THE WESTERN GUARDIAN FEE». may be bought duly Bakery, Wnicr Strut. Mark This column In ruorvcd for howl of w", uuturo mu ho inserted n l will l word, lirlrtly payable In gllronrc. czi _.lf()CK SALT in stoclfi at Bruce's 4:01;“ slgltei. Tglg, Efl-Ilghflnow- B s. °° By c s a nook. *°"' L-aia-i-o-zl. Al. N. OBRYAN of HolLRen- trew and C0,, Montreal is buying furs siuily at office of Charles Rage-rs, summerside. L-MO-lz-IB-tf. ACIRCULAR and hand saws for flu ilolne or workshop, obtainable ilt Bruce's. L-349-1-6-2i. LRETURNED T0 MONTREAL _ Corporal Gordon Campbell ha; re- turned to his military duties rcnl alter spending Christmas 5L ills holue in Milo-S -ll0(‘KEY Bedeqlle rink Wed- nesday Jlln. 7, Middleton Bombers rs. Fl‘Ci‘t0\V11 Maple Lmafs. Skate alter. Admission I5 cents. Game starts 8 o'clock sharp. L-372-14l-2i. --I~‘.N'TERT.»\IN FRIENDS —- Miss Adi Alilcbeod entertained a. few ll'lt‘il(i.\ on Monday evening cliarlningly arran d dinner f) rlor to her leav rig for Charottc- it»... to attend Prince of Wales College. After a _ time lilo guests attended the picture show-S -l.l:1l°'l‘ FOR SOUDOUC-Lv A. , 8.11 Aflstynr- (nee Jean Llewellyn) left r... J-losday lTlOrfiIllg for Soudouc, N, i5, Whlfff} Mr. Vail Alstyne has been srlilnfcrrcd. He is a. member of the R. C. A. F. and has been znnoned in Summerside for some time olld made many fricndiL-S. -lSLAi\'D ANGLICANS MEET OBI.IG.\TIONS— Ven. Archdeacon G. it lllilTlSOn, rector of St. Mary's Church, Sunilnerside, arclldeiicon for lill‘. Anglican purishes in P. E. .. sent the following telegram yes- rday to Bishop Sherman, chair- ill of the apportionment com- iitee of the Churcll of England ~11 " ill Edward Island ii province of Canada " . full 194i budget bppor- lonntelit though only a part of the lccese of Nova Scotia we take ride in our provincial status." - ‘>1 .- P. —DE.»iTlI OF MR. JOHN HAR- Rls -- There passed away at his Jlmlle in sllerbrooke on Monday. after an illness Harris respected Q S t.- :1 5 o n g <- lers Rest. lvfrs. Ben] n Gordon Bennett and lliiv is extended. The funeral is Editing place this afternoon from Ls late residence in the Cenlc tery.:-S Summon! Wassw , AGENTR Mll- John Pond. n Church simc-rhoud m - ~ BUMMERSIDI no rumor: covmz New. w-Bwflvilofll- Adverllllnr should In mi with M“. Pond. "all! of tho following lboreoin o: M] Bookstore. Water Strut. Gourllco Drugmrq, why"- gmm’ Toto“. 61mm. d1 Granville Street. The Gucrdiln will be delivered to my homo in Summcrlldc by l Boy at ito per day or lilo per week. Ph ‘glgvzryirsur “d” m "m My responame h: deuvelsl; Zfilyifirtlixlxrvico or that Mrs. Brenton Waugh is ill —I:IALIVEB on. Li h... luilrfll. m sow-nun; or I Wei/rot oolds- Taylor 0:3: c‘i,i"§‘.‘§5 Mrs. mmd Wright llaa returned L-z-oi. B . v-FUR BUYER. - Mr. R. N golgygg Holt-Eterlfrew and P y w l resume buying fox office or ch 1 . _ merslde. u ea R. Rglg-Illllslllfig-xgl -NEW YE-ilvs DINNER. PARTY Iii/g‘. and Mrs. 0. C. MacNeill gave Yeca ermine dinner party on New Sn Y5 day in honor of Mr. and Mrs, clarion. The table was prettily dec- orai with Christmas decorations an candles. After dinner the guests retired to the drawing room, wmn Mr. , B. Jelly read an address to Mr. Snogren and Mrs. Mag-Neill presented _Mrs. Snogrcn with a beam-mil Piece of silverware, Mr, and Mrs. Snogren were taken qui.e W Surprise. Mr. Bnogren replied to u" Bddross in fitting terms, ‘me gesgsriélfin sonsdFcr Thley are Jolly oo ows an a soc a1 time en. joyed-S —WEDDING 11214.5 - A very pretty wedding was solemnized on New Year‘; Eve at 6:30 o'clock at i116 1101110 OI M1‘. and My; Brewer Waugh, North Bedeque, when their only daughter. Miss Mildred Jean, became the bride of Mr. Claude WW1?» son or . and Mrs. Colby Lewis of Freetown. The drawing took lace was charmingly decor. ated or the occasion. Rev. D. M, ed the wedding music. The bride, glowned in a lovely floor length dress of ivory satin with insets of sik embroidered lace and short train, with coroner. head dress of orange blossom and silk illus- ion, and carrying a. shes! of roses, made a charming pic- ture as she entered the drawing room 0n the arln of her father, who gave her in marriage. The bridesmaid, Miss Jean Lewis, wore a. floor length dress of coral chil- forl velvet ‘with trimming of self covered buttons and wearing a tur- ban of the some material, Miss Mary Lewis as IIOWCI‘ girl, was daintily gowned in rose