MQLQLJ941 ,-_,_ Q STOCK QUOTA TIONS Montreal Stock Exchange I (Canadian Press) Stock! mo” Bell Tel Brazikliighk a 1" Bruc can car Found a? l-l can Car P a b, Can Pacific 2o crlanestr 21 a 4 Dom Brldgl? 6 3" Dom Steel B 12 5:8 m” T” so 1 2 1m Nlcklfllarrls 3 - Massey McColl Front ill 3-5 l\ii' POW" Nlll. Brew l 1'7 Nwruncla 49 1'2 Quebec Power 9 7'3 Slmwlnigarl 12 s! Law 90m 150 5t Law Pfd 14 54 s, of can Pid 53 51 of Can C0111 "' wp; Elec A 7° I“ glee B U Grain‘ , M iu-(Alfi-An clfillllgtkgybuyirfg wh rled wheat . . i - ‘ l 3 Est? ugllillttlil mlugen bgeafm (boon today. - - ilgh rices for more than a ,»&.\.§“..-.»l.=. pgted, with May wheat quoted as high B5 $192 3'8- llcavv profit-raking lowered ‘vow, 1,1,0“; a cent, after the days were rcached but wheat 1 so 5_.urdu ', M81’ ~ ' l 34-7-8? Corn was 3-8—3-4 111811- er, my v1 a-4_ July 73 s-a-a-t; 931$ run-changed to 3-8 higher. wrumrac. Mnv IBACPl-Qfl Willllilltg grain exchange today. fulnrl-s prices held unchanged, May wheat l-B cont over its ‘I5 7-8- Quill peg and July at, its minimum q 7T 1-2 cents a bushel. Buenos res nuo ti0§§_\v§_lf_l1I10l£ll8Bd- ll> PUBLIC AUGTIU Double tenement. 9 and 11 Chestnut iireci, June 2nd. 1 P. M. Can be mught privately up to day of sale. W. ll. BEATON. Auctioneer. -20-29. Markets At A Glance (By The Cancdla Press) Toronto-Industrial an?! gold stocks miller; bus metals and iunlor oils lower. n0 Z, 30 1-4-30 1-2. Cheese: western white, current "WE-Pt P7106. 14 34-14 15-16; col- ored 16 1-16-16 5-16; whit; and colored wholesale price 15, which price 1| applicable to choc-Se man- ufactured on and after April 1, 1941, fior shivment to the United King- cm. Eggs: graded shipments in used‘ free cases, sell‘ng at. A-large 22- 22 1-2; A—medium 21—21 1-2: B,‘ grade 20; C Erode 17 1-2-18. Potatoes: Que whites no 1 75's 50-60; no , 30-50: NB moun- tain no 1 75's .65—.l0; P1111 moun- tain no 1 75's .75-.85. Livestock MONTREAL, May 19—(CP)- Cattle were estimated to be 15 to 25 cents h’gher today on the two Montreal livestock markets, the Dominion Livestock Branch report- ed. Veals were placed at 25 to 50 cents higher and hogs, on early sales, 25 cents higher. Good steers sold from $8.75 to $9.25, medium $7.75 t0 $8.50 with common from $6 to $7.50. He fers were mostly $8 to $8.50 for Rood and $7 to $7.75 for fair and med- ium. Gocd cows were $8.75 to $7.25. medium $5.75 to $6.50 and common butcher cr/ws from $5 to $5.75 Can- ners and cutters were mostly $4 to $4.50 odd sales as low as $4 Good bulls were from $6.50 to $725 odd to $7.50. Common bulls were 0R TRADE. SANIPSON HAL 2.02 3-4 NOTED RACE HORSE AND SIRE in splendid condiiion- Hi5 rolls take the eye, are useful 11nd have speed! Priced reasonable HOWARD WOOD. Rollojiay. r"- Professional Bards annusran, sonrcrroa. ETC- Over Telegraph Office I 150 Richmond Street Charlottetown I 'I'u'u'I.u-I-I.I5'I- W r l r l MORRELL a. co. 5o. r. Ancmouu Chartered Eastern Trust Building Charlottetown i PALMER 8| HASLAM A. J. HASLAM, 5A., LLB. BARIUSTER, ETC. Bunk of Nova Scotia Chamber! Charlottetown, P.E.l. MONEY TO LOAN Phone 85 1K0. Bo! l! BELL 8. MATHIESON MONEY T0 LOAN Cameron Block, Charlottetown E Island." M Mcl EOD & BEN FLEY W. It. BENTLEY. K. 0. .1. A. BENTLEY. K. C. C. F. BENTLEY. LLB. Barristers and Attorneys-at- Law MONEY TO LOAN 154 Prince Street H. F. McPHEE B’. A. K. C. NOTARY, cc. BARRISTER SOLICITOR Build‘ng Charlottetown. &—;_______ MocGUIGAN 8. TRAINOR MARK R. MacGUIGAN. 