r—’ Iunmersldc: Bell Bookltnn. Wile: It Toronto Bllfll. Wlfm‘ St i? v-Th-ll column l: reserved _ of local interest but g , of a newsy nature may be insen- , ed at 2 cents a word strictly pay- able in advance. TiTrckLnvo VINEGAB, Spices, m, gt, Taylor Drug Co, Kensing- ion. ill-Ta. _wANTED — Three year old nurse. Must be sound and free trcni \‘lC£‘, Good size. Bay prelu- m. John Hammill, Albany. L-ilU-il-22-3l. _FOX RANCI-IERS ATTENTION; We have 100 Tons of pulled rice (coarse grcund) contracted for, for PrlllTC Edward Island rancners. clear color can be had by mlxi-ng this ingredient w.t.h your commerc- [a] locus. B-TST-tf. _RETUR.NED HOME _Mr. and Mrs. Mclvor and children Jean and Donald left on Friday on return to their home in British Cosumbla, af- ter visiting relatives in Kinkora-S _T0 STUDY MEDIGINE —Mr. Austin Delaney son of Dr. and Ms. Delaney. Wellington. left this W9C’ for Montreal to study medi- nne At MacGill University. S. _FOR SALE- 2 Cockshutt gang plows int Bayview) $l0.00-~$15.ti0; 1 cockshutt plow (Norman Waughs. Wiilllflii $10.00; 2 Massey Harris ting plows tLeonard Mccarville, Ireetownl (Edwin Brown, Margate) $5.00 each, good rolling cotlers re- conditioned last year. Walter Wccilts, Bayview. L-129-9-23-ii. —I\IOTORED T0 SYDNEIL- M1‘. lnd Mrs. H. G. Muttart and their fliiiClliCY-lfl-IEW, Mrs. Reginald- Mnpart and little son. David Garth, left this morning for Sydney, N. 8.. m a visit to Lleut. Reginald Mut- lart who ls stationed there-S -01.1) FOX RANCIIERS will tell ou cooked rice cannot be beaten or producing clear colored pelts. You can secure puffed (coarse and) rice at. all Sunzlo Dealers mflllgll September-—October and November. Q-TST-U. —W1NS LADIES CHAMPION- lllll‘ —- Mrs. Alex Home is the llllll(‘i'_ of the Indies Golf Cham- pionship A Division, at the Sside Golf Course. Mrs. L. G. Lewis is ninncr up. The Consolation Cham- ;on<hip playoff is yet to be played ha \"n committee will serve at the Club ti is aftcrnon and if the weath- cr ktcps fine a large crowd 1s expec- ltd out-S -l.EI"T FOR. MONTREAD- Miss Allffll O'Brien. president cl’ the Children of Mary Society at Alber- un. wits the guest of honor at a i1“ function given by the Society puor to her leaving for Montreal to inzcr Si. Mary's Hospital for train- ing. Miss MacQuaid on behalf oi the szsisty presented Miss O‘Br1en riih a lovely gift-S MPLOYMENT PROJECT ‘ - The unemployment ‘ct oi the Town of Summer- iii’ was commenced on Thursday with the laying of 800 feet of sewer Eco on Duke Street. This-pffllefit approved by the Federal Gov- tfillllTlli. This will bring work to a numhcr cf mcn in ncsd and a rrzat c» fit with winter ag- — (‘iUvlPAIGN WILL START liIONII-n’ -- On Monday. Septem- bor “"11. the Okto Club will start ils nnnncl collection campaign for the Prince Ccuntv Hospital. This lintitutcn is worthy of your sup- port and is in pressing need lunch to satisfactorily carry on. Efficient service and modern equip- ment within the Hospital are your personal gafcguard. as you do not know nt what, minute of the day or night you may be forced tn call upon its resources. Equipment of this nature entails the expenditure of considerable sums and the In- itituticn must lock to the General Public to supply at least a portion of those funds. For your own pro- fccucn. therefore. if for no other reiucn. we suggest. that you give willziwlv and btluntiiullv when the»: young ladies make their call "Don you. —M11. Myra. MacKay and Mr. lid Mrs. George MacKay were Vll- liars to Wllmot Valley, guests of “Pa. George Curtis. B- ~Mrs. Irene J. Hill of Lloyd- riiinsvr, Alberta, is visiting her gents. Mr, and Mrs, John kit‘. Summerside. S. ~Mrs, ‘Edwin McOarville and a)". Stanley have returned to their ClilC in Kinkora. alter e, delight- ill \'i=lt with Mrs. McCarvllleh “filler. Mrs. Mlillllily. Souris. ~It is pleasinq to report that h Margaret Craig of Middleton. able to be out again after her "tent illness. B. til/Kiss Lila Cameron of Albany col rettimrd home from the Prince “my Hospital where "the under- "m an opcration for appendicilés. ~Miss Catherine Ccyle of Mont- i}.