JANUARY 5, 1933 THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN iroclgsjaglvus, QUOTA TIONS Pivotal New ,York Stocks (Canadian Press) I- Iholl . (‘lose Allied Chemical ... ... 8.113 Am and b‘ Power .. . .» 7 Am Bnleltlng ...- ... . Am '.l‘el and Tel ... .... Anaconda ... .... ... . Atcllllon .. ... ... Auburn lilotor ... C P B ..... .. .. Case ... . . ... ... Chesapeake and Ohio Con Gas Corn Products Delaware and Hud Eastman ... ... Gen Electric .- Gen Foods .... Gen Motors . int Harvester Int Nickel _. Nat Biscuit Pub er Radio Stand Oil TeX Gulf llnion (furbldo linlon Pacific 7.1a, llnlted Corp tit-j. U S Rubber m. Vanadium ... 131/, Westinghouse -. it Woolworth . 31:1,; 1v. KCURB (Canadian Press) Slog-Isl Amer (‘yon B ... ... ... .. Alner Sup Power As G and El Cities Servlro . I'll linnll nllll Share Ford of Canada A . Imp Oil . Int Pete . Niag 11nd . 3t. Oil Ind (Canadian Press) FORT \\'ll'.l'.lA.\[, Out, Jun. 4- hluro than 90,000,000 lyshcls of (‘au- adlnn grain uro in storage irolll the head of the lakes ‘tn the (‘nna-llxln At- lantic seaboard, it was ilitl-Vll in lig- ures ell tnnyflt-by the boal-d of grain comlulsslol f-ial- w til the or» I b- shl- s that are Quebec City lcptt-ot l-i‘ 7.11‘ ,7’. hold in Montreal, might expect to llrzllv export slllp- Sore], Ones-Tho liaritiulo seaports alight expert to drnlv export ship- ments following tho British ruling that wheat to gain the British pre- ference must be consigned to tho Unit- ed Kingdom direct from a Canadian point. Tile figure represents well over ll tlllrd of tlu- total of Canadian grain that is it» storage throughout Canada and at linitrtl States terminals. The total is 23S,000,0tl0 bushels. U! that anluunt stored from the head of tho lakes eastward, 50,302,101 ,bushcls are hold at the bead of tllo lakes terminals: 7,020,501 in Quebec: 2,200,045 at llailfax, Saint Jolln and West Saint John and tho relllainder is held at Ontario elevators or afloat. The more than 21,000,000‘ bushels held ill Ontario are (livlded as fol- lows: Coiiinglvooll 140,501; Gooderlcll ljHtLZi-lli; killgston 7.11.081); hliliinull, 5,300,712; Owen Sound 1.4 ‘i1; Port Volborno 13.1.1111 Port .\ll:i\'ichnll : Prescott. ti Oil; Sarllla 2,437,- Tiffiu 1,512,’ Toronto 011,071; and in floating storage at lower lakes ports- 5,202,517. Tho total Cnnlldlan grain held at United States ports tonight. was 8,- 903,209 bushels and at United Slates lcuiloard . ' l$‘.!,0.'i2 Churchill, lilan has 2,430,283 b is. The Canadian west holds the l'l'lll2l|l|llt.‘1‘ outside the U0,- 0004100 bushels between here and the Atlantic. WHEAT PRICES HIT STRIDE and ‘VINNIPEG, Jan. 4--\\'heat prices hit tilcir stride In the llelv year on the grain exchange today and piled up gains of nearly two cr-nts before tho close. (‘olulnissioll houses in Chic- ago were lll tho market, offerings hers were light, and demand increas- ed as cables firmed. Sales of (‘nuadian wheat abroad were not so largo today as they llava been lately but eastern interests seem- ed to be absorbing a good deal of wheat fur investment purposes and a good volume of mixed buying was generally evident during the session. Outside lual-kcts also did we]. Liverpool and Chicago closed with gains alld liuenos Aires was frac- tiuually higher at neon. Argentine wheat is being offered more cheaply than Canadian wheat llllt little demand ' is developing for it in Europe, (Canadian Press) SVINNIPEG, Jan. -l-— CLOSE Wheat: iillly 4014A: July 4715-165- (lats: liloy 23%: July '.'3l'l¢\- Barley: iiiay 21191,; July ‘ CASH PRICES Wheat: No 1 hard 44%: No l nor 11%; ‘hi: No 3 nor 30%: No 4 nor 3719151) 6 .'i.'l'.