WEDNBDA! I THE WESTERN GUARDIAN lGllfilslkuelulplmllluovnlLnfl _ Gentle (In IIJIIIISIDI ill PIINUI COUNT! Ins. llloelllliooo diverting .IOIMIIB (“grin llflltdlll Mil olllelll- liolllorllllo. WltC-‘Zllrot l-IIIIIQ, ll , Toronto Colon. Walls 800% III 9W4"- dellvuolbalenohlt gm rboaolfl Tleflhrdlonwilllo Carriurlleyntkpl do! _er ll" vow ellnhtlll aside bum —CIIES'I‘ CLINIC-Dr. Cruel- man will be in the Town . Summersido on Thursday, Dec. i6 at l0 am. 1344'“ —I-‘OXES FOB quality Platinum Ifemales. old Summerside. —THE ANNUAL meetinl of North Beoequ: Farmers’ Institute will be held in the school Thun- day. Dec. i6. at 8 pm, If weather unfit meeting will be Friday even- uig. Ralph MacCaull. secritéiry.“ l6- S’side Police ept. Report At tile thiinmerslde Town Coun- '.‘ll meeting 0n Monday llilrht the iuliowing report of the Police De- JZilTfIiQlll was read by Councill" Wedge: 'f‘licit. cases l. suspended sent- ence. 3 months: criving to common Li.ill',2,t‘i'. case 1, convicted l; vag- rnncy. cases 2, convicted 2; Town liv Lnu", cnses 2, convicted 2; as- SJluL, cases l. convicted l: drunk- enness. arrests ll. convicted 1i; curfew law. infractions 4. dismiss- ed 4: school act. infractions 2: dog licenses collected $3.00; labor licenses collected $35.00; truck ii- censes collected $8.00; milk licen- ses collected $78.00; miscellaneous licenses collected $20.00; fines and costs collectec. $156.50. During the month children \\'~re reported absent from school. Forty-four homes were vis- a:::l to determine the cause of the c 's absences. Some homes were visited on two or three occasions us the same child would be absent. 0i’ the 5i reported absent. Seventeen u-ere home through sick- “e55. Six could not offer any ex- cugg and the remainder on var- irus different causes. some work- ing. But a number had been home because their parent; had failed to net up early enough in the morn- m; w spin the ChliC.‘ to school. Two cases have been before the magistrate but as vet have not been disposed of. Where a child is absent in the mcrnizig the home is visited and the child reports in the after- noon a5 a rule. A police officer vis- its the school every morning and ii"? any child reported is located same morning and warned to i school in the afternoon. tin". that this report may 1 wiih you. approval. I am Your obedient servant. Peter It. White, Chief of Police. S ‘MAY BE START iticaillnueal 1mm page i.) ‘ 711i aibrcadcast. ‘Trying at all to hold Uherkasy, the enemy nily brought up II‘€.~.‘iI res- uut Ueriziuii resistance melted Ulllill‘ H/USLZQD piCdSUfE CCIT-lfig lruJl two direction. and the Lfcunanz; were Ckflncd from town, leaving considerable materials and prisoners in inn hands. Guerlllas helped prep-army; landing fields behind the LIQAYLJII hncs for Soviet air borne tro , a noaclcast said- s.....i rnciio reports, meanwhile told cf a new Russian drive far to thc nomh near Nevei—-about 70 lllliiJs iium tne Latvian border — vch ~c Gen. Andrei I. Yeremenko, ocleiidcir of staiingrad, was on eve with six infantry divis- .nd two tank corps. c Germans, indicating concern this attack, admitted they n iorccd to give up scmc - ‘The Russians, who rarely . . e on offensive until they 1.... made inngorlant gains, made iiu nxtnzion of the area. W811‘ Serious Eid For Kiev l“ in thc Kiev Bulge. where ‘cow distmtclies made clear that ' .s were bringing up still 1's frcm thg deep rear m posficii to make a )(| for Kiev. the Russians . . .1 lrrni the highway junc- ‘l "T RMIQIILYSI to the out bank m’ lli: Eleercv River- <1‘ u .. aim‘ Robertson And Liberal Prospect i} N‘ IT. u. 2 u ifALIFAX. Dec. l4-(CP)—Sen- SlLFr W. VlcL. Robertson. president of Llic National Liberal Federation. in n ‘ cment today expressed ronli c in Liberal victory at. llic hills in the next federal elec- tion. if given a “reasonable oppor- "' to present the administra~ record and "proposals for the iunirc" ix-IQIE the electorate. iic said the Liberals had been "ulorcd at c temporary disadvant- nzc“ because the Conservative: oncl 0.0.1“. had been “actively carn- paignlnz for two years. as compared with our two months. Termini: the Liberal party the “most effective politioa organisa- tion this country has ever produc- ed." Senator Robertson said Can- aciims would "hesitah before thev throw away the prosperity they have achieved under- tha leadership of Mr. Mackenzie King and hie ad- ministration " _____.