___ ram: SIX THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN an MINUTE rlvt: atmrrss mm THEY su-zr- sin: ASKED 11m T0 MARRY usn-wowl JAMES STEWART a nd HEDY LAMARR —-~— TPQLAYY £59555” “'5'” MINIIITIIRES PASSING PARADE l iwME impel: tut/n my I’ u/tuo/lsiiiiiii’ ‘Mu/ass m.» BRIEF BACKGROUND COMINCT-IQT-I TPRIITVCTE; EDTWAFITI: it TRTTQ? arrow»? viii l _ " Jvitho priceori his. “head. I ' ' <__...and romdhoeinhis he .. Greater, than‘ ‘the roaring. thrills otfiviva viuavsr DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK GUARANTEE o Take this sensational opportunity to try Quaker Corn Flakes. Taste the delicious difference malt makes. We are so sure your whole family will like them that we say: Buy Quaker Corn Flakes now. Then, put them to every taste test . . . compare them for crisp- ness, freshness, flavour-with any corn flakes you've ever eaten. Then, if you don't agree they're the most delicious corn flakes you've ever calm, just return the partly-used pack- age and you will get double your money back. Join the million: of happy families who enioy Quaker Corn Flakes as a daily treat. Buy several packages from your grocer now. ‘IT'S Til! MALT in Quaker‘: famous secret recipe that makes Quaker Corn Flakes so extra delicious...so rich sad liavourful. And these fiaer flakes are crispier, too . . . toasted to crunchy perfection. sold in flavour-sealed packages! OUAKER MAJOR-GENERAL ERNEST \VILLIAM SANSOM, D. S. O. First Armoured Division. e tntut FliilfES » » , Officer Commanding Canada's Major-Gr-ncral Ernest William Sanson, D.S.O., colnlnands Canada s 1st Armoured D1v1sio11, sllicd i0 ' IIIUTV Clll .._., ciinlinfl desperately toupon Wm Rare Industry quarters, London, with General Sansom as Deputy-Adjutant Gen- eral. when it was decided to form a 3rd Divis‘on, Canada speculated on who would lead it with a human, drllntntic intcrcst somehow reserv- |Brunswick, son of Major Edwin Human 50ml Experience; w proceed overscasd dtirinffik lfliqli f4} I ' ' " u". . n —. . ._ .-._.__.__. .._._ c. GI L T ~ artlme Needs 3:13:11 “in 81% ygfperlnlpArmqv ranks, Ist Division. when General crerar the peat bespokfii-ggé mam ' 4d d ldenl‘dit-s.;,nn returned to Ottawa as Chief o! the erance But t1 t . “y iiii" ‘ Brill G d he m cons are an ‘I General staff General Montague was stibicctrdm i“ More iii BOIITTIIOT serllllifisi g ana a coigghilrihllchsnnsnm ls n “llolrinc! suvmded hiln is Officer Com- chine-sunning inmocliinenroimtmi‘ Ii Choker", born and rrnrczi in Nrw miiilfiiiig- Canadian Military Hcfld- before to wqs fired m m -—— Sansom of Stanley. Coming from a TORONTO, June 11 -(CP) — long line of military ancestors, it ' The task 0f supplying high preci- w“ only natural that ht- should once in Sackvtilc, the Murray Har- 50“ msmimiinis vitally necessary 10in hi5 i091“ Miiiiiil- Uiiii “i ‘in D0111‘ Canadian Girls 1n ‘trtiinillg i!) the opcrntlou of land, sea and ‘early ago. H‘) “'11s coullnirsfoltcd in gruup5 tony Cum-go of me 5mm” n.1~ forces, has fallen to a Canadian .the Stanley 011111131111)’ of the 71st Because o! the absence of Rev. W , C. Plckctts at tile hlarltline Confer- N°W he is entry T'\il8 one on .. . q sifwflfd 0f a passenger-carrying lleiihifil‘. This norlnnlly mild. — SPECIAL — altfsrnoon sci-vice ut Ltitile Sands. esubllshnlcnt where for the first ‘York Regiment in 10".? nl- ire age Pg for the “native ‘iservices only. nered and hard-tu-l-urlle v 'v_ ’ v v 1. ». . ~ 4 . ~ I‘ an ' v _ , - my“ “ii-R CHAMPIORSHIP FIGHT 5.511.221 Jifiifi. ftfiftiti ‘men Donor“ “My he t» w. . . . . .. diifllitniftli‘. Wififii 2:1,"; "r w i M . 