all]! .CHARLO'I"I‘ETOWN GUARDIAN YEO THEATRES GFDRGE ANNABELLA KENT TA Y LOB. Every aeconfl . . . stlrrlng! Every moment . . breath. lOI . . . as they share dan- ger anaih fiiflvfiflllim together a o . I’ ' break for irelellillamll a surfing PAGE SEVEN A lMAKE IT JEWELER Y l? r f I l I i A GIFT wits... TODAY THE BENEFITS OF HEALTI-IFUL SKATING i TWICE TODAY—3-5 and 8-10 SKATE AND THE Stride Airmen Likely To Replace Army Team In City HockeyLeague Unable to lc t: "m 199w“; l?! Fnlllllll: ‘graft. lgillvfllilgnlgctgilivncorltllilcta Tiling;- APIIIY 0° Y tefi alt ni twlth- being quits g e pi _. drawatflsogaelltlienlclw Clllilolcfiy 1"" et will do awayllvleth tehe f“ "Pfelefl- of the local squads trov- atlves held at the Queen Char- Summers! f ' latte berrecke- However. despite Although a definite declilio‘ w i!" ‘Fm’! "illimvel the league not reached at last iht’ l‘ l‘ "l" "l “Riv” ‘l milinelly in: nnhi details wllllsb slmeed- scheduled next ‘Hleeday nighcnec. out’ by noon may and tlie dgllies- "le A" 7° {pa} will be handed in for publica- Alipearanoe oi the Siimmerelde team in the local league will add a lot oi spice and interest to the league 3:111 ycreate lust that much l‘ . more rlv e ,1 a are reputed to have a fast. evenly bal- anced squad but they will be faced b eitually well-balanced teams w en hey stack up against No. .2 A.N.B. team. the combined S. D. U. and P.W.C. team and the Navy, the three local entrants. Dall and See a Real Display of Watches, Diamond and Signet Rings ALL THAT GLITTERS HERE IS GOLD I BE HEALTHY You will have the distinction of giving her- tho finest gift if it’s Jewellery from our store. LADIES’ and GENTS’ WATCHES ROLEX OYSTER ELCO DORIC NELSON VADIS (waterproof) WINTON (waterproof) -ALSO- BRIDAL WREATI-I DIAMOND RINGS PENDANTS LOCKETS IDENTIFICATION BRACELETS CHESTER A. CAMPBELL » 157 Queen Si JEWELLER Phone 1634 l ‘The Old Reliable" "§t'%i~'2r}i§iifa!r}iv' a Groom rendered several bagpipc i ii fr his country falls.’ It is v _' _ “"° ° auiiiio sirens selections and Writer Harry H. supllme in the oft-repeated toll of i Bilgclen of H.M.C.S. Queen char- dutiful citizenship. The bard of. lotto sang several Scottish sofigsiAbbotsford pronounced the sent- , lo Lrezit upiiludsc. icnce of mankind on the man witli- i ended with all .\'l iihau ui‘ i'.-\'i‘iii0'1' OFYICL LLOYD INMAN Identify on... , Carriers Damaged .._ k ll) ll LQBIUO 89b licnygiiselist ital-t on Wednes- . "h: with the staging of the flllgiu that saw all four teams Q] d swlnging_1n_to action. I mes can be taken ‘m lltglllirlngilhen the 188B"! i! ' ‘u, produce some oi the clos- “' e, gvcr witnessed one. local‘ "myedncsday nlsht the coin- ifw offered was all that coutld desired with the issue in be‘: unigfs being very much I’, right, to the final seconds oi peoples each with their own racial and social customs. It needed on. tlence and forethought to havg g SWOYIBIY united People emerge from the cauldron. Looking at ilic la matter from another angle, Migl '7 Show said that, figurntiveiyspoair-i 1H8. a ccmcnt was needed to hold‘ the many different pieces of the‘ mosaic together. To this end, the Women's Institutes. the Catholic Womens League and thc Red Cross were doing yeomtin serviced Saint Andrew by exciting up in- fluence of harmony on his brother flllosties ‘rad exemplified this com. ent whlih ls needed so greatly in Canada today. Also in the recon- struction period. if Canada 15 to take her rightful place among the nations of the world. thui uniiy ofi purpose must be developed und encouraged. In this work n0 