-._-. ._,. ,..-. ..-»---~- 4—_.__ novmvmaa 14.,“ 1949 SA McCready's wispy PICKLES. 24 oz. . . . . . . . 27c Crust and Maple Leaf LARD . . . . . 22c. Fluffo and Domestic SHORTENING . . ._ . . .. . . 29c 15c 98's in print ' 6.00 24's in Tea Towel 1.75 ' MAPLE LEAF CAKE FLOUR ~.»..:. Cake Flour . . q: / a I r \\\- MANY SPECIAL PRICES & PREMIUMS ‘ FOR OUR ANNIVERSARY SALE NOV. Ill-NOV. 19 ALL WEEK BABY FOOD, 3 tins . . .. 25c CORN FLAKES. 8 oz. . .. 15c CARNATION MILK . . . . GRAPEFRUIT JUICE, 20 or. 17c JILL-O, 3for 25c Devon Wax BEANS, 2 for 25c RINSO, OXYDOL. TIDE. . DUZ, SURF, etc. . . . . . . 35c POTATOES, SAUSAGES (Devon) Pickled MACKEREL. . . . . . 29c Pickled HERRING, 3_for . 25c White BEANS. 10 lbs. . .. 95c Yellow-Eye BEANS, 5 lbs. 13c Bulk Seedless RAISINS, 2 lbs. . . . . . . . . 33c Swans Down and Velvet CAKE FLOUR . . .. 39c Nfld. SALMON 43c MARMALADE, 24 oz. .. . 29c Macintosh APPLES. ' 180 count $3.25 200 count $2.75 i I pk. 27c 38c \\\\ \~ \ \\\\ \\ an an A anus ‘an 36c Purity Tomato JUICE, 3 tins . . . 28c Sunlight SOAP. each 12c EXTRA I SPECIAL STEAK Iroundl lb. . . . CORNED BEEF, lb. . . . . Super Scotch Knitting WOOL, 2 oz. ball . . . . . Robin Hood OATS . . . . OATS 37c TEA—Rakwana, lb'. . . . . . 75c Special and Veribest with Premium lb. . . 85c ELLIS BROS. CENTRAL ROYALTY OPEN — EVERY DAY-B A. M. . . 49c . 34c . 35c . 39c PNONE 1786-5 9 P. M. iliill SHWER Willi Quicker morning warm-ups . . e steady heat all day long! WHAT a difference ‘blue coal’ makesl More heat for coldest days! “Never- ‘fail" heat no matter how bad tha weather. Phone us now to fill your bin with ‘blue coal'—it’s luxurioul comfort that's economical! FREE IIOME DEMONSTRATION ‘blue coal’ TEMP-MASTER auto- matic heat regulator with the "Electric Eye" thermostat cuts fuel bills up to 307s! E SIIAYINII own declining years. Iwidely varying circum- itenccs. Why take the future pt your loved ones for ‘rented 7 Wise hon seek ex- ort advice. ow recently eve you re- , iowsd your ' life insur- needsTWe .0 Farsi-if iifi? omca ‘IIFUFFFSE In our way oi life a man is iallowed to manage his own ai- hirs. He can choose his own ob and live where it suits him. Ile can spend his earnings in any way Iic pleases. He can set aside as much of his income as prudence dictates to safeguard the future of his loved ones through life insurance and at the same time provide for his hat is why life insurance is so 'tal to the economic needs 0| ur people. It is so adaptable It can be planned to the exact requirements of individuals land families under tho most guest t lk it ver with I npmliit..." oi thoe Manntae MAuurKEruRsns i conrarqv Ylusllhiml m7) TORONTO, CANADA C. M. FRAZEI - l. H. HUGHES Ipeslal leptessntalves “Wiords Day Alliance Secretary Completes Visit Rev. L. G. Marshall. Maritime Field Secretory oi’ the Lord's Day Alliance of Canada has lust com- pleted his fourth visit. of the year m Prince Edward Island. During his visit Mr. Marshall has been giving attention to mat- ters that tend to undermine the Christian Sunday as a day of rest and worship and has addressed several cClllgreftfl-L-Ifinfi at their Suin- dny services. Attending the Island Minislorinl Association that met in Sum neirside a brief address was delivered and plans were lntttm- aleri for the orlza-nizing of a pro- vintrial branch of the Lord's Day Alliance (m Prince Edward Island next sprinil- Mr". Marshall has in- torvlewed taps-uniting government. officials, given attention to matt- rbers nf finance and while in Ohar- lotteiown ga/ve a course tio the Young People's (bathing Confer- once of the United Church on ths theme. "Chills-thin Citizenship." Speaking generally otmceiming the eta-he of the work oi the Alliance. the Field Secretary be- lieves that right-thinking Christ.