0 Doing prolonged or violent work these days? Your muscles are bound to feel iii When pain efrikee, pei on Sloan's Linlineni to help re- store your aching muscles. Youfmuecle structure is ex- tensive and muscles work on oxygen. 3y psiilaq on Sloan's Idnimeul. you help eiirsulsie the blood supply around ihq tired muscles. The new blood brinqi vital oxygen. sad sweeps aver old blood, heavy with fatigue acids. Stabbing inuscle pslu dlllppllll faster. when you apply Sloan's Lininent. i“ SlOANS LINIMENT, Sorrowing A Pairentls Bury Murdered ilhilil CHICAGO. Jln. ll -— (AP) - Jamcs and Helen Degnan buried the dismembered body of their lit- tle daughter. Suzanne, today with- out vengeance, a priest seid, for the maniac who brought tragedy to their happy home. Neither the maniac nor. any vital clu-e to his identity has been found. But in the hearts of the Deg- nana "there is no room for ven- geance," Rev. Neil Donahue, B. J.. of Boston told the throng that crowded 3t. Gertrude‘: Church to standing room for the funeral ser- ce. The 36-year-old parents. Father Donahue continued, have ‘only s prayer for you mothers and fathers snd the eople throughout this nation, w o have been so kind, that you mav be spared any trage- dy-euch as theirs. EASTERN. GUARDIAN » iie2ifl2.“h°“' "am " .8 i! n day nights an mum yaite d moon. 8 shit S f/uird 1F“. ° -' iiyvttthihiéi? GENERAL ELECTRIC LAMPS V... L100 M0110“. All welcome, ' PIIALANX WlATlI-NITY 1N- ITATION - Sin new members mceived initstioncinto the 153m. In! mtmuty st the Y.M. .A. Friday evenins. fire candidates for were Gilt! Court, Ili-lloyd in jebruu-y. er. rsuvs ciwncn PRES u '- niou E T t“ n" Ogrstbsll. 14., o in Howell. 213w Gililieasziig on I-QYAC 811d Luzon HQ and Disk and is improves in health. n. of four battle stars and d insignia for e beach. Asiatic Pacific? ribbtligt," iifihéfiuil? génlalgverutionlriblgh and u... Rood ' lmdl - e was in the rum’ ‘he. c“ cm '_‘-*-——_-——-__ Personals . 1r f“ v Halifax. to s .3...?"'.',?i'“'°'{,:§,§,§g; 1mm the aruiy, eiftter spendins sh ded chum“ éww w gems wife and - TRINITY UNITED CHURCH At the morning servi e . "Y "l! Sacrament o! "ohmrliiii. Elm?" W" lilrninlsterei to s llrxe congre etion. In the even the minister spoke 0n "Bin sad ghteousness" taken e 6th chapter of Paul's i'ifé'°.i.$2.§.',‘.l.£‘i"‘.““'- °""’.'."'"§'"% , s seen su lrorrrthe law to y the ser- g as their anthem e old n ‘I lsove to ‘Dell the . e Men's Dou- ble usrtette sang "Come My Soul Thy uit Prepare.’ At the regular session of the Sunday Schooh at 10 o'clock the worah period was conducted by Major enk Storey! class. BONSIAW UNITED W M I MEETS The member-s of the WJLB. met for their December meeting at the home of the e meeting with the lighting of tn: cand i weenie. “W dieting Bsnl-‘i l‘ lthi" C when I onductedty Mrs. ' - i-ie-u ' iAndrei Y Vishinsky, shove, ‘Russia's vice commissar for for- eign affairs, heads the Soviet delegation to the first meeting of the United Nations Assembly n London. St. liharles Auxiliary Annual Meeting ilalil The annual meeting of saint Charles Auxiiiarywas held at the Charlottetown Hospital January 5- 1946. with the president. Mrs. RJ. MacDonald. in the chair. The president gave a brief summary of the year's work and thmhu the members for their support in all the undertakings of the Society during the ilB-Bi Year The tres- surars re ort showed a grog; 1n. come of 2033.69. The chaplain, Rev. K.C. Mac. Mlllan, commended the member; on the splendid work of the organ- ization during the ti“: ye...