. run ouaaoiaiv. cu ; by OK. i I "lit- v ' , V4.4- l pi.?.:m... , ; llloetllt ' llsxt Week --- annual meeting of the an Inward Island Divilion 01 ' has Canadian Red Oroaa society '0 p held in the form of a dinner at ' D .' L. A. WJNTER. 0.8.3.. nations: 1 treasurer. Canadian Red Cross so- I oiety. reoeived the highest honor the society can bestow when he was made an Honorary Odunselior at its annual meeting May 3 in 'mronto. The (liar-lottetown Hotel on Mon- day. February nth. will be nor.- oured by the presence of Mr. 1.. A. Winter. 0.35, of Toronto. honor- ary treasurer of the Canadian Red cross. who will be the guest speaker. ' Mr. Lewis A. Winter has given full-time voluntary service to the Red cross since December. 1939. when he was appointed by the National Executive Committee as Oomptroller of the Society's funds and also became a member of the central Council of the Canadian 'v Red moss society. In May of 1946 i' . he was elected as honorary treasur- er. As under the by-laws of the Society no officer may serve more than three years in the same cap- acity. the Nominating Committee during succeeding years has altern- , . ately appointed him as honorary . comptroller and honorary treasurer ' so that the society need not be dewived of his invaluable services. In 1918 His Majesty was grac- .. iously pleased to recognize Mr. A Winter's outstanding contribution to his country during the war by appointing him an Offcer of the Order of the British Empire. Throughout his career Mr. win- ' .; ter has devoted himself to the ser- : vice of others. He has guarded , the funds of the Red Cross with ti untiring care through the trying years of war and perhaps evenmcre difficult post-war period of reor- , pnlzation and retrenchment. He is admired throughout the ranks of the society from coast to coast for - the painstaking attention to every '' detail revealed in his meticulous financial reports. " In May of last year Mr. Winter was made an Honorary Counsel- hr of the Canadian Red Cross So- oletyf This is the highest honour Iiat can be conferred on nryone by the Canadian Red Cross society and no one was ever more worthy of receiving it than Mr. Winter In whose personality and life of ser- vice is typified the true spirit of ' Red Cross. vlfr. Winter ruyiesented the Can- n Red cross society at the sev- teenth International conference of Sodlcroas societies which met in Sweden in i943 and to -which he will undoubtedly refer in his ad- dress at the annual meeting of the P. E. X. Red Cross cn Monday next UNUSUAL BIRD I The umbrella bird of Ecuador. Ibout the sin of a crow. was a heavy crest which can be spread like an umbrella. output is cum I: vs: oiuiu ' (CCT!:0 CIIAPISII XXV However men may propose-even arr , it is worn .. who dispose. There were three days before any boat was to leave Ohunking on the voyage down-river; and on the sec- ond” of these. to Mr. Chalmers bringing her the intelligence that Leslie Dale would escort harm: the rest of the journey to Jharighal, sheila l-lavelock gave a perfectly blank refusal. , "He has business at Tan Pu." said sheila Havelock. with perhaps the faintest irony in her vovioe. "I've wasted for too much of a busy man's time as it is." "He has arramed all that with his firm," said Mr. Gialmers pati- ently. "by wire." "Oh!" said shells. in little blank- ly. "Anyway. he needn't nave bothered. I'm most grateful to you -both. But I'm quite capable of looking after myself." "I can't take the responsibility." said the Vice-Consul obetinaiely. "Then you'll have to take the re- sponsibility of looking after me here," retarted Sheila. "I'm not travelling any further with Mr. Dale-that's definitel" Mr. Chalmers returned to his of- fice. with the satisfaction of know- ing at last what was meant by getting a flea in his ear. He was not pleased when Leslie Dale's only reaction to the story was to laugh. "WIhat's behind all this?" he de- manded irrltably. "Have you been making yourself a nuisance to the girl? Why's she got her knife into you?" "Ask her!" said Leslie malicious- Iy. PERIL BY NIC-l.l'l' l That night came the first of