one race was better qualified to take al leading part than that race which‘ was so ably represented at a Cale- donlari Club dinner. BILLFO LDS COMB, BRUSH and MIRROR SETS (TIGARE'I"I‘I§ LIGIYFERS JIOSARIES WA'I‘EIL\‘IAN'S PEN and PITJNCII. SETS SIGNET RINGS LADIES‘ and (i TS’ Il)EN'I‘lI“lCA'l‘lO_\' DISCS ILANGLE BIL-H‘. Ii I. li"l‘S CILWIPACIKS EARRINGS COSTUME PINS MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON, Nov. so _ (no) -‘The navy department today id- entliied four escort carriers, The Kalinin Bay, The Fanshaw Bay, The White Plains and The Kltkun Bflii. as having been damaged in gm battle of the Philippines Oct I The announcement also disc sed for the first time that 800 sur- vivors of the St Lo and 600 oi the Gambler Bay were rescued. The loss of these vessels “'55 pre- viously announced. The total complement of this gigs craft had never been disclo- Today‘! announcement was in the form of a statement by Rear Admiral C. A. F‘. Sprague who commanded thc escort carrier group which. assisted by Wildcats and Avengers, fumed back a rna- . jor portion of the Japanese fleet north of Leyte. despite the lose squad. Everalnce the rumored with- drawal of the Army. league oiric. ials have been busy in trying u, obtain a replacement and last night it was announced that Sum. merside R.C.A.I‘. would likely be represented in the league. Ii such ls the case, and there is very lime doubt but such will be. Summer- side will play all their games on Standing In No.2 A. ll. S. Bowling League Following is the team standing in No. 2 A. N.S. Bowiln League. together with the eight dlvidual leaders in the league. Team Standing Post Office Armament Section Ofllcers‘ Mess Sergeants’ Mess Woriu 6r. Buildings . Atrm ' ens Wireless Section . Servicing Squadron Headquarters Equipment Section M. T. Section Corporals’ Club .. Individual Averages P 51 1'1 218.2 MM I07. 4058 202.9 g O O ok a licktnl 118m m, Sinrt, The two Air Force " we“ favored t0 Will 59m ‘ opening matches but N“? ‘lynch. showing surprising ' ‘artlculorly in the matter fing the basket, threw a 9y wrench into the machin- by coming through with hard- ,, . victorlczs. ' and of basketball display- fashlgiso considered very good the squads’ initial efforts. As 5mm goes along) and ‘my , benefits from 0th m" practice sessions it ls ound PM. and it will not be sur- W moi, when the league ts ring to a close all teams cdn- d will be dishing out a very - brand of the’ 1120p game. I h. disappflliililnfl featI-IN o! esdayg opening WI! the slim We that was on hand to the twin bill. There was cer- ,, piemy of sitting and stand- mrn ieii in the Y. gynmosium 031.1515, although a little dis- iiited at the slim turnout nev- i,“ were optinustic that oboe 1H5“, is underway for awhi iiiiis condition Will iBIPWFPI/E- a U O i 1 nlong with the ofllc- lpslllrlllSgfPSDECt. When 8 B51119 bggii more or less dormant for number Oi years. spectators’ ln- , wiii not be awakened in any .. space oi time. It takes time . iois of u. but gradually the turns for the better. But e this change is taking place B gimp; the teams to keep P1118- . away and if they continue to .. the some tyne of ame as i did on Wednesday ey will iuglly dLscnver a reawakenlng interest among local basketball SOUIUS -- THUR g p, M, MONTAGUE — FRI. 8 P. M. MONTAGUE SAT. 7.45 AND l“ BIG BATTLES- (Continued from page i.) and hard. As the Germans slowly fall back under a rain of shells imd before the bayoncts oi 9th army infantry they came under withering attack b ‘tr-bombers , m 4 To Relax Press "This is first oi