110111110 e mnmi astute of flre-con- Through public and Hlzh schoo. on es s n coolness until oi‘ the church thev 1. '1'. the C. G. Hyum‘ M“. E. acxmmon‘ a-fter the press release of October months , t . ' 22nd last. On March 4th. 1941 he ago Ye ii M‘ i" trol instruments is being done by the other day mm; and working ns an cngineer 1r. one company, Hero are manufac- Ontario when war broke out. sun- who leader of the lnterlnedlate group, “wed - , . ,. - 9- f - d .- o , V" _ _ ‘ v _ _ _ _ . _ w , gun glghts. "my finders, 50m vomnhvrpd m. yrflc, y“, “as mnsolrc from the 3rd DIH- 'I'I1e_g10\t‘s are org m. ALSO LATLBI‘ “AR NIal-TS f‘,'f,,,fi,§’,§°°,,.,,‘§ Qlggigflfifij telescopes, periscopes, sight telcs- lh'5 old l‘8'!il1'l£‘lll. and pruccrrlcri 1o Siiiil i0 Ffimmiind Cflhfldils Ist Ar- Was aiimc WhPn wc 115m“ tong; “w Scripture lesson was read by_copes_ ma] 5m,“ and stereoscopes_ ‘England as n Hmwnn," in me mcurrrl Division. Looking down them (Nazi submarine and 11m 12th Battalion. AitPr n m1 oti of in- {film H50"- ofFWs senior to Gen- m. oral sanson in his past career say |ot him. "He draws work out of imiiblf. He nlal-trs n wonderful in- jstrucor from orory point or View, iooisrvrs great knowledge and has an cxfrnordinnry way of imparting it to others." "He hns rm conceit", says another voice. "He knows how to be decent to officrs nnd men bomber crew's» up, t blankets and give tiiliiiihgitiihnfl and smokes. treat int-m u n would expect to be tfpjtnd our“, ves....b1lt. no more or irni.“ Ant he whacked his flFi on the cou- Pilrritonuiny wall. i e tod o! sect G crews shelling orfiibofiiiiifi‘, man ustukas spraying strugghnl SHOWS AT 3.1.")_-7,00-_9_0() miss boreen MacNelll. l This important link in the chain ‘llie music constsxu of two special of war production is Research En- numoers by ‘J19 cllolr ot girls, ultti terpriscs Lttl, at Lieasidc, near Tor. a duct. sweetly sung‘ by Airs. Mac-i 0mm, fQffned tmnnt- tt-e Dcpartment K111111211 11nd Miss rtlta Chapman. Inf ,\h,._,,lt,o..g and SHM“. when Wm. hlls. W. C. Piiliifitlli. lrntitrr o1 tnc [wjgpncipq limp‘, i, Mcéhcarv m as fiiii°i,iii°iii"“§iii° it“ “ii““‘°°'1‘i““i sure tlllilillllfcifTl lvoduction of the wed ler tu on 11c L). Li. .".‘ _ ‘ ‘ ' ‘ ' Pmvose’ min,“ me “ms w me upyinsilulnents. The company now to the high standard set for a. Can- Weiiibes i1 Piam cmiiiiiiiiiifl 1391009 auian G111 in lrallang, and telling square feet of space. on a s to which st-rlictlonnl duty in E'1_.,lnn"l. cro=sed tn France in 191'! with the llih Bricnrlc T\T?l(‘i.lil‘.(- Gin Com- pnnv, Fnllmring tlm .'-‘om.1a~ lrxitlcs in Frwcc. l1» cmnri ‘d iii“ 16th Cwlzidiwn Flachinn Fun Cumuruiv which re commanded with the tth Division until the formation of the Canadian Nlachhe Gun Corps in ' Til-Bil‘! -:- CAPITOL -:- FITI. SAT.“ i RAQIO NORTiY-‘Ulimicm her audience somethinfl of line. early last Scptmber was nothinB 1918 and the ond of the war found “Riki iiim- “id i“ “ever i‘ iiiiiiy- i” Team“ “iiih machinwiiii iiit TRANSMISSION splendid programs which Canadian‘ but a grassy plain. lhim commantlinr! tho It lsiitallon a, 73° “Siiibiisiiefi Qxffiiieni discib- They M“ be” iii" mi"? W- Bnvui: Tune uiri 111 11111111111: groups are carry-g Before the wnr most of the Canodir-n Ahchinc (‘wn corn-a H" iii“ Durtlmltirs. 