the Japanese air- raids. Sheila, who was staying with the Gonau1's sister. who kept house for him-a nliddled-aged leathery- skinned woman. who reminded her of Janet James without. Janet's heart of gold-had just gone to her bedroom. when she was aware of a singular crescendo of sound in the air. shells was already partly un- dressed. but wrapped in a borrowed kimono she peered out of her win- dow. To her amazement the streets were a, seething mass of people. jostllns. Pushing. carrying the weirdest collection of goods and cattle. They moved with heads. lowered, and shoulders curiously hunched, as though expecting to be whipped. A few distracted police were en- gaged in trying to get lights extin- guished. to prevent a complete jam in the streets to establish some scrt of order. Their efforts were quite futile and in any other circum- stances would have appeared mere- ly comic. The sound oi approaching engines swelled. and swelled in the dark- ness overhead. "Mrs. I-iavelock." said a voice be- hind her. "you must put your light nut. and you must nct look out of the window. I am just going down to the cellar. I promised my bro- ther-" Sheila burned round. Her hostess. quite grey in the face. and looking grotesquely like a thin teddy-bear in a woollen dres- sing-gcwn was twittering in the doorway. The Consults sister sighed with relief. and bolted down the stairs irresistibly reminding shells of the White Rabbit. sheila paused for a moment to collect her cigarette case and some matches; then she started to follow. But cm the staircase she stopped. she was frightened. horribly frightened. To-herself she admitted as much. And' she knew with a hideous certainty that alone in a cellar with that raliblty woman she would quite certainly got: pieces. And if she did not. the other wo- man Would. They could give euch no courage. A those two. And she needed to be given courage, and to more. A hideous negative kind of die within the next hour or so. shooting up from a group of junk: planes dived to within fifty feet 0! 25 Yugoslavia presumably ha; 3 strategic place in Europe lg 1-9350,. blflausly. ii is the More than that. it threaten Russia's hold on the rest probably would invade Yugoalavig "MY invaded it only seven year; . The historic invasion route is Romania. Northern Yugoslavia .. country. rich fruit South of the river. however. an mounlainous. town sounded the dull crash of the first bomb. quickly followed three wail rose from the seething streets. DEATH STALKS THE STREETS In that moment sheila Havelock know what he needed: the only thing she needed: Leslie Dale. she was up against Reality at last. The barriers of individual pride, obstin- acy. vanity. all went down together. Nothing, no one but Ieslle ,Dale could give her rhe spur she needed. whether fate meant her to live or And careless at her dress, of ap- pearances, of the obvious dangers of the streets. Sheila opened the door of the Consuls house. and. started to make her way to the- street where Mr. Chalmers lived. It whs of ocurse as a proceeding perfectly mad. In daylight she was pretty ignorant of .the town's geo- graphy. At night the place might equally well have yeen Singapore or chipping sodbury. All about her screamed. Dogs 'howled. children. people. jostled, and ran and! whimpered and squealed. We or three ineffective anti-aircraft guns. and a few gallantiy served me- chine-guns. added in the inferno. Down by the river flames were that had caught fire. and readm- ing the sky. And suddenly. like the thunde bolts of Satan. three give it. Prom the far end of the the roaring streets, their guns spit- oau.iNG am. ronssen Prince of Wales College Students j You are cordially invited to join the newly formant Prince j "of Wales College Alumni Association. y us Clip coupon below. fill in today. and mail in to P. W. C. ALUMNI P. 0. Ion: 307 Charlottetown. I . vary row clothes is h to N 1b warm their sta.r'vin;V.bon;:.ur Name A Maiden name if a woman . Kolvinashoaaofun ' Whoaresoysrysuvmg '. . '1 Present address w , , Occupation 25-. . Yearsuin attendance at r. w. c. Raine wlills amsdinsy. w. c. .. I not amicable? Ordl (an M bershi r . . au3c'i?le (:1) llanmuuhipgo 820) i Foe Yugoslavia hllh priority on Stalin's iinng ofh-the one-lime pupil tun-.9.