all-above any i‘ _ ,,, flensorship After White. Associated Pius German Defeat ioillei i° lRangm Win From Danadiens 7-5‘ Premier Jones Premier J. Waller Jones respond- cd to. the toast “Our Province", and from his personal experience extolled the virtues of the Scot. He ended his brief address with s story which evoked much applause. The musical entertainment. urns of a. high order. Pipe Sergeant Al- bert MacLeod and Pipcr Percy MONTREAL, Nov. I0 — (CF) — New York Rangers te their first appearance of the sea- son on Montreal ice tonight by scoring their second win of the national hockey league season. whipping the league leading Can- adieng $05 before a crowd oi a- ut . a War Correspondent. in a front dis- patch. "The 1st arinv is having to pay for all this. and Gennzm rc- sistance has not vrcakcncd am‘- where." (A German military announced that ‘l0 Alli —-Derhaos 850.000 men-now were slashing at the western deitnces Germany, The enemy hmh ccmmpnd claimed that. ‘l4 Ailicd tanks had been knocked out during the last two days). Third army tanks which occupied high ground dominating the Ger- . oi Mcrzig. near the Lux- embourg border. found themselves ,under artillery fire both from ihc 1865i. and lhCv\V€5l2—Sl7m\3 shells iii)- pareritly coming from Siegfried 1.1.110! iortiiications. American troops were within two miles of MQIZIR on the northwest. west and south- wc . Gen. Eisenhower's communique described German opposition to 3rd urmv forces as “snow/Z out there was cvidence that the enemy was committing more reserves o1 men and armor to that front in latcd effort to and synthetic oil of the Saar. l , ‘hoops of the United States 7th iUiarmy. driving toward the German 1&5: border nortnof Strasbourg. ap- Wtgaoached within 1 “.- mries of~1nc portant FIKIICII city oi Hagcilaui and threatened it with a. flanking push on the west. llagcnau is i4 ‘.2 miles from the German frontier. , The German radio reported that enxony troops were withdrawing from Hagcnau, but a dispatch from the AP’s Thobuni Wiam on that front tonight deciurcd the Nazi's still were resisting bitterly. (A Swiss dispatch SrllflnPItHluh troops had reached the Rhino just north oi Basri. thwarting a possible attempt by the German garrison oi Humngue on the Frenchside oi the river to escape into Switzerland.) Northwest of I-iagenau an Am- “ erican column was naaring‘ B. wwii l-i-i only nine miles from the German 14-1 frontier. Both these troops am. Dlfidlthose directly 1n front of Hngcnau were passing through miles of ci- aiborat/c trench systems .\vii.h block- _ ‘houses and Dillboxes. which had 1o4 192i not been defended because the Ger- 144 mans obvlouslv did not have the 203 171i men to out into them. 172 I66 __.__ 009 2 High Three. sllolgfiggrettotfeiigu suppfigg shortaga _lleld lip Drive Points, Aces 4, Jokers 1 JEEPS: Ray McDonald 228i Rev. F. Cass 129i V. Coylc $3 190 132 Bruins‘ Defeat Black llawlit 7-2 CHICAGO, Nov. 30 -— (AP) — Boston Bruins, sparked by Ken smith and Art ackson. scored five goals in a. hectic final period here tonight for a 7-2 national hockey league victory over Chicago Black Hawks. A crowd of 10,54 saw the Bruins win their third in a row from the Hawks. BOWLING ‘Ihc dlnncr out patriotism in his heart lu his standing ivltii clasped hands and immortal words ‘brczithcs thcre a‘ singing "Auld Lang Sync." men with soul so dead. r The following is the text oi "countries are of divine ap- Fathcr McDonald's address: polntment. The Most H1811 div‘ lded the nations, separated ti" “THE DAY" sons of Adam. and appointed the