SATURDAY. ' President Truman. left. is seen as he welcomed Rene Pleven. Prime Minister of France. with I warm handshake on the latter's re- cent arrival at Washington. D.C. New Publisher For Antigonish casket ANTIGONISI-l. N. s.. Feb. 2 -- icPi - Appointment of P. A. G. Macxay. Scotland-born member of the Moiitrcnl Gri7.cttc's news stall. as publisher of The Casket, a Ro- man Catholic weekly here. was announced by the board of direct- ors Wednesday. He succeeds Leo MacGillivary. Following meeting. President and Premier began their momentous talks on the program for Western European defence pledges of continuing warm friend- ship between their two nations. editor and manager of The Casket since August, i947. who previous- ly wrote for the Toronto Star and The Canadian Press. Gillivary has now joined the staff of the Montreal Gazette. Mr. MacKay is a. graduate of the University of Glasgow and Lon- don University. Bcfore coming to Canada. he British newspapers, including the army magazine Khaki Street, and wrote a weekly chain of North Wales papers. Mr. served on column for with mutual Mac- sevcrai a newly nature may ho able In advance. COOK'S for Photographs. .l!llmlY's TAXI--Phone 525. WEAR. at 175 Queen Street. Club. Saturday. February 3rd 3-5 o'clock. NEW SKIRTS. blazers and sweater: arrived at the Fashion Shoppe. at Charlottetownii-lotel. February 12th. 8:15 P.M. Monday and Toomba Music Stores. day. February 5th. 1.15 P. M. . LAID T0 REST - The funeral held from his late residence. llam- ilion, P.E.I., at 1 a..m. to Keir Mem- orial Presbyicrian Church on Rev. 2 p.m. conduciod by Cross. Hymns sung were ”Jesus Saviour Pilot Me" No Night in Heaven". Mrs. Char- les Lock-hart and Mr. Parnienas Phillips sang as a duct "The Old Rugged Cross". King Edward F. and AM. Lod;-zc. Malpcque, ac- companied iihc rcniains to its resi- ing place. Masonic funeral honors 5 were displ ved by Bro. Rev. James Cross. assisted by the Brthrcn prcsent. Intcriricm. in i The Neighbors '3. V? .''Good news for By George Clark 1:? n.. v c r.. nlv Cnrvtnl. list. by Ian 'ynlinu Ca in your income tax, Dad. Our guinea pigs ti and Uranus Feb. 17. have ten new babies!" V Malpoquc co-liioicry. Pallbearers: Messrs. Roy ('aiii-pbcil. Wcndcil Crozier, James A. Ranray, James M. Ra-insay. David Morrison and Wm. C. Donald. nunuzssbcnlrimz (Continued from Page loi sar" by Andre Mauris in the Read- er's Digest for January. The name "Widow of Windsor" was the title given the Queen in a rather brash pceni of Kip!iiig's. Mziurois is a bril- liant writer, hut as a historian we must. make some allowance for di- screpancies: they beset every story- teller who repeats at second-hanal! One sentence. liowcver. will com. mend itself to all wiio can remeni. ber those stirriiig tlmes- "Her tVici.cria'sl commonsense amount- ed to genius." What better can be said of any ruler? THE SKY IN FEBRUARY I The moon is in Perirzco Pet). Bird, being 226,800 miles away. New Moon . Feb. 7th. and on the same date in ; conjunction with Venus. -Feb. 8.. coiljuiiciion of the moon 3. with Jupiter. and ii little later with Mars. Thus Vniius, Jupiter a:i'i. Mars are all in the same quarter of the sky. Feb. 13. Moon in First Quarter. p Moon in Apogl-c. disiaiit 251.400 ii miles. Feb. 15. Conjunction cf Moon : w Feb. 2i. mu Moon. Feb. 23. c.m.j ijuiiction of Moon and Saturn. Last. Quarter of Moon. Feb. 28.. Thin column is reserved for new: of local Interest. but advertising of Inurud I at fin cont: 3 word. strictly pay-' HOWARD MMSINNIS FOOT- RUMMAGE SALE at the Clover RED CROSS ANNUAL MEETING MUSICAL FESTIVAL sYLLA- BUS now available at Miller Bros, HEAR Dll. FRANK MMKINNON speak on the new P. W. C. Alumni Association over C. F. C. Y.. Mon- of the late Mr. Nelson Owen was Wednesday. Jan. 31 for service at J. A. McGowan. assisted by Rev. Jamcs and ”'l'hcre is i ' Dundurn Castle and T HE GUARDIAN. UHARLOTTETOWN cenrm eunnnmu lMade Enjoyable Tour of Eastern Canada And U.S. