SEPTEMBER 27, 1949 _..,/__ . ,_ . for your most cherishe at all the nicest stores. From $1.40 DARK SECRETH dllurlnq off-block. HAZE. . . . . . . . . feminine new warm grey.- JAUNTY. 2 delectable light brown. MIDNIGHT BLUE high-fashion blue. MOON MIST 2 22 shadowy twilight grey. NYMPH. 2 i . . .2 sun-tinted Ilash tone. '. exciting coppery tona. . . . flattering neutral beige. SPICY. . . . . . . a . . glowing sunllt tan. VIXEN.‘ : : : . . as: soft muted toppery tone. flowc- ll" yitlliiiillitw. o d KAYSEIPS lemon t . . guaranteed rrrra GUARDIAN. CEIARLOTTETOWN PAGE 11mm l Magic? Yes - KAYSER colours blend with all the smart new Autumn styles — KAYSER hosiery shades harmonize with every important colour grouping. Wherever you go, KAYSER'S glowing new Fall colours are lashion-right-righf costumes. In the five famous Nylon “Fit-All-Proportions" "Fit-All-Hsel“ not to twist. HOSIERY - GLOVES - UNDERiHINGS .4 THE CENTRAL GUARDIAN I This column la ruerved for news o! local Interest, but advsl-tflng of a newsy nature may be incited ltllvaolstaawtml, strictly payl- ahle Influence. COOK'S {or Photographs. Jlhlllflll’! TAXI. Phone e30. OONFEDIBATION, LIII TN- BUBANCE. CITY TAXES - Third install- ment City of Charlottetown taxes » must be paid by September 30th. or interest will be charged. HEAR ‘HIE BROOKLYN TRIO at the W. M. S. Thankoflerlng in New London Presbyterian Church. Sunday, October 2nd, at 1.30 P. M. NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS». Advertisers are reminded that their copy must be tn the Guardian not later than noon the prev- ious day to guarantee insertion. Out of city advertisers who tele- phone classifieds, etc. should par- ticularly bear this in mind. ronrv nouns nnvdwlou- The Forty Hours Devotion com- menced Sunday at the Church of the Most Holy Redeemer and will conclude on Tuesday evening. The Rector, Very Rev. Edward Bald- win, C.sa.R., was the celebrant of Sunday's 10:30 Mass at which the devotion opened. The sermon was delivered by Rev. J. McGillivary. C.ss.R. CITY POLICE COURT-At the Stipendiary Magistrate's Court yesterday, two men charged with common assault appeared, one be- ing fined $10 and costs or 10 days while the other was discharged. Two cases‘oi drunken driving were also heard, one men being sentenced to seven days in Jail and the other remanded (or one week. A drunk and disorderly was sentenced to 20 days held tor good behaviour, while two men appearing on charges o! being drunk and incapable were dealt with, one being committed to 20 days on an old charge and the other was lined $5 and costs or 10 days. MISCELLANEOUS SHOWER. — Last Tuesday evening Miss Olga Moreside, an October bride-to-be. was given a miscellaneous shower by her friends at the home oi Mrs. H. M. Howatt, 178 Wcymouth street. Miss Alecia Jenkins hand- ed the presents to the bride-to-be from a. pink and white trimmed basket which matched the room de- corations. Miss Joan Rogerson read the accompanying verses. The bride- to-be very prettily thanked her friends ior their kindness and ex- tended an invitation to them to visit her in her new home. Lunch was served and the girls all join- ed in wishing Olga. happiness in the future. Manrrma rnovmcas cnors -Rains have been beneficial to all crops and have not seriously ~ retarded harvesting. says Bank of Montreal Crop Report. Cornering of grains is practically completed and a good average crop is re- ported. While early frosts have as- sisted potato farmers by killing down the tops, rains have delayed digging operations oi late varie- ties and dry weather is now es- sential. Ring rot has developed in some areas, disquaiiiying the ai- iactcd crops for seed purposes. Other root crops have yielded well. A lair crop oi’ early apples has been picked and late varieties are sizing well; the total crop from the Annapolis Valley is. estimated at l.200/l.500,000 barrels. The blue- berry crop was the best in several years. Grass pastures are in fair- ly good condition, having been im- proved by recent rains. __.. I WAl-LPAPIRED MY IIOIAI FOR onLY '81? per ree 'I"‘~ /’ r? . Wiiito%d”[/(j,f/ wish/tall g/MZ ll l; ll ll l”- Pll S i I il W/lllP/IPHI IPI III TO PIT II TIIII ' Just in TIIMZ In wetet Ill Q- ply. Ne teels-av experience eve needed ta do an expect leh Iii see sues smenen OI PATTIIII leevtilvlpettsrnsinlsveiastripes. textum-ewenweedgrelnaflttdl Is guaranteed washable. tele- pnet, style-tested md ta hang sndmntch perfectln e sens ee m snases "seen -i'°"'l_'°.'LQ_I.I-.III". r. A. s. Jones’ I20 Kent 8t. ' C001’! tor Photographs. It WIVDILL KIIONAID. Radiologist. will be absent trcm Prince Idwsrd Island Hospital. Oct. 1st to 16th. CIT! TAXES — September 80th la the final date for payment o! third installment City of Char- lottetown taxes. CHANDLER. 