lANUARYwlg, 194s" _..__._.._ _ __ v THE GUARDIAN, _CHARLO'l"l‘E'l‘OVYN _ _ _> __ _ r-ildichaelfis fliomancc " llits Snag (By Michael Goldsmith) LAUBANNE, Switzerland, Jan. 11-fAP)-An aide to former King Michael of Romania said Saturday that Michael's expected marriage to Princess Anne of Bourbon- .P3m1& is off, at least for the im- mediate future. The 24-year-old Princess inter- rupted her journey from Copen- hagen to meet the former mon- lgrcll and announced she was g0- ing instead to Luxembourg. The dramatic denollement to the King's abdication and postpone- ment of the romantic rendezvous “a; explained by Maj. Jacques Vergotti. Michael's spokesman, who said a. love "entanglement" at pre- ‘sent could be used by Romanian Communists to destroy his hopes pf eventually returning to his throne. Most persons in the entourage of ‘the Prince of I-fohenzollern, as 5-year-old Michael now is known. have stressed that he abdicated for "political reasons" and not in "marry the girl he loves." Romanian Communists have ap- peared to be trying to give the impression that Michael was an unstable playboy, following in the footsteps of his father. former King Carol ll’, who once renoun- ced his rights to the throne for romantic reasons. Tho unhappy state of Michael's and Anue‘s love affair was dis- closed when the Danish Princess, looking pale and tired, got off the train at Liege, Belgium. in mid- Journey from Copenhagen to Lauscnne. With l-ler mother, Prin- c055 Margrethe, she transferred to an automobile and said she was going instead to Luxembourg, wllere~ siie- has relatives. “for All undetonmlllcd period‘ and _ have Vi" ‘ 'littl_e_ rest." - ‘ ' ' is. :-.-~ri* vcrgotti Saturday had an "I- told-you-so" smile. ,1 lie said Michzicl "really loves" Anna who 1s “ideally suited" to be l... wife, and lie may "eventuaifv" .~narry her. ' ' " "But no wedding for, the mo- ment," he added.‘ , " ' Going-into the background of ‘he situation, he suid_ "li/lichael’: imofficial engagement i4? 4111119 ' 143$ only "another reason" why h6- was forced from the thro -." _ f'_ _ The“ Romanian ' -G0 mmelii. wanted, to rorestia an "upsurso o! the‘ King's popularity" W010“ fuoilld have followed a royal wed- ding rind made him more difficult in unseat, hesaid. v ,, I _Texti|a which". 1"" f" .. a h ‘. MONCTON, n‘. n, "a... _ holiday stipulations‘ we e"nj\ _ \ :00 mill employees - liars; Saturday by ii. board orliioinicd bythc Pros‘ , “role l uhrllir-iil h , sollniolirtor marrow-loft THE CENTRALCNUMAOIQAIAADIAN COOK'S rd.- Photogrlphl. BURANCE. ' Footwear at 175 Queen Street. lowtion. CHILDREPPS All) Hall, 8 o'clock. Public invited. and Mi‘. Ralph McLean discuss Tii ilioncton Composite iligli school u over U. F. C. i. FUNERAL __vu funeral of lvfrs. Bloio tcrnoon [run the ironic- John Mcliachcrn. Eidrcd Intelltncnt Fredericton Cctnetclry. ii car pnlkcd 0n llillsboro street hind by a car proceeding damage to the left rear bumper of the parked car was sustained. Teachers’ Federation ‘Executive Meeting ,“BPSf(ll’S‘El10'CX-€ClltLV6 ihcr wer "committee ' ' arrangemeh latter-pm or March. "w -. . loll a afloat". 1c were =2. dud: h: the names of‘ g , rho constitution andgiol; c} comlndtteeayvuvltli John Con‘ flOlly a! chairman. ‘ o Correspondence was iced fro . 0.12m. stating phat UNESCO. ‘i. planning eudrlvc ‘for tlfemonthiof Flebruary to aid the teachers and education in "general in devastated wurope. ‘Each proyinco of Canada ‘wllrtake an active part in‘ thi- drlgc, and not only teachers and pupils but also the _general public -w1l be glvémzi cllrtllcc to donate in money<or educational supplies. ' ,‘-supplies..i.yzilif iiotme obtain‘- able _at-- the lfchcrs’ office, f-rw vincial Lrabor Depzrrtmentto con- ‘ clliate _n_‘d_lsputej=b veen in‘ ltcd Tcxtilaiwork _(A. ' passed expressing. ‘grateful flit-poro- a . .. , elation to ‘both ' he CONFEDERATION uric is. nowaoli MelNNlS' outed llIIcPIIERSOWB- Men's clothing. PHONE SAUNDERS 1806 for Eroup and Wedding pictures on SOCIETY annual meeting Friday night. City nliAn MISS TCSTELLE IIAINES SATURDAY _ Tile Toombs. Fredericton was held Saturday af- ol hcr father, llector Ross. Services at the house and grave were conducted by _Rev. J. l. Morrison. The pallbearers ~werc Arnold Weeks. Lewis Bertram, Miller Stevenson. l-‘ilncrsozl Murray, Wcckl. SLIGHT TRAFEC ACCIDENT -A slight accident occurred in th: City at 7:15 Saturday night. when Mr“ ‘via "“”"' i v A lnécllrfg oi.’ ‘the Prince Edward Island Teaichérfllrederatlon execu- tlvejwas lleld ‘on January »1»i in the Federation - office; pg- Prince; street. Present. life salary and lradlwfo? ‘lilkon ll1'”ErD\V by fl‘§°‘ii°i" d°5*"*°3’°' "conlmiftoes. lllrj. I..W. sliaw attend- Jd lathe lntereptvof‘theyllutten o "assist .in' making‘ lor_'l.l'iéia'ilhlldl East‘- "er-conveutlon. -,wilich begins ontlle . . Weeks Murplfl o_f Rcilsip -' ‘$1.1m V.‘ li cDoriald. _o£_ a"; Word has been necelvcrh-from; s Ice-E I. -‘ Mitts _. m, _. _ rlnogrtvcirl‘ Codi i Heading i lr-ooint db ~ “ riollfn _'to* settle; the‘ ‘ills ' tomatoes are-t ‘t ' an‘ ' tcelllrlls; milliliters, Lfif’? "TIEATNS " i 050p "lfer insertion t" .' liming iwslliiéal. Montague. on Jun. 10. to Mr. lllTJ Mrs. Donald Mills lncc 1' Tormlw. Doreen Murdock) John Murray. MARRIAGES GREEN-MURPHY - On Decem- ber 29th. 1947, at Boiestown. N.B., bl’ RW- Father Wallace, Reginald 4W5?“ (B1011. to Mary Agnes llvrvhr. Phdorlcton, P, g. r. DEATHS 01X - At Charlottetown. JI-Tl. 11. i948. Arthur J. Rix of Springfield West in his 59th year. Roi-mine will be forwarded from the Cut- eilffe Funeral Home this aftflrnoflll Finithris late residence. Funeral notice 6 . a son, WlOSSMAN-At Charlottetown on Sawmill’. Jan. i0. Miss Irena Crossman o! North Tryon, aged i5 years. Remains resting at the Chisholm Funeral Parlors until this afternoon. then to North Try- on Presbyterian Church for Fun- lral service at 2.30. Interment 9'1""?! Cemetery. ' !'1'IiT!0N-At the Prince Edward‘ Island Hospital on. January 9. H. Harry A. Stetson, age 81 years. Funeral from 5t. Jamel Church on Monday, service start in: at 2 o'clock. Interment Marsh- "Oid Cemetery. Resting at the MICLOIII Funeral Home. k N. O. llacldali UNDEITAKER EMIALMIR i?" stated that beginning 1n February _- ‘ .- the Educational Forum’. conduct- honle - economics hvdlgaslest > was-agreed to wlth- slight unload. the‘ "King's County’ __ _ . ‘tonal-Hor- n. 0nd to -CF'CY'i‘dr sits, ' Qgllfkifitlllg- of- the: .. d I _ _ "l? S ‘reipry- lrliiillums. ln-' fornie,d_-th"e meeting of. the agenda be .tak n" up "at ‘the meeting of ' directorate Ywhlch ' he rl the 17th of January. director MauFndyQn Publicity ed during the past year at various local centres. w'll be replaced by addresses and‘ forums to be an- nounced later. " “ nalre for the purpose c; securing information relating to conditions in rural school districts lnenti‘. . Jcvllsll Agency Admits Purchasinglixplosivcs NEW YORK. Jan. 11 —— (AP) -— -The Jewish Agency for Palestine has Elcknowlcrlged that it was lilo purchuscl- of 190 tons of explosives seized by police and federal agents in New York and New Jersey. Its the last of the consignment of war surplus explosives ear- marked fer the Jewish forces in the Holy Land was lccounted for at army depots at Romulus, N.Y., the Jewish Agency lllllfl in a sluic- ment Saturday n'ght that the explosives were "legally procured" and were awaiting "legitimate shipment” to Palestine when dis- covered. ESPECVIXLLY; JiirTu/lnr Molasses is Ililgied by tanker and ls heated a day or two before the shlp‘_docks so as to facilitate its discharge. crliiri clicks‘ AVAILABLE NOW - said rGlevé" Kidd. Union Too Late To clarify: LOST AND FOUND —- FOUND JIMMIIPB TAXI. Rhone 525. Special January sgie: blouses, skirts, etc. PHONE SAUNDERS 1806 fo SFOUp and wedding pictures location. THE OVERSEAS Nursing Sis uary l5 at 8 p.m. Street. i" twice daily. Phone ‘.2061 or 540. COLDEST WEATHER dropped to six degrees above zero night the temperature to thirteen above zero. facing south, was struck from bc-l south on the some street. Only slight From Russia-n Ship "other Russian craft"- from t heavily-llstlilg ~ Russian Dvina-off the east coast of I-{oki kajdo,.tlle d_ earlytoday. _ _ Tfhe-‘hicwage specified . that. I" further assistance 'was ‘from United States craft. jThe Dvina said she liadr bee: The 'l)v_ina ‘ran .ln,to-stdl‘my_ we cllatka" Peninsula to _ Vladivostok. Sbeéent outiradlo-».ealls Wednes- day. n» ' - - . ' Alia-sea‘ rescue ‘fliers said the Dina, appeEl-cddo be an Amer-i, can-built Liberty. ship-of about 7.6170 tons. and 9110130811911!