- mu asked for their con inued support Blllll Rood will for the coming year. The election of Officers then fol- lowed which resulted in the ab- polntment of Mrs. JJ. Duffy as President. Mrs. M.J. Conway as ViW-Dresident Miss Maigam Wie- ner as secretary. The following are the Executive Committee {or the Year, Mrs. Stephen Trainer, Mrs. John Pollard. Mrs. Aeneas Mac- Donald. Mrs. Patrick Murhaghah, Mrs. Joseph Costello, Mrs, 51¢; Coed)’. Sick Visiting Committee are Mrs. E. McTague, Mrs. Edward t Connous. Mrs. Walter Currie. VILLAGE SMITIIY SQUADRON LEADER Should the children -of Longfel- l0W's village smithy chance to 100k in on a smlihy in the Watervillg . Lakeville District of Kings County 1X1 NWB Swtla. their eves would Raze in wonder not‘only at the flyins sparks but at the amlthy who was a Squadron Leader during the war. After receiving his dip- Charile from the air force, the erstwhile Souadron Leader deci- ded to set up a blacksmith shop, flwurdlmz to the agricultural dc- partment of the Canadian Nation- al Railway-st It would- seem that the village ‘blacksmith is far 1mm extinct and that the" u," other communities that are suffering from the lact of blacksmith aer- vice; Qtqtcs a bulletin of the Nova scqtia Dept of Agriculture. MILLVALE WOMEN'S INSTITUTE The January meeting of Millvale Women's Institute was held on the evening of January seventh at the home of Mrs. Leemlng Murphy. There were seven members and three visitors present. One new member joined. The President, Mrs. Walter Parsons presided. The meeting opened with the singing of the Institute Ode and the recita- tion of the Club Women's Collect. Roll call was answered with each member telling a joke. The min- utes of the previous meeting were read, approved and signed. Ques- tionnaire was read and answered. The school and sick committee re- ported and new ones were a point- ed. School, Mrs. Oswald urphy. Slck-—Mrs. Alfred Murphy (rs-ep- pointed.) It was decided to complete s quilt to lettered at a later date. It was moved and sec- onded that a bill of one dollar and twenty cents used in ‘buying treats for school children at Christ- mas be palcl. Roll call for next meeting to be answered by the recitation of a valentine verse by each member. Mrs. Alfred Murphy invited the members to her home for the February meeting. Lunch Committee for next meeting “Mrs. Edwin Hagen and Mrs. George . A contest was then cer- A dainty lunch was served by the hostess. The meet- ing closed with the sinxlns of the National Anthem. _..____i--_-—.i—- lunch was served and e‘ social hour enjoyed. CATARRH R(I.\‘[)_\' v/‘IIIYHIT (flux?! (fol/d ou can effectively treat an old cough with Cstsrrh-o- zone which helps to soothe the irritated surfaces of the throat. In using Caterrh-o- sons, you do‘not take any medicine into the stomach. Very simple to use Cstsrrll-e- Issue-sprinkle it on. Yo"! Mndlm- h! nbsh the was. 3M8"!!! v mithceisnt-e-eseeselsetoiatbs . . ' -- e |..i...i. ti.» vAFm h» Ciuhiruiir) 20m .v\ l... i R. M’ ' we neg ect u, - . if. i haugQfi m t- . .. m: criuatoflcrowsi cuanoieu rnwsfrusnr Preechin ' ... .... tu-‘mrflrlzf °i§ gotten 2:8) t“, otnh’ cvi§i-Th§.'i$“l'.ft"~ 3P3’ ‘GEE this ‘truth ‘y: “g: m,‘ l'i plegsgt I seems to be the Ifuture, i”... as enn » .. ui-u wuiiihmzh, sgligigsshial" m’ he“; lily! 001M however, when "I llriil Within longlus egg; qglietb statement of our crtiilc ‘situations rise, folly can fell to fear, i’ g which we ere celled o a We ere to esve eurselvessnd N“ civilisation. to rm in revolt. 0W such crises that cell out fear If? not only publicly but pjychg]. o: cslly denlfleut. because fear fill}! mean radically argue“; "so. It can mean fright, and tunic. and dismay. that tear per- “lnllity to pieces and wreck mor. "'19- but it need not mean that. Some of the greatest days in hum"! 3118101‘? have come when nails faced mankind, so monsimu; . at ell decent folk feared them, and when the best of men rose up, a ""1? 