(l1l\'o 0 31%; Feed 27%; Track 41%; No 1 duruln l8 . ‘Oats: No 2 C \V 22%; No 3 C W d o! 1 feed 21%- No 1 feed 20%; a . Nno a feed 18%: its-fret"! 19%: Track Bllrley: lilaltlng grades 0A and 2 row ex .7 C W 32%: Other Emil" N" 3 C \V 211/‘; No 4 (T ‘VQ-llllli N?‘ 5 C \V 23%; No o c w 225g; Track slot. When YourCough Hangs On, Mix This at Home Saves 82. 8o Easy! No Cooking! The best cough remedy that money could buy can easily be mixed at homo. It costs vcr little. yet it's the most ro- llsble, aple -acting medicine you ever used. he way it takes hold of stub- born cou hs. giving immediate relief, ll aatonis lag. - Any dru st can supply cu with 2 ounces o finer. Pour t. is into a oa. bottle, and add granulated sugar syrup to make 18 ounces. To make p. use 2 cups of sugar and one cu o water and stir a few moments un diasolv . No cooking needed. It's na trouble at all and saves two-thirds of the money a lanlil usually spends on cough medicine. eeps perfectly and tastes flue. It ia surprising how quickly this loosens the germ-laden phlegm. soothes and heals the ' " " meln ranea, clears the air passs a. and thus ends a severe cough in a u Pine: is a colnponn of Norway Pine in concentrated form. the most reliable healing agent for severe cou ha. t is guaranteed to give prompt re ief or money refunded. EXCHANGE (Canadian Press) NONTREAI». Jun. 4—British and @7911!" ¢'Xt'l"l"l¥° l0 relation to the .anadlan dollar. as l-olnpiled by the Royal linllk of Canada closed today us follows; Denmark krone .1057. Finland flnnlsrlr .0100. lFrance franc .0141 Germany reichslnark .2090. urcat Hr-ltaul pnund 11.7041 Greece rlraclllllu .0061. Holland (‘aria .-t.‘i.'l1. Illlllgury [a nun _.l073. i u. lllllin rupcc ltnLv lire. 7. Janna yen .2309. Jllgoslavla dlllnr 015R. New Zenlnnll pound 3.1221. Norlvay krona .1015. Poland zirtl .127." lfnlllnanln ll-ll .0070. South Africa pound 3.0418. Spain pesetu .0921. Sweden krone .2055. Switzerland franc .2171. United States dollar 12% percent prclululn. NFHV YORK, Jan. 4—((".I‘.)—'I‘llc (‘anaditln dollar llnll pound sterling advanced on foreign exchanges t0- lllly. The dollar closed it. cent strong- r-r at 8% ill-id rents (United States premium of 125.’. per cent). And the pound enefiiil the dllv ll-ltl neat higher at $1.711 5-10 for cables. lts peak for the 4101‘. The dollar opened at R9!’ rents. Sterling stnftoll flit‘ (lily lli $1 ‘L’! ll-ltl, and touched a low for the dny of $311314. at noon. RIONTREAL, Jan. Frown-Sterling atui lillitrd States funds 1n tr-rllls of (‘anruliall 1l||II1f\_\' moved 1n opposite trends today. The pound moved up $3.102! tn 551.7044 while the dollar eased 2% percent. premium. k-tfanadlan 4-—(A.l’.)-For- llenlllnrl rates: 5-1112 Low ii MISCELLANEOUS ‘ SYGAII. NEW YORK, Jan 4—(A.I‘.)—Raw sugar ums firmer today and spots ad- vanecd another 3 points. January contracts advanced to .70 while .\in_v sold up froln .82 to .80 with final pril-cs at the ilcst of the session. Sales were 1717150 innit, Jan. closed .70, .\in .7ti, Slay S1, July S11, Sept. .81), lit-c - . liefiltcd pnices were lower. t T N 4—(A.l'.)