___._.. EXTIIADITION PROCEEDINGS MONTREAL. Dec. 10-(010- An application nf Dr. .7. A. Cook to have Massachusetts extradition proceedings referred to an extra- dition commissioner in New Bruns- wick .his home province, will be re-opened Wednesday. it was de- a clded here today by Mr. Justice Al- fred Decary. Dr. Cook i; detained hm for ex- tradition m Massachusetts on the ground; he "kidnapped" his two children from his wife who had been given their custody by a Mas- Ifllsnlh Uri i0, poulbie for dellvdilo OI III not; fifty-one. '- IIIII I III Ii!!!‘ U‘! UIIIIIII-i Itlfll audio. hrslnuervleo 4W melt Iill and Bruce's. “if-TIRE litmus: —-BII.IIMINT 0s‘ lust received at Bruce's. Io-le-Ii. Annual Meeting Skids Children's Aid Society llelll 8.1 the president ores of the appointment of an aofllt for the society was cl ‘ed and deferred to the next monthly meet‘ ius- . It was pointed out that the mat- ter of truancy had improved ir. the past month but some of’ the mem- bers reported that some children of school age were working on ce ishmants in town and should be receiving an education and_ be compelled to attend Rev. Mr. Cook, ful and efficent service he had alv- elnnm the society during his term of o ce. The following officers for the en- suing year were elected‘- Presldent Rev. John vice-president. . G.J. MacLellan; V.Cv; . president, Rev. W. Carnegie; sec- retary treasurer, DI‘. oidstone; Hon. solicitor, Heath Strong. K.C.; Board of managers, Mrs. L. R. Allen. Rev. Arch Deacon Harrison, Miss Doris Toomos. Lorne Drlscoll, Miss Eleanor Stewart, Earle Hickey, Miss Eleanor Green. Patrick Ryan, Mrs. Fred _ Murphy, Horace M0- Farlane, Miss Georgie Driscoll Max Robertson. Miss Carrie Holman. Bradshaw. Mix! Elaine Hibbert Johnston. MYS- Robert Palmer. Boyd Gorrill. Earl McDonald. Moonshiners Find Going Tough In Wartime Canada By JAMES McCOOK Canadian Press Staff Writer UITAWA, Dec. l-i—-(CPJ--'I‘he moonshiiier niaw be flourishing in the United States. but in Canada he has found disaster twice con- founded by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and what lie no; doubt calls the "cussed rationing. i i the view the general Canadian rioture a“? provincial control authorities. the yygeneral supply is far less than it w. The United states ‘Treasury De-. partmen: reported recently that its crive against black markets in al- coholic beverages brought to light a sharp increase in moonshlnlng Prom the moonshinens point of looks good. Liquor is rationed by used to be and distillerles. after stopping production altogether for a year. are making only “driblets" now. The stage is set, but tho moon- shiner hasn't appeared. In his latest report to Justice Minister St. Laurent. commission- er S. T. Wood of the Royal Canad- ian Mounted Police reported a sharp decerease in the number of seizures of large illicit distilling lants. p Today the commissions sail‘. this condition has continued, with few- er seizures in 1943 than in previous vaars. In the old days. the illicit liquor traffic usually hoped to land a few cargoes on the Atlantic coast overv vea: For 1942. Commission- er Wood was able to report that to all intents and purposes this form nf gnyiggllng had ceased and that not a single cargo of contraband Ihad come