4WD instincts of revot aroused to ss z This intoler. able, better dc than endure m 5o men feared ignorance, and m. "all!!! lseinst it to seek science vi ough the Price was heavy for the pioneers. so men feared ly. Ilhlly. and rebelling a sins! it sought democracy and lbgfly 5|; all! costs. Bo those early Chris- Llens feared pesanlsm and revolt- ff awn»! it. seeking the Chris- an wsy of life, come whst might toTthdem. ' ° fly. We crltlcsll need this spirit-a sober, lndizhent, moving recognition of the feet that in our personal and social life here and in the world at large there is let 100M on earth a monstrous pag- anism we had better fear, and Bainst which our dee instincts of revolt had better be roused. It! lie not put all this of‘! on the haezisi Before they srppeered, with t ir climactic illustration of what paganism means, the results of our widespread rebellion against religion were evident among us here. Dr. Canby of Yale has cull. ed attention to th, evidence of this in our literature-cynical, so- phisticated. futlliterlan, believing n nothing and finding no n.ee.n- inf in life. Writes Dr. Cenby: ;'Th¢ ti’ lcel young person in some‘ of t e popular novels is oi.’- ien like this: At ten years of ace. he sees through his parents, and he lns to caricature them. At feu teen. he sees through educa- tion. and been“ to dodge it. At eighteen he sees through morality and begins to step over it. At twenty, he loses all respect for his home town and for our govern- ment. At twenty-one, he comes of are and decides that our whole social system is perfectly vidlcu. lous. At twenty-three the story suddenly ends, because the young fellow has seen through every- thing. and does not knew what to do next. . Wall that is essential lrreligion -noth ng great to believe in, n0- thlng eternal to bank on, no spir- itual values to live and die for. Such, men and women, is the es- sential nature and inevitable re- sult of irrellgion. and we had bet- ter fear it, and rise in revolt against it. Look at whet preval- cnt paganism is doing in the world now, to personal morals, to home life, to international relationships, and then look at Christ and whet He stands for. "How shall we escape if we neglect so great sel- vatlon ” Before his evening sermon. 9-"- Mr. Borders ssld: ‘In connection with this morning's service I wish to eflpllln that because oi’ an ex- csptloneil heavy week of eXtru servlces t a Sermon that wee be- ing prepared for delivefl‘ U115 1110"!‘ lug could not be completed in time. and in the emergency. I turned to the writings of my 10-!‘- mer Professor. Dr. Fosdick. Ind used one of his instead. This ex- planation ls given only in order that there may be no misunder- stuuling in the matter.” the mining service - Raoul Raymond rmdered the solo "O Lord Moat Hol " (Frnnok) and 2e choirxthel 0:1): em ‘Hear. My sysr" opy . At the evening worship "16 m’; mon was entitled "Wasted Gains.’ Thu anthem "l! With All -Your Hes " (Mendelssohn - Pearson) wse suns bv the choir- GOMMITTEE MAKES (Continued from Pale l) vision o! which l. B. Reid is direc- tor, the Veterans‘ Alfsirs Depart- ment is seeking through even’ channel te make public the bene- fits to which ell ex-"ivicamen are entitled, and to urge them to take full advantage of these benefits. ‘ service ‘Io Veterans‘ “lame returned men." an ef- ficlel told The Guardian. "e e in such: hurry to [at eut of un form end et back to their, homes and fsrnil es that the _dont trouble to lllten to the oficers and other! who give short lectures and talks at the diseherse depots. ‘They don't bother to reed the notices or pamphlets distributed for their in- er etlen "l - . , "Wrcertsinl don't blame them for that, but t would save many heartechea and disa intments if the psid Just e