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Goodman. lof Hunter River, have been mar- ried almost fifty-four years and enjoy life to its fullest extent. On New Year's Eve. 1950. they returned from A tour of Eastern Canada and the States which had taken them almost. two and a half months. During their trip they recorded all points of interest they saw. and upon their return to Hunter River made a complete record of their tour. Mr. and Mrs. Goodman have re- cently forwarded a copy of this record to The Guardian. which appears below. They left Hunter River on Oct. 19 last by the morn- ing train. and journeyed to Mono- ton where they transferred to a train whlclr took them through Newcastle. Chatham and Camp- bcllton to Montreal. Between Quebec and Montreal Mr. Goodman says he found a beautiful prosperous looking farm- ing section. The farms were long and narrow. and the Viiiagc streets lined with Lombardy Pop- lars. 'We l'emaiii(-cl in the same car until we reached Montreal." hr says. ”and tho service on - the train was excellent. We arrived in Montreal at 9.15 a. m. In five minutes wn changed cars and left for llamilton. Ontario. Between Montreal and Toronto was a lov- ely fnrniinn section with some scclions rocky and stones scatter- od over cleared fields like tomb stones. I-lolsit-iii cattle predomin- atn (iii over this section. "Nearing Toronto we came into iiicc orchards and well-tilled fields. Trnvolliiig hours in sight of Lake Ontario wc arrived in Tor- onto at 5.25 p. in. and left at 5.65 pp. m. for Hamilton. a distance of l 50 miles wlinrc we arrived at 6.55. Hamilton is a large iiidusirial ciiv of 200.000 with l.'i Romnii Catholic t'ilili'Cilf'S. Oct. 2,151 was very warm. up to so in Hamilton with snow in Nortlicrn Ontario. Tho weather was doliglitful here. ”I believe with all its great in- dustrics. thc Wosiinclioiisc. the Firesionn. and auto factories. and the grcat stecl company, (the orc is brought in on lake steamersi that Hamilton will soon be the Piiisburgli of Canada. The parks are beautiful. Visited Castle 'i:)n Sunda.v we paid a visit. to its beautiful park. The ciisilv is a museum of ilitercstim: rl-lics of early Ontario both civil and military and relics of the stormy times of the Family Compact iiicluding a portrait of the McNabh and U10 bed that he slept on. These were tho times of the agitation for self-government in Upper Canada. The hospitality of our friends could not be ex- cended. The McRar-s of Orwell Crivo. ihc Knllyis nf Iona. the Powers of HiiiOii'Ri9.'71n(I where- nvcr up mrl. an lslandov we met A friend. There are a lot of Is- landers in Hamilton. "(in Nov. lst I went to Toronto in a hockey game heiwcen tho Jiaplc Leafs and Canadiens.5-4 in f:ii'or of thn Leafs. On Nov. sci. we went to Niagara Falls. a dis- iaiiun of 50 milcs. I believe it is tho greatest fruit belt in Canada. vineyards nllri orchards and small fruit. covcr most of the district. I We passed throughst. Catherins.-'s FEBRUARY 4 -. 10 Sponsored by the Health League of Canada Build good body resistance by of the RIGHT KINDS of food EVERY DAY: MlLK- 0 Children at least 1 pt. Adolescents: at least IV: prs. Adults: at least V2 pt. CITRUS FRUIT or TOMATOES or their iuices and one other fruit. WHOLE GRAIN CEREAL and BREAD VEGETABLES- ' Two others Besides yellow or green and often raw ones. g' ' MEAT. - FISH. POULTRY- or meat alternates. slggs and choose three times a week. COD LIVER OIL - START THE DAY WITH A HEARTY ' BREAKFAST Get enough rest. Eight hours for adults and ten for children. Wear clothes suitable to weather conditions. Avoid wet feet. dram. dump clothinz. exposure to bad weather. Avoid chilling when overheated or wet with perspiration. Keep your hands clean. , i.Don'rg4uproud'gorails-to onion. potatoes. Llvor frequently. cover your nose when shooting or coughing naraairuam or amnrn AND wanna NATIONAL HEALTH WEEK V00 ARE ADVISED-T0 GUARD AGAINST GATGHIIIG GOLil Stay out of crowds as much as possible when colds. flu and pneumonia are going the rounds. Avoid direct contact with people who have colds. EATING ENOUGH preferably one Mr. and Mrs. Peter Goodman nnd crossed the Welland Canal. The Falls give one an impression of what an enormous amount of eiirrgy has yet to bc harnessed. 0”On the Sunday before leaving Hamilton. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Par- sons and William Parsons of Tor- onto came to see us. Left Hamil- tnn. Nov. 17th at :1 p.m. by w of Dulidris on the Grand Trunk. Arrived in Detroit at ll p. m. It is a very mod:-rn city of 2.000.000. :1 city of wide streets and no sub- ways. A city where evr-r.vone owns their own car and everyone parks their car on the street and there nrn no parking meters. nnd no tcns-mciit houses as we know tlimi. Tho city is encircled with cottages. The area of the city is about 20x16 miles. lllet Relatives "We motored across the city to Dcnrliorn whore Henry Ford is buried. A simple sionr marks the spot. His life was sufficient mom- orial. Wo intended to go to his muscum but a siriirn was an anionic the mainiciiaiice workers who had tho place pickelod. We also had a look at Detroit River from the 21st floor of the Nation- al Bank building where my nr-pliew-in-law has his law office. He is Aloyious O'Mara. and dur- ing our silty in Detroit we were '.licil' lzucsts and also visited my iinicc. Sisir-r ftiary who is at thr- hnnd of it new ordnr to work amoiizst the colourcd people of Detroit. There are 300.000 of them there. "I also moi my ncphews. Bruce . d hisflimilv nnd.loscph Shultz. iiiiseph is a steward on one of tho Lako boats. "On Sunday the 26th we went to Mass at the Church of the Little FiCvi'cl'. Rev. Father Coughlin is famous for his sermons on the air in favor of giving the working man a fair deal. The church is. I believe. a donation from his admirers. The church is of veryiunusual appear- ance. circular in shape and in style Bysnntine, The altar has no back to it as we know it. the seats are formed in a circle all around the church with :1 small space for the officiating clergy to get to the altar. "We motored around Belle Island. situated in the Detroit River. about one mile wide and two and a half miles long. leased by Canada to :h! U.S. for 500 years. They have ctr.- verted it. into breathing space for the city with a lot of attractions. A beautiful bridge connects it with Detroit. A vast amount of ship- ping goes through on the Canad- ian silic. We had quite a fall of snow, abrui. five inches here. "In Columbus. Ohio. there were twciity-eiglit inches and twenty-two iiiPii.i.:biii'r:i1. ' At Grand Cenlral "On December lst.. 8.20 AM. We left. Detroit. crossed ovcr to Wind- sor. and travelled four -hour.-i in Canada. a section that grows more com than anywhere else in the D:minion. Crossed from Nialtnra to Buffalo. N. Y. Of historic. interest 1812. From Buffalo to New York, a distance of 456 miles down throuirli the Mohawk valley, famous as the gatewny to Canada fc-r the fur trades of New York. Also passed Tarry town, the scene of the ex- ploits of the Headless Horseman and Fcniiimore Cooper's the Spy. and the otlicr tales of fiction. We arrived at the Grand Central Sta- tion at 9.45 P. M. "It is a city within a city. More him half a million people pass 'hrough this station each day. she .iundred trains a day glide under Park Avenue on seventy-nine tra.r.ks that serve the Grand Central term- inal. Steel and concrete pillars sup- port: tho apartment houses and 0!- fice buildings. Smart shops and ho- tcls witlhmit. going on the sidewalk. My nephew was waiting to Ink; us to the home of my sister. Mrs. -7.11- Fanning. Brooklyn. her family. and my nephew. Jchn J. O'Brien of Ridgewotrd. He is ll telesuvh 00"- aior in New York. His son is in the regular service. stationed at Bault Ste. Marie. "We also visited Mr. and Mrs. Walter Mcduilan of Astoria. 30 g1.,g:gfm...?..- TIIANB-CANADA BARBER HAIIIDIIESSIIB. O . . FEBRUARY 3. my limtly llx 8m- - continued from page I to do 'lreat things. He want d t i to b i I A were good 99-ninn that hoewniiulclo L: n:';'..'g"f;.hl.','l.f,'.l,'f,.'cr.:"'! "VF! lat Bronx. We Bridge boroughs. Manhattan. Queens and Bronx, built at a cost of ;oo,ooo.ooo size of the field has to be seen to be appreciated. "On Sunday night we went to a play, "The Gay Nineties”. It. was good. The costumes were all of that period. st. Michael's Parish put. it. on, a parish of 25.000. A grand niece of mine -was one of the umera so I was assured of a good seat. Tele- visicn is all the rage. You can stay home and take in the sports. I saw the Rangers trim the Maple Leafs on ohristmas eve. I heard Van Trapps sing "Holy Night". Visited Western Electric "We went to Midnight Mass at St. Michael's. 4th Avenue. on Christ- mas day we motored to Maywood. New Jersey, went by the Manhattan tunnel two and a half miles