allied Chern- ical at 1B4. American Can at 144 3-4. American Telephone at 143 i-G. Auburn at 3B 3-4. and Colum- bian Carbon at 91. . Canadian list Noranda dropped a point. Fractional losers included Canadian Pacific, Inter- national Nickel. Ford of Canada "A." Lake Slrre and Hiram Wal- ker. Dome Mines, Hollinger and McIntyre-Porcupine were slightly higher. Currencies _ (Canadian Pres!) NEW Yoilli. Sci". S~Sierllng was lower, thl- i-‘renvli franc and tho Clin- adlau dollur higher, lil Saturday's foreign exchange Juurileta. Tho Donliniuu dollar rrliul-cll its discount. from 0-32 l0 ‘Hi2 per cent. The fl-auo was up .0014; of a cont. at 0.5014 while tho pound stl-rliiig, closing at 84.0273, sirou-l-ll a loss of, hall li cont. (Canadian Proms) AIONPREAL. Sun. 8-—Nurrow de- cllnl-s wore rugiat .~:<_l on ilonlreul foruilzn erl-hiingl-s tuliuy. the pound sir-rilng nmi the [Tnltl-tl Stun-s clollnr both sllolvlug losses. The pound was off H of a l-cnt nt 31.01 and tho liol- lar lusi i-lo nf our) pl-r cunt ui ‘7-32 of onc pcr cont prclnluln. The French Irnuo lli‘lil unchanged at 0.01 cents. Onntrnl Onnrlinn locals, 4a Ill inehl Notices of word. Other Ilka on application. lull-l- Charge fa Agents Wanted AGENTS Berle: Personal Christmas Cards. Dollar dozen up. Liberal commis- sion and premiums. Experience or CANADA'S CELE- brated "Royal" capital unnecessary. Five dollar Sample Bods free to workers. Garretson Company, Brantford. Ontario. A. W. N-7-l2i. For Sale i: sa s‘ _ ‘.i"_“uc'rl'o_u_“ro“aiii Five, Bridge and Whist Score Oarda. Guardian , Central Job Jrintery. FOB SALE — HEAVY BROWN aper suitable for placing under ga,eto. Guardian Office. L-3-37-tf. FOI. SALE-SEVERAL CITY PRO- parties. O0. L-872l-9-5-6i roa sacs - CABINET vlc- trola with 40 records at a bar- lain. Apply Guardian Office, L-also-ir-e-si. A F03 SALI-PUIE-BBED CLYDE!- dale mare. Been rating foals and in foal. Apply O. W. Croken. Enrol-aid. L-flbl-B-fl-Si POI lALl-QUANTITY 0F l-S Ill. preaervin giars and one gal. bottles. Apply early. Supply lim- ited. Milton's Old Bplin. -—- Wanted‘ win-no r0 imm- roa WIN- tar months. furnished apartment Q- liiII-ll llMilO. Apply Guardian. , Mt '1. Stock Exchange _@_-- lCanaliian Preu) ltoeka cm" Blthurat A . . . . . . . .. . . . —- Bell Tel .. 131% Brazilian 7% Can Car . 41% Do Pfd 12% Can lard Al 3% How Smith - Dom Brillgr» . 20% Dom Steel Coal B . . . . . . . . . .. ~i"/s Int. Nickel . . . . .. 291/4 Massey Burris . . . . . . . . . . . . .. — McCall Front 13% illout Pow‘ . 32! Nat Brew .. 31W‘ Power Corp 8% Quebec Pow — Nllawiniglln l7 Steel of Can . . . . .. ,.. —- \Vll1 El ... '" . (Canadian Pres!) LIONTREAL. Sept. 8-1358 ilriccs udranrell sort-n cents n dozen during last weeks trading on the lionircni dairy and pl-odllce ulnrkqt us sup- plica decreased and lienlanll quicken- ed. (iradl-d ahipmcnfs in ulirlnts or lean wcru quoted at 1H l-cuis a llnzen for A-lrlrgc, 32 cents for A-lnmliunl, ‘£21.’, to ‘J3 cents for B and 10% to 20 cents for C. - ' The bullet- inurkol advanced closely to a cent a pound, becoming L": to 21% cents for cnrlutll nf- loss ni‘ no 1 grllde while sluull lots tn retailers brought 23- cents for solids iiuli 24 cents for prints. . A small udrllnl-o was l'i"l'l\l'il(‘ll on the cheese nrurket, no l Ontario soil- ing at 10%. to ll rents a pound while no 1 Quebec brought 10% to 10% cents. Quebec potatoes were steady to firm. bio-pound bags selling at 35 to i0 cents. MTVLQIIRB ‘Canadian Press) Block! ~ B A Oil .. Bcauharnnis .. Dom Eng Close New York Curb (Canadian Preal) stocka Amer (‘ran B . Amer Sup Pow Al U null El .. Call .