10o nmlrv in my my i Eastern unyitgnt Throughout in: out. She commended the gills ‘vol-ups 093m] 31,155 was produced was fl‘v~rd(\(‘ the D50 and mom Tho 3rd Division's training has Ol’ thinking, and they Shaw m 1 Vii“ Iii-ENG!!! i°i' ‘heir iiiiiiiiiii aiimidaii‘? ‘ii ln England, Germany, Czechoslo- ticnod in disnnfrltcs for general Viisiiy bfilflfiltcd bv General Sim- wmpflssiian‘ I'm “Oi iiying w: i‘ Canada an“ U_;5_A__31__,4 m" 3553 church and buhdav School. fol the vakm and Belgium. The European distinction on Am", sowim $01115 experience in England. He should retaliate, fliiilOljgh n,’ m“ War Savrngs Folders which theyl t .11. no 10.00 p.111.) 49.10 n1 (inns , k t t f, d E India Am n y _ s, A _ played ills part in Canada's nearest the Old Mun have a time _t . “L30 um" Wcswm Gilliam-gab‘ {lliiiglrzléiififfifi “iiiaiiiiif egtlillliétify 311:1 311211111131? slsmtintiirelyflrtrakenmb; h-zl‘ pointed ideiliiyvirfiilhliiggiil niiqgzoiivriil briish i0 iiciiim- R6 ii fell t0 his lot. m3 hi! 8"" "i?" Jiiflt rfteiriiivI-agl _ T "wiihimi- 355E i2 m-ojecys winch may 113d suwessglnyv demands. In England some plants Canadian lvlnchlne Gun Brio-uric. giiiiiiil the illness of General troy comr into our hand; u)? ' ‘L. n i ~41. .~ carried our. during the year. The specialize in production of lar-ze ‘orranird its :1 nit of 111t- Porznnn- “iiiiifs- i° Prelim‘? ii"? 9nd Brigade “e imw-i." m?“ ‘mm "1 iiiiiiil i" i’ pm” 0M0“ ‘“" ‘n"" service closed with the National A11», quantities of sDtclfic types of in- ept Form‘. M‘ . th- (Pibfillfimtilit for Ogqmtifififi iii NOYW-il’ but tho iii“ ii"? Whit‘ i003‘ tr” 6.2a p.111.—'CAlsLlNG 1511. WEST them and “'iaD5-" |s'.1'umeuts, but at Research Enter- of this Unit- in 11123 ho commando-l "Immifi": for which the Canadians INDLESH The London Negro Choir. 45 pJli.—THE NEWS. 00 p.111.-"Qucs1icns of the Hour’: Military‘ Ccuunclltnry bv Cap- tain CYRIL FALLS. _ 7.15 p.ln.—-NE\\’S IN JRENCH. i 7.30 p.n1.—‘G1c."1L P.\.rt1l1mel1t;11'- ions’: Kerr Hurdle. Pkeature _ , ' Progranune. I. ' f, , 8.00 plrh-‘PHE NEWS. W ole heart l , 8.10 psnr-‘LLGTENING POST‘. [m i" I’ o ,1 8.15 pJiL-QLLAKIOX] 011111113’. ¢r arms! 1 8.30 p.n1.—‘BRI'I‘A1i~l SPEAKS’. 1 THIN bl‘ ALEXANDER KEITH. 8.45 p.m.—HEADLINE NEWVS AND VIEVl/‘S, Commelliator: J. B. l McGEACilY. i 9.00 p.m.-—"Ili1e Music of Britain‘: Irsll Song», sung by Richard - Hayward. t 9.15 )1.1n.-'I<‘ro11t. Linc Family’ ~ 1 Episode ~10 '11'.1e adventures cf the British Ifatnily Robinson in war-tune London tvriticn and pzxtlucctl by Alan Melville. 9.30 ptn-‘CANADA CAL-LS FROM LONDON‘ tin collaboration with CBC). 9.30: Progrnllllnc to ‘on announced. 9.45: ‘LES VOTX FltANCAlSES. French Men and ‘.\‘0l‘ll8l‘i speak- ing to French-Canadian listen- ers. 10.00 p ln-‘DEMOCRACY MARCH- ES‘. Tall: by (iER-XIJD BARRY, 10.15 pffl.——'Ai Your Rcqtlcst’ 10.80 pm. -_ ‘Starlight : Evelyn Lays. Cfllnncrc, Gerry Wilmot. 10.4.3 D.l‘l"i.—-'i*iI\liI((‘5li'2fll‘l! - The Mnn"——2: ‘The World in Arms‘ (Hrnry V, Henry IV tPart 1i, King Jnhm. Arranged by Clrmonrv Dane md prcdltccd by Val tiiolqlltl. 11.15 ]).l‘t'i.