s Gg . \ *, , 7 et? : \ ein Ae wis --Ois Les iie) 66 alae Guarda, Cisviitionm, aluse, Mec. 2, LuGd. = “a te Wad culuniiiag vo re- oY BALE FULD FEDERATION NEWSLETTER ae oe nr eet a err , —|frrchics Side rt —|rccts tom Now Dein sect-| -ronenon caP)—Aateat” Pe, ts mitting contributions for them. Leslie Frost (thin the only reason he could ous food crisis, created by In \jak, former Socialist premier of While nae — ie a _ of for beimg chosen was On Request dia’s worst drought in 100 years. the Polish govermment-in-exile, ‘ benefits for all contributors j four-year hitch during the Canada al e 0 ram a( e group that really seems to be In Army After |Piret World War with the 20th e dia wate, Bis vane See oe {dled have Dridey, of a heast of J |getting a break are shout new) AQ iv La |Infantry Battalion, now perpet- For Food Aid as a food gilt, an increase of ‘2ck. #. wes ammeunced Tete 55 years of age. For ten years | ear pse |uated by the Rangers. eG $3,000,000 from. the program of day. He was 72. Before the Sec- 8 8 contributions they will benefit to | TORONTO se se Mr. Frost said he went over-| OTTAWA (CP) — There ae recent years. ond World War he was a mem . the same extent as @ young per- > — Alter ;Seas in 1915 as a captain with |heen no new from India |" In addition, Imdia asked. for er o: the Supreme Council of |som paying for 4 years, years as a , former IM: | the 157th Simcoe Battalion. | for request food |and ea emergeney the Polish tall and-el BUTTER PRODUCTION tario. Lealie Frost. 70, Later the unit was broken up |aid from Canada, H. ©. Moran, |$7,000000 shipment of wheat ¢h olich parliament. La 19%, : Island butter production -has Teturmed to mititary life Wed- and he accepted the lower rank |director-general of the external |last March to meet a sudden ‘after the Soviet. seigure of east Ry J. LINCOLN DEWAR 3. Buy one ounce of rulene for this will, take an average of leveled off siizhtly below the fi. |M&@@ay and assumed the post of of lieutenant to get to the front | aid office, said Wednesday. food crisis. ~ ern Poland, he was Do IT NOW” each one hundred pounds of ani- about one minute per animal gure of a year ago. Island fac- penandey ,Meutenant<olone! of in France. = The wheat program is sep=- | witi bis family to Siberia. Now is the time to put an end mal weight. and not only have you taken tories are producing over 80,000 Queen's York Rangers Wounded near Arras in 1913 | month service on the Western rate from the $44,500,000 worth jerrived. in Britain in 1948 and. te the warble flies, we can 4. Mix three times the weight care of the warbles but you have pounds per week and this figure) Mr. Frost succeeds retiring after seeing action in battles of grants, loans and export |became # member of the | speak from experience, the op- of water with the rulene, mix Cleared the animal of lice and will probably decline for so me IA.Col. W. E. Patterson. around Hill 70 and Passchen-| “I was just a junior Meuten- | credits allotted to Indie in the |eil of the Polish eration is a very simple one te thoroughly. should bave a 1000 percent re- time. : tm an interview, Mr. Frost dale, he described his eight-'ant.” eurrent fiscal : * : These are the steps. Leave out milking cows and ture animals for shaughter. carry out animals to be treated. 5. Apply one ounce of the mix- for each one hundred | pounds of live weight but not QUEENS MEETING 2 Estimate the live weight of ™ore than eight ounces on any The final county meeting of ‘anim’l no matter how large. AH the series takes place this even- turn on your investment. So see you contact man and do it now. ACROSS THE ISLAND Unusual Tales Told, Dr.Robertson AtPWC By NEIL A. MATHESON Provincial-Farm Editor A FEW unusual stories came this week in a letter from James H. MaeDonald, Sackville, N.B., who was born in Hope- field, P.E.1. Mr. MacDonald wrote me regarding the ‘“‘wooden pumps” of which I wrote recently. Thenk you for your suggestion. I shall talk with the man whose name and address you- sent to me. One of Mr. MacDonald's stories goes back many years, and it concerns a chap who lived in the Little Sands area. I don't know what his name was, but let’s call him “Bill” to make the story more easily understood. Well Bill had lost five of his shirts, and neither Bill, nor anyone else in the family had the faintest idea what had be- come of them. The strangest part of it was that Bill would wear the shirt to bed, but in the morning it would be gone. Nobody could unravel the mystery until Bill’s brother came home on a visit— he was