cut velvet and carried a basket of roses. Mr. Frederick Keller of Charlottetown was best man, Mr, J. B. Lewis sang during the signing of the register “O Perfect Love." The gr00m’s gift to the bride was a beautiful gold locket and chain. Alter the cere- mony a buffet luncheon was serv- ed to the guests. Included in the family group were six randpar. ents. During the evening t e young couple were serenaded by a num- ber 0f y°llng people in the com- munity, who were given refresh- ments, alter extending their good . Mr. and Mrs. L€Wl3 are spending their honeymoon in the "" y and had Maritime Provinces, For travelling a iriile circle of friends. who will the bride wore a powder blue dress, operate at many points in the Far . to learn of his passing. He teal blue coat with mink trimming East. eaves to mourn one son, Ray, and and blue off the face hat. On their =18 dflllifhwl‘. MFS- Willie!‘ l-o-llgh- return they will make their home on all the oceans-helping to guard n. both of Bhf-‘Pbfooke. and “V9 in York where the groom has pur- the essential conlmunlcations which SW11. MP5. AloXlmdol‘ Champicmchnaed n. farm homestead. Prev- arc vital to the United Nation-B rs. Alexander Moclnnis, 'I‘ravel- m,“ w h" mun,“ the m1“ w“ ' “m “b” tendered a shower at the home of forces will take stations in her parents when she received some lovely ifts. Tile bride was s. member of c office stall of M. F. Schunnan a 60., and has many peopyei. friends in Bummcrside who join in to protect extending congratulationszs. O 1/94 emu» . ' mm: L is" zmana onnr/m mull “ /,€fzlm clan xllkrat ‘L Moscow. Mozhaisk ldvancs 5t HM odvmccofrommrchupd . 591%}? ' M grum- spced inwards Vy Pmitlons tho Germans hoped to hold for tho winter, having been made ‘my comfortable, have been captured and key points token. (3) south félgharkov and (4) north of Rostov tho Rilschlfll litnve mode new flhklxnb. n n the Crimea German all- forces are ac ng clongy and chec M \ scat: m MILES \ L7 $77 I170 la? hiilil 5O The map illustratcl recent Russian successor. The llrurco indium, (1) Russians ndvdming south of toning-ac. (i) Bbrltss. northwest of been encircled. The Russians hero promise to hlc been captured. umc. Ohcrn _____.__i_ A e SUM —NEW LONDON PRESBYTEB- IAN CHURCH-Janus!‘ lit-h. Clif- ton 11.00 A. M. South runvllie 230 P. M. Long River 7.00 P. M. Joint Pro-yer Services as follows: At Long River in the United Church, Thurs- day. January 8th, 7. P. M, Clifton in the Presbyterian Chur . Friday, January 9th, 7.30 P. M. Long River Annual Meeting on January 13th at 2.00 P. M. Rev. H. M. Bun- tain. Minister. L-376-1-7-ii. Personals —Frierlds will regret to learn t her home in Wilmot-s. n —It io pleasing to report that; home from the Prlllcc County Hos- pital where she underwent an oper- ation for appendicitis-S, —I<"i"iends will regret to learn Lhat 3494-6-21- pelt‘ °“ Wednesday morning at Mr. Fred Muttart of Summer '* East has entcred the Prince Ed. ward Island Hospital, Charlotte- town for an operation. His many friends trust he wiil soon be re. stored to his usual good health. -—-Mr. Lorne Weeks has accepted a position as section man at Eilerslie and his many friends wish him success in his new duties. GIVES BLUEPRINT (Continued-front page l) common knowledge in Germany and Japan." Behind such a great productive effort, the President said, was the purpose not or providing a “slight- ly superior supply of munitions" but a superiority "so overwhelm- ing that the Axis nations can never hope to catch up with it." This great store of weapons is to supply not only the forces of the United States but of all the na- tions with which it is allied, and he repeatedly emphasized that the B arty ~'°°‘" WW‘ ‘he m-‘Yfloflo ceremony United States is fighting on the "same side" with the British, the Russians, the Netherlands, the moot eniflyflblfl FY5561" officiated. Mrs. Fraser Play" Chinese and the Governments oi the invaded countries. Thus, he foresaw American forces soon in action at "many points in the Far East", on "all the oceans," taking "stations in the British Isles" and protect- ing this hemisphere and bases outside the hemisphere "which could be used for an attack 0n the Americas.’ Here is what he said on this point:- “We cannot wage this war in a defensive spirit. As our power and our resources are fully mobilized_ we shall carry the attack against the enemy-w: shall hit him and hit him again wherever and when- ever we can reach him. "We must keep him far from our shores, for we intend to bring this battle to him on his own home grounds. “American armed forces must be uscd at any place in the world where it seems advisable to engage the forces of the enemy. In some cases these operations will be de- ferlsive, in order to protect key positions In other cases, these operations will be offensive, in or- der to strike at the common en- emy, with a view to ills complete encirclement and eventual total defeat. "American armed forces will "American armed forces wlZl be “American land and air and as c British Isles-which constitute an essential fortress in this world struggle. - “American armed forces will help this hemisphere-and also bases outside this hemisphere, which could be used for an attack on the Americas." Congressmen Applaud Congress took it all at one en- thusiastic ulp. Again and again it interlrup d his remarks with outbursts of clapping and cheering. At one point a. page boy, seated on a rostrum stcll. vociferously start. ed an ovation. The President was grave and no- t-iceably restrained in his delivery. There were no smiles. Toward the end-it was perhaps the longest speech he has made before Con- gress-he lowered his voice, and by contrast with his usual peroration. leduced his tone to one of almost ordinary conversation. Public morale could not be bet- ter, he said. He recalled that a year ago he predicted that when the dictators were ready to make war on the United Staten they would not wllit for an American act of war but would choose their own time and ‘place-m. prophecy borne out, he ad cd, by the ottoc on Pearl Harbor. He traced Japan's “scheme of conquest" over half a century, said a, glmllar "policy of criminal con- quest was adopted later b Italy", but that neither moches e "lir- gantucn aspiration: of Hillel‘ IM- hla Nazis." All three hui been merged, he added, into one single plan. _ Under this scheme, Japan: rolc was to divert to the Pacific Ameri- cgn-madd weapons which other;__ W118 Ju K315i GT") q PRINCE COUNTY CHRONICLE SwingAiFurS/low Placing of Silver classes occupied attention of Judge yesterday; big F oxmen’s dinner tonight. Owing to the fact that Mr. GeorgeGeorgc Mayors, New York; Walter Meyers. of New York, who is Judg- 1118 the pelts at tile fourth annual sliver fox pelt show at Summersicle did not arrive until late Monday ni ht, due to transportation diffi- cu ties. the judging did not get un- der way until Tuesday morning. by the evening all classes in the silver sections were judged. Winning top honours were George A. Callback of Summerside with ‘l til firsts; Stewart and Lewis. 3 firsts; MacL-ure and MacKinnon -l=‘ox Farms, Charlottetown, Andrew Per- ry. Summerside, and Andrew Jar- dme, Kensington, each with two firsts; E. S. Coffin, Charlottetown, Hugh B. Smith. MacNellPs Mills, Ray Lockerby, Hamilton, Gordon MacMillan, Cornwall A. G. Henry, Kensington, Harold merside, Ernest T. Mills, Kensing- ton. and L. W. Hancock Summer- side. each one first. The judging will be completed by noon today. To be judged this morn- ingtualtre the whitemmarlléed silvers. B. um y DC , B. O gfOllpS, herds and niiitched pairs.The cham- pion awards will also be made. The pelts will be on display in the High School Auditorium by 2 o‘clock thin afternoon. Tile champions; groups, matched pairs and herds will be on separate racks, There will be a. banquet at the Queen Hotel on Wednesday at 'l p. m. Special speakers will be Mr. IVIilligan, Sum- Whi R. Snaw and others. At this banquet the 2o sliver trophies will be pre- sented. The trophies will be on dis- Elay in the window of Heartz God- in all day Wednesday and will be transferred to the High School on Thursday morning. Mr. Mayer's in an interview with Tile Guardian said there were some very good pelts lll the show and in e paler silver classes there was some improvement in quality over last years show pelts. Mr. Mayers said the trend of the market was definitely for the paler color lyhases in silver fox, the paler the butter. Those ranchers ing in for the so called white mar ed. foxes should concentrate on the very pale foxes. te markings alone on the dark- er color phascs i5 a detriment ra- ther than an asset to the pelt. Mr. Millers said the market has been very quiet and is still quiet al- though tilere is seen a little better ffféllllgrSillCe the beginnlll of the ear. Trimming merchan and orig haired furs are the best sellers. _Fur mcn can look forward to an lihprovcnlcnt in present markets as time goes on mid Ml’. Mayers is of the opinion that tile market will be i quite steady and staple. Colnlnellting on the war Mr. Meyers said Americans in New York are facing “the situation calmly and the government is taking measures to meet the sltuaticn."