- is visiting friends in cape “f1. She ‘l/as accompanied‘ by ‘m? Margaret McCarthy who is ‘W; her parents. Mr and Mrs “Kine MCCflflhy, 15c 4. l. Grace Clark of St. John. is visiting in Scarletown. N lhe " ‘ wngfgthher sister, Mrs. Waltgr hunt Viola-Ha m. a. u, gnimhas been visitilrziqtz hgr home in i,“ 239m left this week for Bos- M "F-Qvvas accompanied as far i ‘on by her mother, Mrs. and sister, ~Mis B The Guardian will be delivered gu-rlei- B01 at 2o per ill! or 10o p9) glvv W" "d" "9 U" b"! Iflllallllble for deliveries on your mute, Jfor new! in PERSONALS ’ The sUMiygD ffHE WESTERN GUARDIAN f - sulfur-Mn. John Pond, u w ‘m, t sumunsml, Ann mo: comvr! Balk-Phone 289-1 , um, Subscriptions, Advertising should be Ieftwllh n“, p“... The Guardian may be bought dully uf. my of the following store; in Gourllec Drug.“ _ Merl Geudel, oinormvuiile Edi’. ‘l’ lily home in Bummcrslde week. Phone 088-1 for this service or -PICKLI.NG VI etic... at Taylor DzugN€€f¥Ee§££§ "m L-7l3. —SUNGLO "IMPROVED" FALL geIiluRllING RATION now at ‘Rui- or in cube or meal form, is gleeziyogg%gv%tieltfseeg ‘érlisures ‘gun to instructions. 9"rI'lU~S:lc-9Iql1l€-?, --FREE with lwh Fil fine-it's‘ fgra lgesegloping éxlligelgrtintte a me . service Enman DruxgeandnPhotlaergt-{lf vice. Sumerside, P, E. 1, L-881-9-l4-15i. —BALPII G. MUTTART. Gen- eral Insurance Agency. Insurance of all kinds. Liberal contracts at lowest rates. Phone Bummerside, 527-1: 527-2. _ L-882-4-29-tf. —-CHICKEN SUPPER— St. Mark's Hall Kensington, Saturday Sept 30. Commencing 4 o'clock. L-l42-9-Zl-4l Borden and Vicinity’ Misses Florence and Kathleen Cunningham of shedlac. N. B. are visiting in Borden, tho gussts of Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Chappcll. Miss Geraldine Richard of Bor- den, who has spent the summer with relatives in St. Jc-"rn, N. B., returned home this week Mr, Blair Burch who has spent his vacation visiting in Boston and Quincy, Mass, returned to his home here on Tuesday. Blair leaves for Suckville next. weey to resume his xatudies at Mt. Allison University. Mr. Ralph Ozon of the Sum- merside Fur Pool is spsncfng his holidays at the home of his pa:- ents. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Ozcn of Borden. Mrs. Daniel Dunphy of St. John, N. B . who was the quest of Mrs Charles MacDonald o‘ Bordon left for home 0n Wednesday morning. We regret, to learn of the il‘n~=s of M's Isaac. Auld in the P. E. I Hospital. Below going to Char- lottetown Mrs. Auld made her home for some time with Mr niece. Mrs. John J. Maelsaac of Borden and her many friends here wish her a speedy recovery. A. Concern Over Roman Catholic Church In Poland By Edward K-cnncdy Associated Press Staff Writer VATICAN CITY. Sept. 22—(AiP) —Vat.ican cit prelates expressed concern over e future oi the Rom- an Catholc Church in Poland. es- pecially in that part of Poland oc- cupied by Russia. Pope Pius. who has received a rc- ort from Au ust Cardinal Hlond. mate of Po and who is in Rome, was d to be giving the situation his personal attention. Reports reaching the Vatican in- dicate that. while churches and cih- er religious buildings have suffered considerable damage,all Polish bish. ops with the conception oi the Pri- mate have remained in their sees. No word of lrglégious molestatlons V . has been rece but "Vexatioris < that Jack Jones hag fallen 1n love Jiritlsh Columbia's Legislature will T0114 Y ONL Y THE JONES FAMILY in “SAFETY 1N NUMBERS” Also Musical,‘ Pete Smith and Cartoon Shows at 3 - 7.30 ._.9;10 B UMMEBS 1D]: The Jones Family In "Safety In Numbers” At Capitol Theatre ‘Iihe Jones Family scored a great, hit at the Capitol ‘lneatre. Summer. side, last night 1n the latest of their pzctures “safety in Numbers." The screens favourite faintly are funnigi- than ever in this picture as they are. ail in apjam together. The nwwre Bllens with Mrs. Jones agreeing to go on the air with a. weekly broadcast on domestic prob. lams- Her sponsor controls the site of s’? new mineral water discovery in which the good citizens of Mary- V111°—1@d by Dad Jones-are anxlom to invest their savings. so regcgup- led is the family with ions of sudden wealth that no one realizes a meanwhile with pretty Toni Slew- art. a newcomer to Maryville, who wants Jack to elope with her, Jerk suggests that they send his mother an anonymous letter, in care of the radio station, asking her advice. She discusses their problem in hcr xiext broadcast and. to Jack's and Toms utter surprise, gives her approval to the match. On the day the two lovers plan to ‘clope, it