DEQEMBQR p, 1Z._»l947 w ,VEL and DREFT Soap Flakes 29c Amuse ' PRUNE PLUMS-2 Tins . 35c humus ‘ Pitted Red CHERRIES-2 Tins 65c LYNN VALLEY r PEAS—-2Ti.lis 23c BIIMA FANCY - MOLASSES $1.10 GAL} PURITY FLOUR 98 Lbr Bag $5.10 TEIFEGTIOII M!!! CANADA BUTTER - - BAKING SUPPLIES seedless RAISINS .................s.......-...,.~ 22c Seeded RAISINS . . . . . . 28c Pitted DATES ......'......~.-....-...................... 23c II/Iaraechino CHERRIES 34c Mixed PEELS .- 39c his . . ._. 24¢ SWAN! DOWN CAKE FLOUR ...,....-......-..-. élvTllea WALNUTS~LIL . . . $1.25 filed FlLBERTS-Lb.........., 70c Shelled ALMONDS -_ Lb. 90c Linea remiss-e. _ _ u. 20c run: IIOIIEY 4 u. un$1.45 Euler: mum on llreruau: sour O O 0 WAX BEANS —— 2 Tins . n".-. .~¢...-. 29c BED G10 TOMATOES -- 2 Tins . . .- . . . . . . 51c Boneless CHICKEN—2 Tins . . 93c Aromas ASPARAGUS CUTTING - 2 Tine . . 45c cnovm mur- SALMON, Red — 2 Tins .~~.-.~..-.....-.~.. . 67c TOMATO JUICE - 2 Tins .-..........-. 23c 2 Ihs. $1.33 6 tins 59L MILK FED CHICKEN 36c Lb. DUCKS AND GEESE 38c Lb. MIXED NUTS i 45c LB. " PHONES - 162 _ 16a ' l *' h GET YOUR 1948 CALENDAR BRACE, McKAY CO. LTD. "l!" m. J. H. Richard wu in How- lan for the interests o! his party on Tuesday. The youngsters are sure unicy- lng themselves now that the mill pond ls irozen over. Mr. and Mrs. John Hanan of Woodstock went to Summerside Monday on business. . m. and Mrs. Keir ‘memes and family o! Fortune Cove, moved into their new house in Woodstock recently. Mr. and we. French MacQua-Iu rie and Mr. B. Carruthers retum- ' ed from their trip to Nova Scotis on Sunday after a. week's visit. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Arbiug, Woodstock, were welcome guests at the home of Mr. and ma. Loo Arsemuit on Saturday the 0th. ~10. Paul J. Gallant arrived home from the Quebec lumber woods on Friday pm, Dee. 5th. He reports lots e! snow over than. The many friends and relatives of John A. Gallant, Wbodsinclt. were pleased to know that he re- turned to his home on Sunday menu“: much improved otter his recent sick spell. Dr. Gilbert Gallant o! rreewm. accompanied by his wile and chil- dren. also his sister. Mrs. Elmer Pineau, were visitors at the home of John A. Gallant, Woodstock. on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Aiyro Bum. who have been living in West Point since their marriage one year ego. have just moved to Kelly Road with Mr. Buote’: parents. for the present. On Monday evening, Dee. 0th the Sodality girls o! St. Anthony's R. C. Church held their meeting in the vestry o! the church with a very good attendance. Several new members Joined at this meet- ing. At 8t. Anthony's Hall on Dec. 9th was held a Liberal meeting with a very good attendance in spite of the bad roads and incle- ment weather. ‘teeehee which were very much enJoyed were made by some o! the delegates and also by other prominent speakers. How. On Tuesday. Dec. 0th the month- ly meeting, on! St. Anne's Club o! Howlan and Woodstock held their usual monthly meeting at the home of Mrs. AA. Arsenwlt with an attendance of ten members. The sick committee reported one sick member had been visited and given the usual treat. New mem- ber; were appointed for bellowing month, meeting to be held at the home of Mrs. Alban '1‘. A. neult. where a game ed bingo v.1! be the feature oi’ the evening. Meeting then adjourned by prayer. Statenient 0n Palestine PBUIOG-ENIO TOWER tibia government in Canada. the » ,_,___ tower contains blocks of stone HALIFAX - (OP) - The mem- from many lends. erial tower a l0!!! Obsfivflm" '?——'_*~ lower overlooking pictllreflqlll LONG EXTDICT Northwest Arm. is the number-one "m", gar"; o; 10¢“ “d visiting The ancestor of the elephant. the lhutier-clickerl. Constructed to mammoth. was much lsrzer than m“; m, m‘ o; m; (11:31; gegpqn- his modern counterpart end was covered with long heir. ELUSIVE FIRE GAERAU, Glamorgenshire. Wales —(OP)-— George Nuit, a3 and m5 81-year-old wife. who claim to have aeen most o: the “silent,” movies, still attend movie theatres three or {our time: a. Week, lfilllithllillhiihllfi The rind voll piece upon her flnoer Ia symbolic of the most beautiful mom- ~ Vent life-can offer. You'll wont to ieoI confident that the ring you choose is worthy of the occasion. Select one of our flawless, many faceted