~ NFWS FROM THE OHRISTIAG WOitI-D. Talk by the Rvv. A.M. GHIRGWTN. Secretary to l-hc London Mis- sionary Society. 11.30 {inn-RADIO NEVIS-REEL. 12.00 .-n.n.-Thn lnilv Fcrvirr l2 05 :1.m.- ‘Lnrvlnn ("nliinz ‘ 12.15 anL-‘BRITATN Talk by AYFXANDER KEHTH. I 12.30 d.m.-'T‘l-Tl71 NEWS II.‘ a.m.—Cl*.=c cictvn. c1755} school. ‘. l, .. 7. i .. . and t; keep I| ting and ls about to shut its doors, the cry gocs up," he said, “who goes home.’ "That cry had its origin in the early days when a member o: Parliament. walking alone at night through the strccis of London, was liable to be robbed by gang- sters and cutthroats that infested the highways. The doorkeepers of the House were instructed to make Report for monm of MR3’! Grade X-l. Ktltllvrine Pickering. 2. Kathleen O'Connor. Grade IX~—l Vivian Sullivan. Grndo VII . Willard MncKayt a. Fr-trnk Rlicy. It. Noreen O'Connor Grade V-~l. Glntlvs Glover: 2. Eileen Andrews; 3. Joan Carr. Grade lV-l. lvInrv Ml-cKnyi 2» Horence Dunning; 3. George Carr. Mankind today “On way home" Says Gol. lialston HAMILTON N. Y.. June 10- arrangoments that those members ,_fiflifligltig?nlxitiiiiiimpiiiiiliiiiiiii ,CP,__COI_ J_ '1, Rnlston, Canadian who lived in the same district and Grade 111,41 1 Mafgnrgflg mn- Dfrvyxce Minister, yesterday told wentldhgme in‘ the same drirfiction Gena Gamma University grndiintes that shou cave n groups, o owed Grade "__A 1‘ Elm“ paynmg llbcrtv is at stake in the war, and by link b0Y5 carryifls flickering Grade II-B. l. Dclma wnodside; n-tutrated whm he meant with torches to light their way through l shinny woodsyde; _-;_ Dorothy .1 l to British parlia- the shadows where lurked the rob- Md _ iinnpmfifivrfihiistor; iber and the murderer. wgiiiagdeex__A_ cm} Gala “When the British House of Today mankind is on its way Grade I__B_ L Stew“; qlovoy; 3, common; has concluded its slt- home, aong roads once again in; Robert Ream,» ___ fested by bandits and murderer. Perfect Attendance’ Knmnt-tno Mr. Ralston then quoted this verse:- “The men that are men again; who goes home? ‘Tocsln and trumpeter! who goes home? “For there's blood on the field and blood on the foam "And blood on the body when Man goes home. voice "Who is for Liberty? who goes home?" The Drfence Minister came to Colgate to receive an honorary degree of Doctor of Laws and dc-, liver tho commenceme address. Pirkernlz. Knthlccn O'Connor. Nil?" P011 O'Connor, Delma Woodsidc. stewari 01°11"- BUU HAMSATFS su rsnmo outctttv wmt YTHE ITIGIIT PAINT TD PAINT RIGHT Weirum MacKaY. The kindness 0f W58 Kfliiileeiu prises the manufacture of all types MacFariane, and Messrs Crilly 1113B,‘ 15 being earned out Fred Leiiiciieii-iv Eiiieiii. MiwKimiciit In the early stages of the war the mid Wiiiiai" Miwiuime" im° wok National Research Council investi- ' After preliminary investigation the ‘Harbour, the SITPPY stitchcrs Young estabndyed by the People's Group conducted the scr- company was vice. The Club President, Miss Joycet government. Cooper, had charge of the service» and she was assisted by M155 Mflrlfln‘ “may r-Qblgfns i/Ilfllilslllgli. hllsillhcarkglzindeiiciltlMljs I ope avey, lss 0111a 4101c 1, lvtlss Vivian Darcy, and Miss Kath-i atqtggenfigigizieixsdgisgiofstggyiafifi “$1524 fifpiiiiiiiéy gave the address i'° be made °i iii‘? "ariiiiis ii?