‘ * -,took bore-this‘ 01ft. but in _ "tonifthe-Unltcd States; , lam-e "Corninisdon-tsaid she actually ~was “built, inPSpaln in 1927mm! was formerly named the Cabo Quilutes, a "obfgfiwions- o; ~ '- a . Steelworkers To Seek Pay "Boost honour-O. Jan. 11 - (CPl-A IA/Eifillifi higher than the “" cdylast» October will be l - ' then-United Steelworkers 'f Am rlca'-4C,!.O.i on behalf or’ Wfblfkfifb iiifcanadrvs three main ha" bsteei plants, it was decided at~ week-end meeting of the Un- ion's ncianal policy committee. .-"'l‘hc present hourly base rate ‘n tile; three nlnln steel plants in __.Canada 11s 82 l-Z cents an hour." research director. "This means 89.60101‘ a fill-hour week and is far short oi the sins rlglirc which the Tor- onto WelfarlfCouilcll has set as a weekly irreducible minimum to provide an adequate budget for a Jamily of five in -'i‘oronto." >- Says “Big Business Increases Profits - .. " - _ “OTTAWA, Jan. ll-l0P)—C. l-f. Millard. national director of the United Steelworkers of America (C: C. L.-,C. I, 0.1. said Saturday that "big business"'.took.a,net prof~ it of S61 out of every man. woman and child in Canada" during i946, compared to $31 in 1938. He told the Union's national policy- comniittcc. meeting to de- cide on a new tinge-hours program. that preliminary figures indicate profits in 1947 exceeded those of 19411. ”‘ “Profits ill Canada are running well above wartime profits, and dividends have reached a new high level.” he said. "Dividends payable this month will amount to an esti- mated $52,000,000 compared IIW $34,000,000 for January. 1947." Mr. Millard said llc is "sure that steelworkers will demand "an im- nlcdiatc full-scale price spread" in- vestlgatlon. He added: "One thing is certain and that is our people will actively support the demand already made by the Canadian Congres sof Labor for rcduccd prices, price control‘. higher income-tax exemptions and increased purcliasing- power.“ nfiowlvco willie sivowrmlviivo AUGUSTA. Me., Jan. 9—(AP1— A jeep snowplow, balllsted with 500 pounds of sand, broke through the ice and sank in the Kenneocl River yesterday. carrying its driv- er. Cluy Roy. 39, to death by dvolvning. MP8 5WD hid i199" clearing ice preliminary to cutting operations. FOB BALE-INS CHRYSLER. See special Id today's Guardian or write N. A. M.. Guardian. Lartor Bros. PASSMBIIE STREET - one man's leather jacket at junc- tion of Sherwood and Molpque Highway. Owner may have slmo by applying lo Box X. Y. Z. iden- MRS. JOIINSTUNS ladies‘ wear. dresses. 011 tcrs unit will hold a meeting at Legion Hail, City, Thursday, Jan- R. GAUTlllElt. Shoe Repairer, now located at 117 Upper Queen T0 NEW GLASGOW in 25 min- i, utes via Maritime Central Airways 9.15 Monday evening, January 12th, THIS WINTER. - The weather observer lit the Experimental Farm report- ed last n gilt that the coldest wea- illcl" recorded in lll‘s area so far this winter was at 9:30 yesterday morning when the mercury had Ullrinf! the day the temperatures rose. and HI, 2:30 p.ni. was recclrd- ed at llvclve above. and at 8:30 last had risen TOKYO. Jllll. ll-(AP: _ Al , __ passengers, originally reported. at "npufleil “i009 “m? M‘ “mmaé 73m have been Lrnnsxerred u, feeds which had cost them aboa maid, is’ o! animal feed imported were "con- istgessed} ship, radioed: noededt ‘tliei-“en route _fr_om; theil. Kai-n‘- l Imfor all dairy products, lifr. Shaw ' fold cheese protlllcton had falicll SIISSESMBOSIIAM Continued from page 1 price levels which will be lair to boiih llvm and the consumer. When Decline Began r Illustrating by census returns and departmental records the de. cline in the Provinces agricultural production over more than 60 years, - lifr. Shaw showed that the growth 0f wheat had dropped in the Prov- ince from an all-time high in 190i of 738.679 bushels to 96.800 last year. 