SEPTEMBER 26. 1' H E C E N T R A 19-51 ' D t . 1.. 'e (5'I'Vra-:- Fit;-as This column is reserved for news of local interest, but advertising of a newsy nature may be inserted at five cents a word, strictly pay- able in advance. COOK'S STUDIO for pictures. HOWARD MaeINNlS FOOT- WEAR at 175 Queen Street. ierfect FOR. DESERT. servo ice Cream: 2. luxury food at a thrzfty price. DR. FARMEII Will be absent trom his office till October 8th. CIVIC TAXES: Third installment Pity Taxes is due and payable September 29th. KENWOOD ' ovuncosrs. - i”nnada'a National Overcoat at Jack Cameron's. GET TICKETS NOW. Cream of 'llP West Cooking School. P. W. C. Hall. September 27th and Nth. RESERVE Thursdly. October Lilith for Kirk salad Supper and mzaar. ('H'l(T TAXES: Interest Hi. the Illlil of I'6(.ll per month will be inarged on all past due install- nwnis. JOHNSON K: JOIINSON lw the only drug store llilS afternoon and cveniniz. will open I'l.AY'I'E.Vi glr-(lies In small, medium and large at The Fash- hn Shoppe. Al)VI'2R'IlISEMi'lN'l' for Swine l xhlbits at The Royal Winter Fair. mills for pigs welghllt-; nbout 209 ll)S, November 1st and not last of TC ovcin bCl'. ADDITIONS TO SOIITII SHORE .1ll'SICAL FESTIVAL vlass alas:-1k Dancing -- The Highland Pllniz. Class 19-The A1- lrizro movement only. ENGAGEMENT. - Mr. and Mrs. George Sherren, St. Cathcrlnes. i'lSll to nniiouiice H10 engagement of their daughter Pr-nrl Christine ll Milton Roderick son of Mr. and Mrs. Roderick MacPherson. Bea- toll's Mills. Marriage to take place in October. COMING MARRIAGE. .- The marriage is to take place in Tor- niiio. Ontario. on September 28th. of Annie Christma Davey. daugh- tor of Mr. and Mrs. Alex Aiken. formerly of Stanchel. P. E. 1.. to Reverly Wesley Taylor. son of Mrs. W. R. Peck. and the late John B. 'l'n)'lor, Chatham. Ont. - ... .--. Personals Mrs. DllllCal1ilW:flD0llBld, Mon- t:i;:uc. is spending it few weeks in Moncton. N. B. visiting relatives. Mrs. Charles B. Hamm and daughter Betty have returned home after iislting Mrs. Hamm's nephew Mr. Harold Lawton and Mrs. Law- tun, Moiicton. ' Mr. John Nash. who has been spending his holidays with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Nash, Zr-aives this morning to resume his studies in Montreal. Mr. John H. Mcxlnnon. clerk of Peters Cooperative store. his sister. Miss Eileen Mcxinnon. and 'he Misses Leona Atkins and Jean rTDonnell, motored to Toronto uherc they will accept positions. Mr. Edwin C. .lohn.st.one. Dis- trict Rotary Governor. accompan- ed by Mrs. Johnsione, left this morning by plane for St. John's Newfoundland. Mr. Johnstone is -linking an official visit to the Rotary Club of that City. Friends of Mr. L. D. MacLeotl. Victoria, will regret to learn that he in a patient in Victoria Geri- rrnl Hospital. Halifax, where he is trceiving treatment for spinal iii- uries suffered in :1 motor accident some weeks 8520. Mrs. J.A. smith. Lake Aberdeen farm, Rocky Point. had as her re- trrit guests, Mrs. H. Leaman and her sister Miss Macxlnnon. Am- :.r:-st. N.S.. Miss AlIfll'0y MacDon- lltl and Miss Jenn Kecfc of Hall- tax. Miss A Jolinstozi. Toronto. and her brother Mr. John Curran iritrmervllle. Mass. EMBAKRASSING FACE BLEMISHES Relief in 7 Days SAIISFACIION OI MONEY BACK Pmiples. rpslifblacklieads start to clelr up fast with Cuticurs Soap and Oint- rnent..Cutlcurn is highly succoesful-- rontains recognized medicinal ingre- dients-so why ex eriment with unknown methods Buy and tr Luticura today. culncul Refrigeration SALES and SERVICE Repairs To All Makes MOTORS ltewlnillng and Repair! EI.l':Cl'lIlOAL APPLIANCE Bopolrs Pslltor Electric PIIONI: MM , syllahus.l COLLEGIATE HATS - 82.0 Special at Jack Cameron's. ICOLD MILK - the beat drink ye CORDUROY AND SUEDE sports Jackets at Jack Cameron's. NAVY BUBBERRIES and new fall ralncoats at The Fashion Shoppe. COLLEGIAT-Eg.I'(.).llK no HAT! -Special S240 at Jack Cameron's. BUYING live and dressed poul- try daily at plant. Darnley. North Shore Packing Co.. Ltd. CIVIC TAXES: Final date for payment of third installment Civic Taxes is September 29th. CREAM OF THE WEST Cooklnl school. P. W. 0. Hall. September 2'llth and 28th. Many prizes in. cluding Electric Floor Polisher, Sunbeam Mixmastc-'r. NEW LAUNDRY OPENS. - The Charlottetown Laundry. 