- ms GUARDIAN. CHARi.O1TETQWN Budget Priced Lingerie 0 Good Value -r-'Good Quality "Luxite" RAYON GOWNS- Full cut. rayon knit gowns-Cwise Bluez and Coral-at only- 0 em A finer gown in rayon knit-also made by "Luxite" in gay Fiesta Red and Circus Yellow. Sizes 32-40. 3.95 i Rayon Bed iJackets--3-4 sleeves. Peter Pan Collar. Pearl button trim. Cruise Blue, Regatta White. S.M.L. 2.95 Smart tailored Pyjamas in fine broadcloth - long wearing-colorfast. Sizes S.M.L. Colors, Red. Paddy Green, Rink, Yellow, Blue, Pale Green. 3.95 and 5.95 Canada To Have New SleeL"NicI(eI" OTTAWA. April 1 - (OP) - Cansdn is going to have a new type of nickel-made of steel. Prime Minister St. Laurent an- nounced in the Commons today passage or an order-in-council "authorizing the mining of a new coin of steel in chromium finish to the value of five cents to be issued on and after July 1, 1951, as a substitute of the further is- sue or the pure nickel coin." That means new nlckels are to be made of steel. The reason, of- ficials said. is the shortage of nickel. The. same situation arose in 1944 and 1945 when the same sort of cliromium-plated steel coin came into existence. In 1942 and 1943. the five-cent piece was made of copper and zinc. There were 14,000,000 of that combination and most of them have been reclaimed. The mint's annual output of nlckels runs to roughly 12,000,000. IN MEMORIAM In loving memory of Mrs. Wil- liam Leith Mncbean. who passed away April 9th. 1948. He that dwell:-th in the secret place of the Most High shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty. inserted by Willard, Blanche and Family. High tide at 12.50 A. M. and 2.21 P. M. sun rises at 5.41 A. M. and sets at 6.49 P. M. Summerside tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. Tells How To Put Baby To Sleep IJONDON. April 1-(Reuters) - Soiutlon to a problem which plagues every parent-how to get babies to sleep and how to keep them asleep--was offered by a medical man today. Professor R. S. Ililngworth. child health expert of Sheffield University. writing in the British Medical Journal. advised: 1. Put baby to bed when he is tired rather than at any set time. 2. if he wakes up refreshed after a short nap and can't get off to sleep. bring him down- stairs untll he gets tired again. 3. Never threaten to send a child to bed as punishment. 4. Don't tell him to go to sleep. It's the surest way of keeping him awake. 5. Never mention his bad bed- time behaviour while he is there. 6. Don't rock him to sleep. A young child may learn to alloc- latc sleep with rocking and later refuse to go nff without it. LONDON. April 6 -(Reutera)- Joseph Lerner. 73-year-old furrier. was charged today with receiving a E3000 (59,000) mink cont. stolen two weeks ago from the sport- ment of film star Tyrone Power and his wife. Linda Christian. WASHINGTON. April 6 -(AP) -The American Council on Edu- cation said today college officials. in II coiintry-wide poll. have voted more than 4 to 1 in favor oi uni- versal military training. OAKLXND. Calif. April 5 - (AP)-Henry J. Kaiser. 68. in- dustrlalist. and Alyce Chester. 34. today annouriccd their intention to marry. The two met in the long struggle to save the life of Kais- er's first wife, Bess Fosbursh To obtain (ha; Jj, mm of an page fans. Kaiser. who died last month. Is moronic ch im Possible , 9. 19st ' hinue Notional- isi army strength ' NOW on Formosa between 500,000 and 600,000 men m-U-TI!-C?' By JOHN 1.. si-lunar There is talk again of invading China. Gen. Douglas MacArthur start- ed the ncw speculation with his statement calling on the Chinese Reds to surrender or face "ex- pansion of military operations" to their "coastal areas and interior bases." While this might mean many things, including bombing raids, numerous persons construe it as Ll'i.rCiiU3nin'X to send invasion forces right onto the Chinese mainland. This idea has been dis. cussed before, - during World War Ii. for example, when much of China was in Japanese hands -and the prevailing military view has been that such an operation would be almost isuicidal. There are just too many Chinese. and they bi-ccd faster than even mod- ern weapons can kill them. Still, the possibility of invasion should not be overl oked entire- ly. The Chinese eds say the Americans plan such an "aggres- sion". and the defeated Chinese Nationalists based on Formosa say they will invade and get back onto the mainland in a comeback drive. Any lnrvasion. therefore, prob- ably would be e reopening of the Chinese civil war. And accord- ing to military observers. it could not take place for perhaps two years. The 600,000 Chinese on Formosa lack the supplies to launch a successful drive now. Acordlng to General Chou Chih-jou, chief of staff of the Chinese Ministry of National Defense. they need ammunition. guns, tanks. fighter and bomber planes, assault boats -in effect. just about everything. since the Nationalists can get such supplies only in the United States. the decision to invade or not will be made, in the flnlb In- nlysis. in Washington. The State Department's reaction to Mac- Arthur's surrender statement has been interpreted as meaning that it is not in sympathy with the invasion idea. The big objection is. of course. the tremendous size of the en. army. Millions of men would be necded to make an invasion suc. cessful and once war got under way on the mainland, it easily could drag on for decades. While Chlang's forces claim that mil- him! 01 luerrlllas are harassing the Reds within China, few per. The Neighbors t- r m i'-'u'i.:"u.- insist. an i I "Is, it important that he ion 1. Hes go-ins-tonspend most of V. .. ....-......., --..,7,........... sons doubt that any invasmsi would prolong Chinese civil wu I enormously. in lieu of invasion. American military opinion appears to law. or a blockade of China's easterl seavboard. The Chinese Reds. on course, have no navy worth mentiorriniz in the same breath with the U. S. fleet, so that a US blockade would be chelzp in terms of American lives. y By George Clerk A'ima.u. 1234; Birth iCcc V:-N if t - . .i;.7 J me so much about readinglll his life watching television.'”, our ova WAY I s-rAR'ri:.i7At swzaizmeeroize. HE CALLEDME p WO T1Li.3I FNISH fl: l WiLLYlQi?' By J. n. wiiiiam? t i s Nickel allay aquofuall 9 am-dfnr dye no end else- ails. It does not time: deli nun colon olaltale. Htind reds ofeveryday uses for Nickel have been developed by the Nickel industry through a planned program of . research. Today a large share of Canadals Nickel pro- 'duction is being diverted from peacetime uses into channels for preparedness. So the Nickel mine facilities, greatly expanded over the past decade, are again being operated at peak capacity. There is actually more Nickel now being delivered by.Canada to the free world than -- 4 m- jguavuiuim-pkudun I731; in any peacetime year. is stamped from Niclel V- .'..'f;';' 0 " ' lilur, an alloy of tridtin - apparndsiuqthauajlur plaid. . .. y l , , o l 'Wbum , nniluo yaw ' ., tlttlvldttillll iiicni. column or tuition; mlmen; II llltl st. wast. roimno . p . -: ..fv ' .