3808., for all Ply- wood“ and Chrometglm require- men . CITY OI‘ CHARLUITBTOWN TAXES - Interest at the rate oi 14% per month will be charged on Olty o! Charlottetown third in- stallment of taxes i! not paid by September 30th. ENGAGEMENT - Mrs. Lillian Wedlock wishes to announce the engegemen o! her daughter, Mar- jorie Joan to Mr. Glenn Leslie Matheson, Marriage to take place in October. NOTICE ‘I0 ADVEBTIQIIQ. _ Advertisers are reminded that their copy must be in the Guardian not later than noon the prev- ious dsy to guarantee insertion. Out o! city advertisers who tele- one classifieds. etc., should par- cularly beer this in mind. ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCE- MENT. -- Mr. and Mrs. Horace White, Murray Harbour. announce the engagement oi their daughter Iieeta. Louise of Calgary, Alberta. to Ralph William. son of Mr. and Mrs. William Whitrow. Yellow Grass. Saskatchewan. ' Marriage to take place in the Murray Harbour Church of Christ, October fllst. 1949. at 3 P. M. VISITING PROVINCE — Mr. Athoi D. Msabeod. Vice President, A. lil. Long and Son, Inc. Cam- bridge, Mass., and Mrs. MacLeod, are visiting friends in the prov- ince. Mrs. Maclteod is the daught- er of the late Mr. and Mrs. Wm. A. Macleod. lnrne Valley. During part of their stay here they were Buests oi Mr. and Mrs. John A. Manhood. Brcadalbane. IN MAGISTRATES COURT — Two Ch-ii-ttetown residents sp- peared before Magistrate Gilbert A. Gaudet in the Queen's Oounty Magistrate's Court yesterday morn- ing. The tirst was convicted of uttering a forged cheque and was sentenced to twelve months in jail. The other convicted under the Excise Act for the second time was sentence’ to a, $500.00 fine and in case of default o! psy- ment to serve six months in Jail. Personals Mr. Errol Carruthers, Augustine Cove, has returned to Mt. Allison gniversity to resume his studies ere. Mr. and Mrs, Merritt Ramsay o! Campbelitcn and W. F. Mac- Farlene of Bedeque were business visitors to the city on the 26th. Misses Ora Ballem and Ruby Down have returned to the city stter visiting Toronto. Hamilton and other cities o! interest. The many friends o! Mrs. Lloyd Stordy of Tryon regret to learn that she is a. patient in the Prince County Hospital in Sum- merside. Friends o! Mr. Got-ham Cooke. East Royalty will regret to learn that he has re-entered hospital for further treatment. Friends join in wishing him a speedy re- turn to health. m. and Mrs. Randolph Manning have returned from an auto trip to Montreal, Toronto, Niagara and Boston. While in Toronto they at- tended the annusl meeting o! the I‘ ' ' Association of Chartered Accountants, held at the Royal York Hotel. CARD OF THANKS I wish to thank the clergy. Doctors and Nurses, also my triends and neighbours for their kindness during my recent illnem in th Charlottetown Hospital. . hlh. French Murphy. South Shore, P. E. l. IN MEMORIAM In loving memory of Mrs. Whiter Mclntne (Auburn-i) who paced away septwnher Mtb, 194d. aweeterettememeslesthatllnaer Deaaeretheones that aregcne Inmesnorywcliheldyoudearller Allongaaflle years mlllllm]. InflngIyIIIesnbeIedhryAma endltfary IN MEMORIAM In loving munory of THOMAS BTIWAIT lsndngtcn who paced away Jeptsnbse filth. 1N5. hssrtetlhyWihanllsn. IN MEMORIAM i SPECIAL ‘M: m» ~=__-.-....-.... 4'! bu. i 24-lb. bag I IIASII and GAIIIIY STIIRES 187 Gt. George St. Phone 141 We Deliver GII. i? Canadian Gamblers TORONTO, Sept. 75 -- Canad- ians, betting an estimated $150.- 0O0,000 on various rackets annual- LY. gamblers much money per capita on gamb- are North America's biggest -- spending twice as ling as do Americans, according to a copyrighted article in Coronet. I1’ gambling were considered an industry, the article says, it would be listed in Canada's statistics just below gold mining and considerably above shipbuilding, fisheries and machiner. A cross-country survey or gamb- ling in Canada, made in co-oper- ation with police and anti-vice in- vestiga.