A date/with the one you like best .‘ Z ; and The GCARDIAN. along with you, to add to your enjoyment J i i Winchester cigarettes, to give you smoking satisfaction: inchesler CIGARETTES 8121556»: ‘stinioou’ Itcport for September: Senior Dcpt. Grade IX; l, Lillian Jack; 2. Lee Roadside. Grade VIII: 1, Theresa Mac- Donald; 2, Leigh Jewel; 3,'Fran- cis Arscnitult. Grade VII: 1. Thcrcsa Folland; 2. Jean Gaiidct: 3. Mary Gaudct Grade VI (Sr): 1, John Af-l fleck; 2. Hillard Alurray; 3. CharU les l-‘olland. Grade VI ‘Jrfi: l. Ruth Jack; 2. George Murray; 3, Stuart Craig. Grade V 18:11: l. Eliza Afllcck; 2.’. Ilclen Follaiid; 3, Sherman Mac. Caull. Grade V iJr): ‘l. Arnold Bal- luni; 2, Alfred Ballum; 3, Ernest O'Brien. Perfect Att-cndazice: Lee Wood- sidc, Theresa MacDonald. Fran- cis Arsciiatilt, Leigh lcs Follangl, Hillard Murray, Stuart Craig. Helen Fclland, Dorothy Arsenaiilt, Sherman MacCaull. Roy MacCaull. Junior Murray. Prizes for Arithmetic: Sherman MacCaiill, John‘ Affleck. Principal. H. Greene. Primary Dept. Grade IV: 1, John Gaiidet; 2, 5101M Craig; ti. Walter Gatidet. Grad‘! 1T1 (ST-l: l, Garth Toombs and Joyce Folland Ieqiialt, Grade III (Jr): t. Alan Collett: Willard Colictt. Grade II: l, Cottie Toombs and Jcwcl. Then. csa Folland, John Alflcck, Clia-r-i Wilna Bailum (equal); i Craig; 3, Ross Murray. Grade I: ‘ Albert Gaudet. Perfect Avendance: Stella Craig. . Wilna Ballum, Cottie Toornbs. i Victor Garth Toombs. Highest Averages: John Gaudct. 904; Garth Toombs and Joyce Folland, 82'}. Teacher, Doris M. Oakes. 2. Victor LADY FANE WOMEN'S INSTITUTE The October meeting of the Lady Fane Women's Institute met on Thursday evening at the home ol Mrs. Gordon Cotton. Meeting Ollcried by repeating the Creed. Seven members responded to roll call. Minutes of last meeting were read, approvrd and signed by the president. Correspondence was road and discussed. Collec. tion for the evening amountcd to 45 cents. It was moved and seconded that 596M131? lf-fct a dozen coat hooks for school. Roll call for next. meeting to be‘ answered by each member donut-l ing a towel for school. Mrs- Stanley Mayhew invited members to meet at her home for next meeting. Meet-int; adjourned and a dainty lunch was servcd by the hostess‘ and the remainder of the evcningt was spent in sewing tor the Red‘ Cross. 1. Edwin Gaudet: 2.1 Craig, Gerald MacCaull,i_ STELLA MARIS SCHOOL Honor roll o! Stella Maris School for the month of September; Grade X: 1. Hazel Gallant; 2. Beatrice Doucette; 3, Kathleen Gallant. Grade IX: 1, Alvire beClair; 2. Francis Earl Gallant; 3, Jeanette Gauthier. Grade VIII: 1, Jean Gallant; 2 Desmond Gallant; 3, lfirances Pet- crs. Grade VII; 1, Mildred Gallant; 2, Carol McNeill; 3. Annette Blac- quire. Grade VI: l, Carmelita Blac- quiere; 2, Kenneth Gallant; 3, .Vauncla Gallant. Grade V: l. Betty Peters; 2, Inez Doucctte; 3, Bernadine Gauthier. Grade IV: l, Mary O. Gallant; 2, Harold Piiicau; 3, Hazel Doiron. Grade III: l, Anita Johnston; 2, Rose Marie LcClnir; 3, Teresa Irene Gallant. Grade III: 1, Beverly Pineau: 2, Teresa Blacqtilere; May Gallant and Aurelia Gauth- icr. Grade II: 1. Germaine Dou- cette; 2, Donald Gallant; 3, Mary A. Gallant. MUSEUM RECEIVES PRICELESS GIFTS SAINT JOHN, N. 3.. ot-t, 15_ tCP)—TilB New Brunswick Mus- cum has been cnriclicd liy four pricclcss vnliimcs of Piraricsrs HORNE MOTORS SAYS-- 1 B221; 8t Fender Work ~ Wheel Alignment n Brake Adjustment I Battery fiharging I llhassls Lubrication n Tire Rejuvenation {Thorough Motor Overhaul iii/ma .5//rrtrt/r Take a hint from the calendar... briiig ii; vour car now! Our skilled mechanics will be able t0 give it the atbition it -needs'_ 3, Teresa’ "Antiquities 0t Raine," presented York. Bound in vellum, the voi- umes are in perfect rendition. Piraiiesl ls considered the great- est engraver of the 18th century. Another