ill,-sn.i e\|vi / serous"- , Ql-r- Il|E.‘-- . . . . . and lust. what is the Man with the Umbrellfl now‘! A MOTION PICTURE as TIMELY as AN All! RAID on sun ATTACK - goint it? in but much plcsssntier i- i g__ginseng:assasnrnaeeaesereri; i -:':—-1-i ,. igfifisiiili? iiiiiéii?! , b- l M: DECIDED Qlnd why shouldn't hei 5 omlnlon Household ' oke oan eavehlm 15% to 30% of his fuel bill com- pared with anthracite, (Government test). That's money in pocket] And he gets a clean, radiant fire that's ALL HEAT. A .. smokeless. sootless fuel . with practically no ashes. 9, Ask your dealer for foldgr ' showing how to use Do- ' nrlnlon Household Coke ' for low-cost heating. ooiiiiiioii STEEL ami colt convolution uiiiitii Maui-ax. svsimr. saiirr JOHN. mono-rein l" Qiatain 8i Bell 8i (to. 1 ' Charlottetown CAPITOL-Big Speeiai- lllilll. m: _ , FROM NOW 0N. THEY'RE .7 ' GUILTY ore ERY CRIME ‘i ._ ‘lCOl/IMIT . . .‘Becau_se ~fTHEY MADEMEA CRIMINAL , GILS o A BAND-Musical Comedy SPORT REEL :— i Distributors for P. B. i. “culls oéii suitor LAWRENCE U|.|VER—BA|.P|| lllcllAllll $U||—Vil|8l'i8 llohson A MUSICAL REVUE _ ROBERT: 1m NCHLEY - VITAPHONE—VARIETY _. _._L___ “i-Tniii“ GENE AUTREY Moil-‘iiiil TUE CLAUDE IAIIS-rallll Siiillillii IIY IUISIII - Gllillll Iiliiii$0ll Impersonator lie-joins Troupe GREAT VIII-AGE. N. 8., Nov. 2 /(OP)—Ross ‘Hamilton. known as one of the greatest female imper- sonators of his time and creator of ‘Marjorie’ left his home here to- day to join his old troupe, the "Diimbells" at Toronto. Others who will rejoin the dumb- ‘ ells who were popular with Canad-i ian troops during the war and who were known from coast to coasi. in post-war days are Pat Rafferty and Red Newman. . NEW and liSEll Plumbing Bargains Furnaces. radiators, pipe, fittings, baths, sinks. toilets,‘ boilers, from demolished buildings, test and guaran- teed. Lowest prices. Write for prices. Main Plumbing Supplies, 921 St. Lawrence Blvd., Montreal. Ntilii-Q-IB-tf s How Are Your Eyes‘? If yen are having symptom! alrain-meadaches. sore eye! ‘glasincss — consult a spec- .._..---_--aai_~n-\\I‘-q E23 _<-ud-HW At your service with years of experience and a thoronlh retracting service. Cali In and discuss your dit- lcaltles. G. F. iluteheson I 2. Ruth Reeves and Ruby Drum- DEIGIIAN - TBAINOR NUPTIALS St_ Joseph's Church. Kelly's Cross was the scene of a very pretty wedding on Wednesday morning. Sept. 27th when Vera Edna Trainer. daughter 0f Ml‘. and Mrs. John H. Tralnor. South Melville, became the bride oi Charles J. Deighan. son of Mr. and Mrs. Pebsr Deighan. Freetown. Rev. Wm. McCabe performed ihe ccre- mony and celebrated the Nuptial Mass. The bride Wm attractive- ly attired in a. flown of brown chif- fcii velvci. with wine hat and ac- cessories to match and carried a beautiful mixed bouquet of oink white carnaions and lzladiolls. She was attended by her cousins. Miss Denice McQuaicL Charlottetown. who were a dress oif Sunsan crepe with light rust hat. The groom. was siirihortod by his cousin. Mr Louis Connick. After the cere- mony a sumptuou= wedding break- fast was served at the home of the bride attended by Rev Fr. McCabe PP. and immediate relatives oi the bride and groom. after which ,the happy couple left on a motor trip ihrculzh the Maritimes. For ‘travelling the bride wore '1 tailor- ‘ed suit of coral sand with oak brown accessories. Oh their return a reception was held at the groom's lhome. which was attended by a large number of relutivm and friends. The many and beautiful gifts received testify to the hilzh ‘osieeln which this nodular couple ‘are held. Mr. and Mrs. Deghan will reside in Freetown. A large Ihcst of friend; wish them many years oi wedded bliss. SOUTH FREETOWN SCHOOL Report of Scum Preetowri School for one months of September and Grade X:- l. Florence StetsOn and Gerald Grade 1X:- l. Vivian Dill/BO!!- Grade VIA:- l. Anna Ski-Wil- 2. lviarion Stetson. Grade V:— 1. Lois Perkins. 