1pscsunsn 21. 1946. i THE CHARLUTTETOWN GUARDIAN i} u; gunners, Wain Cheat; Toronto Bakery, Water Street: er ll" 7°" Pi _.noon onnnne for Goodrich ‘flyggtqwn Quality Automobile tires at Bruce's. 400K ORDER! for quality iioi-eehitie all wool lined sleigh robes Qt BIBCFS. ..3UY H0381! BUG! nt Bruce's. .-IOOKIY Kensington Rink. Btilllherslde Legion vs. Kenning- mn Intermediates, Friday, Dec. 2'1, 8:15. ._QUICK DRYING enamel, nt- n-wtivo colors now in stock at Bronx's. DOIIUBCI NOTICE. — Badflfl United church. Services Sunday. neeeinbei- 29th. Bedequo 11 A. M. Albany 3 P. M. Borden. 1.30 P. M. Minister, Rev. J. M. Baxter. B. D. qtoranv MEETING _ m. Donald Baku", vice president, pre- sided at the regular meeting of the Suznmerslde Rotary C1111! 0" Tuegrhy qt Leo, Coylc’s Restaur- ant. The speaker was the Rev. E. J. Barrcss, pastor of the Summer- side Baptist Church who spoke on Christmas. Mr. Fred Btntghrim. Svmmetside was a guest-S. ‘<7 --P(JLICE COURT ——'T'h3 C!" of n Summenside resident charged with .1. violation of the town bulld- ing and zoning by-law had his caso further adjourned till Friday. Jonuarv 3rd. when it camo up in Summorslde Police Court yester- day morning. It had previously been adjourned for n week-S. Christmas Concert At St. Eleanor: A very enjoyable Christmas con- cert wu presented in St. Eleanor! Hail. on Thursday evening under the dlroction of the school princi- pal, Miss Mary MacLui-o and her assistants, Mrs. Art. McKinmon and Miss Ionc MacDonald. The hail was nicely decorated to suit the occas- ion and was filled to capacity. Mr. Earle Cannon in his usual pleas- im manner acted as chums-u- Aftor the program hnd been car- ried out Santa appeared and a well ioded tree was relieved of its burden and there was also a sweet treat for the children. M-r. Harry Gannon then moved a vote of "thanks to tho teachers and children for the splendid evening they had W0- vided and hearty applause was given this vote. Miss Macbutre re- sponded and thanked all for their cooperation in making the Pfflflfllm e success. The music was under the capable direction of Mrs. Harry B. Gannon. The National Anthem brought tho evening to a close. h ‘rlhe following i; the Mum-sma- Opening Chortu. "Christmas Bells" by School Group. Recitation, “Weloome" by Inter- mediate pupil. Wayne Muirhoed. Drill, "Merry Christmas" by 14 Jtmior pupils. Dialogue, "A Greet Saving" by Senior pupils Drill. ' Song. "If; Chrintmea" by Inter- mediate Eupil Joan Mill". Roof . "Some Christine! Gifts" by Senior Pupil Robert i Moose. Dialogue. II Acts. "Here comes The Bride" by Senior pupils. Bong "at. Eleanor!” by Inter- modlnto pupils. Recitation “Holllff Up tho Pius‘ b! Senior pupil Jackie MaoDougall. Silent Motion Carol, "Silent Night" by senior pupils. Recitation "Ihe Twenty-Blxfll” by Junior pupil. Junior Arsennult. Drill by tori Intermediate pupils Monologue. “Christmas Aohiow lrfdsmmtl" by Senior pupil. Ramona ylc. Recitation by Intermediate pupil Irene Geliant. silent Motion oeioi "o Little Town of Bethlehem" by Senior pupils. Recitation "A Boy's Pocket" by Snr-icr pupil. Lloyd Simmonds. A Short Musical Interlude o! one oeiOctlOli. "Heck Bays It" by Senior pupils. , _ Closing Recitation by Junior pupil Jnret ‘Danton. " Closing Chorus, "Christmas Time" by School Groin. Drill. " might" by nine Junior pupils. -s. CAMEO F". I-l-IO. SAT. 1 AND OJI lee he Garey an liege with the , last-Side Klth in "DOOR! 0F HEW YOII” Alla leelni. um ens onus; ir-rna-cnamxnxs- H.012 Thofiflrlhllerhhesltlnlti-nenrertae f oluestnlnmnerdla: Goerlaa The onmisnwuiseseuemspe-euhoneusen-unse. gm-iuieyntlopezdnyerllepeeweoi. flscnolb eednlotbnboynqeaiblofer e Water llllll; Illkqallllfi ITGI-navllleltreot. llrfihatrvlfle olylnrretnla. .