“ iii and wok as he, m“, ~50 “m by,“ ilstrumcnts; tools had to be (tlf- , ya may obmmy She mged the signed for their production and 11C I young people to put as much into correct sequence of operations had. living the Christian life as 1.110 to be learned before beginning pro- Lilymplc ChflmDiCns did into running duction. Added to these was {he tieir races. tclif iculty of manufacturing optcal The music f" iiie eveiiiiil °°“' lass-fir s eciallzed unclertakln 1n slstecl of a duet by Misses Rita and 18,86" p a Dorothy, Cbllisprnan. and‘! two! thems y 1e c1011". 1e ue n former being taken by Mr. and lvlrs. ‘éiihnipilgwiifiiibieiglilliifd ‘ibmiiiiiik Btu“; E. H. MacKin-non. Lame consféilfl- i‘ giy“ e "i9" w“ a“ ' tlons were present at both services. 19d and i1 “mill! 9913598 We"! 09611- _ l cd in instrument-making tochnlque. y Young men from technical schools ' I were given special classes and then B apprenticed to lire production By ltlrlte L. Simpson plant, Associated Press Staff Writer With technical details surmount- The plant now is in full Opera. tlon and an idea of the complexi- t'cs invollrcd may be gathered from knowing that in the manufacture 0i one seven-inch instrument with more than 200 parts, used for gun- laying, thousands of different oper. atlons are required. Much of the Work is done to a closeness or one- The warning Koiced by Prime MlnLt-er Churchi against prcma- l, ten thou ndyh f 1 h_ lure "jubilation" cvcr indicated Al-' S“ 0 an m lied successes 1n Syria 1nd LOIJQH- on found a quick com in rfliifflled Axis bombing of Mail-uh 1n E,;vpt.|BrltlSh _ A test of Gen. Wavcll s aml ty 1/1, halt a. renewed Axis drive from LONDON. June 11 —(CP) - A Libya into Egypt may be at hand.’ The main EritLslt defence lint: on. that front, more than 100 miles "Contra ro ." i. eastward from the Libyan-Egyptian * screw dgsigihedatomixpiiidivi: the “QT- boflcliielghls based" on the Matlpil I fluency o; at, cram may be m," "i 9 - to Royal Air rom- pitmes l; 1t Two sir assaults on tviatnih in as i ~ ‘ many nights. either from Nazi bas- I imiffuiéggiiriis“ i“ ‘mrk-‘imvi es in Libya or across the Mcditer- n“? concralfiop or coixm an -~ 1t iihftmitnili‘.ctfliiiteimiiilttihiisi miiwvgfsiifiylroigiiins flimrew with formidable German “reactlon" to 2° “in? e Dim‘ biiidei- Teseiiibie! Allied invasion o1 Syria will come. W° *1 "WW5- mflflsed close to- And while that reaction "remains i Ieih" W1 mounted on two sham. obscure and unknown," Mr. Church- °ii° Tiiimiiifl ili-‘iidfi U19 other and ill warned, jubilation over Syrian iuriii"! in °l7P0$iie directions. developments is prcmaiuna. ‘Bench tests were started in 1930 There are other indications that, and flight tests in 1940 but they Egypt itself will be the next main have not been completed. battleground. Perslstr-nt reports Capt. A. G. Forsyth and (3. J, which bear the stamp of credibility Hm! ll-Pert, British engineers who HY iiiiit i198“! Gemini Mid Iifii-‘dcvelopcd the new design, CIfllmS ifln rfinfliftemelii-S WW9 Siiilii-ieddt is the first controllable airscrcw I frcm Sicily to Libya while the bfli- '. in the world and that advantages 1 tie of Crete drew Brlrish sea and are obtained by us,“ n with modl _, air pouler away from the Sicllianipm hlghpowerel pihnes aim“ bi'i‘i3ehe"d' I By reducing the overall diam-"t-r ' Reaction of French. colonial of the irscrew m d“, ‘k | mm“ i“ Norm Africa to me Allied i underctgrrlage design plgoiiiiitsi-rissihlt-Io invasion in the Levant is yet un- _ certain. Neither vlchv officials nor Yi§E>§YC1iZOuIILI§ZoICIAi¥ lgzgjztliigg purring} I G . (I, PM '1 fl i - rrgs tiiaileeiitigtxiiitcrrangtlsn. 