-f'n_r- ion futures rinsed firm. (‘losing hid Jan 012: Feb March 021-023 April 112,-‘; ling-F, Race Schedules Co m ing Season (By W. H. Gocher) Two of the most important cir- cuits have announced their dates for i933. The Bay State Circuit led off early in November with the strongest chain of meetings since it was organized in 1914 and the Grand Circuit followed with its groupthe week of the New York sale. This year the opening meeting of the Bay State Circuit has been switched o0 Goshen, N. Y, one of the leading eastern training cen- ters from which it will secure local Sillllbort. as well as the cooperation of those who will‘ be in line ready to take the word in June. From that point the stables will ship to Chatham. The races will be contested over the track of the Columbia. County Agricultural So- ciety which will as usual hold its fair and race meeting Labor Day week. ‘ Northampton will be the scene of the third meeting in the circuit. It: can be depended on to keep up the standard of racing which has been seen at; that point since the circuit made its first bid for public favor. The next stops will be in Con- necticut where there will be two meetings, the first at Avon and the second at Windsor the week of July 4. These meetings have always been leaders not only in the amount of money offered but also in the quality of the racing material. Bturbridge will be the next. stop. The Cedar Lake Park meetings have been noted for the brilliant contests which have entertained the patrons of this perfectly ap- pointed course. From Stat-bridge the leaders will line up with the Grand Circuit at Salem. This meeting will be the fourth in that series. As usual it will open with s. two weeks stand at North Randall. From there the stables will move on to Toledo and Buffalo, The present schedule calls for two weeks racing at Rocking- hsm Park. When it was adopted it was .st.at.ed that one of the weeks would go to Hartford in the event of a meeting being put on at Char- ter Oak Park. ‘rho Good Time Park meeting at Goshen is the nest in line. Last year it. held the most. attractive in the series, notwithstanding the loss of a day by rain. From Orange County the stables will ship to tho Illinois State Fair at Sprinkfleld. This brings the dates up to Labor Day week when the owners of mile track racing material can choose between the New York State Fair meeting at Syracuse or the In- diana state Fair at. Indianapoiil- After the two state fairs there will be a skip until Lexington unless the open dates are filled. There are enough mestinll Mini - liowey Gold . i MINING (Canadian Press) TORONTO, Jan.‘ 4- liioeka Acme Oil ... ... ... ..... .. (‘olulllarln .. liolue Vines . lwlfflllfib .. .. lioidnic liranllda . Nrer .... .. llnillnger ... ... . Homestead kirk Lake .. Knutenay .. . ... Lake Shore . Xincnssa .. .. .. .. Rinlartlc ... Yifan Basin ... ... iifcintyrc .... .. “erlalltl ... . hllnlng (‘orp . iiinffat llall .. H’. Xloss Iifinos llurnh!‘ blcvtttie Nell-bee Nipisslng Noralldn North (‘all Premier Pros All Qucmont . Sanantonlo Sarnln Slu-rriit .. Siscrle Ntlallavolln . Sud Iiasill . Sylvaulte 'l‘aallot:l .. ’i‘eek ilughes '|'holns (‘ad .. 'l‘n\v:ll:lu.'lc . 'l‘rcatlwell .. l‘nit Kiri: .. Vacuum . Ylpolld .. Waite Wright liar . '1! f‘ .. ..- Totnl sales . YNLISTED Ii llissoltrl ... l‘l~u “all .. .. lflu-ln lit-s .. (l-Uopper .. .. (‘nniaurulu ... Plldrlrallo ... tlnotlllsll llnlue Oil Ventures ... . (‘UIKII ‘ .'.\;v.nl.'l . ltaltilvln Iiolllo .. . Brett Tr . . (‘en Pat . Dom l-ixpl lfr-ora .. . kirk Illlnt Kirk 'l‘olvll Lain- .\lal'nu ]\/fe\\’n I t "rs Oil Salt-rt llilnlzo So lit-or. . . (Cilnndinn Press) 1fON'l‘lil'l.