- ian people were never more eon- ccrned about the preservation of our Christian Sunday than today ‘When the mialte-rialislillc-mimded folk seek to reduce the Lord's Day to 1115i‘. another commercial day of the week. OUR BROTHER! KEEPER (Genesis 4:9.) When mothers plead in anguish, That We from evil Ward, Their boys who leave shelter- That plea do we reilnrd? Those mothers know the story That bar-room records tell Of boys like theirs unweoting, Who by temptation fell. home's And when those meet disfavcur, Who victims are to drink; And industry tloth spurn them. Should this not make us think? Of homes where life is blighted And love n victim lies, And wnnt comes o'er the thresh- olrl lhouldiivt- not hear their cries? Think not. that this concerns us But little-nor that they Have wlthal to keep them From stumbling in the way: We are nur brother's keeper, Must help what o'er beildc; Must not like Priest and Levile Look on, then turn aside. From graves that wrap much promise Within their folds of clay; From shrines where hope is walt- ing The dawn of a new day- To heaven that bends shove us A cry goes up-J-low long Shall lethargy subdue us? Rise up and right the wrong! —Alexsnder Louis Fraser. I at Medicine Thrcs lslandrs Among Graduates Di Nursing School ‘fit-Ne Prince Edward Island women, Min Edith O. Compton, i daughter o! Mr. and Mrs. John L. Compton. Bell River; Mics Mer- I jorie O. Bell tie/lighter of MT. and Mire. Thomas Bell, Sour-is West; end Mia Edith L Ravenhill its/lighter of lvir. and Mrs. G. Albert Ravenhill. Queens 00., are among the 66 graduates who will receive diplomas from the Household Nursing Association School of At- tendant Nursing, Boston, Massa- graduatirlg, U. S. A. at the annual graduating exercises on Thursday, November 1'1 at the Copley Meth- ' Odlst. Church. Dr. Chester l. Kefier, Professor Boston University School of Medicine and Physician» tn-Chieif, Mamaehusetzts Memor- lal Hospital, will aldldress the class. A member of bhe school's Advis- ory Board of Physicians. Dr. Kefteir will outline the place of the attendant nurse in the musing field. Mrs. Charles A, Newhall. ’ president of the Board of Direct- ors of the Household NllTSlllg Asssoclatlon will preside at the exercises. Since Lllg school was established In 11916 over 2,000 women have been Builder! to successful complet- p ion of the course, recenllly length- . ened to 15 months as lrcquimed by the Massachusetts Board or Reg- " istra/tion in Nursing. They one all ‘ either rimmed end running their own hounes or steadily employed in Veterans or General Hospitals. Visiting Nun-as Associations and doing pfiVMC duty in homes not only in Massachusetts, but all over the country. Following the exercises the class of i919 will receive their relatives and girests in the chulreh parlors. Evening Auxiliary Of Trinity W. M. S. Holds Meeting The Evening Auxiliary oi the W. MS. of Trinity United Church held its November meeting on ‘ruesdr-iv oi this week, with Miss Erma Tait presiding. The singing of the Hyi-nn "God of Our Fathers Known of Old" opened the meeting. The Scripture reading was taken by Mrs. H. E. D. Ashtord, who also spoke briefly on the coming cele- bration of Armistice Day. and how our recollection of the sacrifices made by those who gave their lives in the two wars could be linked up with Missionary endeavour. Mrs. Ashford led in prayer. and the Hymn "These Things shall Be" was sung. The Auxiliary was privileged in having Miss Pjftna innit-in, on fur- lough from the United Church ll Canada Mission in the Island 0t Trinidad. as guest speaker. Miss In- man gave a very interesting and in- Lstructive account of her work on this Mission field. slides. Her work took illustrattd by her among descendants oi natives of Lndla Hindus and Mnhommedans. who had come to Trinidad over 100 years ago to work on the sugar plantations. Following Miss inman's address, the Hymn "In Christ there is No East or West" was sung, and the benediction pronounced by Rev. H. E.D. Ashford. The business meeting of the Auxiliary was held later, when re- ports were received from the dif- ferent committees and of visits made to the Provincial Sanatorium and Sunset Lodge. A nominating committee to select officers for the ensuing year was appointed, con- sisting of Mrs. Hiram Hewett, Mrs. D. W. Matheson and Miss Enid Morson. The Auxiliary was glad to welcome a xumlber oi new merri- bers. Mrs. Willard Coffin as Secretary of the Citizenship and Temperance Committee, brought in the following resolution which was unanimously adopted. The Evening Auxiliary of the Women's Missionary Society oi Trinity United Church in Charlotte- town. in regular meeting assembled this 8th November 1M9, wishes t0 place itself on record as deeply re- gretting the conditions of in- sobriety in this City and Province. The number of cases daily coming before our Courts and Magis- trates aa the result of the use of intoxicating liquor is deplorable. Motor car accidents due to the use of liquor have become of common occurrence. Morals are deteriorating and the injurious effect of the use of liquor uipon the ccming generat- ion will be incalculable. We greatly appreciate the out.