' N a mu lllillillll IT'S TNAI KIND . DIA OOWIIIA FIGIIIEI mush ‘Zing’! “COMD-‘Zrf -3‘-i> ~€ Tr >5 -" CAPTTOL TODAY SATURDAY Shows 23:30 - 7 - I) E IO WI PAGE EIGHT Panic: EDWARD ow ‘ m”, $5 rosin; ‘ Til "BATMAN" SERIAL CARTOON - MUSICAL line of SHUR-GAIN feeds for your Poultry and stock. ' bringing them to our mill to be blended with SHUR- GAIN concentrates Poultry and Livestock requirements. THE EASTER — SAT. é rm: GUARDIAN. CIIXRLUHETOWN N GUARDIAN scours. noivraoug: I-Ierold F. Landry, Albert Altken, Mrs. Byron - _ . b tewert, lilies Harri t Clulr. SHOWS 3'30 7 9 i) AGENT GEORGETOWN: TVeldon Lovers. l, The Guardian may be bought et eny of the , following places ln Montague: i. in Georgetown: The Poet Office: Miee S. A. Llewellyn; MrmUley. in Souris: Gordon's and Florence The Post Office. Boper; in St. Peters: I "hmWTITNNIIf l anrrsn roorwltan at tr.- ‘ IIIIIIOI U" UIEIII- tlontague Shoe Store. “GKEADERS will find display ule edvts. and auction advte. etc. on our Financial Pa“- . IMASQUEBADE DANCE. Mon- tague Curling Rink, October lath. Meeur‘: Orchestra. ‘ ..'A FINE DISPLAY of Signet and Dress Rings-lovely ladies’ rings ln diamond. pearl, rose zircon and. the new ruby reds. V. R. Pep- IIIDIUIIE! V . GLENN Flgllllgl TERRJT/fifl flaw J v slfliliill ler, Jeweller, Montague. COLD! IV ' ..'MON'I‘AGUE UNITED ficfijvlcolok’ onurtcn rasromu. cnanon. - l Dr. MacKenzie will conduct ser- vices as follows on October 17th. 11 A. M and 7.30 P. M. in Mon- l tague Church. 3 ‘PJM. Lower Mon- g tague Church. There will be a » Young people's Rally at close oi I Welling service in ‘MOIYIHBUB Church. s.‘ MONTAGUE LIONS CLUB _ The recently formed Montague Lions Club ls slated to hold its charter night on Monday, Oct. 17th at the Curling Club. District Gov- ernor Salter Innis will present the charter to the new club which i5 being sponsored by the Lions Club of Moncton, members oi which will be in attendance at the pres- EXTRA: NEWS - SCIENCE - CARTOON ' i>cofi>co@co@>ca§cosi I EMPIRE TONIGHT SATURDAY I: Shows '7 - 8:45 Matinee Sat. Only 2:30 __ ./ a ~ ~41!!- i’ ST/IRRETT "- and s LE B0 0M rowan or entation o! the charter. Charter night will be open night with the smash members and ladies present. Al- though only formed, the club has WESIOTII laid plans for organizing a safety patrol for the school children at certain dangerous points on exit from the school. The sponsoring 0f the Montague hockey club is also being taken under advise- ment. Mr. Harold Smith, the local president, has brought to the club unlimited energy to help in its first year oi’ operation, together with a great deal oi experience in clubs work. If BACKACHE is HoIdinqYou Rack It's Budd's You May Need! When your kidneys eei u end backache IoIIowr-gel end use Dod 's Kidney Pill’, the 50-year-old Canadian remedy. Dodd s Kidney Pills quickly end solely help restore your kidneys to normal action-help relieve ' ‘- end the! “iired-eII-the-iime” feeling by [reeling the kidneys. Ask any druggiel Ior Dodd’: Kidney Pills, look Ior lhe blue box with the red bend. 1.56 Dodds Kidnev Pills / ~ / smmm - SMILEY - auiumr ‘<- mo§>ee6 tW-.-oc-:6/~oo<./oe o - e- - i o’g?/%€>}<v TRAIN MOVES FARM l lltl Illllll Plllltll" -1 Rod CAMERON . Bonita GRANVILLE Don CASTLE ' - -» STUART IRWIN uovo eoenom m»: couv i!‘ WHEATLEY, Oxfordshire, Eng- iand-(CP)—-A Iii-car train hired especially for the journey carried is farmer, his family and helpers. 80 cattle, 200 sheep and household gear from Monmouth to this vil- lage, H. J. IAABON orromermsr emu; sod Suillllilnl Gil-w Etc. COSTLY IDSS Annual losses oi world grain crops to insects and diseases amount to 65,000,000 tons. MONTAGUE- P. E. l.. Ofiiee flours: 1o to 13 A.M. 2 to 5 P. M. by appointment Oiiloe Connected With Drug Store. . BUYING DAILY Live or‘ Dressed FEED SERVICE . FOWL Alter having constructed a new feed mill in which fllld have installed complete and up-toi-date equipment ci-"CKEN are in a position to supply you with n com Iete IVB- I I." Cunning Purpose EASTERN PACKING 60.. LIMITED Seuris You may also utilize your homo, grown grains by into a balanced ration for your Call on us to handle your feeding problems. BIRTS FEED SERVICE SOURIS, P. E. I. OUT OIIR WAY OY_ J. II. WILLIAMS M...