diamonds for truly magnificent color and fire. CHOOSE YOUR JEWELRY GIFT I FROM OUR UNSURFASSED COLLECTION 0E0. T. BLARKE JEIIELLEII sumzllslor ‘If (Rt. Hon. J. L. Ilsiey, Gamma) In the final session of the United Nations General Aueanibly the Right Honourable J. L. Iisloy placed Canada on record in the following statement: "Mr. Chairman and Fellow Dele- gates:-_ “We are voting for the partition plan, because it is in our judgment the best oi" four unattractive and iliiricult alternatives. ‘ "men {ILIQFIIZIIIVBS are: in do “hilvr. to set up a unitary Arab state in accordance with the plan c! sub~Committee II, to get up a federal state in accordance with the minority recommendations of the United Nations Special Com- mission on Palestine, and Partl- tion. "Let us take these one by one. first the objections to doing noth- ing are obvious. For the United Nations i0 do nothing in this sit- uation would be an dbdicatioii, a. l-fllfIllllg of its responsibilities in e sifiuation which is pregnant with yarrii in peace. It. would invite not .m1_v coniusion but widespread vi- olence. involving not only the peo- ple oi.’ Palestine, but people else- re. Ii would. not lmprobabiy. ~" in lfunzished and. a kind oi‘ irregular and nlurderous uiariare v“ ich might spread far. We dis- new; this first alternative as not ltrtiw of the United Nations, htnly dangerous in its probable LPTSOUIIEIICCS, indeed, as virtually unthinkable. “The second alternative ls to set up a unitary Arab state along the. lines recommended by Sub- Committec I of the Adlinc Com- mittee. or at least to let such a unitary Arab state emerge at the time o! the termination o! the Mandate. This course wouldrhave been the nonnal and natural one +0 pursue had it not been for the Balfour Declaration, the League of Nations Mandate. the encour- agement given to the immigration Ioi Jews into Palestine over a quar- ter oi a century the establishment cl‘ a well meted community of nearly 700,000 Jews in Palestine who have invested there. as we are told. $600,000,000 and the de- wotion on the part of Jews all over ,ihe world to the idea of a Jew- ish national home in a country u. hich once at least was a Jewish land. But these iaetnra cannotbe ignored, they make the Palestine ireblem sui generic and unique. They constitute a fatal iiew in‘the otherwise unanswerable ‘Arab case. it is because o! these factors that the project for a unitary state has been repeatedly dismissed by a multiplicity of Commissions on the t ‘eatine problem, of which the United Nations Special Commission on Palestine was the latent. and O 00 <99 a,» 4 COIXlflLILI/OG. There is not a chance that this alternative can find ac- ceptance by any but a small ma- jority of the nations o! the world. As a solution it is beyond the realm o1 the practical. “Similarly, the third alternative, a federal state while more defen- sible than the one I have just dis- cussed, has made in this organiza- tion very little appeal. FSIJOUSEd by Yugoslavia, which has argued the case with care, patience and conviction. the minority report of the United Nations Special Com- mission on Palestine has made no Jendwvzrv, received little support from other nations and was not presented for consideration by a section of the Ad Hoe Committee _arge enough even to justify the setting up of a sub-comlnittee to explore its possibilities. Embodying as it docs thelessentiai features cf a fedora} scheme, the Yugoslav plan. as I_sha.ll call it. has certain cIiilflGllLS oi’ attractiveness to Can- adians. As I indicated in my open- ing speech on the Palestine ques- tion before the. Ad Hoe Commit- tce, the Canadian delegation \\'isll~ ed that a federal plan could be worked out along theee or similar lines. They are the lines along which our own national develop: nzent has proceeded. with reason- able satisfaction to both racial eie~ menis in our population. Bu! Pal» estine is not Canada, and the Yugo- slav plan has received ‘no support- vvhatevu either from the Jewish‘ Agency or the Arab Higher Com- mittee. A plan which appeals to neither Jews nor Arabs and which opens up vast vistas of diffldulty in adjustment and administration is not a plan upon which this As- sembly would be justified in con- centrating turther attention. ‘This leaves the fourth plan- we plan o! partition -which we have decided to support as the least objectionable of the four. We support this plan with heavy hearts mid many misgivings. No respon~ sible dglegation could do otherwise. after listening to the threats of reprisals and Ill the tail: o! fire and sword which we have heard from both aides to this controver- sy. In the Ad Hoe Committee. and today. But it would be folly to as- sume that there would be any less Jkelihood oi disorder if ‘any of the other elm-natives were adopt- ed. Indeed, in our Judgment. this ‘ikelihood in the case oi every one of them would behot less but greater. The fact that other twen- ty-five years of international ac- tion in rektion to Palestine, cul- minating with mouths oi’ consid- eration by the General Assembly oi the United Nations, we should ‘ind ourselves in this atmosphere of t-crimonious recrimination is a melancholy one. The air is heavy with gloomy forebedings. reme- eented by one aide or the other u E, g . Drastic Reductions Our Entire Stock 0F MEN’S OVERCOAT . Every coat will seII From -3 I:o l-2 lower than regular prices e ‘féJ-fi“ ’§-Q€t i0? ffififihi) fi/Qii" T ¢ Mifin ._ decisively rejected by me M Hoe savage threats or responsible pre- frictions. "It is not {or Canada to advise token our full share oi‘ responsi~ other nations on the course they bmgy m this mam,- should take in this vote. Nor would 1.119 entire session. We have work- such advice be either “rlwnie i" cd day and night to obtain a soili- elierlivc. But we find it difficult +10" which ‘mum be prampal m.) i0 undcrslrlnd the larsc number workable, and we feel that our‘ 9%Q' ' ELECTRICAL GIFTS -'i0®§>0 Other Suggestion}: * HEATER$ . ' IRONS " TOASTERS “ LAMPS * HEATING PADS f ELECTRIC BLANKET! Those who come Firs! gel the Ieest Bargains MAURICE MILL MEN’S WEAR ‘The Quality Store For Men” I SUMMERSIDE ither cases the explanation pro- which and, Jews, find it dliiicuit to see why there should be thrown upon their shoulders a profoundly dis- iurbing responsibility for a grave and tar~reaciiilig decision. "rhe Canadian delegation appre- Lakes and Montreal. oi many nations. Indeed we to u: in abstaining from this vote. We have‘ as this Assembly knows, throughout ARE "THE THING" THIS YEAR THEY GIVE COMFORT AND CONVENIENCE AS WELL AS SENTIMENT o 0 0 Q WE SUGGEST THE FAMOUS PHILCO RADIO FOR ANY MEMRER OF THE ‘FAMILY WRIGHT and BELL RADIO AND ELECTRICAL SUMME RSIDE '01 abstentlons which we assume obligations, not only in this o; "But something must be "done will take place when we come to ganization, but to our own peep with this problem and we are sat- the vote. In the case of some na- are such that we could not Just _ sfied that. full oi difficulties as ticns reasons have been given. In an abstention, and that we should the partition solution is, any other >0IlitlOli would be worse. There 1|. bably is that nations like our own. P1019058 i0 40-" of course, the hope that once dr tar removed tom Palestine, which {mite action 1a taken there will be nad no part in the events leading a change of heart on the part of up in this denouement, the responsible leaders of the_ two made no promises to the Arabs tpposing camps. This is the more and no promises to the Jews, least Centre of an argument caused ilkEIy from the fact that of all or all to both, which played no his green trousers. stiloVl-flhd-red the solutions proposed, partition politics with the situation, and tie and light fawn coat. alone has received the Iunlwrt o! which have nothing but the kind- the two greatest world powers. We nest, feelings toward pen. Arabs months for disturbing the peace. must take it as certain that well meant and fervent exhortations to conciliation, the kind o! exhorte- iion that we have heard. during ‘no last two months are getting nowhere. These appeals and en- LTBMICS hi3? liiakfi m0" IJYOHIW rial-es these sentiments on the part after a. decision by this organiza- tion on the partition solution ls home extent share then-h gut we airivfid at. This is the my of lwvr (i0 not feel that they would justify m the situation. vote Ior the resolution. This wd SARTORIAL MENAOI IPSWICH. England -- (I; a Lynch was bound over for ll BUSY WATERWAY More than 9090.000 tons o! ships ping move. annually to the Uppq St. Lawrence bet/ween the Gael _ . m Qflwlfl’ limb}? Jame!