8.0. C. ST. CLAIR TRAINOR. K. O. Bnnlsten, Bclicitorl. Etc. YONEY TO LOAN ‘Hgffice: Over Provt iul Bank. ,_}lllnd Street. Con‘ tctown. rues exrumro ililsslisdfllllili J. s. TAYLOR OPTOMETRIST c New lncatlon N. Kent and queen Stu. Onnoslir mu Grocery Evenings Bv Appointments Phone Incidence ms llley lnualitv. Saws were $5.75 to $7 livc eight. lfrout oi’ the Low Lourta Building in _ more or lcn with go i i l I n D mostly $5 to $6.25 with a low of 50 Receipts were: cattle 937, calves 1,544. sheep 188. h0g5 915. Calves were 25 to 50 cents higher than last week. Good quality veals made $9 to $9.75 with two tops at $10.50 with medium veals frcm $8.25 to $9 and common light veals down to $7. The bulk (fr! the ca‘ves offered were common to Just. fair. veals and drinkers and were sold in mixed lots from to $7.25. Drinkers razed from $6 to $7.50 and grassers $4.50 to $5. Spring lambrranged from $4.75 to $9 each according to we‘ght and quality Common (‘glzt lambs are not wanted. Sheen were from $3 to $6.50, selling mostly in mixed lots between $6 and-$6.50. Early sales of hws were at $12.75 for B-1 dressed. $9.75 for B-l olive fed and watered. Grade A drew $1 per hog premium with discmnts on off grades. Feeder hogs were $9.50 to s11 acc-rdine i0 weight and ‘Mortgage Sale To be cold by public auction in Charlottetown on Wednesday the 18m day of June, 1941, at the hour of twclvc o'clock noon (Atlantic uayugnt Saving Time) All tnat par- cci or land situate, lying and being New York Stock Exchange .._- (cm-am. Press) Montreal-Papers and golds low- Stocks Close cr; other indusiria higher. ‘W? if" New York-Stocks closed unchcug- Anaconda- 25 1-4 vd- Bendix Av as 1-4 wl-mllkliwheat unchanged. Beth Steel _ 69 1.3 . New York-Cotton, rubber gugu 011g; Q1119 . 3g 1.§ and coffcc lower. Chrysler 85 5- Con Edison 18 Gen Elec g8 g-g ' Gen Motors - Produce Prices o m» Pu :5 Kennecott. 85 1-2 *_— en ra - 1% “Fl ii 1'3 PiVElONTREAL, Mlay 19-(01-‘0- Penn 33 3-4, r0 uce Market prices here today, Phi] Pet Q; 41 1.3 9-5 reported by the Dominion De- std Q1] NJ 35 1-4 pariment of Agriculture, folio/w: Texas cup 39 1.3 Butter. first. grade creamery Unmd M, 37 1,; p11; 121s, Jobbing price, 31 1-2—-32; Us Rubber 31 1.4 s grade solids, jobbing price, 81- g3 5g», c9 53 1.4 81 1-2, Que no 1 pasteurized, cur- vanmgum gm; 33 rent receipt grice, 3o 5-8; no 2 29 we“ Umqn 23 1-3 5-8; no 1 w olesale price, 31 1-4: Woolworth _ Currencies NEW YORK, May 19—(CiP)— The Canadian dollar failed to hold an early gain in foreign exchange market, trade today and closed 3-16 of a cent lower in relation to the United States dollar. (Ottawa For- eign Exchange Control Board rate 0.09-9.91 per cent discount.) The pound Sterling finished for the sixth day in succession un- changed at. $4.03 1-2. The Swiss "commercial" franc was down .015 cent at 23.20 1-2 cents, while the German mark and the _ Argentine free peso each advanced 05 cent. The Nazi currency was quoted at 4.05 and the Argentine unit at 23.80 cents. FINANCE By Bernard S. O'Hara Associated Press Financial Writer NEW YORK. May 19—(AP)-— The stock market today ambled through one of the slowest sessions in the past. 25 years without devel- oping any real strength or weak- ness in any department. ' Canadian stocks were generally irregular. International Nickel and Imperial Oil gained 1-8 while Lake Shore 10st 3-8. Other losers were Distillers Seagram and Ford, each 1-8 point lower, and Brazilian ‘Irac- tlon. down 1-4. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks was unchanged at 39.6. Of the 530 individual issues traded, 170 were up, 179 down and 181 un- Bllliflléd. ‘IYB-nfifef-i of 223.010 shares actually were the smallest for a full strength since Aug. 26, last, and there have not been many under this figure since 1916. The total compared with 287,060 Friday. Shares on the upside at the close included US. Steel, Bethlehem, Youngstown Sheet, Standard O’l (NJ), Texas Corp, Phillips Petrol- eum. Anaconda smelting. General Motors. Western Union, 00115011- dated Edison. Phelps Dodge, U. s. GYDlum. Du Pont, Pullman and chesaceake <1: Ohio. ic Service of NJ. edged in- l0 new 11w ground for the year or longer. In arrears also were Santg, Fe. N.Y. Central. Eastman Kodak 3179")’. Glenn Martin, American Telephorps and Chrysler. Montreal Curb (Canadian Press) Stocks Close at Murray River Lot or Township. Numncr Sixty-four in Kings County, Prince Edward Island, bounded and as ' ' - COMMENC- ING at the South side of the Mu:- rny Harbour Branch Railway at tno Northwest corner of land now or rormeriy in possession of Watson White, thence running along tnc Western boundary lino of said Wat- son White's land to the Northeast corner of land now or formerly in the possession of Roderick Keenan formerly William Keenan, thence. along llll! Northern bound y line of tnc said Roderick Keenans land to the Northwest corner of the said land, thcucc Northwardly paraiic. with tho Western boundary liuc o tho aforesaid Watson White's land to the Southern boundary llnc of ti: aforesaid Railway, thence Eustward-| ly along the Southern bounda y lino cf the aforesaid way to the place of commencement and cou- ' eight acres of land a little more or loll. The above ale is power of sslc contained in an ln- dcnturc of Mortgage dated the 20th of January 1926. made between Wil- liam R. Keenan of Murray River, hotel Proprietor, and Rita Keenan. his wife, of the first part, and Mur- dock J. McLeod of Murray River‘ Trader, of the second part, dcfaui having been made in payment 0| . . m“ . . For particulars apply to McLeod é Bentley, Solicitors, Charlottetown. Dated this 18th day of May 1941. GAVIN M. McLEOD. Executor Estate Murdock J. McLeod. L-20l-5-20-27-84l-10. AIIBTION SALE l um instructed by tho Ex- ecutor; of tho Estate of the l!“ J. D. lluino to sell by Public Auc- tion on WEDNESDAY. MAY 21st at the hour of Ono O'clock (Standard Time) 1 l-l acre; situated on corner ofl Applctrce and St. Peter: road with largo house and burn. also the homo plncc about twenty acres od house and with electric lights out-buildin and llghtn n, rods installed and,’ large fox ranch. L-lll-S-li-Il ATON i m m W. H. BE . Auctioneer. l ' L-ltl-b Abitibi Com Asbestos Abltibi Pfd B A Oil Beauharncis Bathurst A Fraser VTC Fraser Ford A Imp Oil Int Pete Price Com Price Pfd (Canadian Press) Stocks Canada Montreal Commerce H u w 0-04 n | M»- lwaifial El 77°.