is discovered that the spring water contains no minerals‘ winch means that Dad and the other investors have been duped, about $100000 worth! It is only the quick thinking of Mrs. Jones, using her regular broadcast time, that lures the swmdlers back to their eventual capture by the entire 5am- ily and. incidentally. brings Jack and Toni back to their senses. Tlhls ls one of the Movie Quiz $250,000 contest pictures. Malcolm Si. Clair directed and John Stone was associate producer. VICTORIA. Sept. 21 —(CP) — c-zgin its regular autumn session Oct. 31. Premier Pattullo announ- ccd today. A shorter session than usual is expected and prorozotion probabiy will be around the customary time —the first week oi December. Little major legislation is i-n sight Th: Conservative opposi- tion lins prided its support to the Gov mcnt in measurrs that may be ry because of the war. feared of religious character" prelate frcm the Ruslans, said. Git: reason why chiurc-hmen belie- vccl Cztholicism may suffer both at- ihc hands cf the Soviets and the Nazis is that Polish Catholicism al- ways has been closely united with Polish painoilsm. After previous pilftlblOilg of Po- land. Russians and Pruesians have attacked the Polish church in an attempt. to crush Polish nationalism. churchmen said t-he Russians at- tempted to exterminate Roman Catholicism in Poland by suppress- ing monateries and closing churches frcm i773 to 1906 when a. policy o! toirrance finally was inaugurated. Thc church in that part oi Poland annexed by Prus in suffered con- siderably in various “kulturkampfs" with the confiscation ol much pro- perty and the subordination of the clergv to Prussian temporal power, some nrelales said. Events arc moving so swiftly, pre- lnics sa" . that it was impossible to sziv what steps the Vatican may take as a. result of developments in Poland. are 011B Keep hlinard’: In the home. Nlll soldier chops shutters from Polish hnusc in scarch for snllfifl- With three comrades, he ls part of pouuulon of captured 1mm (mime deleted by consort-l ‘half the ton n British Airforce (Continued mm page l) l0 4068i bills sire ed. leizlib yrém i321 I-llflmywalrllryml-llig e ur esman unipa townlslriuctofdesertlononthe home front," he said. ' Will Punish Proflteen ‘rho Governor t h ma, uld take all weir? .2... $1.151; Daofltem. "We mint. have no mis- fn. no boarders and no 9mg. Sir Samuel. who was Home Sec- retary until the outbreak of war. sympethized with those who found war. omlftio uPMtt . “At. this moment of there is bound to be dislocation," he sold. “You carmiot move 1,250,- 000 woman and children from town ~° Wunl-Fy without dislocation. You umnot pass from peace industry into war production without dis- location. ' Government is doing its afloat to minute this dislocation and insofar as the change has created unemployment, I want to point out to you what the Prime Minister said two days 8/80 in Parliament. Our war effort is to be the maximum effort of the whole Wllfll-Py- It will not be less than our war effort of 191B. No Idle Hands “In such an effort, there will ‘be nroinmns are every day gathering momentum. I am certain that at no distant date there will scarcely an aible bodied man or woman whose services the country will not need." He told the people not to en. oouralc war obscsion which “swine- times leads excellent people into anti-social courses.” By War obsession, "I mean sucn concentration of mind and body on war that life becomes mutilated and almost sterilized and tnat, people who ordinarily are sensible. unselfish and good-natured 105g their perspective and unintention- ally do iloolishi things." 9 8B0 c t1. b t h _ it 9i nriiiim ‘l; éiegemivogdéipu Faced together with great; 15. sues oi life and death we gather ‘as one family. We forget party ‘quarrels and class divisions. We Ivrzet even personal dislikes anti limit-standing prejudices. We once iiKB-ln find we are one great lam. “And when behind it all i; tn Maflinot line of faith Ln the greal; moral verltles. of faith held n;- Chrlstlans. Jews. Moslems. Hindus and Buddhists in an unique al- liance of world believers such m; never before known in history you and I can then face with string- last fortitude and cheerful confid- ence the dark nights and vexat. 