“ ‘ l... BUT. LADY. ormomo s12, "ri-Ifrrs some OF * ~ 1; '1» ‘IUIEQICYIAI-ILEE "' eoelZEZéafis TSBSGKISZTAEQ; I GEAR Room! ,3 on ouz , FROM A Fist-narrate: p}, is THAT r.- CHAIQE Loueue: 3g 1F THEM JOI<ESMITH§ pa»; veizv u= HE vow-r ‘,4; ‘DOTHAT WHENTHEWRE t,“ IMPORTANT? a, SIGN THIS w- OFFfi/OUKNOW wmrr : ,;.»,‘o,.,. .- :' A AT oucs~~~ ‘mev no WHEN . ~ ’ e .- ' THEYfREON! &. '\\‘ eye?!’ T _. \\ \¢ . O e» '1‘ s‘ 6 \\ ) a. Q ‘ Savor . :“‘ V’ ‘Q0 ‘A ’ »‘ a? "9 ¢/ ~ 3- o 1:13.". Hy . ;V;< ‘l? I I r. ._.-_ I/xlv 75:"! . I ~ . '41 ; w‘ a Pxssme» ‘raouenrl “J-"Ws ‘Al. .-... a .. I ..'ROLEX TVATCHES in stock. C. R. Boehner. Jeweller. Montague. ..'BUY TOUR PRESTON! early at Bergman's. Montague. and avoid disappointment. fililisa Florence liiaiheson, teach- er at Wlientiey School, and her brother, Mr. Roy Matheson, stu- dent st P. W. C., spent Thanksgiv- ing with their mother, Mrs. Dan Matheson, Bristol. ..°WE HAVE 0N HAND No. 50 Eureka Potato Digger, horse and tractor hitch. No. 4 and 5 Cockshutt Manure Spreaders. No. 6 Tractor Spreaders and 2 and 3 furrow Tractor Plowes. Bergman's, Mon- tague. Personal? Ill/Ilse Leela White is spending e very pleasant vacation with her parents, Mr.‘ and Mrs. Horace White, Murray Harbour, after an absence of over two years while a student at the Alberta Bible Coi- lege, Calgary, Alberta. Her fiance, Mr. Ralph Whitrow of Ycllmvgrass. Saskatchewan. a brilliant graduate of the A.B.C.. has taken up his great duties as a minister and preacher of the Gospel, having a charge in Northern Saskatchewan. He is arriving on the Island next ivcek and while here they will be united in the bonds oi holy matri- mony. This is Mr. Whitrows first visil to the east. While hcrc he will conduct a series of sermons in the Church of Christ. hinrray Harbour. Georgetown and I I I Vicinity Miss Earlene Lovers, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. linrl Lnvcrs of Charlottetown was n recent visi- tors to Georgetown where she was the guest oi relatives. Mrs. Herbert (lcorge, Jr. and son Lorin are visdlng in Saint John, N. B., ulicrc they are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Butler. Rev, Pnrmenus MacLeod who is now retired from the active min- istry and who now resides in Port Elgin, N. 13., was a recent visitor to Georgetown and was the guest of his sister, Miss Sadie MacLeod and his brother, Albnn MncLeod. Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Murphy of Elmira were visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Mur- phy, Richmond Street on Sunday. On their return they were accom- panied liy Miss liclcn Murphy OAS ON STOIAAOII Musooseh. N. ll. men seye: “The only medicine that ever gsve me relief irom bloated stomach feel- ing eiter meals. also lin- proved Iny appetite. is Morisseyh Stomach Tonic." Price 2.00 per bottle. For sale st ell drug stores and drug counters. 21 day treatment. Exhibit Shows Trend of Ari Over 5D Ears By ROBERT PHILLIPS (Canadian Press Steii Writer) TORONTO. Oct. l4 - (UP) — An exhibition of Canadian-paint- ed canvases now is showing at the Art Gallery oi Toronto, hung ior a month-long display to commem- orate the 50th anniversary o! the gallery. The exhibit, including only one from each oi the 91 ar- tists, depicts the deveiopment of oil and water painting in Canada during the last half century. Hon. Vincent Massey, honorary president oi the gallery. told more than 600 art enthusiasts that com- parison oi the display with the or- iginal 23 canvases hung when the gallery was first opened, shows what has happened to Canadian art during the intervening 50 years. "Then all oi the artists were thoroughly Canadian and none of them were living at the time," he said. "Represented