2. Vernon Stetson and Earith Davison. equal. Grade lll:— 1. Thomas Burgess. 2. James Power. 3. Melvin Stetson. Grade ll:- l. Agnes Heffel. 2, Hazel Heffel. 3. Mary M. Reeves. Grade I A:- l. Georgie Burgess. 1. Freda Stetson. 2. Phyllis Drummond. 3. Linus Hcffel. Highest average: Anna Stetson. Teacher, Grace Deacon. REPORTS UNCONFIRMED CYITAWA, Nov. 2—(CP)—-Can- adian naval officials said tonight they were unable to confirm row"! that the British freighter Coul- more had escaped a submarine at- tack but stated they assumed it was safe. it was pointed out that if a sub- marine was seeking the vessel, the Coulmore would not use its wire- less at this t-itv to report its po- sition. One naval official indicated that there was no certainty here a sub- marine had attacked the freighter, as reported from United States sources. He said a heavy sea was running on the Atlantic at the time of the purported attack and some other vessed might have been mis- The moire is mo»: today for the Qiritllll values which alone marks life worth living. fighting for a cause which ls “more momentous and samed" than any of the army's past campaigns. Lord Twccdsmuir, Governor-General of Canada,» told past and present officers of the Black Watch (Royal Hikhland Regiment) of Canada. at the im- nual regimental reunion held Bat- urday night in the Blew’! street armory. Montreal. mm ‘llweedsuiuir spoke as 101-‘ lows: We are met here tonight to pram famous men and the fathers who begat us. This is not‘ your ordinary annual dinner. We are celebrating the 200th an- niversary of the formation of the Black Watch u s regiment of the line. And we are met at i-he outset of a war which will deter- mine whether civillzatiou can en- durc. A regiment is a wonderful ' thing. ft is a little. clan which at any moment may find itself islanded in great seas of pain and death. Its members are bound than friendship, and bound not mental tradition is a living thulg, almost like a personal memory. Few regiments have such a tradition as yours. For the reason of its formation you must go far back into the deeps of Scottish hietory—tlie old antagonism of Celt and Saxon. of Highlands and lowlands. In the 17th century. when the two worlds came closer t “ . the danger of clashing became very real, and to preserve‘ the precarious King's Peace in‘ the Highlands it was necessary to have some system of garrisons and patrols. That was the origin oi what was called the Hghlarid Watch; various Scotti-h reg:- menls served in it, and a very unpopular and dangerous service it was. Then in the eighteenth century. when Whig and Jacobite came to loggerheads, it became necessary to enlarge the system. In 1725 independent companies o! Highlanders were raised. cum- manded by Highland chiefs. At that time the British army. though it had done wonders on the Continent under Marlborough and other commanderi, did not enjoy a high poplllfll‘ repute. , My own regiment, the Royal Scots Fusiliers. has been de- scribed at that time as “the flower of the Scottish geols commanded by the flower of the Scottish gentry.” There was. therefore, for the Highlander a real attrac- tion in a service such as the High- land Watch, where he was al- lowed to wear his native dress and was commanded by his own people. So in the year 1739 the independent companies were formed into a regiment when. from iis dress. was given the name of the Black Watch, nnd be~ame part of the regular army of Bri- talfi. who have gone before. A regb‘ i RECALLS FONTENOY BATTLE. Since then your regiment has had a wonderful record in the wars of the British Empire. In the words of the Roman poet. there is no shore which has not been stained by its blod. It first- won fame in the year 1745 at the desperate battle of Fontenoy. It fought ln many Indian cam-l paigns; it fought in the wars of the French Revolution, in the campaign in Flanders: it- was un- der Abercromble in Egypt: and it was under Wellington in the Pen- instill. It played