lit e more et- ten on to their pro-discharge briefings." . Under the do artment’: current srrenrrements, tere is cloer co- operation between the D.V.A. and Censdisn LI ion poets in province of t e Dominion. to this, velueble work in ad voter m to find employment. end assist hg them in cues of illness ef themselves and their fsmilles is being dune b’ citizen's commit- tees end by o ficers o! the Poppy Day fund. This co-eperstlou, it. is felt, will reduce ceees of dis- er-tin an . ere s e treas: to s itrgaimumh th ' apeedu in the Transport to en- sde se men's wives from the Waited Kiusdem. undertaken p. u j-qulg plugs-gent represente- iienl mode by t e veterans them- selves snd the department. -...-.--_P_ n’! “warn: comes tlmoftheendofthe "ti?" vmsrmcag Willi liieMlbhtie ulllllfl be- Ilrst prison ship to an-lvq in 40o clinician. Beach Halifax "Al-IFAX- Jwl- 1a - (C?) -The Can- ldla sizice the cessation of hostil- xgeié“ he British escort ullTiQI W. docked here today curry- "w errraximaleiv m Canadian Army ‘personnel on their way to ""10"! Dlniteniiaries to serve out terms for crimes committed w". seas. , d Piers were barred from the i" I area. Several _ hundred mmilvy Police were on hand as Yell as dozens of city policemen u; 99D b80919 away from the quay- side. The Army stated they could not make public any information concerning ihc- ship on strict or- ders from Ottawa. ‘ The prisoners, smiling and cheerful, were taken from the ship i" 5m!" Rfowps under heavy guard and marched to a waiting lb-cnr prison train. The train left hOZI: early this afternoon, and will rlrllu risoners along the route i? vari- us penal institutions. l was learned that most of the men would be taken to Kingston Pen- ltentiary. Auto Workers Would Accept 6ov't. Plan DETROIT, Jau, l3 - (AP; ._ F-evveaentatives of 175,000 striking auto workers today approved u Government-sponsored wage vom- promlse already rejected by Gen- eral Motors Corporatlon as a basis for settlement of the 54-day-nlzi walkout. . About 200 delegates o.‘ the C.I,0, United Auto Workers‘ G.M. Coun- cil; shelving for the first time their 304per-cent demands, agreed to accept e l’! 1-2 per-cent wage boost endorsed by a Presidential Fact-Finding Committee last xvcek. They urged President Truman to persuade the Cor oration io rc- conaider its unquuifled rejection of the compromise. Letter Claims lloehin Suprviseii Setting 0f lleithstag Fire By GEORGE TUCKER IOH, Jan. 13 - (AP) - A copy of a letter written to Mar- shal von Hlndenburg by a storm trooper fleeing the Hitler blond urge declares that Capt. Ernest ehm, notorious head the Storm Troopers, supervised setting fire to the Reichstag in February, 1 993. Allied intelligence officers, dis- closing contents of the letter to- day, said it was written by Ernst Kruse, who described himself as the last survivor of 22 storm troop- ers who fircd the parliament building. Kruau wrote to von l-lindenhurg from Switzerland July 18, 1034, less than three weeks after the purge in which Roehm lost his life. He declared Marinus Van Der Lubbe, convicted of setting fire to the Reichstiig, was actually n “madly ambitious" member 0f R.oebm's staff. The Nazis charged that Van Der Lubbe was a Communist, and he was beheaded Jan. l0. 1934. l1" conviction of high irelilln "("1 arson in connection with the file. Allied intelligence officers who hove searched vainly for Kluse point out ihut the Gestapo had uryiple time to run him down after he wrote. The letter declared Roehm or‘; dered Van Der Lubbc to climt into the Relchsiag alone and Se‘ fire to the ariterooms. Witho: Van Del‘ Lubbes knowledge. f! fi letter added the main body 0 a’: sonists headed by Roehm WIS set the main hall ablaze. f "we nssembled in the cellar o place of lhg president of the stag (Goering). the loll?!