\lurl-oni Cities Scrl" .. El Bonli Slulrl- For nf Can imp Oil Int Pen- “Advertising Bates-Payable in Advance on word) Wlalefll nud Ealiern lei-nil, lo Doc word; Announcements and Coming Ivan»; h. per war-ll in Iunnrinm Notices, Spiritual Offerings, (Judi, ota , la pop nanny and Apprcainfol. Apply J. P. Bradley 6a" _________ Ninl: llllll . St Oil lull per Iordi Ola-allied Lilla of Ilornl and [Alters of Condolence 10a. 70o. pus inch or h. p; , l0 10o Pr! lneht r any Jvortlnlonf hurry-fin aunts. . - Sales Help__ Male or liemala WANTED — AiVmITIOUS .ALES paopze, men and women. spare time, to handle our line of Per- sonal Christmas Cards, featuring the following out-standing itcms fourfold pastel tint parchmenw, gravurs etchings, many cut-out slide cards with tip-on pictures, a ractive calendars, humorous cards, envelopes with wallet ilap style, fancy lined and decorated to match cards. Elaborate use of gold and silver designs with bril- liantly coloured inserts. Dainty initial cards that are new and dif- ferent. Seventy ' numbers to choose from styled in case form equipped with handle. Prices start at one dollar psr down. Liberal commission. Writs Premier Art Guild. 202 Castle Building, Mon- treal. N-8b85-8-l0-tl. 9-10. T0 LET-HEATED OFFICE SPACE in our Building formerly occupied by Johnson A: Ward. Eastern Trust Co. L-874l-0-6-3i. T0 LET-THESE ROOM APART- ment. Apply 38 Elm Avenue. L-ii7h9-9-8-3i 146 Great George Street. moderate. Apply on u- mill!- L 8756-04-31 Male Help llfimtid; SINGLE MAN HANDY WITII hammer and saw and 80110111 ranch work. Arthur Wood, Alex- andra. Ll-lllb-Q-‘l-iii. RELIABLE MAN WANTID TO‘ supply famous Watkins Products _ 1. am-o-l-u u. Oltllllllhid customers u. Char- ---——— lotteto Good weekly earninsl- WANTIII .- Tillll o: IOU! Ixparience unnecessary. A901! R- .1,,,,“",,{""',;-':,=$,,,,",,,"=g";l.*:"“ w . n-mi-c-i-il. — 1- 17144-141 wanna - runmsnao uvmo || ma“; adrmom . - n“ ___ Mince a l ___ Inn care . .. Ans UYIN bnumam‘ fiUretIEYfow and chicken 60117. “',,,,"°,”,-,,‘ ."‘°""" ?.°h'“3."‘»’:a‘$ Lon °- " ' m» .. m: m]: neon "I111"! "°'"'”’“'m,,,.'°”" "medium mm female. Finder lélgmgwdw W," macabre-n fitllyuafgftb '_~" out new slice, Currie‘ Maine» in MI- Tfirllfg, Charlottetown. a. A. ma. on ma EH10 ‘ Textile Stocks Hold Strong On Mt’l. Mart ii (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) MO . Sept. 8-—The Mon- treal Stock Exchange closed on an optimistic note Saturday with gains holding a large majority over losses although generally confined to nar- row llmits. Volume was light as is usual in the short weekend session. Less than 3.600 shares changed hands. There were few features, inter- est being fairly evenly divided, 119x. tile stocks were fairly strong in the face of increased buying, Bruck Silk advancing 3-11 to 16 3-8 and Canadian Oelanese recording s. gain of a. full point at,21. Paper stocks also managed to show small gains. In the interlisted group. leaders in the rally during the latter part of last week, Consolidated Smel- tors again came in far a large share of support and showed a fur- ther gain of half a point at 173. Holiinger firmed 40 cents and Can- adian Paciflc and International Nickel were unchanged to narrow- ly higher. Making its first board lot sale in about a month, Woods Manufac- turing preferred lost 7 full points to sell at a new hw of 53. Sales on the stock exchanile tOt- ailed 3,570 shares and $6.000 in bonds. ' I Mrs-eel aneoers (Canadian Praia) .