“ imp-ms- Clolc i5 1Q Montreal Exchange MONTREAL. May 10—(CP)— B Leaders were mostly behind on the stock market today though here and there an cdd issue managed to chronicle a modest goin. The strongest group was oils 5nd Imperial and Pete were out in front but MlcColl Frontenac slip- ped, Hudson Bay Mining won a profit, in metals, but Ncranda sag- ged over a, point and Nickel was also shaved a fraction. o Power and Brazilian was fractlonally strong- er. In industrials. Asbestos lost a snail Tar was behind all session. Both classes of Prince Edward Island Hospital Annual Meeting Notice is hereby given that In pursuance of the Act of Incorpor- through the Bt. Law- atlcn u public meeting of all con- u tributors to tho Prince Edward Il- Iand Ilolpltal. will be held in St. Paul’ Parish Hall, Charlottetown, on Triunduy. May 22nd at 8.00 EM. for the urpoao of electing Trul- tcec or c government of the In- stitution In accordance with the Bye-Laws and for the transaction of such business n may be brought be- ADA E. HARRIS. Board of T 4-10-13-15-17-‘0 improvement and Dominion G ,1 Malartic .- Secretary. 0000. 3,5 end, \ Clubs, pclriciic V’ "'1'"? ruarftvuggporrsrowu GUARDIAN .,_,. A Message from The Newspaper Publishers Committee . _’ _ HON. WshlUfllANflNCHlllflAfl NCE in a while you’l1 Yfieet a Doubting Thomas . . I He probably sings either one of these two tunes: =1 Perhaps he exclaims, “Why all the _ campaigning? Our newspapers ARE ' free now, aren’t they?” Or else he’s way over at the other yelling that “criticism divides p M, our will to winl’? ~ Both extremes are half-truths where the danger is . . . §.;1..;..... _ Because you Do have a free press now I : z‘ and criticism CAN run all out into destructive partisanship. spa-mm,»- The problem is to KEEP the press free, ineans free from distortion either wayl _ And make no mistake. To keep that freedorfi, you’l1 have to want to keep it, you’l1 have to Work to keep it . . . The change is very hard to see! A Nazi paper translated into English would look . very much like the one you’re used to. If you , read it, you’d find a totalitarian paper part tragic, ’ part funny. But that would only be because your papers have given you the FACTS. The totali- tarian press is told what the people are to know, which is to say what they are to believe. And they here! And that’s just if‘ v. w, , 1K“ 6512.125. .-r-— they kirlowlfio PAGE FIVE better. “Every. scrap of their initiative, every bit of their judg- fment is gone because they have no standards by ~ i. i; which to judge. 1.x .0 The totalitarian press even dictates how busi- iress shall be done . . . If you were amerchant in such a country, you would be told perhaps that Tuesday was Fish Soup Day. No matter how much you might like to offer beef stew to your customers, you inust announce fish soup. Not a ‘ choice of things. No reasons why each was good. Without a free press you would get no facts tp . . protect your economic freedom either! w; z ,- “But do we Canadians run such risks?” You DO .. . but only if you complacently sit back and think you don’t! The danger is real only if you stop actively wanting your freedom. The danger begins inside a country, slowly and subtly, with apparently harmless voluntary restrictions . . , » The responsibility is partly ours. The news: ‘which papers must deserve to stay free. But it is your