1131i gleaT-‘iiie iiirlmiw iii mie- 5° ii"! Jif-i ly indicated what rt Weygantfscriiii dmini Iii-Emil‘ t0 Bwiiiili wh‘le taking oft‘ and there is an cotomal troops IIlI-I t lay 1n the gtruilgig, p ‘improvement of the aircraft's pow- Ot er intlmatlons of an impcnd- '1' 0f mhnfleiivre in the Mr. in: Axis drive eastward towardl A special attnngoment, details of Alexandria and the Suez Cannllwhich are kept secret. enables one have come from Rome. Withdrawal 1181f of the contract-op to b; kept of Nani air divisions fr:m Sfcily for wot-kin if the other is put out service elsewhere. presumbaly in the or act on. and in effect, twin-en- Eiwiem Mediiemiiefl" WM‘ "WRITE. glued reliability is obtained. Can- ‘ Y“ rcilnéili’ "imiiiimii iii “W Iili- 1 non can be arranged to fro through an cap . British-Free French occupation &?_tiiii.i_iiifi_iiiiio_n_uiiifgi cf Ielnnnn and Syria would greatly IBM" i!" dons" vi’ w Axis pincer. Mediterranean coastline to guard attack on Ezypt from east and 1r it; sea front ts to recon 11cm 1,119 west; but it would also extend lLlbyan-Eg tian border to Turkish British. defence lines. The British rmutien 51W!!! ' the lSmsll Arms $011001 lit Connmnht flea!‘ Odnnw. December. 10.19 with command has nearly 2.000 miles of I d Mnchiuo Gun Wing n! we He urnduntt-d from the Armv £25 9-5258 iliaugliifpsizitigicg} Lheirigated the possibility of manuftlc- ISiRff COIWP. Cwmbm-ltuq Elrzlnlitl At the evening service 111 Murray] iiiiiiis Cliiiflfli lenses in Canada. in 1925 whorr- he ("allied lmdm‘ Frld fwnrshrfll Lord Trclisidc and that troll-known Brhlrh on the iformatious. Gcnrrnl Pvllcr on n niiihnrilv employment of arlnnuro" F Tiii/"Y" i0 Cflflfldl he hcld a widt- Pflhow of rosnonsllrln posts lnrludlnq GS-Q- 2 1i‘ H"‘if'ix and in tho Dr- ectornie of 1\'I"i1.'1"v Training at Headquarters in gnaw“; AIA‘&- QMII. Rosina: cs0. 1, Montreal and Iffrccinr m‘ ltqiiitnyv Tmtnqnm DPTEHCe Hcndnunrtcrs, my “m, 1n t-hls acnoi t t. q n hostilTcs tiiltim m present Gmemi S‘i‘!=0n1 wont nvorscas ln r l _ General Mc- Nau Iuon as his Assistant Adiutnnt and Quarter-master General in the y smarts srotitiacl-t U NEEDN’ at: Relieve those agonizing pains by taking genuine Moelean 5i ‘ Powder which contains, in exact formula. the four alkalies leading British hospitals prescribe to promptly relieve the grip of stom- ach pains caused by indigestion, | acidity, heartburn, food fermenta- tion and gastritis I Do as thousands do-usc Maeleen Stomach Powder and ea t anddrink whntyou enjoy . . . enjoy wha tyou eat anddrinkl MACLEAN were earmarked were cancelled as the troops were ready to embark, General sansom Ims learned the secret of combining hard work and rvlnxntlon, 5713's fit. and jolly with a touch or hilmcr that is a symbol '01 strength in really ban times, iDull 1117s} Ships Thrills, Romance Blfioftly Told By JACK BRAYLEY Canadian Press Staff Writer AN EASTERN CANADIAN PORT. June 11—(CPi --A ring of armed guards, drab blotches of dirty col- Oitd Willi. a show of passes, steam- ‘ship employees who "don't know a thing" and a maze of restrictions add up to a big headache for Can- ada's wartime