a great part both at Quatre Bras and at Waterloo. It was in South Africa in the early Kafflr wars, and many of its men went down in the "Birkq enhead." It was under Colin Campbell in the Crimea, and in? the Indian Mutiny its pipes were Under Wolseley it fought in the first Ashanti -wa_r. It was in the Highland Brigade at the battle of ‘Iiel-cl-Keblr, and was all through the Budan cammisns. m the South African war one of its battalions was under General Wauohope at Magersfontein, and after that men of the Black Watch were in almost every major op-. oration. And I need not remind you of the fame won in the Great War by its many battalions. Let me recall to your memory another thing which should in-‘ terest You especially; the great part that the Black watch play- ed in the fighting on this contin- ent of America. The regiment‘ was at the desperate action of Ticonderoga in 1768 when in four hours it lost 38 officers and over 600 men. In i760 it was at the taking of Montreal. it fought steadily through the long and tragic campaign of the American century it took part in those dis-i estrous expeditions against the French West India islands, when fever and disease were more l deadly to our troops than the en- 1 emy. One of its battalions was taken for the submarine. TILLIE THE TOlLER—— in Canada during 183B. that year‘ a special sense a union of past Revolution. At the close of ihe tween the living and the dead. ‘dark plaid of the old Highland H; Cirlikiiorrarowu p Lord» Tweedsmuir a ' And The ‘Black Ware/i of trouble, and that same bat- talionwuinacurioualitt-lawar of which few people have heard. and defended the city of Monto- vldeo against the Argentine army. For nearly a century British soil on this continent baa been almost wholly free from war. but before thattlmefthinkitcanbsaaidy that there were no military op- erations in which our regiment did not share. Except for the Rifle I gilnenta it may be claimed that tbeBlsckwammoretbananyw-sll other unit of the British Anny. is associated with the ointment on which we live. We meet tonight under the sha-' dow of war, a war in which the cause we fight for ls more mo-i menious and more sacred than in any of our old campaigns. In them we fought for security. or for the defence of territory, or for the balance of power in Europe: today we are fighting for those spiritual values which alone make life worth living. We are striv-| ing against the recrudescence of .savagery and tyranny. and since t-hose dark powers have appeal- them with the sword. We can member Mr. Kipling! verse: "whosoever for any cause "Seeketh to take or give “Power above or beyond the laws. "Suffer him not w live,- "Holy Chumh or Holy King, "Or Holy People's Will_ "Order the guns and kill." SUUTS Q U ALITIES CITED. You are a Scottish l -‘ t. The Black Watch began by being almost purely Highland, but now it draws its recruits from every variety of Scotch blood. Now.‘ in such a war as we are engaged in, the Scotsman is well fitted to fight, for the cause he rights for is deeply intertwined with‘ his character. lover of liberty. For centuries he struggled for it against heavy odds. Whoever tries to tyrannize over a Scotsman takes on s pretty hopeess job. Then he has no false heroics about war. Scottish soldiers all through the Middle Ages sold their swords to fore'gn armies: but that was because the poor fellows had to make a living somehow and could not do it at home. But they never made e. religion of war. or talked non- sensical heroics about it. They looked at it in a plain matter- of-iact vray: it was an ug‘y busi- ness. and had to be got over as soon a; possible: therefore they used their brains and that made them far more formidable than any legion of desueradoes. Do you remember Sir Andrew Agnews address to the Royal Scots Fusfiers before the battle of Dettingen? "My men," he said, "you see the lads on yon hill. Weel. if ye dinna kill them they'll kill you". No heroics