to police attention. With navul and other authorities as well as the police on the ulcrt for strange ships at oil times. Com- missioner Wood sale today ttutt 1943 has given further evidence of the elimination o f the coastall smuggling traffic. The moonshine-r has found that. war regulations have created head- aches worse than that caused by 'hig own brew. For his ‘business’ he nredl lul- ur or molasses. Under rationing he can get only enough to sweeten his tea and ration hoard: are notor- piuslv inquisitive when the dues- w A. cu le, Mrs. '1' _s Ihol ouenuorm Spent Sixteen Artluous Months In Labrador Also News Shows 7.30 and 9.15 p.m. THURSDAY AT 3.30 ___(Contin_ii_lad cost the Canadians have fought either in Sicily or Italy. Infantry and tanks succeeded two or three times in forcing a way across the road but the weight of German fire each time prevented the Canadians from gaining a foot- d for more than 24 hours An indication of the determina- tion with which the Germans are fighting is the fact the advance has gained little more than one mile since the forcing of the Moro river lost Wednesday. The progress now being made is recorded in yards rather than miles, The Germans are paying heavy in casualties. Two hundred Nazi prisoners were taken Monday. One hundred prisoners were tak- en by a ombat team headed by tanks an which included a comp- any from a Moritlmes battalion which was astride the road mom- entarily. Approaching the hiszh- wav the tanks surprised three Ger- man Mai-k 4 tanks Milk knocked them out. Thousands of rounds of shells have poured into the Gcnnon Do- sitions from Canadian guns. In the last 10 days more shell rounds have been fired bv Canadian Run- ners than from nil the 25-pounders used by the Canadians in the en- tire Sicilian campaign. iiritlsh hat- terics are lending their weigh: to the attack. In the battle area. discarded German equipment dots the lzrounc‘. also marked by shell craters and flattened trees. The dead are bur- led as soon as possible and the grassy 502e,: which form the Can- adian positions are being planted with little groups of wooden cross- es over the graves. New Income Tax Form T-1 Special Simpler This Year OTTAWA. Dec. l4--(CP) — The man with 1943 income not exceed- ing $3.000 will find the 10b of fil- ing out his income tax form a little simpler than he did this year. it was indicated today when copies of the new "T-l special" form started coming off the presses. More complicated forms are re- qulred for persons with higher iri- comes. The new "T-l special" is of four ‘pages as before. but the last two pages nrc devoted wholly to tables showing the tax payable on var- ious incomes by Dersons having var- ious numbers of dependents. The essential blank spaces to be in by the taxpayer cover two pages whereas in the i942 forms all won on the first part of the second oage contain the first part of the tax tables. The order of the uestlons fa tlun of additional supp“ is rais- ed. mother equipment like the tub- ing he must have, the kettles. the pails and the bottles all are hard to get He might hear of some ma- terials to buy in the Unted Biotec- but then he slams up lgaiust the For Exchange Boom, priorities and oil's dozen other complica- i0 ‘ 12"; enough w drive a man froml (sic) drink. And that. it ewearmi is what it is doing. '- _____.______ onwzu. scuoos. | Honor roll for the month of NoN- ' ember. BeC/Ifldfiaxgll-I. Liillln Noddy; I Y . Grade VII-I. e Iceland: 2. Charles MacDone ; S. Noreen n - . - ”2.