24!‘. THE EQI rjgjsfcjion FOR YOUR CAR llllllYllll-lilililll llllTl-Fllilili ll Giryeo-Glycol Anti-Freeze gives your car the best winter protection in three ways: (l) will not boil away; (2) pro- tects radiators from damage by ~ freezing; (5) protects cooling systems from rust during the entire winter season. a!» v‘v fl ,7“ i-. iii -. Chryco-GlycoLyourbestsnswer to winter motor protection in every way . . . saves you money . . . lasts all winter. Install , genuine Chryco-Glycol Anti- _ Freeze now. Be ready when winter strikes. Ch is lectured by your nee... Cissyslss-Piylnoulir-Iorgo or Dodge-De Soto Dealer ‘A mic-Jeri a! lbs Cont!" CIVPWIIIOI ll (brain, Unified CHRYSLER CORPORATION ‘ orcauaoaiizginto rams DIVISION Tvwlriusos. ONTARIO DO YOU KNOW The PRESTONE Situation? WE VDON'T Get It While You Con At TOM _DAVIES TEXACO SERVICE STATION Gr. Gee. Sr. PM!" 1134 STEERING GEAR CHECK Uli" wmrrmzr "l." . nnnnrs Steering is all too often a matter o! life and death. For maxi- mum safety. your front wheels should resllmid hilt-Ill"! l0 3'0!" every rmvemenl, Drive ln NOW [or n check upl "liver-ail Overhaul Service!" HORNE MOTORS run srnrrr HELP savn summons l com-era won caisson suvi g COKE Greater Heat at Lower Cost- DOMINION CANADIAN Jrder Now From Your Lets! Dfillfif- Dominion Steel 8100a] Corp. laid» Moilcfllll. N- B- ingo» and ilnels sin Bi Billiard Melrlls _-s__-_-__t- fl . . 100K, UNCLE LEV“ 'J»‘?'§il‘€3"'i u- °“ IN Ti-VMAIL s 11K‘ AFTERALL, 0C |___ Fiilliiill! vans“ Ill Central Guardian This column is reserved for news o! local interest, but advertising oi a newly nature may be inserted at flve cents s. word, strictly psy- ahle in advance. "MM-IFS TAXI, Phone 52.5. CONFED EBA T10 N BURANCE. LIFE IN- SPECIALS 0N PEEMANENTS- Deluxe Beauty Salon, Tweel Build- ing, phone 2.228, MRS. JOHNSTOIWS LADIES’ WEAR-Beautiful Dresses, Coats, Suits, Skirts, etc, DON'T BE DISAPPOINTED this year. Get your tickets now for the York Concert. Henderson t! Cud- more. CONSULT Bellcands Beauty Specialist. Mildred Royce Crowell, at our store all this week. B. A. McDonald. NEW FALL SHIPMENT Ladies’ Belts in suede and other leathers. Also plastic dog-leash style. S. A. McDonald's. CHARLOTTETOWN STRAW- BERRY GROWERS ASSOCIATION annual meeting \vill be held Mon- day, Oct. 17, 8 p.m., at Birch Court, Experimental Farm. KNOX L. 0. L. and Lady Knox L. O. B. A. will hold a. service anti parade at I-lartsvllle. October 23rd. at 3 P. M. All other Lodges are in- vited. Rev. Donald Nicholson. speaker. NOTICE T0 ADVERTISERS- Advertisers are reminded that thel: copy must be in the Guardial not later than noon the prev- ious day to guarantee insertion. Out o! city advertisers who tele- phone classiiieds, etc, should par- ticularly bear this in mind. S0 MANY PEOPLE have items. interesting because of association with bygone days. They say “That. is not going out of this house till I'm carried out.” Then these items are lost irretrievably because care- less hsnds close out the estate. If a. list could ‘be obtained o! such things — a "respon- slhle archives committee could take charge as the items be- come available. Aside iirom the gen- ersl interest afforded the pulblic in seeking such articles. this is the object o! the Historical Eirhibition being held in Olover Club Novem- ber (lrd and 4th. Personals on Monday Captain and Mrs. L. G. Savage and family motored to Moncton to see Mrs. M. G. Savage oi! on her journey to England. Mrs. Savage who spent g very pleasant vacation in New London. P. E. i. also visited her granddaughter, Miss Marie Sav- age in Moncton before returning ‘a London. England by T. C. A. .. Wilson-Kendall Wedding In_!ancouver A wedding oi interest in both Prince Edward island and British Columbia. took place in Vancouver, Saturday afternoon. September 10, when Cynthia. Emma, only daugh- ter ot Mr. and Mrs. A. Roy Kendall of Charlottetown exchanged mar- riage vows with Norman Emory Wilson. youngest son oi Mr. and Mrs. William A. Wilson of Rowley. Alberta. . Rev. F. Sullivan oi’ Zion United Church ofliclated at the double ring ceremony, which took place at the home o! the groom's uncle "and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. N. T. Wilson. 