in this exhibi- tion, are a large number of living artists, very few oi whom are en- tirely Canadian." I-Ic said oi the 6'7 living artists represented, many were European born, many others born here returned to Canada af- ter years of study abroad. The result, he snid, has been a gradual trend away from a pure- ly nationalistic to an internation- ally-aifected Canadian art. The exhibition, some oi whose canvases are owned by the gal- ler-y_ some owned privately and some loaned irom the National Art Gallery at Ottawa, will remain on display here until Oct. 2.9. The display is hung in five sec- tions, each representing the gen- eral period oi a decade. The gal- Field oificers take over from there, distributing the material to local newspapers, magazines and radio stations. The output of non-government writers is supplemented by stories prepared by the state department's own reporters. One big goal of the work headed by Mrs. Campbell is to counteract Communist propag- anda about the United States. Mrs, Campbell came to the Un- ited States with her iamliy at the lery’! catalogue o! the exhibit outlines en interesting trend in the development o! Oenedien ert. At Turn of Century During the first period, moo- 1912, most oi the senior pointers represented the British tradition. They had been influenced by de- velopments ‘in Holland end Hence and before the period ‘ended met yet a third lniluencing factor - the direct impact of impression- ism, also from abroad. - In the eight years that follow- ed, the First World Wer stimul- ated e. national pride and e oon- sciousness of an intimate relo- tionship with Europe end the Un- ited States. Canadire natural wild landscape was viewed UIIOIRTI new eyes and with a new passion and the war scene was recorded both home and abroad by painters commissioned by the government to paint for the Can- adian War Records. At wan end and between 1910 and 1931 there developed e flow- ing opportunity lor Canadian painters to exhibit their work end never before was there such a variety oi viewpoints. New groups and societies were founded -- the Group oi Seven in 1919, the Can- adian Society oi Painters in Water Color in 1905 and the Sculptors Society oi Canada in 19$ — all oi which were fired with e III enthusiasm for the world immed- iately around them. From i931 to I939 the Parisian influence was even more influen- tial, and artists began exhibiting works which owed little or noth- ing to Canadian tradition and which were based on a new les- son iearned in Europe. Many war- time soldier painters were return- ing home and others, European- born, were seeking political and artistic refuge here from their homelands abroad. Of the last l0 years oi war and readjustment, 1939-49, the cata- logue says; "They are so close that any final assessment today is out or the question." Three groups now are emerging ~ the Canadian-born who stayed at home, the soldier- artist who followed the armed services across the war fields oi the world, and the European-born who found themselves cut oi! from their homeland sources and mig- rated here." Ilepori Tesl To Indicate Danger 0f Bloodihls who will be their guest ior a fcw days. age of I1. She returned to her homeland several times and has visited most European countries. At one time she was managing editor oi a scientiiic magazine and directed an all-male staff. Dur- lng the Second World War she was executive secretary on public relations for the Free Denmark Committee and later did an over- seas stint with the United States oiilce of war information. A motor party consisting 0K Miss Ethel Dcighan ni Summer- sidc nnd Messrs. Austin, Eugene and Arthur Pcnderiznst oi Ken- sington visited Georgetown an Brudenell on Sunday where they were the guests oi Mr. and Mrs. F. J. DcLory and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Curley. NEW ORLEANS. Oct. 14-(0?) —A team of Tulane University surgeons today suggested the pos- sibility ol’ heading off potentially