24 Upper Queen Street. opens for business September 27th. complete Laundry Service. nummsur. snug Saturday. September 29th. lit 6 P. M. Rankin Drug Store Building. Great, George Street. Nurses Alumnae of P. E. I. Hospital. I-loll. (.'0URTEsY III-JLANCO TREATMENTS visit Mildred Royce Crowell at S. A. MacDonald's. Oct. 1st to 13th inclusive or phone Cos- metic Department for an appoint- ment. FUNERAL MONDAY-The fun- eral of the late Honeywell Bulmsn was held Monday afternoon, Sept. 24th. There was a short service at the home followed by a service in Hunter River United Church. Rev. Howard Christie conducted the services. The pallbearers were Wilbur Clark. Ernest Clark. Fen- ner Stewart. Clarence Mccuigan. Russel MacNelll and Thomas Bol- gcr. Burial in Hunter River Cem- etery. Flowerbcorers: Ollie Park- man. Jack Stewart, Kenneth White, Chesley Clark. Ivan Higgans and Ray Macxinnon. Windsor still Labor sore spot In tianatla OTTAWA. Sept. 2&-(CP)- The automobile-bulldinz "COHEN M Windsor, Ont. is still a labor sore spot but the general employment picture across the country is bright. the Labor Department said today. In its latest employment survey covering conditions at Aug. 30. the department extimated that of Canada's expanding labor force. only 127,100 were jobless, a drop or 24,500 from 151.600 on Aug. 31, l9tl0. . In Windsor, however. 1,473 were added to those seeking employ- ment. bringing the total without jobs on Aug. 30 to 4,705. Another layoff by the Ford Motor Company during labor day week-end boosted Windsci-'s total unemployed by 1.800 to 6.505. other developments: 1. The Prairies are gradually getting together the huge labor force required to harvest the re- cord Prairie wheat crap. 2. The British Columbia logging industry is still beleaguered by lack of activity. mainly because of a 10-week grappling drought. The department felt it would be some itime hcforc sawmills start working at full scale again. Under Federal-Provincial. ar- rangements a total of 094 men from Ontario and 384 from Que- .bec had heen moved westward to lthe Prairies by Sept. 14 to help brim: iii the record harvest of 579,000,000 bushels. some rain in Manitoba and Saskatchewan had temporarily reduced the demand for men. but crop prospects were excellent and "many men." said the department. will be needed to get it all moved. Generally. all regions showed I decline in unemployment on Aug. 30 with the exception of the Pac- ific region where the number of jobless increased to 26.200 from 20.000 last year. The Prairie region dropped to 13,500 from 22.500. Ontario to 8.- 800 from 9.300. Quebec, to 34.500 from 45,900 Miirltims region, to 11,800 from 16.800 and Newfound- land to 2.300 from 6.000. MAY DESTROY LANDMABK Wit-o CASTLE COMBE. Wiltshlre.ln:- land-(CF)-Castle Combe's lath- century market cross may have to be demolished. Repairs will cost 2550 and authorities fear the men- ey cannot be raised locally. WANTED Wanted son pin between 80 and Bil the. each for x shipment in Saskatchewan. Paying alight pra- inlurn on pin over those weights. Will need them as soon as I can secure the amount. If clo GUAIDIAN ----79- . . C Royal Fhami1yPGroup This photograph of Their Royal I-lighnesses the Princess Elizabeth. Duchess of Edinburgh, and the