responsibility, too . . . your personal responsi- bility, because it is your personal liberty which can be threatened. “ [HOW can you help? You caJn help keep th; press free for yourself and your children simply (Soothing syrup has no place here! by refusing to tolerate it any other wayl Read your newspaper a little more carefully than you do now. Ask yourself, what does that mean? where will this restriction lead? Talk with your , neighbour about what you read. When you think something isn’t going as it should in a democracy of free men . . . do something about it! Phone’ the publisher, write the editor! Above all, do; your part to keep out of the trap of complacency? NOTE: This is one of c weekly series cf Institutional messcdss sponsored by on informal Committee of Publishers, and cppecrlng In Newspapers from cocsi to coast. I ieiies, business firms or individuals who would like reprints may have them by writing lo the business office of this newspaper. \ rcnca Corporation issues were weaker, in papers, and, among miscellaneous stocks, crown Cork and Seal, down a point, Celanese. Massey-Harris and Zcllers common lost ground. Total sales: 57,600 shares; Indus- trlals, 7,000; Mines, 81,800. MINING (Canadian Press) ‘IORONTO. May 19- Close QG 0- | n H“ n n can Duqucsnc East Malroblc Falcon » Fed Kirk n »- § 5 idseéfiaw-S nova-nu .- N2=§‘I~°hBv-l§g T T T a 0 _ u: 28 30 3-8 - 9 fll a l- Mucus: MacLeod Madsen l-lfllfl $88815 Maralgo McKenzie MOWBNAX‘! Moneta Morris Kirk Noranda. i! 88$ss2513-S I-lI-l . . $L OBrien 05 Qmgga 12 l-2 Pamour 107 Paymaster l8 Pen-on 131 Pick Crow 238 Powell 55 Premier 91 Preston 289 Reno Gold 11 St Anth 3 San Ant 216 Sheep Cr 80 Sherritt 68 siscoo 55 Slave Lake 8 1-3 S E Pete 2 eep R1! 97 Sud Basin 120 sud Cont 4 1-2 ’ Sylvanife 35° I Teck H1181’! 393 Towagmac 1B5 11cm 9 1-2 Up can 187 Ventures 33§ Vulcan 2° Wait» Amu 325 wumy 1 1-4 r1 flax-g 615 UNLIBTED Mandy 6 Pawnee l Pend one 125 Toronto Exchange mnorrro. my io-(om-l "nadir? in the second heaviest vol- umg o the month, listings on the) Toronto exchange recorded moder- ate strength lads . Turnover ag- ted 165.000 s ares. o price of Lake Shore touched 15 1-8, the lowest rice reached since 19$ and-the cosc at l5 1-2. involved a net decline of 1 1-8. Trade in Lake Shore totalled 1.500 shares. Kerr-Addison and Preston were both fairly active at gains 01 '10 and 8 cents respectively and other gold gainers on smaller vol- umo wer; East Malartlc, Macassa. McKenzie, O'Brien. Sheep Creek, sylvsnltc and Upper Canada. The close was down narrowly for God's Lake, Little Long mo. Neg- us. Pickle Crow. Sigma and Wright- llargreaves. Lmpa Cadillac and Cen- Advortising llates . Mimimum (‘liargc tor Any application. Central Guardian locals, 5c pu- word; Western and Eastern locals 2c per word; Announcerrcnts and Coming Events 3c per word: Classified 3c per curd; 1n Mcmoriam Notices 70c per inch; List: of Floral and Spiritual Offerings. Cards, ctc.. 5c per name; Letters of Condolence 70c per lnrh Wedding engagement l0 words for $1.00 and l0 cent: for every additional 3 words. Notices of Thanks and Appreciation, 70c [er inch or lc per word. Lists of Subscriptions 49 0611i: per incn. Addrez: and Presentation $1.00. Other rules on Payable in Advance Au vcrtisemcnts 25 Cont: For Sale PLANTS 60c hundred. 