recent gilt to the in- stitution, from the Cooper Union Museum in New York, comprises 30o examples of textile and em- broiderics covering the history of European weaving since the qrlcntal brocades. ‘l ANONYMOUS AUTHOR Francis Scott Key was not ident- ified as the author of the "Star Spangled Banner" until several months after lt appeared. WON'T BE CONQUERED No nation in 1.000 years has boon able to conquer and hold the Bal- kans. Asthma Hundreds of pleased customers report excellent results from "Davis Asthma Remedy No. 1805" ln the relief of asthmatic attacks. Tnkcn internally. it gives prompt relief and builds up resistance against further attacks. $8.00 for 3 iveoks‘ supply at Reddin Bros, and ,‘I‘ho Jenkins Pharmacy. Charlotte- ltowit; Semplv‘! Dom: Store. Keri- slngton. cnancorraro _.__-__.._ by an anonymous donor in New» Middle Ages and including a lewi Decide Th (By The Canadian Prim!) OTTAWA. Oct. lo-A tenant in- vestigation into tho sinking o! the Canadian merchant vessel Novadoc ct! the coast of Maine lut March with the ion or all It hands, bu pronounced the‘ trag- edy an "act of 60d." C. P. Ed- wards, Deputy ‘rransport Minister. announced today. The invostiptlcn was under- taken 0y Mr. Justice W. F. Ca- roll of the Supreme Court o! Nova Bcotia and Judge in Admiralty for Nova Scotll. The report was concurred in by the three mas.- sora: Capt. Rowland Fbrbes o! Harrington, 11.8., Capt. Robert A. Cloudey ol Ysrmcuth. N. 8., and Mrs. A. S. J. Hall of Toronto. The formal investigation. cu- rled out under the provisions o! the Canada Shipping Act of_ 1084. reported that the hull and mach- inery of the Novadoc were in sea- worbhy condition. that the veuel was equipped with all necessary fittings to ensure solely. and that the vessel was properly manned. The ship was lost "during avery heavy gale of hurricane force with Novadol: “Act 00601!" at Loss Oi she nnk or ran on a shoal, then was no control the master could exercise and the loss must be con- sidered due to an act o! God," the report laid. It added that "the loss o! the Novadoc was not caused or con- tributed by the wrongful act or default or negligence of her own- ers. cbarterers or any other per- sons." When the ship sailed from Deep Brook, N. 5., on March 1 bound for New York with a cargo of 3,860 tons of crude gypsum, tho winds were light and the weather line. "At 11.18 mm. March 2 storm warnings were broadcast by radio to alpshlpplng. At 2.17 am. March 3 when cfl the coast of Maine the vessel sent out a message to the effect that one of the hatches had been stove in and that the vessel had shipped quite a bit of water and was running before the wind to keep it down. U. S. Coast Guard vessels went to the rescue, tol- lowed by diligent air and aurfooe heavy leu running, and wholfi operations but no trace ol the vessel or her crow was evil‘ found." (By M. N. Negru) MONTREAL. Oct. 15 - (OP) -- Sixty-two men and women. adher- ents of the Witnesses of Jehovah. today gave themselves up to the custody of the recorders court and ivient to the cells so their baii bondsman could he freed oi‘ his sure?! lor eight of their number. The bondsman. Frank Roncarelii wealthy fromer restaurateur, ear- lier had been turned down by the |court whén he sought lifting of a ‘$10,000 bail bond lien against his mid-town Crescent Street property. ,in order to complete sale, by sur- i rendering the eight Witnesses. , Recorder Roland Paquette rul- led that Roncarelli,‘ whose liquor llicence was cancelled early this [year because ot his support to the sect, had freely and voluntarily subscribed the property bond. To ‘cancel it. now would be to dimin- IiSil guarantees in more than 300 other cases in which Roncarelll lhad lumished personal bond. y‘ The cases, involving more than .100 Witnesses, are part or about 1,200 similar ones before the