living outside the province—so their mother told him about Bill losing the shirts. The brother kept a close watch on the door of Bill's bed- ing Thursday at Birch Court at |8 p.m. MH you would like to attend a |meeting that will be really dif- \ferent, then do not miss Birch Court on Thursday evening. Perhaps we should not keep |@H the secret, the objective will be: A: To limit the time of each speaker strictly. B. To give everyone present an opportunity of taking part. C. To have those present de- cide on the resolutions. | D. To have the meeting over at a reasonable time. For a meeting with a modern approach attend the Queens County annual at Birch Court. | BEEF PRODUCERS The Beef Producer's Associa- tion are planning their annual meeting for Wednesday, Decem- ber 8 at 8 p.m. at Birch Court. The guest speaker will be Jack Johnson of the Farm Broadcast Department in Halifax. Mr. Johnson is not only a beef farm- er but has had the opportunity of travelling recently to Mexico and will report on that exper- ience and, in addition, discuss the economics*of beef produc- tion. CHARLOTTETOWN STORE OPEN EVERY NIGHT ‘TIL 9 P. M. — DECEMBER 2nd to 23rd Here’s Warmth and Protection for Your Feet Against SNOW - SLEET - RAIN!! Stra> Winter Boots for the fa Good quality Canadian made goods. Constructed of top grade rubber : ° to give maximum wear. Warmly lined, with shearling cuffs, Con- Boys o% room. Sure enough the door ned quietly, and Bill came out. : oes : ; He was walking in his Seco. The wresher followed Bill down- To a considerable extent the venient top strap fastening. Make up a list of your family’s sizes asd Sizes 6-12 — pr. stairs and out of the house. Beef Producer’s Association uirements, t i . om nay be a blizzard! BILL’S BROTHER had a long walk ahead of him, for the grew out of dissatisfaction with -_ hen act right Say oe / : trail took him down to the road and about a mile from home. marketing conditions in this pro- \ Men $s: Finally Bill came to a large rock in the centre of a field. vince. Considered have been f He took off_his. shirt, lifted the rock, put the shirt under it, public stockyards and expert- % Sizes 1-5—pr. H then sr eter hiees tek eee back ane, ae ; mented with was formula pric- The brot low! just to sure Bill got back home al- ing but perhaps the most import- right. But next day the brother walked to the rock in daylight. st aad has been the Children's: And sure enough, he found the six shirts that Bill had appointment of the beef field- edi | | . ~ placed there. Five of them were the ones he had “‘lost’’ before man Farmers who have used Act Imm 1ate y Sizes 4-3 —pr. the brother came home. The sixth was the one Bill had placed (4, fieldman's services have @ there the night before. i ; ‘ g As I’ve explained, I don’t know. what the man's name was, oon ee to profit from bis en Children’s: I'm using the name “Bill” just to make the story easier to tell. PONE a ae rivcglie gush This is particularly for the benefit of anyone who may read While the potato people, white, » wees : : , dairy people and the hog people 4-12 — pr, this from the Little Sands area, who may know what this man’s fa real name was. pe There have been many unusual stories about sleep walkers. Mr. MacDonald tells me ‘‘I knew a chap once who used to walk in his sleep. He fell downstairs one night, ‘though, and he never walked in his sleep again.” Lights Forerunners Of Death : JOHN A. MACDONALD, brother of James, ‘‘could foretell a death’. Once on the road to the Hopefield post office, he not- ed something unusual at a house, not far off the road, which was run as a boarding house. A crew of men were working. cutting logs and Belle Mac- Leod—her father, Norman MaclLéod, lived at the time in High Bank—was cooking for the workmen. When John MacDonald was near the house, he saw a light come from the front door and go down to the County Line Road towards Little Sands e Mr. MacDonald made enquiries as to whether anyone had gone that way carrying a lantern. There was nobody, he was told, so Mr. MacDonald said ‘‘Somebody is going to die in that house.’””’ A short time later, James MacDonald tells me, Belle MacLeod died of pneumonia, a disease that was often fatal in the days that are gone. The man who lived next door to my father was a carpenter, and he made coffins in the olden days, Mr. MacDonald recalls. He “‘‘often heard the sounds of saws and hammers there at night, even when nobody was working in the carpentry shop.”’ |wally takes the prize for lack of Pile °c... cee ‘ak rapper Once, Mr. MacDonald tells me, ‘‘my brother saw a horse Sunlight and certainly for the sad St and truck waggon, with a long box on the wagon.’ There was _Jongest nights, Boys — sizes 1-5 4 49 The Whole Family! a man driving the horse, so that part of it looked normal. But | Pat. .6ic&..aoee ab (dle be a > the horse, waggon and the box, were visible, though it was ‘‘one awfully dark night.’ ‘ i : seem to be getting some very good breaks the same cannot be said for the cattleman. While the situation is not really bad, yet it jhas certainly not been encourag- jing for some time and improve-- | ment is certainly indicated along | the number of lines. |NOVEMBER DAYS November has kept up 1965's |Teputation for satisfactory wea- | ther and has, in addition, ‘pro- |vided welcome moisture to re- plenish. the wells of the pro- | vince. Snowfall has been — light |Many cattle are still out and | where provided with shelter are probably better than closely co fined to buildings. Here and | there the last plowman still fol- lows his row and certainly makes very dark patches in the , widening fields. | Yes, November has generally jbeen a very good month, now jwe turn to December which us- LEADERSHIP AWARDS | During the Centennial Year 50 | Lightweight, black overshoes. Convenient adjustable side dome, fastener, Net lasts. Order lining. Narrow or medium yours right now! . Men’s — sizes 6 - 12 4.98 Easy-over-the-foot style. Boots for .Warm winter comfort. Adjustable straps for snug fit. DONT WAIT! TOMORROW MAY BETOOLATE!! = mily 4.49 Many other fashionable styles of Ladies’ pr. Water-Proof Sno-Boots With flat, low, stacked or Cuban heels, Ee to 1 5h = ; es: \€armers {25 in the East and 25 $ ini j i 5 | : Brown with fleece lining. Shearling in the West) will receive schol- i i Waggon Brought Body Home itships to the value of $2,000 00. ‘eo 5.98 as as - a. oS . 'to. carry out research and study MP. sa eh boi ac chee ees a was coming from e home r, unn. Programs designed t d dren’s — 6 - i Mr. Munn sold the truck waggon and about a year later, the themselves as eedecs a thee | So 5 49 ' man who had bought it took the same truck waggon*to George- community and in agriculture POUT on sscserseverervarnees 3 Men's Rugged town to bring the body of a Wood Islands man who had been The program is being financ- Boys’ — 1-6 murdered in Pictou. The man had been placed on the railroad eq to the extent.of $100,000.00 b Pai 8.98 Zipper Overshoes ; and the railway shunter ran over him. This, apparently, was af- the Bank of Montreal ead is Shis OE yeast nen ncsseneenees ; i : t. With led ter. the man. had been murdered, though I-cannot be sure from fbastitution’s Centennial contribu- Men's — 6- 11 Koopa Se See a heavy fi Mr. MacDonald's letter. The man whose body was carried, 0M tion to agriculture as an indus Pai * re Seat cata arm, ine $; 14. seme 8 SB ICUNUIC 25 8 IOUS BS 20° Bere eee wee eee lUlUlUlUlUlUlUlUlUlUlUlUUUUU~C~C RH geht e ewe seer aneeee ee + g. ows tongue. TRA - és the truck waggon w4s named’ Munn, Mr.“MacDonald tells me. Many people do not believe such things actually do happen, Mr. MacDonald observes. But he does. Once, he tells me ‘“‘he was sitting on a big log eating his lunch—he was working in the SUCH. by providing awards to PUE icstascviseseosase ais sin : woods not far from Sackville—when ‘a thump came on the (*Uccessful farmers in recogni- “ - s log”’ near to him. ; ‘tion of achievements in their Others, lightweight style 4 98 “I. wondered what had caused it, but about .a month later |f@rming operation. Rather, the Patt ht. Sac ehecee 1 ae Men's Leader Laced my nephew, Sam MacDonald, was killed just outside of Amherst, objective is to produce better N.S., so that was a warning’, Mr. MacDonald observes.. His | Citizens who can assume leader- | Rubber Boots nephew had been hit by a train. If any old friends want to write Mr. MacDonald, his address is box 465 at Sackville. | the project which he proposes to Ladies’ Lilly warm pile lining. Durable steel carry out to further : : * Sizes 6-11. Dr. S. N. Robertson Is Recalled girv,culto {utter the sims of | Qs oe f BOE eevee, THIS STORY will appeal particularly, I suggest, to the people who attended Prince of Wales College back in the days ' that Dr. S. N. Robertson was principal: It concerns two chaps who attended PWC in my time. Steve Connolly told-me the yarn as we were chatting one day in the Post Office where Steve works. He and George Ayers, Charlottetown, were -skipping the second period one morning. It was geometry, as I recall the story, and