-IU!White!hnme1 M!!! at Bruce's. I -nsnonnn ma: room and Huuthig Knives at Brain's. -I‘0l BALI — Oil-burner for kitchen range. Also 1M0 Pontiac renrond. lVldPontiac front axle; i089 Chevrolet engine block. Ap- llli! H. L. Murphy. care of Bay e. Motors, Bummernid -.IU! Files and sharpening Stones at Bruce's. --A MEETING of horsemen and alkothera interested will be held in tho Town Hall. Wilde. Satur- day evening at I o'clock to draw up a schedule for ice racing for the winter. —D!II AT SYDNEY — Mrs. Mary Reid. 79. a native of Mill- vnlc, P. B. 1., died Dec. 19th. at the City Hospital in Sydney. N. 5., after a lengthy illness. 81o is survived by one son. William R. Reid, Hospital BL, Sydney and two daughters. Mrs. Blanche Bis- sett, George St" Sydney and Mrs. John D. MacDonald. ‘not Chi- cago; also itwo brothers, John E. Hagen, Mllivnie, P. 1:. 1., and James Hagen in Maine and three sisters, Margaret, Ellen and Hen- rietta of Dorchester, Mass. —S. Personals -Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Runa- iian, Bummerslde have left on an extended visit to Toronto and Timmliis. Ont-B. and Mrs. John Xiaigen. Millvale. open-t Christmas with their daughter, Mrs. Louis ilicrry‘ and M". Sherry, Bumrm-rsidis-E. -Mr. -—'I'hd1ma and Billy Sherry. daughter on: son of Mr. and Mu. vLouls Sherry, Summerside nro spending the holidays with their aunt, Mrs. Walter Murphy. Mill- vale-S. —Miss Aleah Palmer. daushtfl‘ of Mr and Mrs. Ingham Palmer, Sllmmefllde, who is attrnding King's College, Halifax, vs spend- ing her vacation with het- parents in Bumme-rsidm-S. —M.'. Bill Durant, student at Dalhotiiie lUnivcrsity, Halifax, is spending the holidays vita hl-s mother. Mrs. Neil Durant. Sh, Sumrnersidm-S. -!lt. Sgt Neil Durant RCA!‘- Mnncton, and Cpl. moss Durant. Dcbert Military Camp, have re- turned after spending Jhr‘ ‘mils at, their home in Bummerwdm-S. -Miss Andrea Dalton. RN. who is taking a post graduate course nt the University of Toronto is spending the holidays at her home in BurnmersiJe.-5. -Mr|. Jack McDonald. St. John, N-Bn and her two children Wen- dell and Dianne, spent the Christ- mas holidays with hei- parents. Mir. and Mrs. Percy Weeks, 5t. Ileanorin-S. ONTARIO CIIILII (Continued from Page 1) ‘ ‘There are more than ~t dozen presents all wrapped up for her. And she was no happy because she hiew lig wnn getting what sho asked for." Little Marlon had her brother's present-a toy drum-under her arm when she dienppenred. Ono theory in that a man who tried to make friondh with her at n theatre earlier that day carried her off. Two turkeys and two geese v ent unenwi Christmas Day es lritndi and relatives scoured the are Police and citizens spent nest c the holiday in n kuitleu search. nnvrsss mo. TAM-TL!!! aromas. Middleaex. England -' has; and “you win stay yomg and alwnvg be happy." says greet-grunti- tnn Jane McGuinness. 7. who mnr- ried at 17. Silo heo 1C children. 47 grand children and three great- grandchildren. ltiillill’ TilEATiiE Friday, lee. 27 Irilebbeafl "noOnIoftbePreii-ie‘ wfthWillh-Ioyl neon‘!- Induce Inning ‘Ml and til A, IIQIE chill ' not .\_ fishermen but farmers also. Rev. N. I. Prencls spoke on “Group M. Non-It: purpose and and" Then aftn- nu enjoyable programme of violin music and step-dancing, h;- smke again, in the place of ‘tev. J. D. McNeiii. who was unavoidably absent. on the subject "Fisher- mqi and the Credit Union." Today , leoond Day Thq highlights of the sec-ind day were s lecture on “Your Central" 5i! Mi‘. R, B. MncNelli. general flllflller of the Fisherman's Cen- teal Cooperative Association td.. and "moving pictures" put, on by Mr. Leo P. MHCISIIC, Provincial Farm Forum Secretary and M: John Martin in charge of National Film Board Film Library. Mr, M". Neill reported on the activities of, the Fisherman's Central race the last Annual Meeting and told of plans for the future‘ He announced that the next annual meeting would be in Charlottetown on February 37th. i947. Three films