muni- ' clpal tribunal in which the charge ls distribution of literature with- out a permit from the city. Recorder Paouett t however, granted a subsequent iotion pre- 9» W. Crawford-Frost Sale Outstanding The following artcle will be of particular interest t9 stock breed- ers here as W. Crawford-Frost is t-he son c-f the late Rev. Crawlord- Frost. for some yeatrs rector qt St. Paul's Anglican Church, Charlotte- tcwn. His mother was Ittsmerly Miss Constance Ings, sster c-i‘ tire late Col. A.E. Ings of Charlotte- town. On the broad acres o! the his- toric old -"25" ranch Iwesvt c.f Non- ton, Alberta. where the foothills start reaching 1o;- the Rockies mure than ‘I00 stoclcmen from all parts of the country gathered yes- terday tor the purebred Hereford cattle auction held by W.A.‘Craw- ford-most, one of Albttrtirs (ore- mcst breeders of white-laces. A record aggregate o1 $42,320 was set as 7'1 head o! purebred Hereford, cows, heifers, bulls und Sixty-two ‘Witnesses’ Begin Terms In Jail l calves went undctr the hammer in a four-hour event which ‘saw the I big crowd nay to the llniah de- | spite the chill brew: which swept. I down the wulees, bringing with it ‘ traces o! anow and sleet. Only a percentage of the large» ‘crowd came in the role oi’ buyers -altholl3h bidding was lplrlted on every oitlcrng — but many o! them i came lor a glimpse of the magic behind tihe meteoric rise ~ol Arthur (rmtwlord-Fii-ost, the Alberta breed- l er who la recognized as one cf Canada's loading livestock men. i They had scannod the record which showed that (or the past‘ three yearn. hi; but three bulls have topped the dollar sale at the l furious Cllllfy opting bull mow-l l They wanted to know how he did it. and they got the answer in | part when they purw the finely-bred ' top gunlity cows and heifers which were led through the sales ring | yesterday. There was 26 years of, llntenaive and sagaclous weeding, I t bnlhlnd development qt the Crow-t ford-Front herd of Hereford-i. and thou who bought breeding stock at yesterday's auction, were pur- l chum; not only quality livestock, but tho years o! study and labor Whidi hid lreuulted in the herd o Complete ' 4nd fender repair w “an. I...» r ender Worlim" We a1’ ¢ 11°" i" 8 DOBifiOn with a crew of skilled workmen to do all body ork, also to furnish a complete paint job.- ruching the top-flight o! Canadian i llveltock endeavor. ' The crowd was not confined to Hereford tattle breeda-n by any mum. Angus cattle at the ringside. and time wet many than who 1nd new: owned a cow in their liven Q v ‘ HORNE MOTORS m urn mm 3K” a never expected to own onl. m were hankorl. lawyer's. doe- totl, fnlurlncc agents, wheat farin- en, cheep broodm. {too nlun. born brutlm tn the mm! and om party of {our drove all the way from lttmonton, "lust to an tho cattle.” And m. and Mn. Crawford- Prolt undo noryone welcamo whether thly QCHIO in the r010 c! a proupoctlvo lmyor or upccutsr. flicy warn bolt: to the huge crowd M a barbecue ltllfl ohloli includ- | ino 12th out cl Blossom Stairway ‘I'm-re were "breeders o! pure-bred _ Bhorthorn cattle and Aberdeen ' sented hy A. L. Stein, counsel for Roncarelll, to render into custody all the Witnesses for whom the restaurateur had gcna surety or to provide cash ball loi- those not surrendered. °QT°§1ZR__1_6. 1941 <-:_ I ACID INDIGESTIO FmllPAriou ._ To kc ENO Tonight 11., Tomorrow Feeliipgtqyfg l/ 1 1| ‘l \ \\\\ A sumtuc WAY comm lam of ENO'B "nun sn¢ii§',i,§",1,',;,‘ thvmornin whenneededJt will“: "P Y0“! who a system . . . PCHPVM Nu of lngmua so of»; Quged HT QIIICI llllll from dullnofl, lick beadacho, acid inrllgentinn. When you've dined and wiaed not w’ y, h! too wall. take a glass of sparkling, h your. E r - - w... 35.313.21.35.” Mt"- ~i ‘ ' EFFICTIVI DOUIl-I ACTION! l. ANTAClD-nllovu sour "munch. In and hurtbuvq promptly. Yoko anytime. 