total blood clots by means of a "relatively simple" laboratory test. They said the lest offers prom- ise of predicting, with a great deal oi.’ certainty, which patients are likely to develop blood clots following operatinmor as the re- sult of certain other conditions. such as heart disease. And they declared that for such patients there is some hope that the administration oi a chemical that is naturally present in blood may hclp prevent the formation 0f clots. Clots ore dangerous for two reasons. If they get big enough they can provide | blocking darn in n blood vessel, thus impeding _lhe flow of blood, the body's l A Thanksgiving Day dance and card party was held in the Town IIUIONIES DY KENR EYNOLDS Hall on Monday night, the pro- ceeds oi which will go to the Building Fund for the new Re- creational Center, now under con- structlon on Kent Square. A good crowd enjoyed a fine evening's entertainment. The door prize was l ,. / l ll won by Mr. Clayton Anderson. ‘l 1/ The prize for the’ oldest couple I I I dancing was won by Mrs. Wilfred MacQlgiillanfand Mr. Heréry Samp- J [A . rze th t Tgdln by Mist? Mafigggt DEN/Id Iivnad N ," Mr. Leo Victor. J 0 M / - ~ Woman Handles Flow u 7 0f ll. S. News Abroad WASHINGTON, Oct. ‘l4 -(OP)- - Foreign knowledge oi life in the United States is determined to e large extent by Mrs. Katrine Campbell. ~ Danish-born Mrs. Campbell is boss of a state department unit which selects newspaper and mag- azine erticles for distribution ov- erseas, Bhe reads thousands of these stories each year and chooses those which she thinks tell the story or the United States iairly and accurately. Reprints oi Mrs. Campbell's sel- /////I lUUfltl/U ’, - V J lrqlgllgr ections are relayed to United States embassies and information offices in more than 50 countries. Ill I 9‘ sow 8m. I QILIIISS A n "Htuu M, i... JOB“ GLASS Cleans 50 kinds e l" 90o I k ' It G nd’ ~ mi“ m“ tod"; a"; geefoiiriuuniiinwrrgvzihttds fpr o new radio- DOES A BETTER BETTER JOB I OF CIEAIIIIIO HIETAIWAIIEI from windows, mirrors, tvlfiwsre, brass, chromium, Con,“ “d mp av uuote stems in, . gm m “m, .A FIIII AIIO oi‘ dirt in 30 seconds tsbletops, sil- VIONDII so menipeo en to Kilo 3's ren Toe y-crlepinmll .Getsboxtode Fresher, we guarantee! Kellogg-fro I TRY THEM AT NO RISK. If Kellogg's aren't fresher than any other bran hskeasend BIIJTLY oertolrto Kellogg's, Box d-A, Lon on, Ontario. Get double your money back! IAILDLY LAXATIVI. Contain anr-u h bran to help regularity, many fol s dndl Try them. _ -___ NEW! emu-new! crave; AND we: ‘new even: MOTHER‘ Mon/s ocronsa ‘T14, 194a wwli- _"\. river of life. And sometime a big cio. iinuiias loose in the blood strcum. If it reaches a vital urea, like the lung, it um cause death: The Tulane surgeons also szild that there has been an increase in the number of cnscs oi’. and deaths from, blood clots oi the veins In recent yours. They ad- vanced the theory that this in- “REPEAT PE MacDONALD anus. rnrnfmr 8:80 — MT. STEWART — 8:30 Plus Stooges A Show You Are Sure To Enjoy crease may he due to tho almost. routine use oi sa-cnllcti "nnzilmi. tlc" drugs like penicillin in com. batting infection in hnspiilll m. tients. They explain ihut suclr drugs, valuable in fighting gcrml, also tend to mukc Ihc blood coagulate more, easily, tho:- IliVCIb ing the formation ol clots ill soml cases. - 1 RFORMANCE” TO-NIGHT . crcv-vi. PM. "Comma JORDAN You'll like her music and friendly diet-It's delight! y ‘Eerent. i SOURIS THEATRE SATURDAY, OCT. 15th DOUBLE FEATURE “BADMEN 0F MISSOURI‘ Also WARNER m; s‘ Elites DECISION or CHRISPHER: m-nemu- . e-A-o -.- -_.,, Pleas fill Tonight TO ‘to I~I p.. .. use etoox a co. Ill Kalli. p tlerlstutovn FETTIOOAT FEVER by Mani; nan» CFCY Charlottetown (Dominion N h) .__4 ennui new TOILET OUTFITS A h" $39.50 Latest llyle Vitreous china 1M end bowl, complete with 800d ‘1“'I' lty white mt end fittinll- T" lowest price in the City, Y0" m" 810.5!) below the regular 91""- I ~~ ..-_\ 1v