1°05 of war. air raids. partings for we know that we shall win and‘ we are certain that we shall see the triumph of faith over the brute force of the ‘new paganism." Prisoners Brought, to England / pin-inc the day the Ministry of Information reported that a. num-- ber of German officers, taken prisoners of war. had been brough; to England and placed in it pus. 0" Win19- Qthel" Prisoners, said the communique, were taken to an. other camp. The announcement recalled that an Soot. l5 Mr. Chamberlain told the House of Commons prisoners had been taken in British succes- ses against submarines. B? J. F. Sanderson Cmad an Press Staff Writer LONDON. 56M. 22—((.?— Cable) — Th9 Rflya-l navy has defeated Germany's first U-—boat campiii n and is building and equipping t e most powerful submarine hunting fleet the world has ever seen. While extremely optimistic the British fleet. will sweep submarines from trade routes, ust as German mmhlflt 811117111118 as been clear- ed from the seas, naval authorities here expect. and are basing their plans on further loses. But they emphasize that Germany's first at- tiw has been held to comparatively few losses. When war was declared three wee-ks a o British merchant vessels were sca tered all over the world while German submarines had been osted at focal points in antici at- on of hostilities. This led to in tial losses. some of them. such as the Athenia and the aircraft carrier Cour emis, definitely severe losses. Slow y, however, the convoy sys- tem was placed in effect. it is now operating for all outward bound vessels. Until inward bound ve=sels are included it will not be complete. BETTER. THAN 1917 ite this initial handicap the navy has held losses to one nage and one third the -. numbers of April, 1917, the peakl month of the German underwater menace in the last war. the other hand the British of- fensive against the U-boat has been more continuous and intense. iirrltioiilefinitcly more effective, than New methods of detection and hunting were develo in the peace years. Not only tha . but these im- lements of death for U-—boat crews ave been distributed to far more shin") andmaval rsonnel is far more liunlllar wit them, than in 1917. such reg-fess has been made that while t. used to take a flotilla of destroyers to hunt a submarine. today two ships can do it. The only o ficlal estimate of the umber of subs sent to the bottom is "six or seven." But this is admit- ted to be an understatement. The reason is the necessity of keepin the German admiralty in a. state o sus nse, not knowing what shins tn rep ace. (France has accounted for "four or five” more». Even ll only seven sum have been sunk. that. represents 1-10th of Ger- many's U-boat. fleet at the start ol hoot lities. MERCHANT SHIPS ARMED Meanwhile no merchant ship is leaving British ports without defen- clve armaments. Britain's trade is proceeding while German commerce has been swept from the seas. In the last war Britain also beat. off’ Germany's first U-boat attack; after a long pause the German ad- mlralty sent more submarines and better equipped ones to prey on merchant shins. Naval experts aaree there will be a second attack this time and a Brit "mopping up" llflllll "U"! more violent attack. But meanwhile the new‘: defence will be on I .no room for idle hands, Glgan iic "I riizrzituis- cf’ tnc British lincr Athenia, first ship to be torpctlocii in N.S., after a. rough nine-day- voyage on collapse aftcr the ordeal of nine days on a boat built to accommodate an GAA PRINCE COUNTY CHRONICLE In Path oi French Army's Advance P Y». l The photo gives i’ an much larger 50816. It is admitted that ships in a011- voy are vulnerable to aircraft and surface vessels, and the possibility arizes that Germany may 5m!"- ncxt with planes and armed mer- chantmen. The navy, however. 15 flully prepared and is already gath- ering together fleets of vessels equip- ped to light this twin menace. GERMAN SUBS INFERIOR. (By Maurice Schumann Haves Stall Writer.) PARIS, Sept. 22-‘(CP-HAVAS)- The German submarine fleet is in- fcrior to that of 1917, and the sub- marin as a weapon has been out- moded in the last 20 years, French naval experts argued tonight, “France can count on receiving supplies indefinitely, thanks to its merchanb fleet and warships.’ Al- phonse Rio. the new Minister of Merchant marine. said. His words expressed the confi- dence general among French mil- itary leaders that the German sub- marine will not play the role in this war that it did in the last. “In the last- 20 years." Comman- dant Jean DeFussy, a ading French submarine technician wrote recently, ‘The submarine is r- haps of all war arms the one w ich has progressed the least.’ “Its speed and radius of action on the surface or beneath it have re- mained about what they were in the last war. The submarine i; still slower under water than the slow- est merchant ship. and on the sur- face it is at the mercy of any traw- ler iirmcd with an old gun.‘ “On the other hand, the defen- slve methods invented in 1917 have been perfected. The increased speed of merchant shi s and the effic- iency oi air patro s make submarine attacks today extremely difficult." But the German submarine threat to Frances food supply has not been lcsscncd by techn cal pro- gross alone. The number of U-Boats in action today is less than in 1917. and the number of French merchant vesels which they must try to 1n- tercept has grown. Early in i017 Germany had be- tween 150 and 17S submarines in action and was building 200 more. On May 1, 1939. according to French naval information. Germany had only seven submarine llotlllas. That is, 52 submarines. and only 19 sub- marine; undel- construction. In contrast. the French merchant fleet has grown from 1.900.000 tons in i914 to 3.000.000 ions today. Moreover. in thjir haste to en- lnrgc their submarine fleet, the Ger- mans hnvc impaired its quality. Of thc 52 U-Boats in scrvicc when tho \var broke out. only eight were 740- ton craft '1 ‘jfiblfl of extended voy- . apt-s. Twenty-eight are small. 250 ton- A Story OINeW Ktyles c Tin-e casual look is furrt-her stressed _ C Thisarca is in the path of theFrenchadvarice, if not already act an excellent view of the picturesque Rhineland area, at the intersection of the rs _. . . . . . PARTS. Sent. 9-’I‘he autumn style story might be outlined in din-piers, like this: Foundation: To be oorseted or riot to be corseted-lttiats the burn- ing question early fall shoppers will have to answer. ‘They M1159 think. too, about the slightly aris- tocratic, “stiff-fronted" look vuhich calls for a. totally new set of atti- tudes, not to man-lion postute. The military influence will caitoh and holid. attention. At the mom- cnt this definitely is the pro-dom- inant. note in fall collections, as urlitzizss all tih-c ironing. braiding. flap pockets. erpaulctics and other insignia. Suits: 'I‘hey‘re Jaunty. 'l‘hey‘re practical, colorful. youthful, that is. ail those dest be worn at any time up to the hrncheon hour. comfcrtablc quite are by the addition oi g.catcoats—wh.icii\ attain respectable proportions aind easily slipped on and off. Skirts: Skirt lengths are no long- er an isue. You wear what suits you best and especially vuhat, suits your figure best. Trim ankles and slender legs can wear skirts as bzicf as can be and you must. trim your skirt to you so to speak. Skirts are trim, sometimes straight or with the mercst hint of a Fare at. the baick. Shoulders are built 111D. padded but rounded in- stead of the squared effect. of scmc years ago Taillcurs: At noon the llllich or town taiilcur takes its bow. Tncrc is an elusive quality of aristocracy a-bout the suits of this category. | The fitted jacket. buttonint: high under the throat. often showinz a swath-ad and "cry colorful neck- ban-d, and basoues. flaring at the track. sides or all wound, are re- nwi-wwa m. n-l- In-n-wQQlQvL ncrs, and 16 are of 500 tons. Those ‘ two classe: have a limited radius ‘ sf action, and must dr-pctid on hind bases 0r mother ships for supplies. They will probably be confined to the Bivtic or Black Sea, French na- , val officers believe. The 250 ton U-Boats which make up the bulk of the Gcnrian flect, are armed only with a small-culi- bre anti-aircraft gun and t-hrcc for- pedo tubes. Tncy mnkc l3 knots on ‘ surface and scvcn knots sub- r the merged. None of thcsc German typos can boar comparison with tho hip: 1.400- ton French '-iibmnrinr~s. wim-‘ii mount n 100 milimciro mm mid l‘: torpedo tubes and m‘kc 20 knots on the surface. only nine passengers. it. ually in French hands. Rhino Trimming: Pnr trimmings on suits are mainly fiat and amusing. One-sided pockets and uoh muffs attached to a belt cont; buts to that general impression