262 Trinity Street, Vancouver. The bride was given ln marriage by,her cousin, Mr. A. Guy ln_ the absence oi! her father anti her only attendant was Miss Beth Mac- Laine. Mr. Ja-mes Tonner was groomsman. During the signing cf the register, Miss Alice Torgncss sang "Because" and "Oh Promise a. The bride were s late afternoon gown oi wine tafleta. white floral headpiece. white accessories and carried a colonial bouquet oi white swansonia and camations. The bridwmaldka dress was ot turquoise, match rig accessories and she carried a colcnlal bouquet of pink glads and carnatlons. Alter the ceremony the 1eceptlon was hold in the garden and Mrs. Wilson, the groom's aunt received with the bride and groom wearing a grey crepe with matching acces- sories ahd corsage of red and white. The bride is an active member of the Vancouver ex-Wrens Associa- tion. The groom recently rcceived his Bachelor oi Arts degree from the University of British Columbia and pla-ns to continue his studies in Agricultural engineering. IN MEMORIAM m loving tneimory or our tlltllng daddy, Bernard Candy 0t Vernon Mrs, who deported this life Oct- ober 11th. 1948. Adesserlletldyneverllvod Noronenuorekindetrtltno reorweselladdyeverloved Morets-nlydeerthenyou. Levingly llemcnbietl lly Ills beughtltAliw-Mildrvetlsnd Myrtle. THROAT - a ‘ll-ifs GUARDIAN. Aborigines Keep Tribal Secrets. Stieniisls Mum DARWIN. Australia, Oct. 10- (OP) - A team 0d Australian scientists and In American photo- grapher lelt civilization last Aug- ust to explore a remote part oi Australia's [test Northern Territ- ory and to record the social sec- rete of a primitive ilrlbe o! Aust- ralian aborigines. . Th; party recently emerged from this tropical land 0i salt pang, crocodllo-lnfe-Sted river and desert with nothing to show for their journey. Back at Australia's most north- ern port, the scientists‘ headed by Broil. Adolphus P. Elkin, noted. Sydney University antluopologesr. mid the white community that they could not reveal anything o! what they had learned about trib- al rites bees/use uhey‘ha.d promised the natives they would keep their secrets. Their attitude reopens one of, Australials strangest mlystmies, oonwming lite in the tar outback. Northern Territory people who have spent their lives in this lonely land know o! similar scient- ific missi l3 which set out to till- cover tribal secrets but returned with sealed lips. Territory people a ember the scientist from the Adelaide Museum who lived with the blacks for seven years so that civilization would know the facts about tribal rites. He finally cap- tured the blacks’ confidence so much that they initiated him into the tribe. Two years later he returned to Adelaide but refused to tell anyone the secrets he had learned. Australia's well-known ouifbatillc poet, William Hnrney. has written hundreds o1 poems about the UH A RLOTTETOWN blacks Ln thsiterritory but he has never betrayed the secrets he knows. He ssh he would never dare discus them with s. white ‘ s “Sacred” lays Author Xavier Herbert, who won the Australian 160th anniversary novel prise with his book on the territory called “CI-irricornis.” won't talk about the tribal sec- rets either. Like Barney he has lived wiiih trhs natives for years. But to inquirers he says gruflly: “They are too sacred. Mind you: own b No one knows what it is about the