there, but homely good sense. Of coure in the heat of battle our blood can kindle. I remember at Loos speak- ing to a French officer who was next to the Scottish 15th Division and saw its advance. He said. “I do not know what kind of effect these fellows have on the enemy. but for me they made my blood run cold." But we l never lose our heads. We take‘ war in a business-like way. ‘ That has aways been a char- acteristic of your great regiment -what I should define as disci- plined audacity. You have shown it in other uiuigs than mime. at! the beginning of last century a famous German scholar was per-‘ mitted by special consent of the Sultan of Zhirkey to visit the holy cities of Arabia, Mecca and Medina. When. after immense! difficulties, he reached Medina he‘ found to his amazement that the‘ Governor was a Scotsman, one a sergeant in the Black Watch and had left the regiment in Egypt. I aim sorry to say he had been converted to Islam. and , then, by the exercise of what I. have called disciplined audacity,‘ he so rose to fortune that he be- came the Governor of one of the two holy cities in the Moslem world. That was a pretty curious fate even for a Bcotsm r- and s. man of the Black Watch. I LOOKS BACK 0N PAST ' l Tonight at this anniversary we think not only of the dark pres- ent and the dim future, but of the past-of the great men who went before us and made the regirnentls fame, who faithfulw did their duty. and have left us the bequest of e high tradition. A regiment, as I have said. is in and present. a partnership be- Things have changed with our regiment. If we could look back up the ages we should see many differences from today; the phila- beg of Athol tartan and the long were» e» wlatgemensuma BY BRINGING THAT DE LUE WOMAN mro THE PICTURE "i- s. a.’ au-rcnasos. i; - r. o. nuscaesou ~, I'LL NOT SPEAK TO MAC AGAIN- HE SPOILED EVERYTHING AND AS 5s II" n oi= HIS LEAViNG ME AND GOING AWAY WITH HER. WELL)YOU worvT FOR R°NEY4~THE IDEA A TEAM THAT'S BOTH MATCHED AND MATED _ ..._..-. ._'__.. Eastern y. P. u; f Convention ‘His torn Y? Union-l 08' the malice outer: so: "e wtmai w e minim-s deport. The president. John Ellis. pave a very suggestive report on last ears’ town; Rev. an. W e. Ocari- Raol tion: Pearl Finis‘. Char- igietown‘; Rev. J.A. cbolsoil. k. Press: my. OJ. Bshiiit. Valley- galnd; Muriel MacDonald. 0011i- *"".-..:.e..."'=h:"°....'~.’:lo so: open on e Peo ' Problems. ceting adjourned until 6.30 p. m ‘ihe delegates then proceeded to the hall. where a delectable been supper ar-‘epsred by Vallcyfield.‘ W. I. wai them. . a. The evening session opmed with Rev. Lewis Murray speaking on 11%|; singing and the Hymnary. . Murra mentioned that we 5081mm‘ W N85 Wbmll l!!! 6101s!‘ ed to the sword, we.must meet must under-s and the hymn- He‘ also stated that the Hymnary coma only to" each other but to those make no truce with them. You re-iWYIGfl many Biron! him!" l" some very weak onu. The audience -- listened with greet pleasure to a solo. "My Task" by Miss M1111’ gimp, Dunstagfanage. aecolr-Pfl- aemLM. urr-sy. ‘The evening devotion was led W Miss Hume and Mr. Ellis. takins as their subject ‘fihe Charm of the English Bible. The secretary rend the judge's report. which so" first place in the com tition for a shield to Trinity YP. . for the best year's work but on accmmt of Trinity Y.P.U. having donated the shield 1t, was given to Mt. Stewart who took second place. North Wiitshire and Central United came third and fourth. This was followed by the roll call I of the Eastern Unions. The following resolutions were‘ brought in by the committee in glgiiesolved that the convention He is a areal/l extend to the minister and sesion of Valleyfield United Church and the Young People's Union our sin- cere thanks for their hospitality. (2) Resolved that the thanks of this convention be extended to the retiring executive for their efforts for the past year. our thanks to Rev. George Som- (3) Resolved