- spoken condemnation of the use of liquor expressed by our Pastor, the Reverend H.E.D. Ashford from his pulpit last Sunday evening, and we recommend all clefgymen to make s special study of the grave and disastrous effects of the use of liq- uor. It is our opinion that total ab- stinence is the only proper attitude for the individual, and that the total suppression of the use and sale of lquor is the only remedy which should be provided by the Stats. ‘The meeting closed with the Mizpah Benediction. "SALAIIA" TEA 8r COFFEE Outstanding Qlltililj,» Delicious Flavour , . I Lonclyfaradcg Fllllle Burst Chapter XXIII CHAPTER XXV But the summer wore sway and Home House. filled to "Y. drew the immense heat oi the long days of a longer summer into its brick and mortar and Sierra, “B? in plans for an aiuiex to the Annex. not only lived her days, but slePl- as well, in the torridness of Home House, what with TwenW-OBB B!“ profitably sublet for three months at Kitty's insistence to a South American coffee merchant and his family. Several limes in the mlssms of heated nights Sierra, with the sheets thrown back from her toasting body, had repetitiously dreamed that she was sleeping in a motionless city, with the liv- ing dead moving through its hush- ed streeta- or was it the dead living‘! Waking unrefrerthed out of rows of such stagnant nights had print- ed circles beneath her eyes and lost her weight. But come sum- mers, go summers, they brought no cessation of the problems of Home House. Deprivation, despair. tragedy, comic relief, fear, ex- pectation, poverty, romance, death. birth, came knocking, winter and summer alike, at her crowded lit- tle ofitice in the Old Building. Re- gardless of season. these lives, tossed, blown or capsized as the ease might be, drifted or crashed against her doors, and come heat, come cold, she remained. Into one of these typical days, when the city seemed to have coagulated and died in its tracks. there burst upon Sierra the un- expected figure of her father's wife. She was wearing the quick- ened manner characteristic of her when there were men about. At home, alone, she could relax from it to placidity, which she wore like a charming negliges for mem- bers of her immediate family. Sierra knew this to be the stim- ulated version of her father's wife which entered her office. Closing her large hands over Lennon's, she could feel them beating. “What brings you to town. Leo- more?" "I knew you would ask that," replied Lecnore, her voice full of breath as she peeled off trans- parent net gloves. "It makes it easier to begin. I see no reason why the hordes of women who live here can stream in upon you day after day, and a person like my- self feel so inhibited about com- ing to the oracle. After all, I am your ‘walchamacalium'." "What's on your mind?" "I can't pull the load any more, Sierra." "I see.” "I know you do. I'm here." "It was your bargain." "I thought what I needed was security. But I'm sick of it. I'm flattened out with security, dead with it. I'm a candidate for the padded cell with security. It's de- grading io feel so transparent “IIIPFG you are concerned. Your father is to: dull for me., Sierra. He's killing me with dullness. Anything seems more endurable than being shut up there in the north woods or down here in Murray Hill willh his dullness. In fact. it's a little worse down here. with alternatives so close. Listen to me, Sierra as if I were any one of the women here who come to you. I'm not better of! than the worst of them. Help me." "You're overiired." "Nonsense, that's alibi and we both know it. I'm overtired of your father. I never dreamed I could be so tired of anyone." "In other words, you figure that in these few years with him you have earned the life settlement Father has fixed on you." "Sierra, believe this, because it's true. Much