'I'h.e production of grass and clover seed in the year 1881 hild been 823,338 lbs. That figure had been increased in 192i lo 834.048 lbs. but had since dwindled to such low amounts that no record of their production hall been kvpi. . Mr. Shaw revealed figures a-hlc-ii showed that potato and turnip yields were greater during the last few ycars than at any other time ill the history of the Province-S),- 780900 bushels of potatoes and iii-i 600.000 bushels of roots. mostly. turnips in 1947~but lie said irilati those crops were grown by the im- portation of huge alrnounts of fer-; lillzer and the more or lPrS placing f "our eggs in one basket." llc rcfcrr- cd to the disaster ' which would have overtaken tlhe, potato growers-l last spring had not‘ Great Britain ‘ urgently needed the Island's_sur- pill; crop of three rmillionibuail: . Mr. Show surprised rmany of his‘ listeners by infonfillflg flTrm " tllllt back in i884, 07 yearsugo, the ls- lnnd ilud 39,083 acrcs- ofpbtatggq with a yield of-over sixiflmllllon bushels. Tllosc. he said. W0"! Pm" lluccd when suclh a tihlngas arti- ficial fi-rtllizec was illfknownn‘ Mr. Show quoted figures ' show that Island farmers’ in l ho two million dollars. If the arinolmt vol-ted lo a barley’ basis. it Wviiifi 1'9p1'(!S6l'll2.Ml‘.' Show said. 2_ 31-4 million bushels of barley. Last year. rid fanmers thud. grown ,32l~.0tli)_ bushels. The" value ‘of flour im - ed to the Province last yeair was estimated at over 1-9 million-dol- . an» shew mini.‘ 58.5w --l_orl_s‘ iii a N" of 2pmilllon dollars were ini- ported‘ in i946. - _. ~ ‘ljhe live stock population. with the exception of swine and poul- try has steadily dccreased-‘durlng _th"e'_l_ast so years. The lumber "of horses _ir1 illc Province. rose from drop stead 1y from I o~ that last year there I .150 fiver- 40 t usond" more cnttlc in the Yrovln e 25 ycnrs ago than at"! the present tlnlt‘. ‘the figure"- for, 1921 being 138.195‘ as compared to 95,300 in 1947. ' It ,is tho same story with sheep. Buck 1111331" "when practically ev- ery farmer kept o small flock, there were 1.66.495. That figure steadily dropped. 1o 91.232 ill 1911. World War I Save the sheep in- dustry a boost so that, when the next census was taken in 192i. 131.- 763 sheep were grzlz rig on island ‘ farms. But (lesplte World War l1; lllld thcuiccomponydlg llirzh prices for wool, lilo shecp populai-‘on von- ‘ tinned iu decline so that last year i types, n" the-Province. There were] i months azo llnrl n serious effect on tho present hog population as nlnny hog growers killed off their young litters but last year thcre was an all-time record Island hog populat on of 64.000. Poultry. too, Mr. Shaw said. were at an all-time h'gh in thr- Prov- ince as last year thc island had 1.330.000 poultry which is" approx- imately a 150 pcr cent increase over the number of 944.000. which were on Island farms in 194-1. Demand For Dairy Products I Despite the high prices offered alarmingly. Only 654.423 pounds wore produced inst year as com- pared to 4.457.519 pounds in 1901. Butter production continued to show an increase as there were 3.- 520.000 pounds produced last year as compared to the prov ous high record of 2.627.931 pounds in 1941. However. Mr. Shh-w sold. thorn were only 115.000 pounds in stor- age at the present time ill the face cf a domestic demand which would take nluny times that amount from tho Province if it were available. Mr. Show said the present trend showed that many worthwhile crops which were grown by the Island farmer years ago are not now grown or. at best, in negligible quiintltcs. He mentioned beanl. peas. flax. and other small crops. All those played an important part. he said. in the island's agric- liltural economy at one t'1.no. Up to the minute figures were not available, llc said, on the num- ber of vacant farms in the Prov- ince nor on the number of mort- gaged farms. But in 1911 tllerc were only 137 vacant farms as compared to 434 in 1941. 