°"§2““> l Frances ma a ammo lifacDonald; a. vgiibw MIoDonakl. Grade Ill-l. Betty MacDonald: Blair Madcap. rode II (n- . Josephine Noddy Grade t1 (bu-l. Melvin Little; 2. Marcellus MacDonald. . Grade I (ll-i. Roger Mneuuiz. . Merrill MICKCIIIII. . Gmfe I (b)-i. Lorna MuDonv \ld' 2. Joan M . | Teacher. rreda Carver. . “WASTE NOT“ rt is ill n Ftifm away paper h one 2. ‘ouliorv savings t vmp, m new gm iim tax aim the changed somewhat an they are broken down into greater detail- Where there were l4 mail-i questions. each with a number of sulroues- tions in last year's form. there are 1'1 main questions this your. mission due through adoption of as- -eurn pla-n" is - not union this year. That in itself lends t0 Tri II simplification The rates. as laid down in this year's federal budget. are unchan- d from last year pt for the mnbilum £11010 pays ta in fixed m. and t8 additional in community MY"!!! if he has no allowable voluntary savings. Whore the tu eohunns lost ear isted first the Mr] nmntial x the fixed to: an the com- ouether and later commilzory savings. when: this veers form lave in two ‘grlilumns “the “Martel ugohniiel tax be e gra ua and 00m- savlnps ad 000001191“ and the wmpuisory n. rtion. the 1044 form lloia i dusted tax and the com savings but no total of the Taxpayers are a to credit premiums p d on life insurance g ondahalLwith Dal’ 1min . issi . A i l ........'a...r...... by use" taxable income of a... sum ilevn l December N hill; l t Guido 00mins On Baturdll’. we were pleased from our Distric sioner. Mia Du in; meeting Guide; on attendance, appearance and Illldfl "Wil- gtufi" y '8 snotty een Bloke. Mary ‘Terese MeNeilL Jongph, and Betty Richard- Guide Service Stars were Pres ented to: M G . ilsur Nicholson Arsenault. Janet M Lois Innis. i nald. acDoriald Eileen Brown. Gloria Miller, El ._. KEY‘. lth CIIAILLOTTETOWN GUIDE COMPANY 11th. visit chomln. who dur the general At the close of the Halli!!! the iris ed as = ~ .--~»1- NWNI. ‘Ibsen Ngnh Mae- Phylis Betty MacDonald, Cecilia Thistle, aina MacDonald. Frances Dunn. and boI communications. emu of the First Contingent the firm Great War, Mr. Lacey left hen for Labrador in July 1M1, Xtagvork on the new airfield. which bflenundettakenbysbfgOa- 1m construction the Joint use of Allied air forces. of the camp was a huge beau, surrounded by sump and musket situated about 100 miles from time coast. It was devoid of vegetation and encircled by rug- ‘ severe. '.l‘here was no access to the interior. The nearest settlement, west River. wee some twelve miles away. Life there we; arduous but inv - crating. cl ' . of seals was a no- llve delicacy. especially to tn- nt- klmns. w... 7 Illiurlaselhll a r-bmw mow: munauiwnlriftsi zed mountains. The winter cold was 3"“ °‘ oilfield sunnnuu fer photographs. couscous-rm ion INIUI- mo: N sue-r Auivsn - flhipmani. of all wool sweaters, ladies houaeooots IIIC C101. ' Ildal Renoir-trawler. ia-u-ai. a": .. b’ ii-ii-u. RAIN eeriywlmin left Borden int even- 11h ‘tllulhiganlssenlers. ‘arriving l ‘The ferry mamnc$jyeeterdayn i wanna. SUPEIVBOI. urn-i WENDY for Mr NC ' 1mm of to» watch loa-rived-iligrewaidit. re main in the Province unat-Il Pr - OFFICIAL VISIT — Mr. H. W. the Management Service, [Wartime Prices and Trade Board. >Ottews. paid on official visit to Charlottetown yesterday. While hare he conferred with officials of mo. Board and regional rv-olon of- WASI-IINUION. Dec. I4-(AP)- United States war industries sot a new monthly production peak in November despite a. scheduled cut.- baek in the output of small arms ammunition. The index of produc- . .,, Guide r Badges were also psERIlIfidZ Athletes — Annie esa Doimtte. Elaine noucettge- Arsenault. Teresa Doucette. Needlewcmaxrs — Mary Glilis Lois Arsenault, Teresa. Doucette- MacDonald and Janet ald. We Believe Jmet, who is on ly ten years old. is one of youngest Guides to receive a Sec Janet. m. P" Patrol, Teresa Doucette. P. L. Betty Blake, Patricia. Richard, Soner. and Molly Whitton- many parents and they will come again. Distillers Company Pay Big Salaries ‘Pl-i rnnpanrnm? Dec. i4 - (AP) 8 LtcL. of Montreal paid three of- ficers of the company and