2. LAXATIVE-qulclily nllovu Inn, , ulcigluhnon . . i chum tho system. ‘folio lafun iroqldcll m." nu“; E N05 "FRUIT slur“ ST. PATRICIPS SCHOOL Mary Gallant, 3. Lorraine Dorm“. Tom McAleer (equal). 0t these, 62 disciples of the sect, including the original four men and four women. lined up against the wall o! the courtroom as their names were called. Mr. Stein said they all voluntarily had shown up on a phone call from ltcncarelli, who described himself to news- papermcn as a Jehovahb Witness and a Bible student. Recorder Pnquette ordered them admitted to the cells and declar- ed the property and personal bond subscribed hy Roncarelll ir. all their cases wiped out. The men and women, about evenly divided in number, lilod calmly out of the little court room. The men were taken to Bordeaux Jail and the women to l-‘ullum Street Jail for women. Among them was a one-armed man; another carried a bandaged arm in a sling and a third vrire a hearing-aid apparatus. The ages of all ranged from the early twenties to the fifties. It was expected new hail arrangements would be made tomorrow. ed prtmc trocisttbeet and beans. two kinds of salad. pe, cakc, and coffee, and appctltcs, sharpened by the cool Weather, soon made short work o! the iblg spread. The wcathci‘ was below the freezing mark when Auctioneers Allen Baker of Cayley and Waiuen Following ls the report Ictr the months ct‘ August and September. Grade IX - 1. Lorne McGtiilgan, Grade VIII - 1. Margaret Doyle. 2. Evelyn Gallant, 3. Leo Herrell. Grade VI — 1. Gloria Hcurell. 2. Mary McAIeer, 8. Kathleen Mc- Grade II.-- 1. Leonard Gallant. Q7806 I (8) — 1. Louise Diirrcr. Grade I (b) — 1. Eleanor War. ren, 2. William Doyle, 3. Florcncu McAleer. Grade I (c) —— l. Arnold Kig- gins,-2. Colin Gallant. Aleer. , ' I-Iigihest average: Margaret Dona Grade V - 1. Douglas Gallant. 94.2. Z. l-Ierney Gallant, 3. Shirley Mc- Peulect Attendance: Margaret Aleer. ' Doyle, Evelyn Gallant, Kathlecn Grade IV — l. Etti? Marie Gal- lant, 2. Clifford Hetrrell, 3. Dennis Doiron. Grade III - 1. Bertha Doyle. I. McAleer, Etta Marie Gallant, To,“ air/Heel". Léonard Gallant. Dorothy McGlnn - teacher. v l/M \ [lave You Made f/ie E "lest? Shine one shoe with 2 IN I . . . chino i the other with the polish you're using SEE FOR YOURSELF \\ll|ttt iniiiirntiu, Cooper ol Nanton knocked down the first altering at 1.20 o'clock but from there on untl 6 o'clock. there wasn't a dull moment. HLghest price of the sale was recorded when L.L. Atkinson oil Claresholm paid $1,669 fctr a two- ycar-old heifer and royal breeding and then W.C. Scott of Nanton paid 01,675 Ior an upstanding young are. A March call by Silver Stand- ard out of Fanchicn who was by Prince Domino the Ninth brought $1,300 and the cow then sold lctr $800. - I Jim- Cole of Drumheiler thent paid $1,125 Ior a yearling heler by Pine Coulee Real Domino 12th out o! Alisa Standard vwtho was by Silver Standard. Ed I-Ichr o! Midnapore paid $1,025 for a bull call born on April 3 and sired by Pine Coulee Real Dotrn- D mid while a. two-year-old hell- etr by Plnc Coulee Real Douiiao 12th out of Marlene, a tamous breeding cow. went tor $1.900. CHILDREN'S CHURCH WESION-SUPER-MARE. Eng- land - (CP)—Cl1ild.ren aged seven to 17 have helped convert stables and a builder's yard intotheir own undenomlnationul church, said to be the first ol its mo in the couri- try. ’ "it "'| Know Just - “m 33¢ ‘ IIWIQ . lrtamLs... r"a...""-rsr..i"fi"“"“"“ Adlai-h now oqvdlu of TIIESPARKLE Z "tint n/qnuiu, mo‘ uv A 2w! sn/‘rve 2 IN 1 was originated to combine a cleaning action and the polish- ing action of a-wax paste in one product- so you can give your shoes a fast, sparkling shine. A single test: will prove this. - _, Sill! IT T0 TIIE LAUNDRY’ . Damp -y Thrifty“ p - Finished antics: votm srnvicr I j claim - vnnm - srsniuzrn - rtuiur rim: _