‘ 5am Euch member ofnilhe 941w): had sacks coniainlriil B 18h! ti‘? der and a roll of "Bmlhld 5 ‘F: The sacks were Pllmfl "l 585,1 “and places and ihc strips were: ll rolled xuward the cellars ex\t.-. h m ‘he group returned to i E cell r entrance Rochm dun’! ‘Vim; oth r Storm TPOOD leufid ‘the hes ed, the group link‘? 9 “ht Rpehm had ma c sslgn he Van Der !._.ubbe was i 1 v "jumping about m the adionni. ha ," Krusc said. e letter charged the illillrpfis: of mu fire was to blackma its c munista. Similar staielnrcnw halve been made repfliledy m-e C mrnunists, who asserted [alt m” ti e of Van De}: Lubllllf! if l he was s Nazi plant- Allled intelligence» officers tread 1 cy believe the letter is au ‘Nev ti but refused to disclose hmv _ .1 f um! it. No trace of the engine h s been discovered. , white and blue funnel. The {kg survivors are the “Lid? "=1- n", Canada's first hospital ship d ueen of the CNUB West In- as feet. and the Lady R04- Qy" qt present in troop trarmaort service. On the Pacific. the CNS ‘Prince Rupert".- which resumed her regular coastal service north ut of sricouver. has also reverted peace-time dress. These 311196. ith the exception of the Lady iNeisosi" in hospital service. sported ;wer usint. battleship grey. Hos- pital ships are painted white, with e broad green band running around the hull interspersed with large red crosses. . ‘DAST e- sRi . .R[lll'l lilil NIMPil AS 40mm: Asrmn is 0n Prison Ship Nazi's “Race Purity” Dictator Is Suicide By DANIEL m: we; NUERNBERG. Jun. 1a _ (APl_ Dr. Leonardo Conli Nazi man,v's medical dictator who de- filgigaxigg kfllllflz 0f lrundrcds of for “r ~ ° Persons m his lust a" Purity’. hanged himself I“ the Nuerllberg Jail three month! i180. it was learned authoritatively today._ United Slates Army u“- éhorlties had kept his suicide u errct. Contl garrnlted him ' Shi'i- 30 dfllls beforesplDrirwlltilobgist If)’. Nazi labor boss, ‘took his own life in e nearby cell block, Bug}. were buried in the samc ceme- iery. Contls grave was marked erroneously, identifying him g5 m Italian and adding only his sh- bi-eviated name "L. Conii." Th6 "Ovky 8.8. zruppenfuehrcr had served dlrectlv under Hur- mann Gael-ins’. Wilhelm Frick and Heinrich Himmler as chief of relch health. Ho was, to have been a prosecution witness against Frick in the war crimes trial. An_American soldier serving in the JBil last October said Contl, in a fit of (lesponde y. climbed on a chair, tied a shirt sleeve nrcimd his neck, fastened the shirt in one of six metal spikes stuck in the wnll around ihe window of his solitary ccll and then slump- ed olf the chair. Conil advocated "guinea pic‘ experimentation with human bo- ings. His career was a mixture of fanatical politics and wierd scien- tific whims. A rlchtest radical while he was a college student in I918. Conii established the anti- Semlilc Kampfhunrl and early. joined Hitler's Nazi movement. Born in Luzano, Switzerland, of. Italian-Swiss hercditv, Cont! led the medical wlniz of the culi of ihc sin-called Nordic supermen and Aryan supremacy. Gen. Eisenhower Returns To The lLS. TORONTO. Jan. l3 — (OP) — with his boyish grin, his cheery wave and soldicrly bearing. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower won the hearts of Toronto citizens Satur- dav and ended his four-day visit to Canada by accepting an hon- arary degree of Doctor of Laws from the University of Toronto. He and Mrs. Eisenhower re- turned to Washington last night by train. , ' In a busy afternoon. the iurmtl‘ supreme commander of Allied Ar- mies in Europe attended aflun- cheon at Hart House on the Univ- crsity of Toronto campus. address- ed the University convocation and was guest of honor at a reception given by Lieutenant-Governor Al- bert Mattliews of Ontario. The Experts Say By inzutariialvwmzaiiiw Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA. Jeri. l0—Dui"ing the last few years we've learned a lot ab"!!! "Villr-savlns sugar. saving butter, saving and stretching meet and all the other foods that are either rationed or scarce. All this, and many other wer- acqulrcd food skills, have led to considerable money saving too and hares e thought for the new year) I Babies especially. need the health-giving; sunshine Vitamin D and Milk in the beat carrier of it. But even bottle: is Sum-nest Irradiated Evaporated Milk because extra amounts of Vitamin D have been added by exposing it to ultra-violet rays, in a process called “irradiation". It contains at least 54 International Unite of Vitamin D per 100 grammes, or 648 units per Imperial quart; andiaratedbyacientistaaeaneecellenteourco of Vitamin D. Surwrest is better for riclmeel IEITII POI MOKIIO 1'00! For temptinl dishes that will give l "lift" to any meaLueeSuncmstMilk with its special nnoothnen Ind iineilsvur. anocxvii too-all the original cream doubly concentrated and .. freah as a daisy. Even more important, it is easy for baby to digest. Use in aooordanoo with the formula recommone ded by your doctor.- Wanted immediately. and Trust Company. STENOGRAPHER-BOOAKKEEPER Must be reliable, com- petent, and, if possible, experienced. ~Pleasani surroundings. Good salary. Prince Edward Isl- 1. 14-3i By POPE HALEY WASHINGTON‘, Jan. l3 — (AP) -—The Navy revealed today that it will operate seven active post- war fleets. At the same time it put on is fulldress review of the organiza- tion of the top-level command which will direct the Navy's posi- war policies. The 1.079 combatant ships-MB in active service, 73 in ready re- serve. and 697 in laidup status —- wlll be divided among thrcc fleets ln the Atlantic, three in the Paci- fic, and one in Mediterranean and European waters. Main headquarters of the com- munder in chle, Pacific Fleet. will be maintained at Pearl Har- bor.. That post is now held by Admiral Raymond A. Spruance, who‘will soon be suceedtwl by Ad- miral John H. Towers. The Seventh Fleet, under cam- mand of Admiral C. M. Cooke. Jr._ will operate in the Western Pacific. The Fifth Fleet. under in Apple Betty, in Dutch Apple Cake-in fact in any recipe using up lea. utch Apple Cake requires two cups of flour, three teaspoons of baking powder, one egg, one large or two medium apples, l-2 leu- spoon of salt, i-4 cug 2-3 cup of milk, two ta lespouns of sugar, l4 tenspo of cinnamon. Mix and sift the dry ingredients except the sugar and cinnamon. Cut or rub in the butter. adrl the milk and beaten egg gradually. Spread l-2 inch thick on a shallow buttered pen. Pare, _cut the apples ln sections lengthwise, and set m dough: sprinkle the top with rug- ar and cinnamon. bake in e hot oven, 400 degrees fahrenheit, 25 to a0 minutes. Serve with cream. If you peeled your apples. save the parings and cores, cook them in about two cups of water until they are well broken down, strain through a sieve or damp cheese cloth, and use the liquid io make a sauce to serve with the Dutch Apple Cake. Add a little lemon, sugar, a pinch of salt and thicken to a desired consistency. THREE TONS 0F PUDDING Canadians whose lot ii wns to be away from home on Christmas Day, pcrchancc travelling on mnin line trains of the Canadian Nat- ioiiol Railways, were shavers In three and a half ions of plum pudding. This festive dessert was prepared under the supervision of James Morgen, chef-instructor in the station restaurant kitchens at Montreal. Housewives. iloubilcsa, will he interested in the nmouiiis of the various Ingredients i-Yifllli! into the making of