Steve and George didn’t have their home work done apparently. The pair decided to head for the furnace room in the bi t. They told the janitor thei lem; thei i . deuie wes to hide trom Dr. Robertson ee wan. often ‘on the ee: ies umn sae FASH IONAB LE Overshoes by Kaufman “> hi f h students. : bo number ques- 9 ‘ uM the Salter ‘wae kind and he told them that “the Doctor ns asked the different speak- WARM-WATERPROOF segues. Oe. eee eee very seldom comes to the furnace room”’ to search for students. place to-hide: Unable to find a spot, they saw two large barrels and they hopped in and squatted down as low as possible. When Dr. Robertson arrived he asked the janitor if he had, seen any students hiding. The janitor replied in the nega- tive, but Dr. Robertson went on the hunt anyway. When he But this was one of the days he did come. | I : ; Hearing the unmistakable sound of the Doctor’s steps com- eee cost and cover- ESKII OoOos a 8 98 on Brown ubber the stairs, St and George looked quickly for some | 48¢. After Janua c = Paige tins corms roogevee s uk ing down the sta’ eve zg q y | loved ry levery.seu: - J air ny " R spotted the barrels, he approached them and calmly invited : a much snow is éa the @ lave all Mr. Connolly and Mr. Ayefs to “‘come out of there’, and pair. Thick pile lining Felt insoles ths trouble of 3 ground, then took them upstairs to administer the traditional Robertson Sizes 6-10 4 49 Wear : one = wae a eS i Dr. Robertson cold | eae) ll lUllltt:CC— (ee bracts . al prices, . A colorful character to look back ai, Dr. Robertson could | Pair ©. ....++. . Sa prea be very formidable on occasion to the students who were under Sizes 11- 2° his care. . Stood At Front Door Of PWC A STICKLER for discipline, he offen stood at the front door of the old oe with watch in hand. The students who. were club bulletins, _busi- os on time were allowed to enter. But the old head would shake | _Ress letterheads. All Me ium Hi * Boots vigorously as soon as the minute hand on his watch reached the work guaranteed. Dressy Eskiloo di - [High Billy 0 en — coe which ae the —— student was late. : Cocktail Esk by Eskiloo p e turned me once—the c st ahead of ‘ot . Boo iteo Boots ‘. VU in—but I knew a back door we ‘end setae for football GUARDIAN - PATRIOT — = High cut style, durable Saturd ‘ practice; and I went to the back of the building and made The Claridge in black The Classique. Black or Royalon uppers. Heavy : ay the first class as though nothing had happened. The old prac- CE NTRAL @ ‘brown, Révalon up- brown. Royalom=cheavy fleece lining. Black or tice field for football was just behind the college in those days. pers. with crushed Roy- pile liming. Button side brown, in stacked or flat Ch'town 9te 93 ™ Generally speaking it was the area that is occupied today by a R | N T E R Y aioe ‘trim. - Musisn* heels trim. Stacked heel. Sizes heels. Sizes 5-10. © : ee Pp. we the Vocational Wing and the parking lot behind PWC. Tt wasn t . Sizes 5-10 = 5-10 S'side . . 8:30 to 5-~p.m. regulation width, but some rare old football baitles were fought Phone 4-8506 Pair ; : 15.95 Pair. 15.95 Pair : 15.95 > se Oe P. there, and some pretty good players got their initial experience on the PWC fie'@ i ae [ itry. The aim of the plan is ‘not lto “produce better farmers, as ship in developing better rural communities. Each applicant must submit be made on the j i | 1 projects outlin- ed in the application. Interested persons may obtain further information by contact- ing the nearest branch of the Bank of Montreal |PENSION PLAN 1 One item at the county annual meetings which has developed considerable interest is the ex. ers indicate that there is still a |8reat deal for people to learn | person earning over $800.00 will be required to file returns and make payment of —_—————————— Call us for programs, “ree INRRENEERENREE MNT They’re cute, but they're very warm. Attractive white rubber: laced overshoes, fluffy fur trim. ‘Sizes 4-10. Par © icccas seenenerenes oe 4.25 ba Ladies’ Dress Nylon @® brown. fastening. Choose yours from black or In illusion or Cuban heel style. Pull-On Boots This will keep your, feet warm and dry. Just drop: into Holman’s and try on a PAiE cece ccceceese ave ~ 4,98 Both Stores zs Famous Leader Brand. Really made take it, of heavy duty rubber. Thick, shank, Men's Toe Rubbers When the weather’s warmer, and not s0 1,99- 2.69. 2.98 git oe ' = r: a % 2 Ame BAR rn Rha accent Rster te oe sseeMmera eR ie Meth OS At oes! Pe PM RENE 20s LotR M a0 of 7 Sere SR At GEAR LT ORE ORNL tO LENORE