75c bv mail. $4.50 thou- sand. F S. eves. Southnort. L-63-5-1-6-1. FOR SALE - USED OAR RADIO. Tanwns Accessories. L-199-5-20-1i. FOR SALE-ONE WALNUT DIN- ing room suite. Apply phone 750. 11-128-5-17-31. FOR RALE- DUAL PURPOSE Shorthom Bull. year old, register- ed. Also Record cook-stove, four covers. Austin Cameron, Augus- tine Cove. 14-4-5-15-17. l-‘OR SALE — QUEBEC HEATER with oven-good condition. Apply Guardian. 11-189-5-2 -2l. EEEuFF-ri» carrots, parsnips sound N0- rade. Edmund MacMlllan. West. ovehead. L-174—5-20-1i. HORSE FOR SALE — MAJOR Cope. Leslie Mitchell, New Dom- >- inion. L-191-5-20-2i FOR _ l-lydrolic Holst. Will sell at half price. Will Cameron. stanchel. L-188-5-20-21. FOR SALFr-APARTMENT HOUSE Good investment. 205 Euston St. L-111-5-17-2o-2i FOR SALE-BARBER SHOP. ES- tabllshed 15 years. Modern equipment, or will hire good bar- ber. F. W. Cole, Cole Block. Sack- villc. N. B. L-206-5-20-22-24. tral Porcupln? traded in volume nt a gain of a. roctlon for POTCHDlYlE and loss of a fraction for Cad llac. Lowell, I-muyn weakened 10 lo 55. ron sarIr-zl-Aoui-fnnizskris-i" table, four chairs. Plgone [- SALE - STEEL BODIEII‘ Wanted WANTED-PURE BRED SHORT- v horn bull. State age and price. Norman MacMurclo, Summer- sida, R. R. no. 3. P. E. I. L-l63-5-l9-2i Miscellaneous SPRING SPECIALS AT MRS. Johnston's Beauty salon, oil pennanenis. etc. 1.. 141-5-17-3 Lost LOST — PORTFOLIO BETWEEN Orwell Cove and Vernon River. Please leave Hall Manufacturing Agents Wanted AGENTS TD SELL PORTRAIT limglarizements B12 mom)’ max"? t. T i0 United A: own A. wdbzzmsi To Lei‘ n ~___ T0 LET-MODERN AkARTiilENT. os Prince st. L-2l0_-§-2°-3l. T0 LET — THREE ADJOINING rooms. unfurnished. private en- t . A ‘. 40 Pownal St. m“ ppy L-157-5-i9-2i. T“ 1 ".2121"; ment avnl a e une s . _ 955-1 . __ “Llilfilfl- T0 LET - 511156515» APART- ment until November 1st. Apply 14 York Lane. Bl‘l2lliOl1..2o_22_24' _ .Iff1°7l.5‘._....-. Female Help Wanker’ wANrEn-l-crnimrokhiousrs- work. Seep our. Apply Guurdllfl- 11-160-5-19-21. wlwrcn - akrrsruaxcan m imz room girl and chombermui for Sackville Hotel. Sackville, N. B. L-l45-5-19-51. WANTED mnvEfiYA-ranvxmx. for general housework. Co., Charlottetown. L-127-5-i7-3i. —-—-\ LOST FROM RICE POINT 15 crates lobsters. marked ABS. Fin- der notify John B. MacDonald, Rice Point. L-zm. Agents Wanted UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY-RAW- iei h Dealer in e an ambitious man to ste established business. Dealer will give full assistance Write immediately for iitlélll. The W. T. Rawlelgh Co ado. Wanted I Queen's County sting. Splendid opportunity for p in an Retiring. inform- .. 111111-470-12-5. Montreal Can- 296 Grafton. WANTED — RELIABLE MAID. ‘Goodxwiages. 1 Write S. A. Guard- r erences. m s v “g e L-iaa-s-zo-zt Boarders Wanted ROOMERS AND BOARDERS AC- commodated. 256 Euston Street. L-l80-5-20-2i mewrrwuntdcd DO YOU WANT TO IMRROVI vour situation? sell complete llnd household necessities lrwludlfll Tea. Coffee Pnee Products in ex- clusive district. Thirty 13,11‘): without Risk. Aoov now. - 1435 Montcalm Montreal. WANTED - BARBER APPRENT- ices. No former experience neces- sary. Write for information Moler 300- Barbu- Oolim. H1111“. I a N433 Diamonds iifayhe’? Ancient Mayans of Csflllfll llllll South America used to decoratl their teeth.