\i._ Jan. ~l—'-l’rices held firul on the produce alld dairy nlnr- ket here ti-Tlnyn" i 7 Fresh graded eggs in cariots or» less were qllntc-d at {i3 to 31 cents for ‘I do H0 cents for (lPSltlWfHItl cut-s a dozen for pallets. la carlols or less were firsts 10% to 20 cents to 1i! cents a dozen. eases. . of an 1 finest grass butter were. 211/. tn 211,5 cents n pound. ller-pipls \\f‘l"l' til‘ boxes. (‘urrollt (lntnrln colored cheese was R11 to fiii, vents, current Ontario white 01,; to or; cents and early On- tario make 101,5 tn 11 cents a pound. Receipts were ~13 boxes. Potatoes were firm New Brunswick or Prince Edlvarrl Island green moun- tains, pen S0 pound ban, were S5 tn no cents-and Prince ildward island green lnnuninlns, per 00 pound bag, 0.‘. to S held over mile tracks in September to take up all the weeks if the as- sociations could agree on dates Last yeah-and no doubt the same thing will occur in 1933, in acidi- tion to Syracuse and Indianapolis going on Labor Day week the flags will be up atDetroit and Hemline. This clash scatters the money to be raced for but at. the same time it; makes s. slash in the quality of the racing. ' INDIINION 0F CANADA PROVINCE 0F v PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND IN THE PROBATE COUIIT 23rd George V, A. D. 105B of Francis Bradley in Re Estate By tllc llonollrallle llarolll Leonard Palmer. Surrogate Judge of Probate. etc, etc. To the Sheriff of the County of Queen! County or any (‘nstsllle ol- literate person within said County GREETING Whereas upon reading the petition on file of Joules Aeneas Bradley of Kellyfis Cross aforesaid, Farmer, and Francis liradley of the same place, Farmer, the azxecutnrs of the above named cslute praying that a citation may be issued for tile purpose here- inafter set forth: You are therefor hereby ra-quired tn cite all persons interested ill the snld Estate to be and appear hefnro me at n Probate Court to be held in the Court lfnuso lll Charlottetown, in Queen's County, in the said Province, on Wednesday tho eighth day of February next. enm- lng, at the hour of eleven o'clock foronoan of the same day to silew rouse if ally they can why tho At‘- counts of the said Estate should not he pn-x-w-d and the Estate closed ns prayed for in said petition and on luotion nf ll. Francis lifacfhcc, Esq, Prortor for said Petitioner. And I do hereby order that ll true copy hereof he forthwith published in some news- paper published la Charlottetown aforesaid, onec each week for at least four consecutive weeks from the data hereof atld that ll true copy hereof be forthwith posted in tho following public places respectively, namely, in the hall of tile Court House in Char- lottetown, aforesaid and in front of the flank of Nova Scotla in Charlotte- town aforesaid, and in front of tho school-house in Kelly's Cross llfmo- said. an that all persons interested in the said Estate as aforesaid may have dur- untire thereof. Given under my hand nnll Seal of the said Court this 110th day nf De- cr-nlber .1. ll. 1071'.‘ and in lilo ‘J-‘lrd. 3 ‘a! 4-1‘ ills .\la_ln.~l - reign. (Sgt i II. I». PALMER Stocks Do Pfd . . Can C I’ Int Nickel Quebec Po Winnipeg the including snld for at $1.75. llllp Toll TORON 10 cents. 1nd A It. lloln Bridge . Dom Steel and Cnnl Massey ilsrl-is .\lt:Coll Front .. Montreal Pow" Power _Corp . Nut Brew .