-1 I e ome of a movement-Tltolsm-that could yggh heavy loud: upon their heads luiieday we'll liberals mm A!!! fun men I'll for than where to the Kafwl Austin I. L.h5'W I -- offis. 060004 50 75 MILES tlinetable. It; to eye it sm- bitter critic. enoulh for Russians of the Communist world. If the Soviets decide to move against non-Russisnized Europe. they first. They know ihe way in. for so to wrest it from the Nazis. "'IY0llzh the plains of Hungary and 1 north of the Slvs Mid. Wrlect around for mechsnlze River -- is plain invaders. Illressoris He th 1.500.000 ' an emergency woflilfd bet he" equllprxgs Marshal Tito could muster in Why would Stalin want Yugoslavia? to fight. ting and chattering their engines roaring. sheila found herself running like everyone else in sight. Like others she ran as close along the wall as she could; then feeling queeriy that probably the next bomb would brine that wall down. bolted di- Itonally across the street to run along the wall on the farthu side. She felt as ante must feel in an antheap when the human boot itirusts its way into it. she half- twisted her ankle thrust both hands 0V9l' 119? earl. careless that her 3131050 VI! flying open well above her knees. stassereo on-the reek of pcwder and humanity in her nostrils. blood splasied over her sandals frwn where she had tripped over a fallen body-heading only heaven knew where! (To be continued) ...a Korea .......- The following verses were receiy. ed by Mrs. James Austin of New Haven. from her un P. P. C. L I. in Korea. He gives his Present. Lycpl. Austin served in 191F008 in world war two: I rm 055! Just a Canadian boy But I'm awful proud to be; 1'0! belna ion a Canadian boy Is ecmething proud to be, I've travelled a lot of the country lneland. aootland and France, Belgium. Holland and Germany At Korea I've had I glance. This glance I've had at Korea Wu certainly worth my while. Such filth and dirt I've never seen For min: Ind many a mile. - The streets are very narrow The mouritsinrvery sum, Th! Whole here are very poor And have no place to sleqp. The little hernia they have are cold And are made of mud and storm; truhs along; enemy theoosamuistthroog; m..u.o.'.'...... belong. - A husband cc 0070011! Austin serving with thei own description of the country ufwilks inherited nearly all of it on 'the death of her brother, col. rd- ' unc. Yugoslavia as an anchor in eastern land. eastern Europe from Turkey. And Furiously building d ' at top speed. inferior. One Of VIoild's iiichesi Women -Dies In York NEW YORK. Feb. 9 - (AP) - Mrs. Matthew Astor Wilks died Monday night - a child of riches who lived the same austere. with- f is l The Yugoslav: know that they are marked. determination that often, seems lacking in western Russians come, the Yugoslav: will fight. ' imstosnc Apart from the obvious desire to punish a wayward child-lo slash the The who studied the art of revolution at the Kremlin and then defiantly took his country on an anti-Russian path - the Reds need Europe. Controlling Yugoslavia. they would protect themselves along the 1.300 miles of boundary which their satellites now share with Tito'a They would protect themselves against an Allied drive up into they would have a perfect spring- board for an invasion across the Adriatic into Italy. . Tito has a Five Year Plan now running He needs to industrialize. and badly. has been mainly primitive, mainly agricultural. and the other necessities of mechanized war his troops are startlingly For the country In tanks. guns. plants Yet observers note a Europe. If the "PROSPERITY RED" ' 'nocH ISLAND. 111.. Feb. :9 - (A.-P).