Duke of Edinburgh with their children. Prince Charles and Princess Anne, is the latest family portrait to be taken. IHE ' GUARDIAN. UHARLOTTETOWN By P. H. MacArthur Playing the horses pays better than working, but only for the lucky guys. And for every lucky guy there's hundreds of suckers. Part-mutual machines tell a sad, story. Below I give you some amaz-I ing figures covering fabulous pay-I offs. . Back in 1912. four first-place backers of Wishing Well. a winn- ing long shot. Across-the-board returns on the nag were 51,835.50, 5744.40 and 75112.40 on a :2 ticket. Last year. at Old Home Week. in the Garden of the Gulf. a local man won the daily double and was handed rt cheque for 5140040. The biggest win ever recorded in the Maritime provinces on a 52 invest.- ment. . . . At. Haydock Park. England in 1929. Mrs, Unsworth bought a ticket on Coulc, a steeplechase en- trant, that was considered a poor prospect and took home the entire pool of 6.822 shillings. The odds - 3411-1. At Rockingham Park. New Hampshire. in 1945. two long shots. Mighty Tough and Detach chalk- ed up the 2nd highest American daily double: 58.61460 for a 32. ticket. There were three winners. At. Las Monjns track in Peurto Rico on September 2, 1943. a tel- low bet :1 on a seven-horse parlay at the parl-mutual. All seven horses achieved victories. and the take was 55009.43. The lowest payoff in American track history tfor a daily double). was 54.50 paid at Toronto in 1939. They say its possible to beat the horses but not the bookies. Itis lstrange But True 1-AGE THREE 1 If you meet a lobster wearing an Jllllllllllllrn tag. don't waste synip.itliv. ll u.wi'r ll.'il.llC(l up for paiLin;: opposite a hy- (llaill. llir l.ii.; nus put there by the National Hshcnrs liriurd li'lllLll is sleuthing out Ifl.llIll(' life stories. A snlmnn, so tl('I oiatrd. was rc-(.iiii:,lit alter lIillI' it-hrs illltl a lobster uliu ten. ii in: tags were still in trxrellcnt condition. Aluniinunfs ability to Willi- .1t;tnil Iiic ii:-iiirnls is our of tlic .i(ll.lili.l;;l'w ullitll indie ll. increzisingii popular for walls. Innis and aI'LllilCCll.lTI.l embelw lishments. An aluminum roe DltC in Rlniitrrnl was taken rlnwn retciitly -v iiiirlnniagrd after being rxposcd In the weather since 1895. Aluminum Company of Canada. Ltd. (Alcan). hard to heat either. And unless ycuie prepared to say good-bye to your hard-earned sheliels you'd' better not bet at all. . . . Rail tie-ups because of climatic conditions are remarkably few on one of the most northerly of rail- ways in the North American con- tinent. In 1946, the Hudson Bay Railway, which i-uns in Manitoba. Canada. from Winnipeg, some 1100 mles to Churchill on Hudson Bay has the best record of any rail- way on the continent - not one break in its schedule because of snowstorms. Rail schedules are hampered. however. hy migrating caribou and ”nuisancc” beaver which dam culverts. helping to undermine road beds. The railway just waits for the caribou to pass. but catch- es and transports "nuisance" beav- er to other sections of the north. DI-JNTISTS SEEK LEGISLATION chltown Ministerial Association Meets The Association held its first meeting of the season in the Y.M C. A. Building in Charlottetown recently with the president. Rev. J.D. Davison in the chair and the secretary, Rev. W. T. Mercer at the desk. The following Ministers were also present: Rev. Henry Barber. Rev. J. T. lbbctt. Rev. T. H. B. Somers. Rev. E. A. l"it-rcey Rev. John MacKay. and Rev. M. D. Dunbar. Regret was expressed at the departure to Ottawa of Major E. C. Hutchinson of the Salvation Army, but the best wishes of the Association were conveyed in a formal resolution. l The Rev. J. 