as 1 needed your father's marriage settlement on me in my name, I wouldn't have gone in for this if I had realized-that it was going to mean the end of life for rue-and that's what it's being. The end of life." "Why not‘ try some other ar- rangement first, Leonore? Father takes all he can get, but he'll take less. Your conscientiousness makes a slave of you. He wouldn't want it that way if he realized. Re- memiber, Leonore. he starved so long for the bright things you mean to him." "I know. I know. I know. He's good. I've failed. that's all. I made a bargain I can't keep, for a thousand maddening, maddening little reasons and one major one." "Oliver?" "Oliver." The name dropped like a quick plummet into a sil- ence beiween them, into which Leonora finally burst, challenging- ly. “Take that away from me and you snip the last thread that holds me to life. I'm that near the end of my endurance!“ "Don't say that, Leonora." "ls that what you say to the“ women with faces like vacant lots who move through these hopeless corridors that lead to their lonely rooms’! What would you ssy to one of them who came to you as I am coming to you, carrying the ruins of a hopeless life with my husband on one side and an Oliver on the other? What would you say?" "I would lay to them. Leonora, and oh, I say it to you, that your help must come from within." "Any corner-church preacher can do that well for me. I'm at the end of my rope and you give me a picture-card motto. I'm at the end of my rope. and you-and you—" suddenly L e began to cry. . "beonore. Leonore. please!" (To be continued) That's why OTTAWA. Nov. l4 -(OP) — 'l'hs Senate today approved a Govern- ment move to give Canada the right to amend the constitution in Federal matters. Ths resolution geared without a recorded ma. Potato Winners At Amherst Here is the detailed statement on Island winners in the potato classes st Amherst. Irish Cobblers: (20) l. Alton Raynor. Cascusnnfic Howlan RR. l. 8. Garden Mac- Millan, Cornwall, A, Mary Ellen Molnln. Elmira. 6. John R. Ed- wards, New Wlltshirs; 6. Hector Jenkins, Msrshfield; ‘I. I-‘LL. Yeo and Bon, Union Road; 8. Alton A. Rodd, North ‘Milton: 9. Gerard MacDonald. Little Pond; 10. Mrs. v. Mulvnllan. RR 6. Charlotte- town; Stanley J, Scott, Charlotte- town; 13. Charles W. Townshend, Fortune Bridge R-R- 4: Cairns, Dimstaifnage; l6. Harold G. Coffin. Mt. Stewart RR. 1; 17. Leigh Vessey, York; 20. Lester ' Wood, Howlan; 20. Lloyd E. Ram- nald Melish, New Isa-til. PILL: l. Frost muvhy. oarlewn Blame: t. Josejii Murphy. Carleton 8m- lng; 6. John W. Platte, Howlan; ‘i. William E. Johnstone, New 1on- don; 8. Elliott Wright, Kinkcra; s. Joseph ‘helnor. Klnkors. 1o. Leo Btowart, Bummervlllo. H.111; 1.1. Alton .. - Oeacumnw; 13- Robert Gallant. Bediord; 19. Harry Dawson, Carleton Siding; M. Clark Caselsy, Konsinaton; 15. Merrlsl Mellish. Cordial-n; 1'!- 011v R111- ings, North Rustico; l0. Wm Shields, Howlan. Kstahdins: (an) 1. 11.1.. Burgo; St. Peters; 4. Sylvsnns A. Muc- Aulay. East Baltic; B. Harold H. Lewis. St. Peter's Bay; 8. Charles McEachern, East Baltic; 9. RS. McGregor, East Baltic; 1:1. Charles 5, nix, 0'I..eary; l6. Andrew Mae- Laren, st. Peter's Bay; 19. Arnofd say, Kensington RR. 4. chippawa, Bebago: (11) 1. Char- les 5. Rlx. 0'l‘..oary; 2. Willis-m Buell. Little York, P.E.I. Green Mountains: (20) l. Regi- To innit.- Sufi}. You're getting Lin)‘ Iul iii... “Ayn; '. Mo». un the coin... ""'" i: ‘ ' . ran, Cornwall; 4, Q Summerslde, RR. rimgfiskm?‘ Yea, Central Lot 1s; q u 1° Buotte, Howlan. RR. l; '7 Julia R. Edwards, New Wiltshire- '3 p: Thord, Nort-ham; 9. E.W."1‘u.yn"y O'Leary; 10. Willis Brown, Ho“: Duncan, Howlan; 8. Jack MscMll- lan- ltl. James Harris, 5t _ side’, RR. z. "mm" a “oulc/r- 6154A! " ' WASl-llNG...l-'V£RY mu: L t For dependability and the most for your money, see the G-E Models from $139.50 to $189.50 at your-nearest Dealer. CANADIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY LIMITED Heed Ofllce t Terenle . . . Sales Oliees from Coast to Coast __‘- n. r. Holman Ltd. Summarslds 8. l Charlottct own YDCR 10s m: st. Carr's Electrical DEALER ' Plloilt 21st 181 CIIEEN S1’. ‘ Toombs Music Store . PIAIIDS. RADIDS. ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES _.__; cnsnLot1tt0f!_