Following is the text of Rev. bounds of peoples. Man is born a Father MacDonald's address on LONDON, Nov. 30 —(O PJ-Rfi- laxed press censorship, both in Britain and the United States, will become effective the day Gennany is beaten. British press representat- ives already have approved the pro- posed revisions. Admiral G. P. Thompson, chief press censor, made this known here today. Byron Price. director 0f U. S. censorship. said in Washington his office had been working 0n a. revis- ion holding meetings with the news- papers‘ irdvismy council. The regulations would be confined to military and naval suurlty mat- ters and would operate until Japan ls defeated. ' "' gggiglhbegtfginffjrg“:gi“fflg‘°fi,,f,fiil South America is necessary. The fulfill)’ by n59“ 9s does not suffice. There is need oi a larger organism. Families must unite for their mutual pro- tcctlon. They must band togeth- er for the development of the fac- ulties and powers with which nature has endowed the children of men. he ole human race is too extensive, its interests are too diversified for one such soc- iety to serve all. There must be sub-divisions which we call coun- tries or peoples. Mistaken Ideas “We find nations and countries "The Day and o.‘ who honor it": "I shall dwell on one virtue we find strong in the heart oi every Scotchman. We find it in his iichrt ikn ev yhcoungryg where ‘l: has tn cn up iS a o c. as ' find it in tho history of Scotland. I rcfcr to the virtue of Patriotism. I would define Patriotism as love for lane's country and‘ loyalty to it! life and weal. is love tender . . n strong, tanner as the lovc of Press cousorship inside Britain, as . w). mother, strong as the p11. well as with Canada and the United =1.,,-S of dean, 1i, is loyalty en- Statcs, has bcen voluntary since the ‘érous and diginmesieip sin-in in; beginning 0f U18 W111i from no sacrifice, seeking no re- Nlncty-five British defence orders ward save country's honor and were drafted by the censorship to country's triumph. protect security. The new British “There is magic in this ivord. It from time immemorial. But. we cede has been rcclucod to about 4o is bliss to rcpcat it. Through a es aiso find mistaken ideas concern- dcfence orders. the human race has burnt the fling the reason for and the duties Postal security censorship would cells" cffliiinlmi°=l “n? Twin‘??? 0i Coumrlcs- Before ‘Pg advent °_‘ continue miheingci-im w“ pemxi at thc surincs of putfl0ti5m~ B Christ paganism denc man an; _________ most beautiful pages of history arc rights as citizens. Even the wise STORM WIDESPREAD those which recount its deeds. Aristotle taught that some men (Conilnucd from page i.) rlca as ministers of the gospel, to Assam to grow tel. to China. to opt-rate steamship lines. and everywhere in imdo.‘ »nd claims no icss 1.1- dianis of the Unitcrl S ral Dominion Premlirs, and i.‘ "mg busincssmcn and industrinlls ii'i six continents. "Herc in our own country find them prominent in cvcry walk oi liic. In tin: political ficld we find such incu as Sir Joli" MacDonald, A. '1‘. ‘uh. ' Mowatt and thc Rt. Hon. Lyon MzicKenzie King. Sco were largely responsible f founding of seven o! our vcrsitics. A xanrlrr Bcll thc Wcpiitii and Lord way builders. In music Sir Ernest MacMillan lass an international reputation. And in Canadian lit- Nung Team Birch. Poet Office "i/Iclidiiisn, Ali-men's Mess rown. Ofltcers’ Mess Forrest. Post Oflice Britten. Arm. Bee- Mc is. W. d: B. leerock. Hdqtrs. 70 Gordon, Eiqutp. Sec. i5 2956 i9 High single-Younker, Works dz Buildings. 