ship news reporters ‘trying to get stories from a. port I that is further obscured by a label , dntcline. | But on the other side of the solid guard of veterans, and be- hind ihe dirty gray paint lie more thrills and romance than ever put into, Montreal or Victoria or Saint John in the glistening white and gold braid days or peacetime. The wtir has changed all the splck and span efficienc of those easy days of passenger lis handouts and lon heralded arrivals; of not- ables w o talked freely and skip- pers who rctnilcd minor adventures merely for the listening. Today drnbntmd dirty, their names hidden under a grey camouflage and revealed only on the closest scrutiny, the liners plod into port at nII hours, unspoken and unwel- comcd. It takes much showing of identification cards 11nd much per- suasive argument to reach their war-scarred sides. successive rings of veterans guards, police. customs and immigration officials have U be passed. Officers Wary I The purser who used to meet newsmen with a broad smile, a passenger lLst and a helpful tlP now shrugs an apology and looks as though he were guarding the Crown Jewels. But both passengers and crew. the strain of a hazardous ocean crossing behind them. are usually in talkative mood. and from them Iromc the stories of adventure on | the high seas. They recount chapt- ers in the v‘tal battle of the Atlan- I tic, stories of running fights with raiders. of thrilling rescues, and of tragedy. Passicngers, most of whom are 0n vernment business and in offic- nl capacities, come dribbling in bv dozens on treighters beefing house Hat's which in peacetime repre- scntt-d the ultra dezree of comfort in ocean passenger transport. Cabin . class now means merely a. second- lafv stool cell in the bridle-house iWh"l\ in peacetime afforded pri- vncv tn the second wireless man- ITho crow are doubled no and the pwsscnfiers, loss important in vnvawc, are tripled up. The lrelghters are shared out to the various lint-s to compensate for n Fl A u l1 ., Ithe renwsitlonlng of theft-proud x _ s~_ SIOmHCh |ll'"era. now operating as firmed 1," p d .mert~.hantmen and troop trans- - - ' I D01’ » 0w er ' And the British seaman has be- some l grim guardian. Rla race in the UIGG srllool._ C_\‘lli ATacPhtrsonJ Harry MncLeod, 3 Norman Mu- Grade VIII—l Margaret Martin. 2 John MacKinnon. 3 Sandy Dat- son. Grade VI-l Gladys ilaclieod, < Charlie MacKinllon nlld Roy Cami- bell (equal), 3 Arnold. lilncleod Illil Margaret MBACIKTDG tequall Teacher. Doris A. White. Primary Dept. Grade V1 tbi 1 Mary Moclzod. Ewen Campbell. Grade V~1 Shells lilacKinnttn. Beatrice Dim 11. It bolus/e Mac ‘\- Grade IV-l K. J. lvhcKinnon. Rita Maclsaac, 1i Donald Ma ~ Grade I1l—1 John Morris. Grade II (a) 1 Francis Ma ~ 1 and Don MacPllerson (equal). gilitgenoe Cnmpbvil. 3 Elwood '11 Grade 11 n)» 1 Douglas Martin. Grade I-l Kenneth ilaclrodn Sheldon Cantpbcll ‘Beecher. Christine MaoLeod. LONG DROP FOR. SCRATCH a bit of a scratch," he ma Use Mlnartfs for dandruff. IIUXZEMII SPECIAL AM 15¢ 001.1) CRE 35¢ SKIN CREAM ha: Value Sp- ar bed _. u MINTY'S r0311! PASTE 75c value 5P- ll GIANT HINDS CREAM 49¢ $1.00 Value SP- _ 35¢ coltai" W“ PQWTTU‘ 20¢ Colililiei‘ Powder Tooth ghz-Vaiue. 5P- SPECIAL ‘ CROTHBRS “i?” 11011.50 CANE"; 50c Pound T i‘ REDDIN BROS. Phone 85 E OUCETT i ti”)? Sliillitltiiiiiii’ i d