‘ rs showed the following: 1n Toronto, despite police action which brought about the convic- tion oi 800 persons on gambling charges in the past year, an es- timated 1.000 active bookmakers continue to operate one oi the largest betting centers on the con- tinent. 0n one street alone, there are approximately three book- makers to every block. In Montreal, one investigator describes gambling as "the city's biggest single industry." A recent court conviction o! one or Mont- real's leading gamblers disclosed that he had an annual turnover from three betting parlors of t2,- 5(I),000. In one two-month period, he cleared $100,000 from baseball and horse-racing bets. The con- victed bookmaker was only one membe of the city's gambling ire.- terntty. which was described as controlled by a five-man syndicate employing 12,000 people. Driven underground for a time by the raids, Montreal gamblers are again coming out o! hiding. In the Windsor area, gambling is centered in the suburbs out of jurisdiction of city police. ‘Phese suburban establishments also serve as the “back and" or "beekeeping" quarters {or Detroit bookmakers, Mclnnis-ilrazel Wedding l. Jeschinh Church at Vernon River was the scene o! a very pret- time“ not“ ca“. w , mug er o s. and the lsta Joa- i nnia of Ismael-life ‘came the bride o! lawrence Wil- fred, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas “'5”. ‘éiimflii “i”; m“ Ur ls, pa pres, per- ‘formed the ceremony and celebrat- ‘ ed the Nupttel Mess. ‘The altar was Itastefully decorated by irlends o! lthe bride. During the Nupttal Mass iappropriate hymns were sung by Mr. Martin Power and Miss Mar- lgaret Brazel, accompanied by Mrs. "fifiiiil “"12”. °fi;‘“‘.’fi" h e e en re e urc on the arm of her uncle, Mr. FM. McInnis, Regina. Basic who gave her in marriage. The bride looked very winsome tn her long white satin weddin gown. Her onl or- nament wasga double stranId o! pearls, a gift of the groom. Her shoulder length veil was held in place b a coronet oi’ orange blos- soms. Syhe carried n hand bouquet o! red roses. Miss Helen Brazel, sister or the groom was brides- maid and looked lovely tn a gown o! gender blue sfitinl on same lines as r e’s, er s ou der-length veil (ell from a coronal; 0i flowers, and was the same color as her dress. She carried a hand bouquet o1 pink "3555- ‘T119 Broom was ably sup- ported by Mr. Michael McInnis, brother o! the bride. lvir. Melvin Brazel and Mr. Joseph McInnis not‘: es ushers, e bride's lnother wore e with black nccesories with“: corsage of mixed sweet peas, while tikengroormgsc mottllaer wore black and w 9 p wt e accessories BM ‘$011186 of rnixegd gweet peas. A delicious wedding breakfast was served to about sixty guests at the home of the bride. miniature bride and groom. The "mt We! Proposed by Rev. no. Callaghan and responded to by the gmom. 'l.‘he bridal party left on a short motor trip and returned 1a- ter that evening to the home o! the groom where supper was serv- ed to about one hundred and titty guests including Rev. L. l’. Calla- ghan, Rev. V. Mumsghan, J. lites- ter Douglas MP. Music and danc- 111g was indulged in till the wee sma’ hours when all departed wishing the bride and groom many W"! o! happy wedded bliss. effectively out u! reach o! De- troit's antt-gambitng squad, one. ario provincial police are now tn- vectigating a tip-off from Detroit authorities that some 2o Windsor district hide-outs are co-ordtnating m! filterations, via telephone and messenger, ot American gambling rings, - i», 1n the Marittmes, the R.C.M.P. has information that no fewer than ten gambling syndicates were op- erating simultaneously this year. In ‘e. recent series o! a2 raids, at Hal- ifax. Sydney, North Sydney and Amherst. 8125.000 of lottery tickets were seized. Each of the syndic- ates was running l, dtiierent type o! lottery, mostly based on the out. come of baseball and hockey games. Describing the racket as flourishing 1or years, the RCMP. disclosed that one group tn Halifax had a turnover of 80.000 tickets g The table was centered with a three tiered wedding cake topped by a Now! Toni Home Permane__|t_ti_ TWICE as EASY-M, TWICE as FAST.