379. vgorks do l! 20 25 M 24 WI O .... every day one rum into .. figures that before h0stlllt- broke out in Euro were well own in island at etio circles d now have traded an athletic liurm for a service uniform and oars making just as good a job their new work as they did when the glare of the sports spot- ,‘ I I O . the past week this writer has . the pleasure of meeting three s new in thc service of King country. The first one was "Brick" Gormlcy, now Major micy. Bifilcr than the days en he was an outstanding half- iwlth Abegivelt football teams a well known sprinter on the der tracks. Brick was enjoying lew days leave with his home CLERKS: P. Curley 5A. Farmer High Three-lagging?” Bulldlnll. 016 ( - a“ l“ —’_“' 12o 136 12a is; tiulfstroam Park vlill Ra-Dpan Dn Friday FfiTe-sggmgllfggg- oghepeggltgourgrafirolié gzzzslggfildcellliattgg figrgwetgt It: eraturowc have to mention but a froem it their warmest glow P035 llgion of Christ proclaimed the few- will?“ Cflmlib?" Rflillh Coil- - ~ . hi». . i, _. arc swcctcst whcn they rc-ccho its fatherhood of God and the broth- ficjlil-nqf in‘ "iihiélllt? whlspcrings; orators iirc most po- erhggd of man, It taught that mun to you ind ‘m an svm J tent ilvhcil they W110i iii ilffllld- has rights. It. proclaimed that manqwrnqus (Tlwratjnng ~ My vmpr “uls- - has “homes which no power 1m i» ih 4 ‘he lust on‘. civic hllfagfllglntallilgieglagi tfiggsmg.‘ vgloat"algalcaléfieszlvizgutggnzrehbgl; inspiration. Nlav the great deed! lvcer; lilvgorl; Bu! their effvl‘ “'55 lng impressled upon us in our h?“ “l” “l” "5 l ‘P “ll” an excess of a great truth. that ¢i-gy_ We have witnessed a rccur-‘ ' ' heaven and earth unite in i119‘ rcnce of this old pagan philo§oilhiKi ‘ proving and blessing patriotism. we have seen dictators coming to m power, denying to mcn the most Li} Value OI PiIlTIOl-lfl" fundamental liberties. Are we no. waging this war against one such tyrant. And how much is being said and written about liberty “Permit mc to pause for minute and consider what is llb-, crty. Too often 1t is confused with 1 licence. I will define liberty us‘ that right WlllCh frees men from all restraint save that of the laws of justice and order. It frees mnn . from submission to other men, cx- l cepi. when that represents and enforces these laws. i‘ “Liberty is a gift of __God to . V man. It is God's recognition o. x‘, man's greatness and Vriignily- Tho \\ rights of citizens begin ivlth and go upward from ihc people. Dic- - iators put the revcrsc ill'.0 prac- tine. some snow might fall in this Pro- vince. STORM RASIIES N. B.‘ SAINT JOHN. N 3., Nov. 30 — (CP; — Hzavy rain and high wind lashed this section of New Bruns- wick today. No damage had been reported tonight. 1N NOVA SCOTIA HALIFAX, NOV. 30 —— (GP) 303W “ind-s and rain which swept Halifax today left little damage m their wake although the weather bitrcsu officials revealed wind vel- ocity in the Halifax area. reached 36 miles per hour at the height of the blow in the middle of the afternoon. Capo Breton was catching MIAMI, no, Nov. za-uiri- T Members oi a syndlca‘ which gambled hundreds of thousands of dollars that Gulfstream Perk could make a llwar-tirnehralcing fotzieliack ACES: already ad won ai a vc ry day-and waited confidently for a E- Dollcciie meeting opening Friday to bring complete triumph. E- Half tho battle was over when To Miami florist James Down and associates finished a hurry-up re- furbishlng job begun late in thc summer in time to inaugurate glands’: riisrcirligl ‘season on the ear- est do e 5 ry- spondlng more than $300,000. they