-.. . . .. -. .. _... Shawllligall .. . Steel of (‘allnlln Walker i‘fll .. Montreal Stock Market (Canadian Press) wer . Iii .. lie-ll ’l‘cl ... ... ... ... .. 1.... Brazilian .. ... ...- ... ... .... '1? .. ' LIVESTOCK (Canadian Press) MONTREAL, Jan. only 112 cattle, 20.7 calves, 0&3 hogs and lti sheep and lambs fnr sale on two Montreal livestock mark-era. H0 cattle, 000 hoes and ‘lfiti l-alvl-s held over from ycstzr- days ulurkct. There was a fnlfly good clean up made on cattle. Common steers were quoted llt $8 to $3.50 with fair cnws selling beta-eon $2 and $2.25. (‘ailcs were slow. Today's was again easier. nhnnt 4—Tbers The steep market was unchanged ’."'n-rt- was no denaud for bogs and up to time of writing, no early safes M T’L. CURB (Canadian Press) FLA SII (Canadian Press) 1'0, Jan. (‘lone WQIO tradlng 4 Prices were 2-’; to .11 rent.» lower on drinkers and veals. i-‘alr in lnedlllm q-nllltv calves were $5 to 3.5.2.1. Grassera not selling. One slu..‘.l lot was weighed were 4-—Fnlconbrlllgl Nickel blllles Company at the lug of its directors today, new rhanter by votlnl! its first divi- dend in be paid Jan. 2o_ to sharehold- M»: 01' record Jan 1-1. The amount is meet- opened a CENTRAL GIMBIIIAII 11;? FORUM-BAND TONIGHT. Ex- cellent ice, 7439-11 OFFICERS ELECTED-Officers for L. P. U. for 1933: Pres. Arthur Gormley; Vice Pres., Jos. Trainer; ‘Treasurer, Joe. Burns; Sec. Jos. Thistle; Guide, D. McKenzie; Guardian, A. Ryan; Trustees, W. McNeili, R. Gallant, M. Eugen; Re- cording Sec., T. Bell. WEEK 01-‘ PRAYER SERVICES —The service this evening will be u held ln Bt. James Church, begin- nlns at. 7.30 o'clock. The Rev. Dr. E. H. Ramsay will be the preacher, i- taking as the topic “The Consecrs- I tion of our Business and inclus- " tries." FORUM—BAND TONIGHT. Ex- cellent ice. 7459.11 PLEASANTLY IINTERTAINED- The altar" and choir boys of St. Dunstans Basilica to the number of about sixty were the guests of Rev. Louis Dougan at. a most en- joyable banquet at the Margaret Bethei Tea Rooms Tuesday even- ing. The affair, which is not» the first of the kind enjoyed through the good offices of Father Dougan, was given in appreciation of the faithful and satisfactory work of the boys under his direction, and was greatly enjoyed. Father Doug- an presided and was assisted by Rev. C. McCarthy. ...? HAD FINE RECORD-Sergeant. Thomas Taylor who passed away on ‘Tuesday was born in Annandsle in 1845, the sou of Mr. William Tay- lor. and was one of a family of six sons and two daughters. In 1867 he cams-to Charlottetown, worked at. North River for a number of years and afterwards as attendant in the old hospital for the insane. In 1874 his father sold the farm and with members of the family, and others, eleven in all, removed to California. IvLr. Thomas Taylor, however, re- Sleep Fine Avoid Kidney Acidity Thousands suffering and losing en- ergy fronl (letting U t Nights. Back- ac s, Stiffness. Leg sins. Nervous- aeas. Acidity or Burning. caused by poorly functioning Kidneys or Blad- der, ahould use ystsx (pronounced Bias-teal) sDcclaliV prepared for three troubles. ‘Jvorka fast. circulating through system in 16 minutes. Only 76c at druslrista. Guaranteed to ft: you up or money hack on return of empty package. in farming in Tryon for three years. He then returned to Charlottetown and worked with the late Dr. J. '1". Jenkins. Later he served three and a half years as attendant in the Fslconwoocl Hospital, and was ap- pointed a member of the Charlotte- town police force on March, 1887. I-ie rose to the rank of sergeant and retired from the force after 37 years of faithful and highly competent service. I. 0. 