1n 193i there were 4-040 farms mortgaged lCzilizida wllih the proceeds of Call- Jbffnioiley in circulation to pay for ienorrnous United States and Can- . subsidise ruis dour orjtirxalljcn but liars-and the latest figures fol‘ ier- ~me prlckasked ‘m, b’), the" ford“ curios lh 1 1 to genes h. iaii but [Wh a "powder nah‘. m“, Q of all’ breeds and i.“ there ‘were only 48.600 in the= Province. f The cxul-i. result of the sudden rise 1n all animal foods n few came from the western part of Prince County. smclts are reflected in the figures for fish exports though cars fish. 17 cars went to the mainland last month as compared to 1i in December. i946. ' given more of a Christmas mosphere last month by the aid of ‘St. Laurent Says Gov’t Concerned Over Proflteering QUEBEC. Jan. 11 -iCPJ-—Ex- ternal Affairs Minister St. Laurent said in an address here Saturday Federal authorities are concerned about profiieers taking advantage of Canada's present econctnic situ- ation and are at work on the prob. lam. ‘ffoday I cannot say more than 1111i." added Mr. St. Laurent who spoke before a. lunuheon gathering at the Liberal Party's RClOPm Club in Quebec. He discussed post-liar loans cx- tended by llilc United slates and Canada and said they had pro- veniccl domestic unemployment which would ilave resulted frlm hick of export markets as: xvi-ll as "chaos" in Europe that today might have been beyond ritncdy. The result of foreign buying in udirin loans. said Mr. St. Laurent W215 that Canada today enjoyed a iillzhcr level of employment than ever before. better farm plriccs and hlglzcr wages for abor. A domestic effect of the policies of aid -to ism-ope had been the" "iri- flatten factor" duo to the amount miian prdduction and "massive dis- patch" of" products overseas. .-"'The prices of whit we keep for oirr 0W'i1_COI1Sl"lTlQll011 have a tcn- dency to rlsel" said the Minister". Mil‘. Si. ‘Laurent-Isoiri there were inevitable increases lfttlle price-s of’ importcd consumer goods and ,raw materials for industry. lJui-ing the war the Government had been obit! ‘to Eoliggl/these lincreases- by their the Government wasilhe prin- cipal buyer (if-national output. l The subsidy system of price-con- tfiilwas neither possible, nc-r- de- sirable ill peacellmephe said. "and the lndivirual consumer must give ‘up today what is imported. or pay producer." . Such Drlcc increases were inevit- able and increases in one depart- ment of. the, economy nud ed u those in" ot er departments. lVsaid Mr. St. Laurent. Wages, production .costs_;_ and sale prices" followed" each other up‘ cis gavé"an outline of the scrious social and economic -conditl0ns which arr: new prevalent in fhc Eastern Hcnllsplicrt‘. Only by study and co-operutloil. based on justice and Christian principles could the world be saved from depression and Commun sm, Father Francis safd. Incoming Freight Ltontinued from page 1 land farmer is cutting his fertil- izer imports 50 per cent, for great quantities came to the Province last fall by water. However, 20 cars of lime which. technically. is not n fertilizer was brought ovcr last imonth. None was imported in Dc- , camber. i946. i No butter and cheese was ex- .portcd from the Province last month though two cars of thosc dairy products were ferried to the mainland in December oi’ 1046. One car of eggs was shipped lust month as compared to none for the corresponding month of the previous year. Eighty-three cars of live stock, many of them consigned to New foundland. left the Province last month as compared to 93 cars in December. 