turned a run-down plant Total which had been idle for foul‘ ell‘! into a spruce horse park. 1111 ill! stables with ihoroughbreds lined up a 20-day racing orosrem with s $1,000 purse minimum. Guifstream, Florida's third track. is situated approximately l5 miles north of Miami at Hallandale. year. Says the astute manalfl‘ 01' the New York team when ebull- lng oi Meta. who joined the Tor- onto team aitcr reoeivinl hi! til!’ charge from the Canadian Active my; I O I ‘Meta has made the Mail I , l’... Butler-BBS High hrec. I... Butler-Gilli Pomts. Clerks i, Tyros 0. to- 210 162 209 109 280 199 17B 144 down W12. .. . en the next one was a fellow i r of “Buck's”, Ivan “i-llckcy" lson, also a Major of the Highlanders. also marking time - a irw days leave. Hickey lie heavier than when ‘he pab 1- the left boards for the Abe- ti in the Big Four before go- tomigisnd to play and on re- ~hsvliig a trial with the Ohi- i Black Hawks. Raga-j "The human race PHYS hflmage to patriotism because of its su- Dremte value. The’ éifgalziirrlfgé ism oapcope s. ' ~ 3.2‘? .2132‘? rflatriotlsm is the vital spark of national honor; lt is the fount of the nations iiroiiliieflly- eveniihc shield of the nations safety. more intense gusts of the 5tOI17l"I‘nkc patriotism away and the whim started 0“ Fiolidfl 10W Wed- nation's soul hus fled. bloom and nesday and moved with great ra-p- beauty have vanished from idlty up the Atlantic seaboard. I nation's countenance. Gusts iii parts of capo Breton ivero “The human race oars hcmflce approaching 50 miles per hour. oif- i0 Palrmllsm “Emu” 9r l“ sup" ficiaLs said last night. Centre of "m9 mvclllless" Plltnolltill; i1?‘ the storm was moving through m“ l” “hm 1s “l‘,‘°“g,fg‘,‘,,us pine inland Maine $55k)“ dlhcd £Z:L__cl;unirv ’ ‘i5 oiricidis of the Nova Scotia light {§,'§‘ff,§‘,},e,,,,§ or‘ in. wring. and and power cllmplmy m“ “m w" noblest sentiments of thc heart.- night they had no reports of any patriotism is innate in all men; its "W102i breakdowns during the day absence bgigkens .1 pcrvcrsion of and telephone comprmy officials JOKERS: C_. Costello a tn there was the slim figure ‘ Filling “i-larl" McInnls, now ll‘ wearing the uniform of RDYoLCuuadIiin Navy and a n of D-Day invasion. "Had" be remembered in local sport It as nctminder first oi junior i and inter performing with i» teams before enlisting at the eak of llVill‘. . a i ;i n WASHINGTON. Nov. 30 —- (AP)—- Gen. Eisenhower had to dela/y his general offensive until enough ar- liery ammunition accumulated, War Secretary Henry Stimson dis- closed today at a news conference. Following the r-ueh across Franco, “we experienced n series of artillery difficulties." Mr. ..-»-"" r’ Total SCAR-NOTE: W. Mullins C. LeClair Patriotism A Duty three have lived a lifetime iilitrlencc in their yet young i» but they haven't by any lost their love of athletics. "Beautiful as patriotism is, it is also a duty resting 011 mall. This duflv springs from justice and human nature. rtoxt to God is W?’ iiic topic sol nil nature. 0 1a O turned to three miss the good old days " ti’ were cavortirig in E1185 of 11rd. but “l! lo the ~ will be Ieit oi ltd the ~ hands. I O I " may ‘ actively; oi time it takes to wipe ou and HirohittYa-but with the legion of l "it col in one in " ill ' lclslctil the Short in which they iiic trio were nll days to come when able to tzikc un where f_ zit-after they have ioli they now have on not be able to aar- _at depends on ill: 9S who are now serv- fskggiiii iglvlc alctive ‘sup- m the rgmr ng rig 1s and . . , pinion of none other Patrick. of the New ' losers. Nick Metz is one oi n mums Why Toronto - i , J!