that we express ers. Rev. B.C. Salter. and Mr. Keir Duggan for the‘r work in connec- tion with the shield competition. (t) Resolved that we heartily thank 'I‘rinit.v Y.P.U. for donating this beautiful shield. (5) Resolved that the secretary write the editor of ihe Pathfinder expressing our feeling that the material presented outht to be made more simple so that a great- er number oi our Young People may appreciate and understand the same. (6) Resolved that the thanks of this convention be extended lo all who have helned to make this convention a aucuss. " Followln‘: is the slate of officers for 1939-40: Honorary President. Rev. WA. MecQuarrie. Hunter River. Past. President. John Ellis. Dtmstaffrzage. President, Marion Hume, Char- ioi-tetown. Vice-President. Florence MacRae Cornwall. Secretary-Treasurer. Pearl Finley Charlottetown. Convenor of Fellowship, Muriel MacDonald. Cornwall. Convenor of Citizenship, Harold Vessey, York. Convenor of. Missions, Lila Jen- kins. Mlllvlew. Convenor of Culture, Mrs. Lmris Dover. Dirnstaffnage. Convenor of Boy's Work, Eev. LM. Murray, Charlottetown. Convenor of Girls’ Work, Mabel Lin". Wheatley River. Convenor of p ‘Drain- ing. Rev. ER. Woodside. Cornwall. Convenor of Recreation, Alex. W. Mstheson, Charlottetown. Convenor of Publications, Erma Mellett, Union Road Rev. EBB. Miller of 5t. Peter's Peninsula, thelflapping na-nkeen heard at the relief of Lucknow. [Thomas Keith. Thomas had been trousers of the West Indian cam- paigns. But I think if some old Black Watch sergeant from the past could revisit the scene today he would find that in all the things that matter the regiment was the some, It is a wonderful tiring to feel that behind you there are hun- dreds of thousands of men whose tradition you inherit. In the Pil- grim Progress when Mr. Valiant,- fcr-Truth crossed the river he left his sword "to him who should succeed him in pilgrimage, and his courage and skill to him who could get them." You have in- herited such a sword. I remember, in the last days of the Battle of‘ Verdun a French division was sent in to win back a piece of land. every yard of which had been stained with French blood. That division had the idea that the deed were fighting for them. They went into action shouting, "En event lea mortal" and trium- phantly they won their ground. Bo a regiment like yours is not only the men who are enrolled iri- it today, but the great company| who for two centuries have lived and died in its ranks. That is why we celebrate this anniversary and praise famous men. k Sheer Perfection All Kayser Hosiery is rlngless. And, now Kay- ser Hosiery is Sansheend a special process which adds longer life and en- hances the beauty of silk Be sure to see “SUAVE” . the new medium beige and “VERVE” the new Kayser Budget Hosiery in 3, 4 and 6 thread weights - — - Heavy service weight, silk ' A NOVEMBER 4,1939 v Service chiffon so sheer if. $ looks like a 3-lllT0lld_— —- - -- 1 loo Extra sheer 3-thread chiffon, $ silk reinforced — — - — - - 1 loo to the welt——--——--$1I25 ‘ON 171E [HAND ID» was the special speaker at the evening session. taking as his text Philippians 3:14 "I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Mr. Miller urged the Young People to devote themselves to the high- est things of life, of which chief is to follow Christ. The in- stallation of officers by Rev. Mr. Stirling of Georgetown closed convention. OH!‘ ‘b; MAC p d ens MARRlED IN EXVILi. NiGii-lT~“SHE'S A5 GOOFY AS 1 AMfSTATED some TO MAKE A SWE W AUSSIE APPLES PERTH, Australia—(CP)—Wert- ern Australia will have a record crop of apries this year to export to her principal customers-Swed- en. Great Britain, Ceylon and the Netherlands. Dinner hats are done in colored uins, sometimes worn with fine- m shed. clotted veils. A. E. TOOMB 101 Queen 51"“ By Westovei ‘ -R- U or. i.'u"s,'r"i-ie IA-CRIOBATiCI cAFicsE l AZZLE- AZZLE ONEY AND LUL ~v I i» s?‘ \ \ a titer’- Y’ws ouei-u; Li. TEAJL