1946 . Potato Shipments The Railway has been fast catching up in its potato ship- ments owing to the greater num- ber of refrigerator 611's available to the Province. 745 cars of pota- toes were ferried to Tormentina last month as compared to 820 for the same month the previous year. Turnips, which for the past few months have shown an increase ovcr the quantities shipped for the corresponding period the year be~ fore have now begun to fall back. Last month only SO cars were shipped as compared to 102 in Dc- cember. 1946. Seventeen cars of gravel and sand left the Province last De- cember fer Tormentine where work on the ferry terminals is be- ing canted on. All the material The recent good catches in not ah contained that particular Many American homes were at- ill; and knowledge. 50 that can eventually take their Conlmonvrealth. Continued from page 1 press, wholesale witch hunting. and even the very unjudiclal ex- ccution of non-Communist politi- cal leaders. "Nobody is seeking to upset the internal security of the Soviet Un- ion. "Call they not begin to reverse engines and to discard provocative policies by which they are not only running the risk of war at some time, but which are impeding the economic recovery and progress oi mankind?" Britain Would Cir-operate He said Britain wants to co- operate uiih the Soviet Union. "but we cannot be expected at all times to lie down to the untruth- ful and malicious attacks which are made upon our country and our Govcriilnent by the reckless propaganda machines of the Rus- sian Conllllunists, and of the Com- munist Parties of the world. which conduct themselves as the servlle automatic outposts of the Soviet Foreign Office." Morrison said he had never ad- mitted. “and I admit it less and less." that the Communists are on the lcfl. “They are un the right. “The Prime Minister was cor- rect in a recent brodcast in 1s- menting that in this year of 1948 --~thc centenary of (the Communist manifesto of) 1848~—so nlany coun- tries‘ in Europe should be going into reverse against the very cause ' of freedom for which brave men risked their all in the European revolutionary efforts of l cen- tury ago.“ _ He also attacked Russia for op- posing thc European recovery pru- gram and said he could notpnder- stand Russian motives "unlesr it ‘ be the old and evil doctrine that the mole misery there is in the _ world, the better it is for revolu- tionary Comunist success, the doc» trine of triumph through chaos.’ Defines Foreign’ P131191’ . . . - .< - --=¢ ' ' '~ Morrison defined three main pilrposes in British foreign polléy. "The first is the promotion of international action, through the pjniterr Nations, to praventgsny future wars. This involves mucn nlorc than passing YBSPIILi-iOII-“i- W6 have- to take" action. sometimes run risks. It means preparation of a program 0f positive work. 1t means the availability of, and, l! necessary, readiness to use. armed forces to prevent the outbreak of lioicncc." B"t.\in'.< second purpose was promotion ul economic co-cpera- r1011 uitli n view to increasing the prosperity and security of all coun- tries. “No ilntioil can thrive perman- cnli_~.~ on the misery of others, and ccgliiinly Britain can not." The tllirci was to lift the stand- ard of life of the so-called-and often nliscallcd-backlvard peoples- “We want to hefp colonial pee- ples towards an increasing degree of sclf-governmeilt. social Well-be- they place with the other free nations of the "There is no confusion in our WKILGEJIL? WM a TllE BEST TIIINS I SAN IIO W84 my WAR SAVINGS O CERTIFICATES ? Wicéetéau WARTIME SAVINGS Q0405 PEACETIME U BACKl-OG o o a ow that your Wat Savings Certificates are beginnin g to pay off, why not keep this backlog of security intact. Use this money welcome ready res tl I » _ re create a "Fund for the Future" - a asset in time of opportunity, o ourcein time of need.