‘ lghs are Be good to yourself x Tu thl Tr y i rrei Fl N E CUT for rolling your own Such a powerful c National League owerful team." Patrick said in a etter to Al Ritchie. of Regina, chief scout for the Ranger?- "They will bahard ‘t0 OVGPOOMQ- When Meta headed east he was none too sure o! himself. A two- year absence from the big-time. plus a stomach disorder, let him wondering if he could m!“ fl- comcback. Discharged from the army early last summer. he dldnt Reg rviacuonaid Stan Dllnrlm Bob Bradley Total 316 h Sliigi . Gus McDonald-zoo % Three‘. - LeClair-oiill Po ts. Scar-Note 2 ‘s. Jizeps 2 is MAR-NOTE: I34 ii id. Bef he enlisted Mctz raenked wlltlll the best baoahll players in Saskatchewan. “Nick has regained all his old confidence and poise." Patrick wrote. "He le playing as well as he ever did and is the studying influence on Toronto's team. An he is scoring the odd goal. and that's what counts". I When a man like Patrick de- votes half his letter to talking about a player on another team. if“ player" be doing all 1‘ Zlnifif in n even exicrt himself on the ball Ed 4.0 BIIWGCXI Gallant DARTS: W, Mclnnls H. Powers W. McKenna L Doyle R. MacDonald Total _ High Single. W. Brawders-iua I-I h e. E. Kelly-hid Points. Mar-Nuts ii. Darts i. REMEMBER WIIEN a Th c Ill r The flew evdarl. sit: luAlthletic day that. a flghte a title in more than one division at a time. The decision came as a re- sult. of confusion when Henry Aim- strong of St. Louis iii-id the feather- weight and writer divisions simul- tahtously Paris Newspapers Protest Paper Cuts A315 . 30 - (AP) — Par- ispnewsplaiglellls’. already limited by . it single sheet gilggi-ggovfrsixlimeillestrigted circulation. Stimson said. "First was the lim- itation imposed by disrupted rall- ug road lines for the delivery oi the 4 ammunition available in the ports. As the railroad situation greatly improved, the next bottle- neck was the incapacity of the ports to dclivcr the ammunition available in Great Britain" Following this as the armies ap- proached the Rhine "it became neccsary for Gen. Eisenhower to delay a general offensive until an adequate reserve of artillery ammunition could be accumulat- ed. hc continued. “As (rail and port) factors im- prove we are reaching another limitation and that is the avail- ability oi ammunition in the Un- ited States." Mr. Stimson said the ammun- ition situation bids fair to be more critical "unless production rates ln the United States are greatly increased.” Cogon. tho common type oi Philippine grass. is very coarse and dense, and grows to heights oi t%_t<_>_tifilit_iest- R A F F L E FDR DlllDKEllS K. of C. 11 QUEEN sr. Friday, Dec. 1st. protested Jointly today eseimi e new order imposing further reduc- f “(atolls of the new order. aitIib-l uted to a shortage of su lies. wore not immediately avai ablmi Tho leitlsh newspaper Combat said; it mounted to e as w" wit WI in , imilotlon. 8.15 p. m. Come and bring a friend also said their equipment had cs- capcd damage. In sections of the county a few local lines were out. Lights ivcre out in the north cnd of Halifax and in the Ausicnvllie scction of Dartmouth fcr 9, short time. but the extra staff of repair men kept on call throughout yes- ‘terday soon had the lines repaired. | SCOTSMEN—- rcontinued from page l.) dinner. Mr. McDonald also men- tioncd thn‘ tlic white and ihcpur- pie heather displaycd at the ban- quet had been the gift of Miss MaryNiclioison of the Isle of Skye, Scotland. I-Ic