0. F. hiEETING-At a e119!!- ial meet ng of the I. 0. O. F. tn- morrow evening in Moncton Past. Grand Sire Powlcy will address the members. Other speakers will 1n- elude Grand Master J. T. Nicholson of Sydney Mines, N. S.; Grand Patriarch R. Perry, Moncton, and the president of the Rebekah as- sembly, Mrs. Ruby Hollie, city. who leaves this morning for Moncton. Mr. J. J. McKlnnon, Grand Secre- tary, also leaves today to attend the Moncton meeting. QUEENS COUNTY COURT- During the last two days s. number 0f cases were dealt with in the Queens county Court by His Hon- our Judge Duffy On ‘Ihesday the case of Wilfred Cormier vs. James Power. an actidn for wages due was completed. Judgment. was given for the defendant with costs. R. R. Bell for the plaintiff, and H. F. MacPhee for the defendant. In the case of Ivan Reddln and Donald Grant vs. James Power. an action for money due on s contract, judg- ment was given for the plaintiff. Gilbert Gaudet, K. 0., for the piainfiff and H. F. MacPhee for the defendant. In the case of (l Judge of Probate. flfl-l-lilThar-ei CHEVROLET SIX A NEW. with Full... NO-DRAFT Ventilation COMING SOON-the new 1933 Chevrolet: Six-styled, powered and priced to be first _ choice among low-priced cars! It's "Air-Streamed"--tlle most excitingly- styled Chevrolet you’ve ever seenl It's ‘the biggest m in the low-price field-danger, - roomier, with new riding comfort! Ir wins a comple e victory over vibration-with an even smoother Cushion-Balanced six-cylinder engine! And it offers the greatest develop- ment since the introduction of the closed body—Fi.lber NO-DRAFT Ventilation! RIFIIOT‘ THE “DRIVER'S VIEWPOINT". lit For months, Chevrolet and General Motors asked motorists, "What do you want in your next car?” For months Chevrolet engineers planned, improved and tested, with the re- suits of this Canada-wide survey to guide them. Newt-in just a few days-the new i933 Chevrolet Six, Made Io Order for Canadians, st: lo-mulllnwfs runs WHAT 30.000 IVIOTORIITS TOLD U5 This “Automobile Buyer's Guide" summarizes the mum of our rascal annoy among Canadian motorists. Not all advertisement, this hook provides Information which you will find valu- able In choosing your next car. Write copy to Customer Research Dept-i General Motors Products o! Canada, Limited, Oshawa. Ontario. GMAClrma . . ration Plan . . . In comes to our showrooms. Watch for itl 1! looks entirely new! Has unique "Air- Streamed" styling. New bodies by Fisher- the biggest, roomicst bodies in its price class: V-sllaped radiator. Skirted, anti-splash fenders. J If’: thrilling to ride in and drive! Extra horsepower unleashes new “puncll" and new "pick-up". New Silent Second Syncro-Mcsll gives 40 m.p.l'l. acceleration in second gear- smoothly. New Octane Selector gets all the pep and power out of every kind of gas. And a new low center of gravity permits wonder- ful riding-ease. WHAT OTHER NEW FEATURES? Safety Glass windshield. "Starter-star"- ~a new, highly-simplified starting system. Larger, even more effective brakes. New style upholstery. Cowl ventilator. Pointer-type speedometer. And a dozen more that we haven't space to tell about! Remember, coo, that the new Glevrolcc is the proved Six. And-you can count on even greater economy! Keep your eye on Chevrolet . . . learn what “the driver's point of view" has