Pi I...-_.-I-__-_. .. . §E__TEN t ____ Kinsman Dance This rulunin iw rcscrvcd for nnvs 0| iucul iillfivrl, but advertising 0| a ncwsy nature may be inserted at -i t-t-tlu a word strictly pay- able in advance. Ciinaiditin National Hotel Fvitluy, Oct. liili. Piuccctls in iiiii of ii.\‘i:t;\t.\'. 1:158 wtiiis Sedan _ V‘ _ _ tits- .. tight delivery- l‘ 1'01.‘ Dcilltli (ilntC ' a:.i .\l:t;~l)oniild. L-l30-l0-6-3i. 'l'it'kcls-$l.3il ‘- , _ , iit'.\'i.-.t-. i.i\'i-.'t' LENITED Al‘ B""“h“'d ‘md lClLuli" . , n’ l\fticQttarrié, ‘his Orcitcslrtt l-‘l ' U“ suidaifnagc? ' - “lllsllmt i" "- _ _ _ ~ - ' w Hunter River l‘ “"1 u “v.01 at North . Hunter River ' llhhiilfe at 1.45. tr. ::~-" -"' f" , AF l __l all. 1.427. cflilllflliitfitlll" aerate"; . l‘ ink Jaclvlillan, [ill iififlfmfimellt t. fast . \\o d, tic-ntral Roy- ,. . wi.l please call Contpaziys Office ptizes. L-133. RIES-Aiastcr old >011 of Mr \\is,>.\lt. Ecl- v .. Prince Ed- l» - ‘~' I" M vrstcrtlay from vliuii.» " m4‘ w, -=-=“ v \ in an accident i » Z, i\---'~~1 \lt-’»~'-‘ 'l“.tt-.stiti_v. Th1‘ little 1 .1: . - ,1 tnytri-tl when from thc back of (‘ULLISION-TVVO :<i in u taolllsion tibiiut 8 o'clock c "ash occurred ‘wt-r. l_.1 north 0n i ti uh another -.l L‘ IlllUliY Strcvt "i Police vvt-tv injured, it ‘ it‘ Pttrmcnas d itn occttncd . was hcld yester- m: has latc rcsi- Scrviccs at the in the York wntltictcd by the and the Rcv. Mr. .l'\ lacy . time a.. Only Alternative- War bvnrt-rs “tire: .< n.- n .1 --.l l ltooct". Broun, ~ .. .1.’ to l t. Afcptinnlti, \~AL .\'i.i.:lcii agar zzi. ".1 * .cl Frank How- '“_“°"" V r HARSIIFLELI) _ l'.'\‘l' ll ll - . i. tzil- lute Mrs. Will- Milli .< lii 5 L,- iiiil ' csttct. Ccnttneiy ' ‘ the Rev. Mr. ‘-\'. w Rcv. Mr. 13.n- wcre: Afcssrs. " . Iylcljctii. \V. J. its, H Thomp- l‘ LAID TO ..i tiutl oi thc late ilig- gtavcsidc l-lilt‘ Ccntetery. hlvS ‘ lmr-Itdmcnt s. Peter in ‘our The Central Guardian ' General the witness iestificd as to , ___'____. Witness Gives Startling Slant In Liquor Case More than tisual intcrcst was caused yesterday in the Supreme Cotirt room ..when adjourned "Count" cnscs were up for hear- ing before MzigistraleGJ, Tweedy In one country case further evi- dence was put in by Mr. R. R. Bcll, counsel for the accused, two witnesses being called who had accompanied Hubcn on some -of his trips. Some startling evidence was given by one witness, ayoung Charlottetown man, as to trips he had to all parts of the Province with Antoine Hubcn. llquorinvesti- gatorirotn Montreal. The witness told theCourt that on practically every occasion Huben took a bot- tle of liquor with him, which was purchased by the witness from the vendor, with scri ts supplied by Hubert. The w tness testified Hubcit had liquor in his room tit the hotel at all times and told of receiving money from Huben to purchase liquor and fancy cigar- rcttes on several occasions, the money being a $100.00 bill. Cross examined by the Attorney dctnils of thr- operntions of Hubcn especially with regard to the spending of money, the procuring oi scripts. the purchase of liquor from the vcntior. Iiubetrs lovc af- fairs and his visits to various honu-s in thc Citv. The case wits atljotirncd until Octobcr 12. (‘..l’. FULLERTON V iContinticd vfromwptice 1i __ std in municipal politics which carried htin to the chief magis- trates chair at the age of 3-, most youthful mayor in the city's history, After six years in Sydney, the _\'0llttg ltiwyer