\lO.\"l‘Rl<IAL, Sept. 8— \\‘l1cut_ nor no f1 80. lint-ivy C W nu ti 43. Outs food no 1 ~10. l-‘lour Spring wheat palentdYirata 8.130 Flour seconds 34.90- Flour irnkcrs $1.80. Flour winter wheat M1911". "Ml" $3.20 to $3.30. Flour white Midliliugs ton . 25. lloliod outs bug U0 llls $3.03. Hay no Z per tun carluts $10.00 to 1,0. . rill-can no 1 Ont 10%. to 11.. Nu i Qili.‘ 10% to 10%. Butter nn 1 22 to 22 ’. Eggs in various A l large if). Eggs A l medium 48. - Eggs A lurgc 30, Eggs A medium 3T. Eggs B ‘J0. ' Eggs i‘ 2.‘). Potatoes Que 80's 3,5 to 40. BRUIN ATTACKS AND TREES MAN (Canadian Press) VICTORIA, B. C., Sept. ll-Bruce McMicklng, son of Dr. and Mrs A. E. MCMiCking of Victoria, has de- cided that bear cubs are best left alone, espezially when “Mama and Papa" bear are around. Bruce is piacer mining at Squaw Clcek in Northern British Colum- bia and when he was wandering through the woods recently he saw two grizzly bear cubs playing in the bush and walked closer in order to gct a better look at i-hem. The old bears were closer than he thought, however, and 'when they appeared on the scene he made for the closest tree as fast as he could. believing he would be safer in its upper branches. The bruln parents pounded on the trunk of the tree in an effort to dislodge him but were un- 'ul and decided to wait until he came down. He had no idea of doing this, hflwevei‘. and was forced to stay in the tree until long after dark before the bears departed so he could come down and retum safe- ly home. . Bruce now believes it is much safer to view grizzly cubs when they are in a cage than it is in the woods. am. wan. al. been‘. l. m» ' ""5 """' IV. Y. Stock Exchange . .(Canalliaa Press) .. .- Olnll Allied Chem .. 1,64 Am and ls‘ 1'0“ 7% Am Smelt 467' am Tel Tel 19% Anaconda . 197i Atcbiaon _ . . . .. 63 Auburn Auto 33% Beth Steel 4° Canada Dry . 1° C P B. Case Chea Ohio (‘on Gas Corn Prod .. . . .. Del Hull .. Eastman Gen Elcc Gen Foods .. Gen liiot int Harvester Nat. Bin .. N Y Ccntrul . North Alucl~ Pub Ber N J Union ac , United Corp U S Rubber . l.’ S Steel . Vanadium . . . . .. Westinghouse Woolworth Ma rk ets A t A Glance o (Canadian Pral Tcrolfto and Manfred -'lndustrial stocks higher. Toronto Mines-Golda up; other metals heavy. New York-Stocks clued higher. Winnipeg-Wheat: up 2% to 3 cents. New York-Cotton and rubber lower. (Canadian Praia) WINNIPEG, Sept. 8—'l‘he new mlnimum- price for wheat but a few hours old, futures values shot. ab- ruptly above it in an, active Winni- peg Grain Exchange session Satur- day, advancing the limit permitted in one day‘s trading. Prices soared-at the opening, fell off only a fraction and at the close were at the session’a highest levels. three to 21/; cents advanced, October at 881m, December 88% and May 01% cents. Announcement of the minimum price for this year's no 1 northern wheat, 811,1, cents, was the signal for hcllvy short-covering that; run prices up smartly. Fair-sized export sale nf wheat and outside market strength whctted bullish enthusiasm. Foreign sales were estimated at 750.000 bushels. Liverpool cloacd 1133 illghei- and Chicago 2% cents ad- rauccd. Buenns Aires_ reflecting in- sufficient ruins over drought. strickcn Argcnilnn_ closed three cent higher. Cash grains trailing was un- scitlcll. with operator: uncertain