were shown l?! Messrs. MacIssac and Msrtin-' on modernizing the community school and a third modernizing the rural kitchen These pictures, two of which were in technfcolo“, were not only interesting and entertain- ing but highly instructive. They stressed the almost incredible pris- albiiitles of united, unselfish, group effort in the community. Before the closing of the courgg the Rev. J. N. Polrlcr. pastor of Ewmomt Bay. spoke briefiv thank- ing those responsible for putting on the course and the several speak- ers, and commending the figqzrmen and farmers of the community on their interest in the coirse i-rd for their faithful attendame He reminded them. however. hat -r the course is to bear fruit that there must be a follow-up of what was learned at the course through the means of study groans The course was brought lo a close by the slitting of the Nation- al Anthem in French. Illllll lilliiill , llliA i] HUME - PALHER . Directed s. JAMES TJNLINO Produced n SOL M. ‘EURTZEI. Ill I001 IO‘ knell Ifiy by Mill" NISIIIO 2o. curves-II Also MARCH OF TIME and CARTOON Shows 7:15 - 9:l5 Matinee Sgturday 2:30 Short Courses i run one 1s! tosr (Continued from Page 1) tEgmont Bay his a row-boat manned by two residents of the little timing village of ~ Petite Vallee, another fiiting The third of a lerlfl! "If 5M"- hamlet nbout 950 miles east of Courses sponsored by the Extension Q1165“; Department of St. Dunstanfi Col-i 5.3g}; w", 51,1, g, “lg, .1- lege who held in Egmont Bay on though Morin. who fractured a December 19th and 20m The foot before leaving Goclbout. was weather was ideal and tlte attend- troubled by this injury. They ance oi fishermen, as far as could were bundled into a snowmobile be ascertained, practically l0) per, on arrival to be driven to Ste. cent. It was one of the most suc- Anne ‘Dee Monts where they were "an," courses ye; hem to be met by Dr. Lionel Vorreault ’ At‘ the opening of the collggg 31v. wiho went from here, also by snow- mi - Lilian assured u» fishermen that 4 ' the Inspectors were their friends, ' nnd he invited tho fishermen to “take that?! problems in the iri- ". " nuts. J. sum» III-play. Ill Illlsver n all 'P'°‘°"' ° ‘°"-" " ‘G an," gr", g. 0g,” g; t‘ i _____-,. lirv- J- N- Poirler pn-sidei nt sufimluml ‘n. rmc‘ coo-NT! . Chg plibllfi meeting Ill the evenW-g “gaflflg... unnm" . SUMMERSIDE which was attended» not only by PAGE t)...- Big Clearance Sale 0F . . f LADIES’ FUR coats l FURATRIMMED COATS and UNTRIMMED CQATS“ Still Continues For The Balance 0i December i one on the lobster indurry. one M E. Francis complimented the 1110b“!!- people of Egmont; Bay district on their splendid cooperative achieve- ments as evidenced by their C:- operative Fisherman's Association. their (Iv-edit Union, their Coopera- tive Store. and particularly by the very successful Rur-al Exhibition which they hold from yea: to year. He reminded them however that na matter how successful they have sary to continue their cooperative education through studv groups. courses and the like. so that they should not become complacent. end been in the past it is always ricces-' Capt. J. G. (Pat) Twist, a Ca- lnadian Pacific Air Lines pilot, |spotted the woodsmen on n post- dawn flight. They were in a din- ghy, dropped from the air yes- terday or the previous day, and one man stood up and waved to the passing Diane. The other was curled up in a bedroll which also had been dropped from the air. Twelve planes from tho C. P. sir lines. parent company of Que- bec Airways, have been taking part in the search along with an R..C.A.F. Dakota and special res- (C?) - Jifarry young. have n pg] ,7 , cue craft from the United Slates. " ' “mequen” '°t'°3'fl“°' Fu‘ Private planes also have joined in rather renew from time to lmc n“ hum and it w“ on, o’ mes,’ the cooperative spirit within them, patted w Jimmy wade o; 581m