its sub- sidiaries $60.000 each during the last fiscal year. the company's an- securities and exchange is sion disclosed today. They are HF. Wlllkle of Louis- ville. KY, vice- E. Seagraxn 6t Calvert Friel. vice president and treasurer of the two companies and Scagram- Distillers Corporation and Calvert Distillers Co i ., and W.W. Wach- tel of New ork. president of Cal- vert Distillers and vice president of Calvert Distilling. Samuel Bronfman of Montreal, President of Distillers Corporation. Ltd. was paid $50,000 (Canadian currency). corn Canadian Navy Rad Big Share ln Sub Defeat BY riuuv-ffiauaitrv Canadian Press Staff Writer parlance, ran beautiful for a United ins one of the major victories the war during l That victory was battle of the Atlantic was enduring enough to have vital influence on mllita on the massing of troops a a ons. Damon's anti-submarine navy’ u it grew, assumed an more rtont part in tho anti- Admirnl L. W. command of all convoy o in the "Canadian Atlantic." In that agaclty s of a comb ad poets make the operation P! beck Tatar with new new tactics but tlnlb United Nations’ control vital slant. p I ID,KIII'OI1 flex!“ and men are Losses uring the yell‘ heavy. ‘the destroyer lt. in the North A gpeerenee. loll of e heaviest tall for a sl N. kin in the Ils- to d Other the corvette: tnuilaurg and We! burn. two of l7 whida wok rt in °i’°.i.'.“2l'8' 1mm: Villa a o . . bee and 3.. Arth evened score by sinking submarines. Belldesftltl: new tribal: the 0 policies and annuities and prlnelhl payments on mortgages on their "‘l“"li."‘ "°“‘.‘.‘.il.l.'.;“.‘.“€ii..'$ ‘l?’ se e can Mhifli b l’ 1 Ul- toin 1nd "rim?" e ass-H. M. C. Gatinuu. Kootcnay and aukotch Inn. An unlinked l\_ Campbell. Lois Arsenauit, Mary Gillis, ‘Iier- Chlld Nurse - Betty MacDonald. MlcDo d, Janet Mao- Donald, Betty Ann Birinot, Teresa _ Mary Glllis, mu h Second Class Badge - Betty MacDon- the ond Class Badge. Congratulations to for the Patrol with the ‘ Points during the lost six weeks was awarded to the Robin Ann Sirinot. 2nd, Maureen Sylvia We were also pleased to have s0 interested friends present and we hope that Corporation - seagrams nual report to the United States m '- of Jose h . e Distilling Company; . OTTAWA. Pee. l4 —<CP>— The war period. after the first uncer- Rnyal Canadian Navy in lWi-bflll talnties, generally active 17118111955 Nam!“ Nam mersecréggland high employment a; O the defeat of the German submarine fleet in the mes . While the nshment defeat may not be permanent h l’! W911i" ions in Europe during the year and “mo,” m A d‘, an applies overseas for further oper- took the North Atlantic u iia preserve from start of the war on‘; marine war. This year a Canadian officer stationed at Halifax. Rear Murray wu given “w: the speaker. to absorb into the rou- "mole pose Eitilh, American and Canadian force, with the Canadian element predominat- gy mldsilnmer the submarines "Q tn third place in worl hid will barges w, y. hey came weapons and lo to dispute the can afford. The Con iribuil g but its eveloolnent will require tense elau destroyer Aihlbntan. Imq is and Haida were, commissioned and a fifth. the Mie- moe were un Time s; tub: Wu curiae" “than werf ism "flmwwoifl OIQ C Ulllllmlfiho were Croiz, was sunk tlantie when the III-boots made their new wifli I40 lives. ___..-.