‘ NEW TONI SI CIIRLERSs NEW FASTER PROCESS I 1:7, . Ne rubber bands-nil plastic-all-In-onel Grips . . . Spins . . . locks with a flick of the finger. Makes every wove from new en twice n: eotyl New Photo Method Dirac- tbes show how ‘leni wens snany types eI heir in es little as 3O minulesl But II’! still the same gentle Toni formula that has given more than u million soil, natural- looklng waves. SPECIAL COMBINATION OFFER TONI REFILL KIT $1.25 New TONI SPIN CURLERS 2.00} $3.50 New TONI CREME RINSE .25 ra-w Value m my $229 week, with "chances" being sold in stores and barber-shape all over the town. In Vancouver. recent police raids revealed the West Coast city as headquarters of at least one Can- eda-wide lottery chain. ‘The police disclosure recalled a Police Com- mission Inquiry 0t two years ago which obtained evidence that at least 1,500 illegal establishments were operating then in Vancouver; one self-coniessed operator testi- fied he had a turnover of $15,000 to 020,000 in an average night. Although police across Canada attempt to bring gambling under control, the magazine describes how. by various methods, the gambling syndicates "go under- ground" to protect their continued existence. JEWEL IIOARD LONDON -— (C?) - London's famous Hutton Garden jewel mar- ket is to have its own bomb and burgiar-prooi strongroom, the only one o! its kind in Britain. More than 1.000 merchants will use the strongroom, where about. $40,000,- 000 worth o: jewels will be kept. THREE STATISTICIANS, Front $2.880 to $4.740, depending on posi- tion, Ottawa. A TECHNICIAN, (M A C H I IN I SHOP AND WELDING), #5804‘ 32,880, Ottawa. An ASSISTANT PHOTOGRAPHER, $1,860-$2,l60, Ottawa. Details and application forms at; Civil Service Commission, Nu tional Employment Service anti Post Office. i‘ A IIIIIIIITIIY GAIIIIEN (Continued lrom Page i) nice plump mushroom, and she sauih it too, but did not know I saw it“. Quick as a flash she pimped it. in one of her pockets and kept ‘or! talking. When I turned around I am sure I was more embsrrasse than she. I was so afraid might say or do something to lei her know that I knew she had the mushroom. I did enjoy the joke after sho had Bone home (to eaiI the mushroom I suppose). i “lost tooth loss cones iron g_s_ni troubles," say dentists. Illilll IlIlIIll IIIIAI AIIII llllli IIIIIIIBIIS BOTH! New dental research proves you tun Iiclp prevent tooth decoy cs you guard your gums-this douIiIy-elleciive lpunu wcyl , DENTISTS SAY THE IPAIIA WAY I PIIOIAUIES IIEALTHIEII GIIIASI In thousands el recent reports hem country, dentists any the lpsns way promotes healthier gums. That's just as important II MNIRI deco y, for dentists warn that you can't teeth without healthy gumsi My approved Ipena urn-for healthier taethsndhssl- thier gums both. all cmrtha have healthy thin danflat- DENTAL RESEARCH SHOWS NOW IPANA FIGHTS TOOTH DEGAYI Scientific research based on daily dental alumina- flnna new proves that every time, any time you brufi your teeth with Ipsna, it helps fight toot-h decay by elactiveiy reducing and keeping down the acid-forming bacteria. No other pom or powdlr |'| more effective for this purpose. llnove becteria-trepping depoliht that invite decay. HERE'S ‘IIIE DENTIST-APPROVED lPAIlA WAY-EASY AS I. 1: The Ipenn way II doubly" elective I. Bstuem nllllfll’ flail: to your dentist, brush ell _ tooth surfaces with ipsne altar every meal. (lpeufs special cleansing formula helps prevent hsotbdecsy~leevss taeth cleaner.) 2. Then massage gums the way your dentist advises. (ipsnfs mica- ‘ circulation-promoted and expense. Gum Ipcna dental care. hill ecid-formin Anrl Ipenl helps ‘ stimulate! bseitltbr gums.) Dentists warn that if you want: to eeve your teeth, you must protect: your teeth and gums both. For not only does tooth decay cause untold misery imubirs muse even more tooth loss?! than decay, according to loading dental autlioriticl- And gum troubles can strike anyone-even healthy youngsters and tcen-ugers-with little wamingi Now you and your family can help prcucnt tooth decay and gum troubles BOTH-with doubly-effective For new dental research now proves that Ipnnn'e Own special formula eiloctivcly reduces and harps bacteria-considered e major sub of tooth decay. Ipnmz fully meets these standards [or an anti-decay dentifrice. And more-Ipsna Is the only leading tooth pasta t.’ a - n - to ' gumcit ' ’ pm- mote healthier gums. IPANA a for Bot/t! “V‘_’ IIEALTIIIER TEETH, IIEALTIIIER GUNS