without which no cooperative en-l Johm N_ B" that “fled Haruey ""71"" "n W" “We i“ '“'°3T°“- and his two companions from the Tho first speaker of the course Wu" manna was Mr. J. J. Larabee, Supervisor of Fisheries for P. E. I. Mr. Lara- beo spelt, on a variety of siibjectg-i > He stressed the necessity of fisii-| m; and little ships. ranging ermen putting up n qualitv producti (mm the Quebec North Shore if thev are to receive maximum pqper Company's 5,800-ton freigh- prlces for their fish and if they tor Colabee to the row-boats and Ire t0 b6 .8518 i0 00ml)!" l'-'l I WM“ fishing craft of the weather-beat- mnrket He spoke of the care that on Gaspesian fishermen, also have the fishermen of Denmark and taken part in tho most dramatic Norwav take with their fish from search and rescue this normally district has rnmatio loareh. Reecuo the moment they are taken out of tranquil river-side th '. tlil th .t ll k . - lnetlrtvsulfn-nds of Ebeegtsnstfilniez. g3 nglnteur radio operators - the explained that. tho market fir n‘ "hams" of the airwaves - also product like chicken hadd'c. for em] played a pm. pldtlns up end ample ‘could t; ruinedkb; cnrelfzs lsvintrunaesgblziegpczza 11112:" process ng. e remar e on e "l! ' ' anomaly: of shlppl-ng cod away tof The ti!" °7 m‘? ‘Fwued m“ be put up as boneless cod in other provinces and then shipped back 3m acre ‘tiolbedsogd t; fiur owntpeople. 3"" ‘m, to withstand u" com id “ti” dvleibilrtelsen t? an“ "ti" m" u" “"“‘" “m” s er .9 a t s y on tng up. “venue. be,“ "and for a fish cakes, thus helping both fish- "on" foot‘ u“ ma“ m’ "l, ermen and formers, for last year wed m“ wore mun" and wind, for tlila industry alone there were were not properly imported from Maine as lillh In, gxzgaiorufhe" "um "bu". on m m‘ “m” °f wuwe‘ M" u"? the ice. Some were bnreheaded. be, concludes his very interesting] unique w" picked up by ggpt, and instructive address by remind-_ ma!" 301mm“ and m‘. Mo“- ing the fishermen that. the tisherq mm who we“. o“, 1,, a “shin; ies regulations were mode for their b“, m“ cape Ch“ own protection and, in their own I interests, the" should see that they y zro observed. Ho assured thlem that S he fisheries officers wero fisher- men's friends and were anxious to (mmmued "an Pm’ D help them in every way possi‘ ‘n. “film! ~ Other speakers ‘no Greenland Tris!‘ m“ Mom December 104B uni Ill Tho second speaker. Mr P. ligmuny wade and Capt. John G. Martin, Inspector of Fisheries for Mo. 0g m‘ U3, “my spent three lint flrlnce. explained in detail mum“ 1n m, antic when the what the Departments of Iisher- uq-mm, 9mm] Airways piano in ice were doing for th. fishermen whlQh they attempted to rescue and gnve them much practical nd- gqygn glrmgn from the Greenland vice on the handling and oars of is; “p wan’ forced down by short- flsii. The audience enjoyed Mr. q. q fuel. Wsdo wag livhg in “n. ‘intuition. of h i a t- r l er t devwn .. - m. e a. usemien, In:|\ector o‘! WM’; M Fisheries for King's Cotintgv. He stated that there are 4'1 fish can» I s nlnlnns neries in P31. ernploving 171C “Hg; negro: _—I llll persons If ‘ltnough quality pick- ing and advertising the per caplta consumption of fish in Canada whicihts ten pounds annually were even doubled it would mean so much more for the fishing indus- try. Ho. than proceeded to explain themselves helped in their rescue. ardened to the elements by theirl .door life in the woods. they. American pilot, died HALF PRICE" DE, P. E. l._ All Balance 0f Stock Still 0n Sale at The very coat you have been admiring but thought you could not afford may still b0 here — now on sale at a great saving. A Call and Look Them Over [Today Our New Electric Elevator is now in operation. Ride to our Ladies’ Ready-to-Weor _ (Upper Floor) and select your coat NOW at HALF PRICE. \ Sinclair 6s Stewart Limited Charlottetown at tho time. The first