ltcaded west and Winnipeg received one of the kccticst local minds iii the Domin- ion. He jqined the legal firm of Sir James Atkins and became em- broiled in the province's Mtterest political campaigns, His staunch support of the Conservative forces led him into _'rns_cnARt.0TTsTovvty_ GUARDIAN To Gpealt llere y‘ REV. J. F. GOFORTH. M. A. 0n October ll. Preliminary Bridge Survey is Undertaken Prclintitiziryt survey of a propos- ed bridge across North River from Brighton on the Charlotte- town sidi- to York Point would begin today, it was announced ywrtcrtini‘. Mr. Armand Laverdurc of the Gcncral Engineering Branch. Dcpurtincnt of Trans- port, Ottawa, is in charge 0i the work. The stirvcyt would include the sinking of a number of test ltolcs to determine the type of rock on which foundation for the iicw bridge would rcst, the cu- gtnccr_ dcrlnrcd. With the con- tinuation of‘ fine weather the work would be complete in about a week or tcn days, it was hctped. It was his first vistt to the Province and he was greatly charmed with what h:- hnd sccn, hectic battles against the Liberal Government of l-lon. T. C. Norris and his platform utterances dur- ing the'l9l5 and 1916 stru‘ restilicd in a Royal Com-nit ion inquiry whichfclcrirctl Mr. Norris ct the "Fullerton charges" Mr. Fullerton glndy acrcptctl the post of chairman of the Board of Railway Commissioners in 1931. He rctirccl from the Matti- toba Court of Appeal to take the position with the remark he ltnd found thc bench a lonely place 011d Was "glad to be cnce again more or lcss of an ordinary citi- zen free to mingle wherever I choose." I-tnoatienbwtm red foc of duplication and waste, his efforts as railway commissioner's. earned him thc title of "czar of all the railways." Rt. Hon, R, B, Bennett, Prime Minister the time, selected Mr. Fullerton in December. 1933, as the strong _ tape and , 'I‘hc operator, to bc in Van- "llltii whcti i t. ..0t:ciouti , lll- littd bcrii tin-u» previously When rclativts .» vvtustcrii Canada be ‘ irdcd ti 27 yf-fll‘ oltl who died here c. . t .\it‘l{innoti. A, ~. .~'.l.ttott and Elinor rials J.l\ c ltiacFadvcn 't'*1t‘l'll"i‘,,' of Char- . “Wt; trunds in 'l‘yiic profcsso‘: of lllll‘.~' n! St. llllii Prince (‘fvltilllfii to . .- . liis iiinny .. a .\]\t'('(i§‘ rccov- .‘ . blinisicr of . ing chairman o! iran Board dur- uf flan. Mr. Le- Cornwall. lii flflvfliilfll] in the tin Wvtlnv-tlay wcil rts can be iillill_\' triciids recovery. City Series ‘A’ i Kansrzs Evcris ‘Y Oct. 5-(AP)—- ' returning to twcncrl the . at two games Hitting Newark itlonnl lcague "ll 000 142-8 l2 2 0n‘. 100 421-917 3 », SWncvvich. Stinc Makosky, ,. ‘ll §Iil)\\'7\?fl”:l‘ll|_‘l.\aI—UP iiwya-‘rjltr-rnatc man to head the board of UUSlPOS‘ of the Canadian National l-linil-l wtiys which replaced thc directors’ lavnrd. He twelinqtiished this post ivhcn thc Liberal Governinciit was ricot- cd in i935 and dccldcd to bring ‘mick the board oi directors sys- tcm. General La Fleehe ' Heard In Bren Gun Contract Inquiry CYITAWA, Oct. l5 -(CP)- Major James E. Hahn, President oi thc Jonii Inglis Coinpitny", “out to Liigluntt in Octobcr, i930, tirin- ctl wiin ii pt-rsoniti lctlcr o1 intro- duction from Dcfctice Minister MncKcnzia to Hon Vincent Massey, High Commissioner, anti preceded by a rcqucst from thc Dclcncc Dcpnrtincut to let: the War Ofiicc know lic was coining Testimony to this cficct was givcn at thc Bron gun inqtiiigvto- day by Major (lent-val