'r. lbbott was wni'm- '"0"m 0' AP” ly welcomed back after his illness; and I trip overseas. V” in: arose in the meeting over the sale of objectionable literature on the public newsstands and steps were taken to have such reading ma- terlal withdrawn. Full consideration was given to all angles of the question of sup- port for a chaplain to the social institutions of the Province and it was agreed 4.0 solicit from the va- rious commuiiions a detinitc pro- portion of financial aid to make such chapiaincy service possible. Upon suggestion of Rev. T. K. B. Somers it was unanimously agreed that 8. course of study papers he prepared and discussions held at ation will be held in the Y.M.C.A. the coming monthly meetings and building in Charlottetown mi No- a schedule was drawn up until the vember 13th, when the election of officers for the ensuing year will take place. The next meeting of the Associ- K. of 0. Funeral Notice All members of the Knights of Columbus are re- quested to meet at the home of our late Brother, Guy Scott, 66 Great George St., for prayers at 8 pm. this evening; also to attend his funeral at 8:13 'l'iiui's- day morning. tlorotliy llix”S5'ys they can't be too lonely. aters in the ear. and you will at breaking tradition. like it smaller group in the ear. COl'll.lnllEVt'l-IIllt):lil'l page 2 band's free time like this. and since they have each other. surely Plan A special excursion next Sunday. this occasion your huslmnd prefers to have just you and the young- Ii your mother is at all an understanding person. tell her frankly that your husband is tired by Sunday. and would be reached by alternating Sundays. one with your family. one alone. with ll third possibly devoted to his family. DOROTHY DIX cannot reply personally to readers but will ana- wcr -problems of general interest through her column. I. Tell your parents that on least have on entering wedge in A satisfactory compromise might Twenty five MEN WANTED FOR PICKING APPLES M. F. REEVES. Southport Telephone 2755-J men wanted PROVINCE OF PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS & HIGHWAYS TENDER SEALED TENDERS will be received until noon Mon- day. October 1, 1951 for the reconstruction of Gil- lian's Bridge, Kildare River, Prince County. Tender forms and specifications may he obtained at the office of the undersigned. Lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. R. G. WHITE. o Deputy Minister, Dept. Public Works and I-iiglnvays. OTTAWA. Sept. 25 -(CP)- The Canadian Dental Association will apply to parliament at the next. session for legislation setting up a: national dcntal examining lioard,' it was announced today at the: associations annual convention! This would make it possible for, dentists holding a certificate from the board fo practise anywhere in Canada. At present, certificates are issued only basis. The Neighbors ! l an ' .,. . 1 know, "They're F-80 jets in ME 0 A'?4ai.ix)5XlM5ayii amfyoixmmw fgslihe-&me Slmmpoo tvm-i LANOUN leaves hair so” . . . perfect for homo pormunenls. Ole Bornem B 11, -. on a provincial uegiau violinisilnwhtll dlegdrcllrl i-xas largely self-taught. .......D.D. By George Clark because my Mom built 'cm." Farawolio Love How did love die. A sob. a tear. a sigh. winging it's way into the blue. Wounded and weary. Rejected by you. How did love die. You alone could tell. Love used to dwell. Now lonely. lies my heart, it come. but to depart. How did love die. Whither gone. beyond recall. I-lope arise. quickly fall. Haunting chord. toll of bull. Love's knell. and so, farewell. -Lila '1'. coulson. Don't miss the MONARCH COOKING SCHOOL Charlottetown at P.W.C. Auditorium, 8 'p.m., Sept. 27th & 28th All. TIM T'S NEW IN MUDERN CUUKERY demonstrated with the aid of is FRIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR supplied fly FRIGIDAIRE ELECTRIC RANGE and n.r. HOLMAN LTD.