five days of that ex- ipertemco Wade and Moe spent in "a. tossing rubber dilnflhy. They pick- ed their way among ice floes and celebrated Christmas by eating hard tack and brown bread. , After they landed they remain lln n snow igloo for tzwo days before a party of natives found them. i Their New Your’; dinner consist- ieo or biubber and scal meat. For iweeks then tho would-be rescuers ‘made their way from village to VIIIBGe until they reached a spot Where l. Diane could be sent for ‘them. Fear 9i Dead In Crashes In China i SHANGHAI. Dec. M -(A.P) — iFcars multiplied tonight that the death-dealing fog over Shanghai on Gtristmas caused n_ fourth air transport crash and that casual- ties among the more than 100 Yuletide celebrants aboard the four planes will be increased by l0 to 91. The 10 were aboard n piano which still has not been account- ed for among l3 planes bringing passeng s to Shanghai for the holiday. Sixty-two persons, including an in three crashes. resulting when thefrsn- sports exhausted their fuel. and l9 others were injured. Addition- ally. a Chinese woman and three children were killed in n farm- house struck by one plane. Aided by radar. one of tho 13 planes landed safely. Eight land- ed elsewhere. A shocked Chinese officialdcm began a probe which seemed bound to point a heavy finger at Lunghwa. Shanghai's only com- mercial airfield where tho corn- mlinicatlori system is lii years old and {rich has no marker beac- ons Message To The Canadian Legion MOATRIAI. Dec. M-(Oéldrhe increasingly important role the r. l‘ Lggiom in playing in ‘he reconstruction period ms the theme of a Christmas and New Year's mung, to tho Milton by the Dominion President. Moi-Gen. C. B. Prictu "The clone of 1N6 and tho ep- proach of 1M7 sees our country well into the difficult recmatruc- tion period in which the Legion has played-on effective part," he said. ' GIIIII Price urged members in detail th. process of quality enn- ni of lobsters. stressing particu- in the sanitary precautions to be - I~.____ I“" WENTHOLA; UM (more lib’! taken. use‘ sat. Lenses Ir. Inc- of the legion "not to forget their fundamental object-tho prot-ction of than: who served and their de- pendants. a Father Certain Amnesia Victim Long-lost Son HAMILTON, Dec. 36 — (C?)- .Patrictc' ‘Prembiett of Hamilton sold tonight he was aura a man who matched the Iremblett home Christmas Eve-and claimed he had been m. amnesia victim as n re- sult of iii-treatment in s- Japanese prison camp is his 20-year-old son, Albert Joseph. _"It'| been nearly 10 years but we imow him when he flopped out of tho car," tho father eaid. “He had n scar from a boyhood acci- dent but we didift need to make identification by the sca' “It was the most wonderful Christmas present that parents could get. We never gave up hope and the good Lord finallv brought him home." The stranger said this; on his release after 4 1-2 years as a pris- oner, lie could reniember only the names of Ferris and Barlow, When he told his story at a travellers’ aid booth at a nsilway station here Tuesday nigh‘. offi- clale made a check of ail persons named Barlow and Ferris in Ham- ilton They found that Mrs. Alfred Ferris and Mrs. Alfred Barlow had e missing brother. It was several hours before he said he remembered Mr. and Mrs. ‘Premblett as his parents. "When I looked at than first, they were like strangers. But I ning to recall events of my boy- hood. T left home to find work and to see the world. bu! a fellow who has partnia litke mine. shoui-l never leave them." He said he fought with the loyalists in the Spanish .