L. it. Ln- Fleche deputy minister of Nation- al Defence, who told of his first mcctttig with Mnjm‘ Hahn and thc ltittcrls first kuowlctlgc of the Brcn gun. Gcncrtil LaFlerhc was thc fifth witncss at thc Royal Commission inquiry into the Inglis Company contract to supply thc Canadian Govcrntnctit \\'l'll 7.000 Brcn light mricltino guns. Thc itiqttiry‘ tindt-i" , Mi‘. Justice H. ll. Davis as Royal l Cominiss‘ or rcsttlls from crilic- | isin of l.t l’(llill‘lll'i in n lnfilfflZlllC ‘ nrtit-le by Limit-Col. George Drew of ‘Poroiito. Thcrc ivns nothing unusual providing Canadian itidustrinlists with lcttcrs of inlrntlttclion i0 authorities in England, said Gon- eral Ilnflccltc. it was tionc regu- larly for Canadians who vl-ished tcr cxtiloreflic posslbilily of stip- plying equipment and munitions to the British Government. l l in umrns _ MACDONALD-At the Glace cietierai Hospital, N, 5,, Sept so 193B. to Mr. and Mrs, Earle Divon 0400001111111. a dntightcr. (Donna i uric.) _ __Mi\RRiAGES SWANSON - MATHIESON — At St. Patils Church on Wetlnesday morning. October 5th. 1938, Rev. Dr. Raymond officiating Wilfred Swanson of Mrdfnrd Mass, U. S. A. to Gladys Bratricn Attlrl Math- iPsOIl. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ii Mathicson of Charlottetown. CLARK - WHITLOCK -At the home of thc Bride's mrcnts. Hun- lcr Rlvcr, P, E. I., by Rcv. W MacQttarrle, on Oct. Mr.‘ Lttverdttrc sziid. Hr tmrtlcu- ‘lttt-n." coinmt-ntad otuthe salvytang in the air. tictnnrlzinq that not since 1910 had hc sccn salt wntcr. Pcoplc who llvcti here were so uccttstctnczi to the hcnttfiv and charm of their Province they fauvd to appreciate it, the visiting eitrntrcr thought. MOVE 3.410 (Continued from page 1) >___ were paid. but there was no indi- cation of the amount to be claim- ed 1t appeared that the Sudeten Germans had been kcepingtv. care- fitl lcdgcr of everything they be- lievctl should be "repaired" by the Czcchoslovaks. It was rccallcd that one of Konrad Hcnlciirs eight points enunciated April 24 at Kztrlsbad called for “removal of injustices inflicted since 1918 and repar- ations for tho damages caused thcrcbyx" Even as the Czechoslovaks were witli<lrn\ving_ todny- from ceded art-as, Der Angrifi, organ of proptignntlu Minister Patil Jos- eph Goebbels, pointed out: "Pro- vision has bccn made for kccp- ing exact count on evcrythlng iri the way of Stidctcn property hat thr- Czcchs takc with them.“ Unclcr scction II of the Munich Accord the Prn;ttit\ Gnvcrnmctit pr: nda of Niinlstcr Paul Jos- tlcri "existing installations“ un- d. Charge iinptnrc Property Taken German newspapcrshave charg- ed that the Czcchoslovaks in e- vacuating took with thenLin many cascs, thc property of post of- Itccs and other public buildings and. even thc property of private concerns. If this could be proved to the satisfaction of the commission rcpiiratioit in this also must be made. The littcrtiationtil Commission, rcprcsenting Germany, Italy, France, Grcnt Britain and Czecho- slovakia (although the Czecho- slovak representative was not mcntioncd in today's ' dispatchcs) dccitlctt onc important issue to- dtrv-thc b sis for sclcction of Cztrrhtvsloval-z urcns for 1ilcbiscitcs_ Tin: commission bowed to the Gi-rtnain viewpoint and agreed to act-op‘. population figures as of Oct. 2B. IQIH-thc day the Czecho- slovak stnic came into cxlstence- as thc guidc as to whcro the pcn- ple will be CLiilNi on to vote on union with (il‘l'lllilli_\-'. Hitler had tlctnnndcd this dale in a tncmorantittm to Prime Min- ister Chamberlain on Sept. 23. The Commission further ngrce-d that. ti 51 pcr ccnt Gcrntttnlc poptt- lnllon lilifillifi bc considered suf- ficient to declare o village or tiistrict to be German. The Com- mission's motive. according to one intcrcstccl embassy, was to narrow down as much as possible thc areas in which a vote will be take-n. _ __ >Hitlcr’s "demand to‘ consider the 1918 complexion of thc population as the guide for pleblscites actu- ally amounted to acceptance of thc 1910 census as the basis. It will be on the lines drawn by these population figures that "zone no. 5" will be outlined and. occupied by "International bod- lcs." in the terms of the Munich accord, pending a plebiscite be- forc the end of November. The “International bodies" will be German and other Internation- al troops. Occupation of’ four predominant- ly Germanic zones was stnrtcd last Saturday and will be complet- ed by next Monday. The German delegation vvalved claim to movable weapons or mun- itions taken by the Czechoslo- vaks from the occupied zones. TESDCCL Jatncs George Clark lottctown, to Vcrn Oracle lock; oi_ Hunted River. Whi nsnus_ LEWIS-At the Prince Edward Is- “We will not want to wreak vengeance on the Czechs," a. spokesman said. “Similarly such demands f-zr reparations as we “Lil! make will be most reason- a e3. The intemwtional commission urged German and Cechoslovai) railway administrations to estab- lnnd Hospital on \vl"dllf‘S(ill_V, Octo- ber 5. 8 (lcorgc James LcwLs. ‘ '10- . i v ’ l tnl and white con- z" t‘ - “it! at. Ruxlcv '.1r'c,v, in an effort [so llinniiis for (Lnitliuli. more distinguish- time‘ 1o iiiutoixsis. fliwd 7 tears. son of Geot- Lill nu Wis, Mt. Edward Funeral notice later, gc R. and t Road llsh contact as soon as posslbla to resume joint transportation scrvlccs and assure delivery of fond shipments to certain dis- trlots. Scheduled to speak in Zion Church QQTQQER 6, 1938 Germans and Soviets Pay Ardent 0N Court to Little Baltic States lllCAl CHURCH fl Independent Trio Has Large Stake Illustrated Ta l k By Well Informed In Map Changing; Clergyman Planned I BY WILLIS THORNTON For Z i o n Church NEA Service Slafi’ Lorrcspondctit‘ The fringe of little countries Next Week. The Rev. J F. Goforth, M. A" along the Baltic seaboard rests uneasily in the jaws oi a nutcrack- wlli give an illustrated lecture on "colorful China" in Zion Church er. Their whole history is a story on Tuesday evening, October 11. it of German pressure eastward and Russian pressure westward. To- wns announced tyesterday. The talk will be under e aus i085 0f the day Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania Y, P, S., of the Christ an Eltideav- our are still squeezed between con- flicting pressures aimed at alinflll- Rev. Mr. Gemini has spent halt his life in China and travelled a ing them with Germany or with total of 10,000 miles to obtain the m L). lmy ESTON IA u --\ L. a. ATVIA “A- Russia. They probably will line up with the side able to exert the most pressure, not because they W811i, to, but because they have no pictures h will show here, it was choice. They all Dre!" lnde-i, said. The efilm will mclude hea-tt- pendence. Together they have It reading scenes of war and desola- population scarcely larger than,» that of New York City. And add- ing in the people of Finland, Den- mark, Norway and Sweden, you have