as to thvir position. The pl-ice of no - northern was set at the October future's close, 88% cents. one cent above the ulinilnum. Coarse grains futures moved bl her with wheat but trading was eauitory. CHICAGO. Sept. E-Cnuuda’: new- cat price-fixing plaua brought about sharp upturn: of Chicago Board of Trade wheat quotations Saturday, late as well as early. Toplnoat prices in Chicago, 2V; cents up for the day. were reached Just before trading ended. Keen in. iereat was abnvvn as to whether Eur- opean countries would now find thcnraelves forcedlto go tn Cgliadg wholesale or hreldrluff supplies. “heat closed strong, IM-zi‘ spot-s yesterday's finish, Dec. 91x15, corn 14-h advanced. Dec. sass, oats 1,544, 5p. and provisions 5 m 11 “m; lo e Dlli/‘lgleat. Oct 8855B; Dec 8554B; May Oats: Oct 33%; Dec 301,5; 341,-, aging-lei: Oct 34%: o» ma; May CASH PRICES:- Wheat: No 1 hard 89; No 1 nor S8156: No 2 nor 85%; No 3 nor 821/4; No -i nor 78%; No 5 06%: .\'o ti (i615; feed 40%: No 1 durum 83%; Track 88 ': No 1_garuet K215; No 2 garnet 80 z he} nor spacial 72; No ii spec- ial 02; hp 6 special am. Oats: l\o 2 C W 87; Na 3 (l W and ox l feed 32%; No 1 feed Ill; No 2 for" 28%: No a feed o up 'l'l'ili2lf as x ' linrioy: No‘! C W 34%: No ii (l W 30%; No 6 C W 28%; Trnril 31%. MORLOK QUADRUPLETS START SCHOOL TODAY LANSING. Mich. Sept. ‘L-It was a question of the ilildfl“ g "tan teacher knowing her alphabet today. The Morink quardupiets started to school, and their mother, Mrs. Carl A Morlolr, sewed their in- itials on their dresses so their teacher could tell them apart The four girls now five years and two month old, are Edna A.; Wilma 3.: Sarah 0.; and Helen D. Their "ather is a city constable. THEATRE LEADER GOES T0 LONDON (Canadian Press) EDMONTON. Sept. 8—A lover of d1 atics from his early boy- hood and~ prominent today in the Little Theatre movement in Ed- monton, Fred Val Carey will leave here shortly for England to ae- cept a position at the Old Vic Theatre‘ tlondon. Mr. O y is a native of Man- chester. ngland and came to Canada B’! years ago after he d considerable experience as an - atcur actor. l-ie first resided in Calgary and there threw himself whole heartodly into the theatre work, Later he moved to Edmon- ton and. has been secretary for the Edmonton branch of the Die- kens Fellowship for the plat seven years. During his entire career it has always been an ambition to enter the professional field, w. cmy listed, and at last his dream has been realised. ifs expects lo pin in Shahesneuean. production at the Old Vic. "There is vary little really I006 Shakespearean playing today.” said Mr Oaxey. "This is a pity. for in nu phy- u» actor-lets a min- ing that cannot be equalled. l feel time afoot ‘nearly enough produc- tion ofjhakaapean in Canada and it imam in foamed." 1 Enclosed please find $1. Yours sin- like this."~with a fair copy of the original sketch. GIJARDIAN ' (Canadian Press) TORONTO. Sept. B-Tllo gollla clicked again on the Toronto minlul market in the closing session" of the week, rising a full point n the "H!" on good vulaiue. Sliver a uck showed llltle change at the end of the period and base iuetais were slightly weak. For the third succeeding session lioliiger luovcd ahead and closed’ at $l4_ up 36 cents for the day. Wright- Hargreaves and McIntyre closed un- changed and minor recessions were ported for Dome, lSraiorne, Pioneer and Tack Hughes. Interest centred in the medium- priue golds with buying good on ris~ ‘ in; prices, supported by_ a bettor‘ London price for Rflld- ban ‘Antoni-- gained 10 cents, hylvanlle 6. 