eborigine or his rites which makes scientists. Journalists or novelists keep tihe secret. There are Emil) full-blooded blacks liv- ing in the ffliflfi) square miles of the Northern Territory Alushral- lans know that they wander through the country without mak- ing ariy attempt to grow crops, that they are the best trackers in the world and that their social code is strict and often harsh. These primitive men survive in a. pitiloss land only through their prowess with their weapons. With a. piece o! hardwood like s. tapered truncheon l-‘he black can knock a goose from the sky. With his killing boomerang he could smash your thigh at 300 yards. He elm track s man over clay baked hard ss rocks, over hills, creeks. mud ilats and car tracks c. month after his quarry has made the trail. The Australian Army used him during the war when they found he could hear and see approaching Japanese planes Ions UBfDIe a soldier with powerful binoculars. Efforts to civilize these black men of the Territory have mostly oiled. Frustrated missionaries and anthropologists have called them: "The only black race which sincerely believes that our west- ern civilization has nothing to offer." be Alberta. contributes about 90 per- cent of Canada's total oil output. mo: some v Canadrfs Best Blade Buy! l" mrnovrn PAL notion cnouun ooustr root BLADES ' dispenser i. in new plastic Delivers m. unwlumo ' llodo . o . factory-keen ss-reody for usel Poi’: edges are hollow-ground ilite your master barber's razor. What a difference In tltavingl And ZIPAK makes Pals eqsler to vse...lteeps blade edger perfect. Try them-today! Still these some low prices! rmonrsn tmmsrnv nnrmo nnsrs rssr pas-man's nnaarrr The cultivation and production In fresh skins the moisture con- 01 Silk began in North America in tent is often as high as 8E) per 173A, when eight pounds oi silk cent, but in finished leather it is cocoons were raised in Georgia. often less than l0 per cent. The "breathing" ability o! lea~ ther, or how much ventilation it provides. can now be measured by a recent developed machine. In place of the old wooden tub, wash-board and wrlnger the modem washin, cial laundry have come to the assistant: of the housewife of today. “Moml," on alloy composed of‘ , 35 Nickel and K Copper, is today in general use for washing machine tube, and for washers and other equipment in modem lau ndries. Being rust-proof and corrosion resistant, it eliminates trouble from stains and verdigris. Its hard, glass-smooth surface removes all danger of injury even to the most delicate fabrics. Because it is strong and tough as steel, “Mnnel" equipment is unusually durable. ,' Since more than ninety per cent oi’ the Nickel produced in Canada is sold to the United States and other countries, it brings a constant flow of dollars back to Canada. In fact, Canada's Nickel industry is one of our chief sources oi‘ U.S. dollars s_o essential at the present time to maintain our foreign trade and make available products not produced in this country. _ Cauaulaulllcsrt FIRST PRODUCED Iii Qlilllll ill llll THE INTERNATIONIL NICKEL COMPANY 0F CANADA, LIMITED. 15 KING STREET WEST. TORONTO ®@ unions cots rziczccomounsnnnaisiuu 1 \ \ I 1/ \ I I ~.w.~ . ’/1.\\\ " Canadian Nickel sold Abroad brings in US Dollars ’ s1 and the eommen These dollars help pay the wages of the 14,000 Nickel employees, and help provide the dollars which make it possible to pay millions in freight to Canadian railways, to buy timber, steel, coal, machinery and sup- plies amounting to many millions each year. These millions, flowing into all industries through the length and breadth of Canada; help create jobs for Canadians. t v \‘ . ‘ f)! 01mm of \ Mrlrl": 60-1-45! ha! full; Illin- mud. will tr MU 1m III rrqnn II nus/u inumld.