accom- plished in motor car design! l Price: that isle accrual i! today‘: lnrames . . . my genemu Dominion-ride Lubri- dladia len he: (hush lqbrfnflatll. A. HORNE é? CO. CHARLOTTETOWN. P. E. I. and Mrs. Mrs. Cris brother her tion do Notre STREETS of the action. vlrlnter. structcd to George Dennis vs. last, an acllon to. was given for the plaintiff. Gilbert. Gsudet, K. C. for R. R. Bell for the tit-fondant. Yes- terday the ca and Sons vs. action for mom-y oi’ a car, was hen" given for the plat .:f. n. N lilac-l and 25 rents- Neill for the plant; rr. ’ ‘ PERSO TVAL. Archii; i Mr. and Mrs. 1 Grand River, spt Mrs. MacLellalfs Mrs. John T. Dr. C. C. Arch mild leaves this’ morning on a vlsloto hospitals tn Montreal, Toronto and Boston. He will be absent about two monthsi Archibald leaves on a nsit "50,, or slunmvr: with friends in Halifax. Miss Marion Taylor, who is at- tending West Kent School, return- ed to Charlottetown of‘. the Christmas hoi days parents, Mr. and Ivirs. Urban ’i".l;.'-,‘_ _._i._ Unh-erSiyrS ior, North Granville. f ' Georges, spent n most. week 1n Summerside the guest of MacLellan, and of who ls a member of the Congrega- Frlends will be pleased to learn that Miss Bessie Blanchard, organ- ist at St. Dtlnstzlnls Basilica is coll- valescing nicely at her home alter spending some tune Hospital for treatment. 'BOSTON. Jan. 4~Joyfu1 are the children. Police have been ziot-lfied Street Commissioners setting aside scores of streets for coasting this Officers have PAGE FIVE Joseph A. Gal- reut, judgement the plaintiff. so ct W. B. Prowse Lt-z- - 1 T. Rush, an —- on Tuesday on tcton where she ' ing spent the to guest of Mr. Hunter. ii J. MscLcllan. l 7 Q Sunday witn, tents, Mr. and: Mr 11).’, Clortnoltt. Cilarlottctoltvtl i Summerside to rd to learn that csslezt-S ' --).i‘r. Ernest lvlacCorlnac, SL. enjoyable‘ c110 hundred Reverend Gregory flocks a5 her daughter, ccss in his new Dame. i ics at. Prince CllHi‘i0l.i(‘iO\\'il in the City FOR. COASTING L-Mr. Thomas done N. 8., from a pleasant ofthc Board 0t been in- n thicken ranch on the estate \'.'('§i of Sump: a commencement. many friends vcish him every sitc- tives in Sununcrt-idr. he was the guest of his uepilerv. Mr. Everett Phillips-S other streets 13060115? of the prohibit coasting on ger of accidents. SIIMMERSIDE i and Prince County . —1IOCKEY MATCH in the Ken- sington Rink, Friday, January 6th t; v m. the 531g at 8.30 pm. Victoria vs. Kensingtol Judgment was McLean League game. AclmL-zsion 1| 7487-1-5-21 -Miss Greta Rogers and llclrrlt dtogers passed through Summersidl- their return to Mt- Mrs. Helen G. ‘TeNeiii returned Allison University, Sackville, hav- isst night from .\ spent New Years. holidays with their parents Mr. and birs. H. Rnsqc-l ilogcrs Colelnau. PERSONALS —£»i‘l'. and lvirs. Frank-Jubilant: oi lift-lit Monday in V-Sii. the former] mother, Mrs. “Fhomas Joltnsolf-S ~l~lcr many friend.» will he pic-as- Alrs. Tnonlas John- nie. vxhe is —.\i.'. allci Mrs. Joseph Collusion‘. Q1‘ siienilllii-flof Summersztic have as their purest Willi h" Mr. James Callaghan of Si. Dun- Darby has sizlrted old Price side and has Pifzncuth His barred undcrtakilm - S -~Mlss Adelaide Humphrey Pro- fessor of History and Mathemat- of Wales College, is spending the Christians holidays \vllh her folks at Kcnsillgton.-K Follsnd of Hazel- retllrneti on Monday lllF- rela- wilzic theK \'l.§li 13.11‘ darl- '1 pctzous- ' 1y ill at. her home, i5 resting a Lttit