only about 20,000,000. If; was not for nothing that Al- fred Rosenberg. Hitler propagatio- ist, founded the League of thej Baltic Brotherhood to spread Nazi ‘ tions as well as an intriguing con- trast been old and new Chitin. Mr. Goforth is the youngest son of the inte Dr. Jonathan Goforth. missionary in Chino. for almost half a century. He was born iii China and spent the first fifteen years 01 his lift: there. He frequently tw- l I l i COIHIJiIHlEG his arcnts on their ,, -; _l missionary tours ‘Zhrough the towns gggiigmgsauggrgllllg‘ ILLQQS 1 ( o \J\_ \ and “images of we prmmwe o‘ Ho‘ i t for nothin that ‘hlaslinll i l i llllli as wcii n5 on their visits i0 1°, _ff r R 51 ,‘,.d ihote‘ , \/‘ a ' other parts of China. Al an early Yelp“? a’ L “ffldmle m, \ 0Q ' \ age he acquired a kitowlcdge and wumr“ asnyfalA “"1"” 5 n‘; , V k‘ \\ “L ,._ untierstiandint: 0f thc Chinese that smile" SmYPa ‘3- my W075 ° \ /\-.. A I . ' L; given only to a ;¢w_ for nothing that Norway. Sweden, - ‘x .-_\ , \ o Following his graduation from Wnllmd. and Denmmk met $1115 ’~ -/ ",___,.\I year at Oslo to devise mcans of joint defense. CONQUERRED BY TEUTONIC KNIGHTS the University of Toronto and the sectiriiig of his Master of Arts de- grcc from McGill University Mr. Goforth made a trip around the world in the course of which he spent six months Willi his parents who were then located in Man- churia, iilLvJlg opened a new field there in i927 On his return to Canada Mr. Go- forth eiitcrcd Knox Theological College, Toronto. Graduating from that institution in the spring of 1932 he was Ordained a minister of fgmgmqv f RUMAHCA Three tiny Baltic states-Estonia. Latvia ma Lithuaulb-ehown ’ in black in the above map. liruule to maintain their independence, against Ger-mm pressure eastward and Imsim pressure westwanL; Strongly nationalistic and prosperous, m; three nations ill-e 10gb, to part with the independence ' " after the World War, but; probably will choose-if choose they must-to line up with what- ever power cun aflord greatest protection. The islands ofl the west coast of Estonia in' the map above belong to Estonig About the time Columbus dis- covered America thc lauds along thc Baltic that are now Littvia, Estonia and Lithuania worn coii- l quered by Teutonic Knights oil the Sword. They became nobles‘ under the Czar of Russitmdomlnat- l ing the native peoples, and though thc Prvsbyttcriati Church in Canada. - ,. - , . -. . . and was called m Knox college. Teutonic in origin cxttctlcti ‘$1821! ~>11;1\1e'~a<i_ 3:496 f G I iconccrtitd at the establishment by wauaceburghy m- weslem 01.1mm, influence at the ltusqnn catut. hum“ i ‘r on ‘eruiaily the soviet Union of o naval base Raqzznmg his Charge lust March Dcspcratc efforts were iuadc t0 1 ‘ dob» a lain to cling to €lHiUiv at Murmansk’ M1 (“north 5m (m; 10p China Rlbcli)’ the CPYIILOI)’, bsntisc they “which ‘ll WWM 311lBt$°111Z¢ m‘? Here again, the "little deny- again, this time equipped with a ports of Revel 010w Tiillumi and -“\*- “M” Wuhlll“ WWPY,“ ocmcies," which are sought, a; moviiiil hicittrc camera and six Risa were important Waist out- 011041110‘ PMHDH- 111 BMW-WI» allies of the cicoier ones on thousand feet of film. He covercd lets for Russia. Mllluwml “l” ll bill-Cl‘ “W 1W8" almqst, themselves pushy 1n flow“ the cottutry from north to south But from the revolution of 1905 M10004, “bl-Mlle W114! P016110 01-1‘ practice. Latvia has almost dis- nnd from east to west, trill/filling in Russia, nationalist and Spcflll-l div vlw-l ui-itiiui. scizou 0y 101W pensed with democratic procedure SOill-c 10,000 tnilcs in all. With his 1st spirit sprang up n. rims,» i-e- ‘ by Liit: roles, and German cycs and Human“, 15 almost m the’ previous knowledge of China and 313m, And when in 1917 1"\'_]u..i i..