of well-rounded hips, which after all is the new line. SIICIOLIEUDSZSO far as foam is concerned-everything goes. Thea-e are skirts that fall in f-ull, straight fullness from a more or less deep bin yoke or gathered around the nipped-in waistline; tihere are bristle drapes: a. ran fronts; drap- cries over the hps which tie in s. ‘too: at. tfhe back: shiirting, smock- ing. tucking, pleating: all the tricks m":- introduced effectively. Colors: The most favored colors for day wear. outside of black. xivhlch has reasaerted itself in an even more impregnable position, are a1‘ shades oi grey. browns, greens with -~=ilowlsh casts like myrtle. cedar and other rich plums and rccis. An important note is that some lighter shades such as bi-igiht hlnn mustard. old gold masblic and b21511 are being offered. Chief Passes After 5C Years Service LONDON. Sept. 22-101’) -Com- mlssioncr John Maclwillan, chief of! staff of the Salvation Army, died ' today after a long illness at Sun- ‘ bury court, Mlddlcsex. The commisloner served 50 years with tlic Salvation Army working in Australia. Great Britain and the United States. It had been expected time he would succeed General Evangeline Booth when she retires Nov. l. His lcng lllne s precluded thiipossibilitywand Cnmmi_ lim- rangt- ol’ Rc-condlti Walcr Street East . _‘ L-BfQ-il-lti-Sut-tf. inc L i-opcan war. wave and shout as they dock safely at. Halifax, the American freighter. City of Flint. Many of the 223 survlcors were reported in a state of’ Commodity Prices In Canada (Continued from page 4) said to have shown in the autumn m 1919 a sort. of plillllilllli-JY)‘ downward flutter. but by llle end oi me year, LJHCC; ior an gkuiql.) or products were about on mo u,»- ward trend. _ _ The Reneral prwe index in Can- ada. reached its maximum in May 1920, alter which it turned defin- itely down-ward. Two groups of products. 3111111815 and non-ici- ruus metals, had commenced in: descent somewhat earlier. Whilst the effective demand for many commodities had continued com- paratively strong, this had not been sufficient to absorb the large quantities produced by an indus- trial machine geared to war con- ditions. stocks had been accumul- ating and when the slump in trade came. these were thrown upon the market at greatly reduced prices. Raw silk was aiffectai early in 1920. causing a crisis in Japan in March; this was Quickly communi- cated t0 other countries. In Can- ada, as in practically all countries. the period of inflation was now succeed - by a of contract- in: credit. falling prices and gen- eral deflation, these factors caus_ ing unemployment, a further do- crease in effective demand and continued price recession. The general level of Canadian mines. a5 meas the official index number. remained comparatively stable thereafter for a. period oi! nearly nine years. that is, until the drastic decline in 1930, The trends shown in this rcview should not necessarily be regard- ed as nroglietic of what may be trtdes in the technique of production of industrial. agricul- tllffll Ind metal Urodugtg 115v; been made since the last war and strontt trends towards higher prices should only be elcpected in the United States. for example. 1t and when unemployment largely dis- appears. Of course. prices in Cun- Bda w“ dlvflke from those in the United States by changes which may occur in exchan e relations and in other coun es can be affected materially in addition by difficulties of transportation. Car loadings In Canada ilave iligh Since 1931 OTTAWA. Sept. 22 —(CP)—Car- loadings considered a barometer of business. jumped to 71,274 cars in the week ended Sept. l6, the first full week after Canada had de- clared a state of war with Ger- many. Those loadings were the highest since 1931. the Dominoin Bureau of Statstics reported. and com- pared with 60.572 the previous week and 56.580 in the correspond- ing week a year aflo. In tho week for some l _ m9nth-__ We Sell at Lowest Prices- Door Glass. Windshields. Axles, Wheels, Bearings. Spring-M Generators. Starters, Radiators, Crown Gears, Plnionfi fit‘- Alsn all sizes of-Ncw and Used Tlrcs and an exceptionally ’ Tires. Opp. Robinson's Mill ending Oct. 24. 193i. mrloadirtgc tolallfd 61.654. T... Ickipnitci wiliiliij-‘Qli last Summerside Auto Salvage Box 5M u-mpx AT‘A,QQTBQQ=A -q_-.,-__-*_.. . 1-3751»