this pudding. Principal items were 1.500 Pflilnds of raisins, 950 pounds of currarvis. continue to save money on food bills to help feed Europe's peoples to whom our somewhat restricted diet looks like a feast. To help along this saving cam- paign the agriculture department suggests these ways to make a little food go e long way: First of all, save by not buying too much-abet is. too much of certain foods which arc perish- able. These include lettuce, celery end other salad makings which will wilt if you haven't proper store e space, and root vegetables end rults which will shrivcl for the some reason. ‘Then there's the saving of flavor in spices. Yes, pure natural splccx have been hard io- gel but any spice, whether pure or synthetic, will lose its flavor if exposed io the air ieo long. Be sure always to close the opening of your spice tin and if you have the shaker type of container, keep e‘ little round of waxed paper over the shaker opening. I O l Having mentioned the question of fruits, let's go back and see whet we can do about these prec- ious apples._ There are many ways of stretching the apple flavor in salads and desserts. This may be done ‘by reducing ihc usiial e- mount of apple in cabbage and apple soled, in gesihe deseertq. 480 pounds of mixed D091. 27° pounds of mixed fruii. Wltlpllllllfls of suei, 90 dozen cggs. l0 pounds ‘of ground nutmeg, l2 pound". 0f mlral Jonas otlllilisr ship: e goutlipilt-iahtic. The Fourth Fleet, k , whuse commanding officer has not ' i yet been named, will conduct re- . , serve training in the Allalitlfi- of butter. Charles yards. of air-con quircd ONR | mace, and 2p pounds each of . ground allepice, cinnamon and I ginger. ' if ,/ "v Ger instant relief from sore. chug protecung. pdsy. i U. S. To Have Seven Active Post- War Fleets ‘Vice Admiral Frederick C. Sh J man. will base on home ports an operate in the Central and East- ) erri Pacific. will include heavy ships, and spe- cifically, aircraft carriers. ; ' The Third Fleet will be the Pae- » ific reserve, charged training on the Pacific coast. Both The Atlantic Fleet, The Eighth, under Admiral '; A. Mltscher, will comprise a. stroll . tore; of ralrcraaft cutie? sedpéug- " ' ornsisasedon ome . 2nd .511 ngrmally o erste in tho North Atlantic and The tenth, under Vice Adnaltll ,_. Bernhard H. Bieri, consisting of . _- cruisers and destroyers end sufih . as may be assigned. in the Caribbean and , 15,000 TONI or i948 under t minal development Pl!"- [hg SUmYn of ice. _ .' d ts going overseas l‘! hour; Pal? gin), as 4m N frigeretor pars t0 b0 the yards m 011° pa“: will 0 ans. , . artificial reiriserexitlh 1.. csmuhctlon W facturlfli; Illa-nt- aoooo cAItmAns PAPER these with reserve ‘ H. ’Ingr n: aribbesn. nd n will iaciiitate servlrlnitivc ditloned and refrlP-Tll-m‘ "‘ er as many B5 3 ‘. were serviced in a/ day. . ‘iy of 15a” Iwiiilebglntiéipbaéilit 1o have oh and to serve y 5n ice mun!‘ fleets with Ad- ICI paesenl in- ,R. re- i handled in The ice u; riwpUCTs CARRIED 1945 ducts were ihterostinii news» . azlan National Rfillwi‘ Y3 1 _ The 3'91"‘ M5 curs carried while the United States. wa5 also sent to Europe . . ifax, Saint John. and Va/rvhi. ’ _ distributed throughout the countfli‘; couvcr P0115 and fcr domestic use. 111s least dumpness can in swelling and snliitlml of thi- wgprlm paper rolls lloess so for their lutesitifiWofCNR u, 1' prevent damflill‘ in 10M"; ‘ ~ iii anzio unlmdiufl. special Convey“ ors a-re ueed to carry 1,400 pound bundles. ped |' b I in i.ypsyl._Sooi ing. 1p; y_sPP"y-n yio use in push-up nick form. get Lypsyl st your store prcvious ihc _ bulk has 201w i° ‘h; a large amount of protection ihlf traffic from He)‘ mnulndtl: ‘v ’ resisllig £ ,i and iota-l "i bOX 081$ 8f‘. (lie 1,200