-.... la IW- new eel-vetoes “d. NY! llliddlli-TOYRI aim mvfilh IIDIIIM trim in the l wows Qd Out of this wilderness the airfield was carved by working crew; from all arts of Canada who put in twe ve. fourteen and sixteen hours l. day. seven days n. week. w bring it to completion. Work is still [ding 0n. Mr. Lacey reports. but the field as been in operation as n. trans. Atlllltle fllrfitennlnal for some time. Around it hm grown up a moi] city of some 10,000 vropulstfon o1 service men and lion workers. ‘$.22’ ll . i . as we 9s wo hospitals, ‘one Canadian and one American. with‘ capacity of about 40o beds to the big Job at Y. w. Lacey worked for "me time lit Rlgolet. B coastal out- post occupled by armed forces in illlllmel‘. situated about ll0 miles away. Among many Prince Edward Isl. anders with whom he worked dur- ing his sixteen months‘ in Labra- dor were William Campbell and William LeClaire, Charlottetown, Henry Bourke. Douglas stone“, Lloyd Duffett. Milton, Fred mm. ins. Tracadie Station. Hammond Coles. Milton. Wallace Rodd. Milt. °!l- GWYRB Cflrwu. Charlottetown. Vernon Oatway. Cha. , and Reg Spencer The latter re. turned home to Charlottetown a few dlVs ago. Mr. Lacey leaves today for Boa- ton to visit hi; sister. Mrs. K. B, Gfllpatrlok. who is in falling health. are shows and other con- iCanadians llave ‘To Choose From ‘Two Roads Ahead TORONTO. Dec. l4—~(CP)—F0r- CB5 are at work in Canada aiming at the herding of people into the groove of a regimented state and tho destruction of free enterprise and initiative, 5.1-1. Logan. presi- dent of the Canadian Bank of Commerce told shareholders of the gunk at their annual meeting to- ay. Two roads lie ahead. said the presicent. One is paved with prom- lses that a sociallstlc government can guarantee security and an abundant life for all from some imaginary source. The other is the ' . oi free enterprise which has been responsible in the past for Canada's great progress. If political action does not weak- en initiative, Mr. Logan thinks it reasonable to expect in the post- a result, of the demand for civilian goods in. Canada. the needs for rehabilita-l tion in the Dominion and else- where. reconversion of war indus- to peace needs. the re-estab- and. relief of homele l IIt is a modern city too. with Bee u; tlon ‘- -' out points. an l8- point gain over October, the pre- Ivlous high month. The index i; figured with November, 104i. pro- duaion as the base of 100. IIOMI 0N LEAVE-Hoot J. I‘. McMillan. who is fJsinadlan Army Iottetown last night to ‘ eave at his home bone. H imcnber of was gran cave a pence m“ ca] ted l 0! b enlist CHANGE AT AIR. STATION .- The change-over from Royal Air Fioroe wRoyalCa- nadian Air llbrce will likely take place next February or March, it was learned unofficially here yes. terday. This is in accord with in- formation brought beck officially from Ottawa last week by Mayor such s change would take place in the immediate future. FIRE AT ROPER FARM -Dam- age estimated at between 82.500 and {L000 was caused by a fire yesterday afternoon on the farm of Mr. Frank Roper, Mount Edward Hose, which destroyed the -dairy. garage. boiler room and equipment all sma “‘ - i. tween 400 and 500 bushels of grain were also destroyed. Without the able assistance of the City firemen Mr. Roper states. the loss would have been much greater. The ori- iezidn of the fire is being investigat- CRITICALLY ILL - Mr. John E. Stems, well-known Charlotte- town business man is critically ill at his home hero. He has been un- well for some time and was to have gone to Toronto for hospital treatment this week. However. he Plllll- with the ' B. Roy Holman, to the effect that “Y ling of the Consolidated Mining and vary-Footie , Conspiracy Said To Be Cnly Myth Ib-(OH- “I haven't seen the report. but swung makes ouch statements fsotglcen only lvtbatsofer this party is consented. tho tenants containnotasinglsiota oi’ truth." Mr. Bracken laid. MONTl-IAL. Die. 11—(CP)-B. G. Blayioek of Connoi- auto mains and smelting Cem- pan , said that pensions | minister Mackenzie “seems to be very much off the track" in charg- ing in a V sou address that there is a spine? to u party in “Pl be?! betlieve 118 non- Inter. . Blay ock said. "It's pbieets are to make preparations for post-war de- velopment... so that employment can be maintained. and to see that