also mentioned the many greetings the Charlottetown Club had received on its 120th an- niversary. stating that one greet- ing had comc from far nivay Bucncs Aires, capital of the Arc- entinc Republic. The Rev. Archibald lifcDon-uld. C.SS.R.. whose address appears in full below. was the next and mnln speaker of the evening. Mr. Lloyd Shaw Following Father McDonald was Mr. Lloyd Show who gave a very interesting and thought-provoking talk on the problems which con- front thc Canadian people. Mr. Shaw was responding tn the toast to “Our Dominion.“ Thcrc were Isavernl things. Mr. Shaw said, which made lhc Scot such a po- iicnt figure wherever he happened to be. Those wcrc his hercditv, tho environment of himself or for- bears. his independence of spirit, his thrift. his deco religious spirit, his sense of humour. his hospital- ltv- nun his love of homeland. The -Scot wnsii good cltizrn because tie had nil the qualifications which are nrc: wry in making n strong and virllc rare. Today. Mr. Shaw said. is n my of unccrtainty iind 1.1m nirlgy in which unity among tho Caiindi-in pcnnlc was bcinfr sorely irlrd. Cimnfn ivns n mos- hlc. f1 crnglmnorwinn of lictrro- ccnoois iicoplcs It is truc she was a melting pot for many different. COllillY)‘. and _to religion’ plm-ioiism No p isr- iincs beyond its dcscrts. It is suliiiuic in its lceroic obliitlun on the oniilcficld. ‘b glorious i". lic’, cxclninis Homer. brings you u top notch one ADC AS!’ iDireci From Ringside; .New York coy" MEllElltllElLl JOHNNY WHITE 10 Rounds - Wcltcrivcight fiFcY- ll r. M. 630 Kc. ‘for tuobw ‘raw gratitude. ‘ and protects our dcarcst intcrcms our altars and hcarthstones. With- o Thc country fosters ut it there is no safely for life and ])r0pcri._\‘. All the country ls sh»: makes curs. Wc arc wise of l.ci i, wisdom, rich of hcr wealth, strong of hcr strength. grant of vl"'l‘ greatness. The Pnlcsunian .._< and Roman soldiers wore) f’ with .'iwc and rcspcct for illDli p. oncr Paul when he slated thn‘ was a citizen of Ronic _' "Duty to country is 1x duly of‘ conscience, a duty to God. Conn-- xlsis by natural divine l‘l'!l‘iL. C-nd the auili liy iiccdful for ‘ The grczit Apostle oi tnc Gcutm“. stated very clearly that all null‘.- orlty came from God. llnfortun- atclv the religion of patriotism is not sufficiently conslclcrcd. Yo’ it ls religion that gives to n roiiniffi‘ its majesty and io pntrioiisiii ii. sacrcdncss and fol-cc. v H “Allegiance to country is nin- itpd only by nllegiancc to (rod. God and His eternal law's oi’ 111*- ilcc and righteousness come first A country which exacts thc vicin- tion of these laws nnnuls its own authority. It becomes an aggrega- tion of human wills which phvsl- cal force alone sustains. To God that which is God's: to Ciiesni- llfll which is Caesar's. ‘ ‘ "I mentioned one phase o. ILL" rloiism, sacrificing of spit” fol‘ country. Is thcrc any land uich d more glorious list of SllCll iiiuors First for their own bCJlVCfl Suit- lnnd, then for Great Britain, and now for all oppressed pcnplcs how mnny have made thc suprcinr sacrifice. Well did (hi! SCOYiISh poet write ‘Scoichmnnls blood in clnngci-‘s hour, nc‘cr vet ran cold nor slow.‘ Heotsinenfii Contribution "I also mentioned that patriot- ism consisted in dcvotcdncss in country's wolfurc in time of ponti- How Scotland's sons have _pruvcn their love for all that is for ‘d 0m: 'i AWWF- was v5; country's good. Writing lu ilic Sut- uriiny Evening Post for Nnvcmbcr 4th, Mr. Ernest O. Hiausci" has , this to ear. ‘Scot-smen have gone _ €¢‘§________,..,-...M.;,;.....