long. and the Holland tunnel. one and a half miles. We had dimer at my nephew's. Ray F'an.ni.ng's. It was a family dinner and quite a reunion. itwe visited the western Electric, a huge plant. of over 20,000 employ- ees, it is a branch of the Bell Tele- phone company. It has a wonderful recreation centre this year. They "Coming back we employees of the Western Union. I mean the Fanning boys. wilfu-:1 rind Ray are veterans of the late war. On Friday. the 29th of Decem- ber. rxe left New York central ter- minal at 3 P. M. for hcme. Left Boston at 9.30 by way of Portland. st. John and Moncton. We expect- ed to stay over Sunday in Mom. ton. but. found at st. John that ma late train was still running. Arriv- ed home by our general taxi driver, Ernest Cousins. at 11 P.M. Dec. 30th." crossed Triborouzh which connects the three and cut to La Guardia. field. The planted a live ohrlstmas tree twen-i ty feet high. , crossed the-l George Washington Bridge and back; to Brooklyn. My nephews are old: SCHOOLS faith in him made him lo faith i hi it Iloncton. N. B. being a failure. " n "M ""1 M mu” 1' ut it i th cliildro h th - chronic dllco'urag.er. They? are ot.o:"youn.g T35! I:lllg&:IIQv!;,":I:o:'t EM to t their .parenta' croaklngs. And so. when their father. 3,: milk I" I" "1 WW "I10 I-hfolllh iilov. edgn5futi':5!:Th:r?&r:heri,o ?;1::'tl.u:itl: hgt aim”! nun um wmnm C9'm"'1P”'k ind T111198 Square and ndnyn. they believe the pellimiliic doctrinal. it '15:: world no" past St. Patrick's Cathedral. the quencher their ambition. It turns them into quitten whocounn in Empire state Bufldinc. and the before they ever begin to fight. '" "CW The ar many evil (I I th if any (true mo:e harm thunntlji: :lironii:o'dier:ou:age:r.worm rm I doubt DOBOTHY DIX cannot I war latter: of general lnhn:: lI:.e,r',oo.l.umn."du" M. "I" ""1 i Suxv uIs(-I) l()l).XN I'0i' I()M()Rp()H The following Representative: of the Sun Life of Canada in Prince liidward Island will be glad to discuss with you any matters relating to life insurance or annuities. Without obligation. CIIABLOTTETOWN MRS. DOROTHY ROGERS J. ARTHUR. CAMPBELL J. A. MOORE W. D. YOUNG. SUMMERSIDE . R. C. Shea. Kinkora; H. M. Chllholm. Tryon; R. R. Burns. Freetown ll. 0. BOIIAKER - Unit Supervisor Charlottetown, P. E. I. Save 33 on a chair for your living room. Pay 56 down. 55 monthly. Sale Price P.4P64l CHAIRS and TABLES Reg. 29.75. Occasional Choir” 24.75 CLEAROUT the first lake steamboat was R 79.50. S 1 - ml d built. here. The city was buni- Kf.:(,mn. chair swig ..cu5'i1g ed by the British in the war of ionllzedll mnstmcuon. SI" 51;). Piiy 513 down. 55 month- ly. Only . .. Kroohlor Lounge Chair 54.50 Orig. 27.50. These have been on our floor a long time. To clear them we have marked them at Utility Chairs--V2 Price 13.75 Rec. 6.95. Very conibinntlon chair for the baby. Takes up little room and can be used anywhere. versatile Portable Baby Choirs Clearance We have grouped a number and 62.50 and marked them 35 monthly. Your choice Comfortable Iprlng-filled construction. Reg. 95.30. Chrome kitchen - table with four chrome down. 56 monthly. Special I Rog. 21.50. Occasional Chairs den. Save nearly 20')?! 55 down. 85 monthly. Redu I Occasional Choirs. j Slightly ahopworn and a 9 wonderful bargain. I Popular style for modern 3 homes. Save 510. M2 down. U I of PLATFORM ROCKERS at the one low price for quick clearance. serviceable covers. 811 down. Chrome Table A 4 Chairs chairs. Save 15.35. Pay 516 Buy now for living room or to clear Regular 13.25. Two only. Rog. 69.50. Platform Rocker 55 monthly. Very special of our rockers that regularly Iell for 59.75 52.50 Reg. 49.95. Buy now and enjoy bridge the me of the winter. Maroon. Pay down. 35 monthly. Sale Pricc 8 Orig. 22.95, 27.50 11.45 eluded in this Price and ion! 139 mu stall: Bridge Table In 4 Chairs 43.95 A on moans-nanucmo '1-oicaaani Ind and Lamp Table; in- End. Coffee and. Occasional Bnutiflul styles In Coffee. group. Half Table III A. srlwnr Jonas .. Oddmoim In Tables Oi-ll. 9.95 to 19.50. Flrll. come. first served in this apocill group of tables. Look at the price .......... .... ......... .... 7.95 Reg. 19.50 to 23.95 17.50 Reg. 39.50 to 44.50 36.50 from which to choose. Como urlyl commode and Chrome Tablet. Save! a ciiuniomitrowil