free enterprise has s chance after the Will‘. “I am not even an officer of the organization. but have been assur- er that there is not the sllthtest chance of it becoming political in character. and any support Con- solidated would give it would de- pend entirely on it remaininx free of politics." Yesterday '3 Market ¥ “¥ stretcher; :5. toes, Green Maintains. n .5“ e i). Aillnlt O. C. F. VANCOUVER. D00. H-(OPF- Hamid Winch, 0.0.1". leader in the o British Columbia legislature, in an interview today said he agreed with pensions minister Mackenzie that there was s. “wry-financial w conspiracy" in British Columbia. paid that its main object was 1-1 to break up the 0.0.11‘. Mr. Mackenzie in an address hero last night alleged that the conspir- C d was "aimed at the protection vested interests against social- ism and this in turn ad been de- fleoted against the government." Mr. oh said he had informa- tion o $10,000,000 fund was being raised in the federal field and that a very heavy advertising campaign was tn be launched against the C. 0.1“, Interests backing this cam- paign would come out in support of ive Conservative party_“vviien the time was oppor- no Winch said he personally was to be a prominent target of the at- tack. A fund of $250,000 with back- _ ,_ _ 5s :21 ssjliss§éfiés§iie§§e§éfi§§§fi§ Xmas film. Xmas Wreaths. var amiss‘ BAKER-M the Prince Edward Island Hospital on December ll. i948, in l..leut. DR. Baker, 11.0.11. V.R.. and Mm. Baker. Charlotte- Bmelting Company. was ready for WWII. e dIlIBhter. Donna Jean. an immediate blast in the Ncw_ (Mr. Mackenzie charged the “cczsoir-acy" was headed by "the tool of a certain railway corpora- tion-the tool from Trail" with “a Vancouver lawyer. Locke." in chars: of organization here.) Mr. Winch said he understood ‘naiviii PETERS — At his home in ltusileo on December l4, 1048, Joseph Pet- ers. retired merchant. aged 19 years. Funeral Thursday morning becametoo ill to make the trip. lntendec to have been by o. charter flight of a Maritime Central Air- ways plane. Mr Stems. a veterani f the first Great War is a._mem- r of tho Charlottetown City Council and proprietor of Stems Laundry. COL] WAVE HITS PROVINCE —A cold wave which began late Monday afternoon sent temper- atures down to one above zero here during the night The cold moderated somewhat during th day yesterday and by mid after- noon it was nine above but the temperature wag dropping again last night. Last December a cold wave. arriving s. few days later in the month than this. sent tamper. atures tumbling below zero rind from up hundreds of water pipes, in dwellings here and elsewhere in the Province. Some tatoeg storage were frozen then too- MEETING OF ALPHA BEBE- KAII LODGE — The meeting oi’ Alpha Rebekah Lodge held ioet night was largely attended and included three visitors, in the Dur- sons of Mrs. Florrie Stewart, win. pipes. a fomner member, Mrs. Agnes Coffin, past President. Re bekah Assembly. and also the dis- ano starving people-x abroad and the supplying of goods to returning servicemen and South ' ' n l of oo-opera- ‘ tion between labor and manage- ment would’ however- be necessarmi Canada's promising future. add- ed the speaker, can be realized only ‘if the peonlo are free to go forward i Jllmircd by their own individual- 'ity and enterprise and with assur- ance that the we;- was fought to preserve fmeeom and not w de- ,velop and build up a bureaucrac . i Plan; must be made in time, said tine of commercial life the return- ing members of the armed forces. Also it will be essential to re-estab- lish the country's export trade on a normal. peace time basis if Ca- nada is to be prosper . War trade had rained Can from fifth trade but in peace time: she ‘inset differ- ent conditions. There ll be high- iy-oornpetitlve markets where eon- lIIIIICP5_WIII nuke their own choice of soot-h and my only what they vernment eon a's volt-war trade l ndividuallm and friend- ts. in!’ the bank's annual tetneut. 