-t iiuii,riiy' on ivlcinet, liitiiu- salne position thou h mm,“ this lis familiarity with the customs moms“ seized Russia, Germrut and, uiiiiiti ti.) with a large German year ado ted‘ a n8. o F; and “EMS 0f ‘he ‘W19 he knew Soviet troops alternately iouvlit ' 041010-1011. and rem}: e“ C m“ um)“ , . . _ _ f? ned to democratic pro- “11919 i0 R0 and w at W 1°°k f°l'- across the Baltic state.» haying wd n I . Hi5 “films carried him 51mg many desolation and ruin behiiid i T115 “HUNG BALTIC “$113 er ‘New yen‘ o! dic- byt-poths which the casual tourist with the Armistice me‘ three: P- womd ‘men m1“ » countries dwarcd their ince-l All bailic countries have a s - Fmlmd’ most’ democratic of u“. My‘ Gomrlh was m Norm Chm“ end ncc’ Ei~ibni1 inl 'iil t the ciai sna- iii an eiierai pe- Bamc countries oumde Norway’ when the Sumo-Japanese conflict PM a : ~ _ ‘. C“? .‘ l .8 ‘ l. F . y g . 4L“: swede“ a-"d Denmark. 1185 been broke out and had a Splendld °p_ o ussianf piovtnccs o‘ ‘stopia ope ii \~il_ii.Dv0l BleaVtli lLJXlJO o especmyy mm between “den, pornmm, w see the mighty» Wm- and pair, o Livonia, _Laivia_ in- inc Edith/P) a iiigeieut would B11315“ m4 Gnu-um argempu u, macmm of Japan at wmrg eluding the Duchy of Cotulnnd make illlotlllslif) the lite oi bci- w“, hen Dump; we com-Se o; m5 grgveys and the rest of Livoniayavnd Lith- ‘, ligClUllli-x or Gyfillull-CULTCIS on that 11m, not wry on me “m” 1n (jpma ML 50mm, unwittingly uania including the pioviticcs of scacoast. iictuiiais icais that Ger- mum path w me Ukraine and wandered into a acne where pno- Kovno and Viina. v J iiiuii) s lint Mil Knish! 0910 the Near East, but along the bleak toginéuhy “as pionbited. He was But Contmuntsts invaded thc sou..- Liiil. Hilllfliiy undcfenaeu Baltic, German expansionist plan; arrcs ed and spcnc the betterypert Baltic states again,_ \_Vith ltclp couutiy tor tilt.‘ excess food sup- are viewed with apprenhension, to: n day in adCxhlliicso jail. “$9116 lftoiéi thlel kAilitk, tcispzciaiiy Liig- pin-s n ptotltio.s. n, rememoers 11m glfgjmygnf; of Lhasa counm“ is camera an i ms were c0 is- an , w lCl wan ~.< inth >cnd that, Snicisvvig-rlclstcin oi r- y,“ ~ - cated. Later they Weisrrcll-‘flsed- BX- states tliete as a "bulwa.rkla* .. man llli"liL become iolagaiicr? Ge “my.” naln’ the only ‘mug m” ce-pt for a portion of film chiefly 5°51, vjsm" m com, ‘y - '~ . .° . . ' m“ A“ that’ “33T°‘51V° through the intervention '01‘ the l; l n ‘Z1 , .mt'.,',‘,‘.l‘ ,b“§“§“ 158510} me gm‘ “on mm’ by Gama“? m we‘? ‘ii-PE’ British Consul. Wcrebr lacn om an la, pcaitc tun y and §_i.‘LLA“l‘A1(ii-L$tr1e5 which would tiqn will drive them g0 may; m, COIiCEITiIH" his expcrieiiccs in teal,“ L‘ wig mulfuffmc‘ f” l “R550 “Jllllllll; W 5")’ mild‘ P90090910“ 0f m9 311551911 IYmY the chiuwleflval. area NIL“ Gflgrtt, 1 lieu p11,, c0ut.t.i.s was: plbbcLk/i bcliiguient. Ncrway 1,5 5nd the British fleet‘ says; “Periaps my mos 8X0 111g '" _.-_- "Us .2 "I __,_ __ ,_ __,, , ,_-__»_-;___—____-_,~- ----_ i __..