‘ Here's a way to ensure that this money you've already saved doesn't slip through you: fingers. Endorse and mail your maturing certificates, as described on the back, to Ottawa . . ." dicn, when you receive your cheque, place it in a B of M Saving Account. etter still care of a - lcr the Bank of Montreal aka ll redemption details. just bring all your War Savings Certificates to you: nearest B due over to get the cash for it and credit itfslbll ‘(a _ _ value (which includes the interest) ‘to you! _ - account. Under tli "Nr-ZQGMOWMOMQ}! 1942 GNNYSLER minds between development and exploitation. ‘this development will come with the co-operation and good will of the colonial peoples themselves." THREE _WOIINOEO Continued from page 1 treat and fled in an automobile. A11 those in the house soon follow- ed and only one attendant ro- mained with the three injured pat- rons. He called police. The detectives reached the scene at the same time as the morality squad who had arrived to raid thI. bzlrbotte game which has been playing hide-and-seck with police for several months. travelling from one suburban community to an- other. The injured men were rushed to hospital bllt they refused to hcip the police in their investiga- tioil and detectives still were try- ing to question them early tonight. ¢ 1M0 '9-1§_/‘0®§/00i00%00Q Vernon Mclnilis PUPQTlIGIIQliTQV and Decorating 220 Great George Si: Phone 2295-1. FOB SALE for 34.632000; in 194.1 there were Island trees as is sholvn by the 5,229 fflilfi! mortgaged for $5.75l,- statement that seven cars of 7mm N- B" “hld!” “mm- i‘ 200. »' Christmas trees were exported P"""!"' “P”! °°“P'- 91"“ The Rev, IlLE. Francis also cd- from the Province as compared ‘mm E‘°°"°"‘ °°'“m"°"- "'“°" dressed the students. Father Fran- to five in December 194d. mim- T“'° "m" "r"- Write N. A. M.. Glllflllnn. PLAN T0 BUILD YOUR HOME | Mortgage Loans arranged for Family Homes, and Commercial Local A tlfying Jacket and paying for ihil ldvortisonmnl- NM _ , __ Under The NATIONAL lllOllSlNO A01 ATTENTION All anchored-layers. lndloo and Willi LONG TERM PAYMENTS MORI ON DEW EASTERN TRUST BUILDING , CHARLOTTETOWN-TEL. l7" Private Residences, Multiple prize. Buildings. gent c- Columbus, will be hold in their Home. 196 Richmond Street. City. on T ‘ gentlemen. Charlottetown Legion future. r BANK or MONTREAL of M branch. As each one cdmol the next few years, we arrange is arrangement, there's no need for you to go to the fuss and bother o! endorsing each individual certificate —thl Bank will attend to this for you. ou'll find this service will save you rimef trouble and worry. And while your Sav- ings Account is growing -— your War Savings Certificates will be in safekeeping. You'll be surprised n: the low service charges, too. backlog of security today is your guaran- tee that you will get the thing: you u/ant most tomorrow. Hold 0n't0 it — add to it —- and do a real dollar-building job for the '5"! We‘d like to help you plan this. just bring in your War Savings Certificates now . we'll do the rest. lf you haven't a savings account with us, we'll gladly open a special one for you. II l I/HIOI (HM/III Charlottetown Branch: N. L. FORD, Manager ‘i? Home, Monday. January 12 at 8 pan. Prise: for game: and door ll. 0f 0. Meeting Regain monthly meeting of tho lottoinvm Council. Knlghtlof evening. Jan. ll, n PRIBENTATION AT UNION ROAD do ‘Tuesday evening December 3nd. I lugs number of friends and nlighborl gathered at tllc home o! M: and Mrs. Harry New- man to honor their son. Alton r.- to welcome his bride lo the com- munity. To the strains of the Wedding March played by Mrs. Sterling Yea. Alton and Olga were escorted to the scat of honor oy Misc Mariorle Lamont and Mr. All members plant attend. Malcolm Helicon. A nicely mm- ed address was read by Mr. W“- lace Mallett, and a. well filled purse presented by Mr. Curling Yeo. Alton, on behalf of his bride. and himself thanked one nod cl for the kind remain“ . ARI the singing of "For The! Are loll; Good Fellows" tho groom was heartily bounced. A dfllib lllnnl was than served by the Iodtq. ‘Inc remainder of the av Vi! pleasantly spent in music and n- clal lntercoursl. _ “lit-weevil;