5186"‘; 1'» Prospeclora Airways 25 and Licllai tern 8. Trading was bear)’ 111‘ mand in Little Long liac with 111 Pr)", moving up 15 cents to 5.40. TORONTO, Sept. 8- iitockl Acme Oil Afton .. .. Algnma Ashley liagaluac liarry H llual- Mat llullr lliillk lllll . l':lIl .\l.'ll tlirilmo . lhatic '1‘ i‘0il Pill . . Fhilmug l‘ll'i'll'y Fonlagzls (‘onlnrllln homo ‘.\i nos [mm llrpl Frnukllu . Elllvlfilild .. Full-on (itnifls Lilli!‘ ilolllaic . . .. .- (illullilfih .. w- llfillhillii . - Giz-lnllurn lilliililll‘ . llolillrgcl- llHWP)’ .. J .\l (‘ous l\"*rr Luke . . kirk Luke .., .. 8G j Lilkv Snore ~ . Lulnzlqllo (‘out ' o l. . . . . .. hlllfliifitid . Mall Exist Maple l. lll-lntyre .\il-l\’cr.zle . .\il".\l'llli\n Bil-Yillle . All-Walters . . . . .. lionctll linrrls K llurpily . Nowbcc . Nipiasing Norunlia . . Puyniualor Texas (‘no Ventures Wayside . . . _ .. While Eng Wright. I-lnr Ylnir Y G . Sliver _ .. Total sail-s 401,000. l xlxsrrtn Brow-nice Can Kirk .. Home Oil Ml . . . ncL 11-?‘ _ NOVEL LICENBI. AkrulCATION (Canadian Press) MONDG. B. c., Sept. 8-Mod- em art has invaded the Burnaby Municipal Hail. The tax collector recently received the following license application: "Kindly send me a dog license for dog ‘Bum.’ He looks like this: (Sioetch of an elon- gated dog of enormous length. short lest? and tail.) He is a Dachshound or a. sausage hound. oerely (signed) Master Ed. Hrye, Inchdale P. 0." In acknowledg- ing receipt oi’ the license fee the collector sent a tag for “a dog ..____.__ AW of Life InsuranccBcncfits Beneficiaries Receive the Balance‘ EAR after year, living policyholders are receiving by far the greater share of the moneys disbursed in Life Insurance benefits in Canada. In 1954, for example, these ‘living policyholders received an average of over $400,000 every working day! In that year, their total receipts of over 127 mil- ' _lion dollars amounted to 75% of all-Life Insurance benefits; the balance of nearly 42 million" dollars was distributed among beneficiaries ofwdfieccascd policy- holders. Through Life Insurance disbursements, thousands of Canadians from coast to coast have been ableeto- realize their earlier ambitions. Men aildvvomcn have won financial independence intheir later years. Young memhave obtained a start in business. Children have educated. Families have beeo_‘tide'd_'ovcir' ‘periods been of financial stress. Life Insurance ofiers a safe,'jbecause It ~ plan of saving for future needs. Not. only does it pro- vide vital protection for dependents but ‘it ‘enables millions of policyholders to make sure oflnouey when they As a Life Insurance policyholder, your savings are held "in trust” for you. They are safely-invested on your behalf so that you can look forward, to the time when you will enjoy the benefits of. yourown thrift. Life Insyu1'aincc One of a Series of Messages Sponsored by Life Coripanla IDNDON-The Piccadilly hT LONDON THEATRE SOLD need it most. " The- At Port Stall’! y ‘a msrioeavreaof the a. .. ~1- .“. . atre has been sold and will be con- $500,000'i'or it on behalf of a syn<4 alerted into a vaudeville house. Ai- dicate. fred Esdalle has paid more than 11.51,»... picture hows a group embarked from the ntrcplshe cnrrie, Egypt- Blltein has ordered h" _~ uhruhaavppnlssuurshwr.au.s.ruhurm anal is}, scientific, s Canlizllon DUI-lame: r . 7