-ivil war. enlisted in the Canadian Army iri Ellglani in i939 and was taken prisoner at ifong Hong in 194l_ Cne Injured In B. C. Hotel Fire PIINTXUION’. B. 0.. Dec. 26 - (GP) - ‘trapped in the smoke- fllled= second storey of the Brit- ish Columbia Hotel. l0 guests were rescued by firemen today when fire cut off stnirways escape. One man was injured. _ ‘more were 50 people in the hotel when the fire started. many of them asleep. A 20-year-old chamber-maid, Pat Lehman. was credited with oavin many by rac- ing through the tin ls. rousing late holiday sleepers and guiding mean to safety. origin. sl and squared away for o showdown spread ‘rapidly the second storey. but most. of the building was saved. No estimate of the property damage was available immediately. Thomas Long, 75. was seriously burned and is in hospital. Of tho 1C trapped, most escaped down fire ladders. One. O. L. Crows, 84. leaped from a second-storey window, but escaped injury. ilit-anti-run Car Believed Located NEW GLASGOW. N.S-. Dco. 26 —-(CP) — An inquest into the death of John G. Oe-lkln. Si, whose body was found on the Wentville Road Christmas morning. was adjourned today after R.C.M.P. reported that they had found the oar believed to have struck and killed the aged Westvillo man. Police ssld they were holding n man for questioning but declined to identify him. Parts of a. cas- found near Col- kirrs body will be checked with the car police discovered today when the inquest is resumed tomorrow. Atomic Commission Starts Flnal_ii_r_lve MIKE SUCCESS. N.Y.. Doc. 3 —(A.P) — Delegates on the United Nation; Atomic Energy Commission approved today the scientific and tedhnloai phases of a comprehenv vo year-and commission report fight cm the United States’ plan to know them now and I'm begin- °°mm1m° "mm io-to-o vote. with Russia a nogxfiartfélifialirig and Poland ab- staining, the political committee of the commission adopted at a closed meeting every section of the report except general findings and recom- mendations, Those were left blank in the draft for action by the cem- missimrs committee of the whole n closed meeting tomorrow. Everything hag been acted upon except the essential part of tho re- port-the commission's general po- litical findings on atomic control and the recommendations as io just how the atom shall be con- trolled. ‘k 114i WHY HAvl SORE ‘\\\1$-\\FEET? The fire, of unknown broke out in a washroom and Strike At Case Plant Year Cid B7 llama Quin; RACINE. Wis.. Doc. 26 —(AP)_- One o! tho longest major strikes in the United States—that of the United Automobile Worker: Union (C.I.O.)—- against the Bighmnq Works of the J.I. Cass Farm Equip- me“ Columns’. was one year old today and there was no indication of immediate settlement. The first anniversary of tiii walkout of 3,100 workers last Doe. 2B was marked by n company stato- lwlt which chm-zed union cfficinh with "dictatorship." and n declar- ation from the striking local 0.1.04 U.A.W. 180 that it seeks only n “fair contract.” A payroll loss of $9,660,766 for S. weeks of strike woe estimated by the company in nn advertisement in a Racine newspaper. Seven hundred strikers of tibia original 3.100 who went out at two plant installations here on Dec. 28. 1945, Kltnnan said, were receiving $20 a week “picket donations." Ho said the rest cf the original striker: now are employed at other jobs. Lifted Oui, l0 Pain! No pads or plasters ao (use with-just a [our drops of a painless remedy PUTNAtWS CORN EXTRACTOR-only a few applies- Dione and relief comes quickly. Tachlo youraore corn today. For rapid renulta, for‘ grwatrr mrnlnrl. use the old reliable Corn‘ laborer. PITFNAMKSCORN IXTIACI$o 15c at all dealers in medicine. Putnam's Corn Extractor ti ALE BOTTLES PURCHASED We call for nie bottles. any quantity, pints and quarts; high- cs1 prices paid. We will also any for Jnvex bottles. Bring them In nod guarantee an ample supply oi Jnvex. Phone Cecil's Grocery, 'll°.. in pick-up. i FUR SALE We have for sole Cured Cod and Hake. pressed. COD HAKE Fieitii Well l1 Ch- IO Ch. InSOLhI-ch l. CHAMPION l. SONS. Kensinglon .. =1 ‘Jea “mess Jena-toss..- SEVEIC