- and arduous experience was vii a 1 “'- , - _ . t . , n to the point or sacrifice and problems, a valued at rduffflfimtlfilllb $3213; Fflfmfltiigg? foil lunch could be done. The £200 0900) a year has been eo- giil nffergthc Chinese had been standard of mnintcnance was not talbliabed at the University of the driven biiCk from the line b the lush 9119111411 111 tl1_=q°h"-_\'°h ‘Fwd, Lllmwmmld» Jwmlese, 1 was emvm ours ill.‘ bclicictl thc stipciid snouu o. in. least $1,600 t0 $1.800. Bitdgct lill‘ thc Maritime Synod ‘was placed at $35640 for the com- amt fcpQrt, later, ing_ year to be paid, Cape Brut/on Income oi the church was fur $8,000, Ptctou $113550. Halifax, below that which it had ioccivld 35.515; Saint, John $3.515. 141mm‘ ten years ago and thc accuinulnt- ,it'hi SLI-‘Iltb and Prince Edward I8- ed deficit was more than $230010. land $5,000. a,‘ perched on u couplc of stiitcascs on the platform of a baggage van, without; n bite to eat or anything to drink. All the time the burning August sun was pouring down, All along the iine i saw evidences of the fighting that had taken place oulv a fcvv diiys before." The lccttire is scheduled to start at B o'clock Tuesday evening and promises to be unusually instruc- tive nnd entertaining. Down The Alleys HOLY NAME BOWLING Duck Pin Mixed Doubles Too Late T on Clasify 110,5 T-BDTWE EN (Continued from p._.'e 2) ntiniecirti; examine thcm UPPER >_ Guorviia n. l L434. Dr. Hugh Munro, imuictlldtc pa~L moderator oi the GCllUYfli Assum- bly and chairman of the budgct and stewardship ported. Dr. Munroe did not bellow that 1-—Ili the Presbyterian llPOlllL‘ wtrc giv- xtmrk LOST 0N HIGHWAY BETWEEN Borden and Charlottetown meta-i titre cover back from 1986 Ply- mouth. Pindei- please leave at or Guardian 01f where- 10~6- HIGIHVAYS SCHOLARSHIP commlttcc, re- Q-LANNEBIIRB, Biruth Aifrlmf order to promote research advise in highwny‘___'engitice_ring_k abet-tits Last night before one of the largest crowds ever to witness a bowling iouritzunent on the I-ioLv Ntimc Allcys the dlffeicnt couples again enjoyed a pleasant ‘night's recreation in this most popular duck pin game. The scores n.1- though not so very high were vcryclose iiiitl exciting from start to finish Villl ititcrcst growing grcatct" each night. Following are the scores: G. Glllis 132 158 1Z6 E. Curley 81 97 112-706 J. McQtinld 139 107 140 E. Bcll 78 92 99-4555 A. Martin 105 133 121 G. Hitches 84 109 88-640 w. Davey 11o 11a 116 F‘. Flynn 108 90 90-635 G. Nolan I02 137 113 F. Martin 76 104 97-629 G. Toombo 183 133 108 N. Kirwtn G1 66 96-610 F. ‘Lafferty 108 1m 96 R. McFarlano 89 121 92-004 J. Heron D7 115 90 E. Connors 0G 92 100-603 V. Pineau 181 11! 114 M. Carragher 74 82 78-600 Sev. Arsenault 98 94 109 B. Higgins 103 98 87-684 Rev. W. Keefe 112 91 86 . Dougem 74 84 106-662 Tonight's Schedule At ‘l 0'Clock Sharp LADIES GENTS D. Klrwin C. McKenna N. MacKay R. Ellison L. Ellison L. Brown A. Birch E. Callaghan D.‘ Brown R. Duncan M. Brown F ‘Tierney |P. Lawlor C. O'Neill P. Harper O. Gallant S. Smith R. Liawlor E. Mitchell J. Peterson M. Walsh R. Mclnllan P. Mclnnil E. Doucettc STILL A FIGHTER WALWA, Ans-Release’ from a .»¢_....___ 45-foot shaft alter two days, a g8 dog‘ “one the worse for m Ordeal‘ Fuoing the problems o! hie far-flung Empire u vurclouflo hovered over Iurape, ‘fiinlghifscsri! medlatsly “tacked l do‘ b” VI wu grave and thoughtful n he returned from the Scottish palace to London. ere s drown u he attended the funeral o! Prince Arthur o! Conunght It lt. George's Ciupel, Windmi- toonootiitezgocuelu