8. M, Wedd. [moral manager. d the bank bad 1,113.- m d account.‘ and o1 per @3611!!! "n. bank a $1.105 . e ms a in vidunl loans to its customers year and more than en per cent ‘amazon-lent showed the bank's insets st stateroom. the highest ‘gene of II efsgsapbmflwmmarui- I W“ I ' vioue flees! year. in Canada. Joined the nu h“v'3vi'vi'.'si»°'1°t§{it set in l’ on s vv '53.“..- ahead gaining or opened I it! eeta mt at llwk NB" a verlta univ- ib." “"' oral?! of the see. _ l! la t available count the the war with 1e ‘gm 1.700 men has more than ships ma more than ‘llflolrmen and woolen. 100's nlvvls Qvoh AID mill. - . ____..__.._.V and frlsatd. built‘ bmerine trlct deputy - dent of Alpha. Lodge. Mrs. Lulu Nicholson. Copi- mitwes were appointed and plans do to make n brighter Christ mas for tho ill and shut in mom bors of the Odd Fellows Home Ln Pictml- The Rebekah degree was conferred upon three candidates, and Mrs. Helen Mscliaehem, do gree mistress was pleasantly sur. Ilrised on being presented with s. lift by the staff in ,,. ' " of her work. At the conclusion of the ins-ting refreshments were served, and a pleasant evening was color‘! by everyone. MEETING 0F ABT SOCIETY- ‘Iflo meeting of the Art Society was held lut evening at the residence of Mr. arid Mrs. J E. Harris, n. Ii‘. Herbert Dick pro- sided and arrangements we" mod; "If helfilht a local exhibition of the work of the members in Jan- llflfl It was also Wposcd to dis- cuss the works of inslow Homer. errata srtilahfiltnltho newt meet- . . . r ave s ver viv zuerigtimi of thollife of Bus! nll int. .A..a.ws Mrs. r. A. Oreelmsn spoke on this artist's illultrotlna’ the talk with numerous repiaoduotiom of hi. wat- - etc CI‘ In . I upon u...» oompletlo 1 on '°°.l."“.'°.'.l°.‘. ‘i’ If -- m: p - t to s". ..'°.:....~'=~=~= v- W“ - Personals Mill E - u in koittbiiiililfil. W“ m" Qn f0“ m mu ehrovn-'."vi”“tll"i.'ai° $3.111‘ Mr . A. J ch-rfam Gig/lie. hing-old. was in Nf- ll- Jwm . ism-m um» iv" lll the city “I 0 G. l. "r. vlarlka IIIVICI t misfit. Dee in the Blpth l5 it 7M pm, a.“ loo Late To also; Wlluiin - rox museum. h 1:11;" ensragiséliggtreiown. Apply is-is-ie-is-ll. [nth ia-is-ii ~ at l0 o'clock to St. Augustine: Church. Hus WIIQSON — At his home No.1 the organization was prepared to s end 8750.000 between now arid next provincial election. r0 sunvn nvnum nah/m siuwicas LONDON, Dec. I4 —(OP) -The government has appointed a- oom- mittee. headed by Sir Jose h 3110M. to vestiga public heath in India, both curative and pre- ventive. The two, part of a Plan for poet-war reconstruction in India. will survey the whole; field, including health “d “mum 1'9"“ BEYWCH. health education and propaganda. i qqndi. tions in relation to health and nursing services. son, formerly Queen's County, P111. MoAULAY - At Cardigan Head. Tuesday. Dec. 14, 104.3. John Jams: McAulay. aged 98 years Funeral will be held Thursday inornini in 5t. Theresa's church. Interment in 8t. Theresa's cemetery. \ yi N. D. MacLean UNDERTAKER EMCALMER Charlottetown and North Wlllahh Bole II C erseney. development for yearsf’ __ I ‘ "W i .—— Silver Foxes Buying all grades Fox skins, Muskrat, Mink "d “h” "w "IPB- Paying highest market prices. thO no»; h Pelting And Cleaning Plant Now'Open FOR SALE: Used fox wire, fox houses-Benn Your requirements now. Our stock is getting low. . I C. R. MacQuarrie, SUMMERSIDE PELT l” RECEVING .s'i‘AON Our Charlottetown Receiving Station for this seaefll will be under the management of J. D. Jenkins, office 119 Grafton St. This station is now open and will be pleased to revel" 5'0"!‘ Delta and issue receipts and advances for same- Th Dominion Silver Fox Furs, lil- SIIMMERSIDE, P. I. I. ll-II- 0-.