- The nstlonel debt may be growing bigger daily but the Fed- eral Governonesrt is selling red ink - not buying it. items for sale at the Rock island arsenal is red ink. described as "prosper- ity red." The n cc of sale says 13, now is "obsolete." "material cod id in .' ' io m-lit. J. I. Mutchmor. --- TIMPIIANCI N011! rurnished by the mder of The sons of 'l.hmpei-aiice highway Safely Increased accidents attributed to excessive weed and drunken driv- ing have increased so alarmingly that the National Committee for Traffic safety adopted a resolut- ion calling on the governors of all the states to cram swift punish- ment for speeders and HM Ml” era. Norman Damon executive vice- preaidant of the Autanobile BI!!!-Y Foundation declared. "The appli- cation of license nvocst-ions and suspensions of these drivers has become an impentlvev necessity. our highways are carrying too much traffic to tolerate violators who speed death and disaster not only among thunselvea but other motorists who are chains the MB and are intent upon bensvins in an orderly mann ." ' "Liquor is the leading factor In 5 per cent of traffic accidents in this area".-axle! Robert Weather- up of New 'xwon'to..aIt "rho traffic niobium is the No. 1 problem facing police today. It is more serious than crime. and th drunk driver rates as one of the worst, if not the worst menace in this situation. see every yeat".- Inspector Vemgn Page, head of Toronto's mgu, Division. Toronto. Ontario. Norway's drinking driver prowm. tits: is one of the most drastic in Northern Europe. Every conviction of driving under the influence l hrinls a minimum twenty-one-dsyr inprisonment plus suspension license for twelth month first offence. s five-year Sumemlgn for the second offense, and life M3. pension for the third offense. IN ME!-yORlAM' In loving Imdsanlu o. ooandu noon-on - Maylleld. r. E. I. who passed away Iibfllhfi 10th, IIII. Ever Remembered by His wife May. . IN MEMOMAMU In loving usury of PETER. I. VIBSIY Died February lith. 1050. Alwnyg Remembered by wife and Family. IN Msloiuau ..-In lgymg memory of our father. Gordon 6. Houston. V110 D0005 sway February ms. ins. Tberoissullanaoheln ourhocris family. of memory of my dug ' nu. countless yam we-ft W away. A page innoir hearts that nothing can We lhiu you father. and alwlyl Mill. Fondly neaseaibered by the Family. "A drunk-driving diIlI0 ll 0"” drawn lifeasher t ' ', ..-.-,..lthy mother. Ketty Green. she was 00. Mrs. wiliu was one of the world's richest women. worth an estimated 81.23.000.000. But during part of her life she lived like a child of poverty. in is barred. shuttered farm house or a cheap fiat, pinching pennies, at the direction of her stern moth- 1 er. it so embittered Mrs. wines that when she cnce referred to living with her mother she added: "if you call that living." . Hetty Green. the mother. died I916. an eccentric old woman worth tio0.000.000. she lived a marten life and shunned publicity. she built the family fortune from realty In- :-estments and wall street secur- l. as. Mrs. Cl-reen divided her fortune between I son and daughter. Mrs. ward I-Ln. Green. she spent part of her youth at Bellows Phlll. Vt.. nursing her in- was barred and shuttered. and the Lights turned off at 1:30 each aven- Later. Mrs. Green moved her iamiu to a :10-a-month flat in Ho- boken. N. J. There Mrs. Wilt cook- ed and sewed. helping her mother save money to add to the vast fort- Mrs. areanlived in dread of fort- une hunters. in me Jan. wuss married a great-lrlndson of the first John Jacob Astor -- but not until Mrs. Green made him sign a vmivar on her daughters great wealth. The husband, inmrcw Willa. died in 108. cluslonasawiaow. an qua-.5 fuhlimuud dressed Jun, In as. valid father. Ed-ward. 'n1e house - W. M. business. customers. . moral WITH Yes Sir. this FORM! ldillerrlros. sum loema will lie. times to idemensneie Ilie.Appllaneee to tom and lldclesl Service is eonsumen by Mr. Arslusf. SAY, Mrs. PM COOKING lady IS COOKING A VIAITI-I GAS! and moreover she has a message for you . . .. Listen to mini SIIE is shrine... of Miller Iros. I.rd.. and Esbcn Arnfustof the Arnlesi cool 69.. announce that. us of February 15. they will enter into the Propane Gas and lanes business. Ibo App I- be looked after by Mr. Fersyllie willie Mr. Arafat will supply the out ihroildi his cool linens and insulation: Housewife - GAS!!- eomely young uivmlisr Ir -. A or all ' prospective ausredulifroocne s for tha-