- i ___L______L_-__ . ,_ wise would go to Britain and Rus- sent‘ Si a. “The act of Japan at Pearl l-lar. bor was intended to stun us." he continued, "to terrify us to such an extent that we would divert our industrial and military strength to the Pacific, area Oi‘ even to our own continental defence. "The plan has failed in its pur- pose. We have not been stunned. We have not been terrified or con- fused." But, nevertheless, hard choices had to be made. “It was bitter for example, not to be abie to relieve the heroic and historic defenders of Wake Island. it was bitter for us not to be able to land a million men and a thousand ships in the Philippine Islands. "But this adds only to our dc- termination to see to it that tile Stars and Stripes will fly again over Wake and Guam; yes, to see to it that the brave people of the Philippines will be rid of Japanese imperialism; and will live ill free- dom, security and independence." He spoke of his conferences lvitli Prime Minister Churchill and rcp- lesentatives of other allied nations —onc of whom was Prime Minister Mackenzie King who was in Wash- ington last week--and declared that for the “first time since the Jap- nnese and the Fascists and the Nazis started along their blood- stained course of conquest they now facc the fact that superior for- ces arc assembling against them." ‘Their purpose was to beat Brit- ain, cllina, Russia and the Neth- erlands and then “achieve their ul- timate goal, the conquest of the United States." Victory for the united nations, he continued, means victory for free- dom and religion and the Nazis could not tolerate that for “the world is too small to provide aile- qutite ‘living room‘ for both Hiilnr and God." "Our own objectives are clear," ho said. "The objective of smash- ing the militarism lm by war lords upon their enslaved people- ilte objective of liberating the sub- juqated natlons- the objective of establishing and securing freedom of speech, freedom of religion, free- dom lrom want and freedom from fear everywhere in the world.” To Maintain Peace "We shall not stop short of these objectives," he added. "We are de- termined noironly to win the war. but also to maintain the security- of the peace that_wiil___follow." And at another point, he "ruled out any "return to il‘e kind of world we had after the last world war." I-Ie went on to discuss the ncerl for srms-"modern methods of war- fare mckc it o. task not only of shooting, but on oven more urgent one of working and producing." "Producttlon for war is based on men and women-Abe human hands and brains which collectively We call labor" as well asllpoll metal-l Ind raw material-S. A sum equal w mom than half the notional lu- como-456fl00,000,000 for the fiscal your 1m alone-must go into tho ff . e on means taxes and bonds and taxes," llE said, "it means cut- luxurics and other non-es- 'b'1'-¥+'b+-k++++&+-t~+++de+ids-hi":- uary 15th. Paying i0]! grades. Al promptly. us continue to do so. *+++++++++++c*+++ Attention “All Farmers We require large quantities of poultry by Jan- I rail shipments a t t e n d e d to Correct grading by qualified men. We have served you well In the pant. Lei ELMER BERNARD KENSINGTON, P. E. I. .-i-.-i-.+.-i-.~1-are-idi-_+_-v-.+_-i-.-i-.+.-v-_+_+_+_+_-i-_+.-v-_+i market prices on all +4.-!-!l-!-++-bel"l-b-le+ . Inwilhvofi.‘ ifliieills an ‘ail-out’ "war by individual effort and family effort in a united coun- try." Speed Urgent Speed was 0f the utmost neces- sity for "lest ground can always be regained-lest time never," he said. “Speed will save lives; speed will save the nation which is in peril; speed will save our freedom and cii‘ ' ation - and siowness, ' s ncvrr been an Ameri- cristic." He warned against complacency, against under-rating an enemy who is "powerful and cunning and cruel and ruthless," who “will slop .at nothing which gives him a chance to kill zllui to destroy." America "as lflrvaciy "fllsterl cicfeat" 1nd may suffer further setbacks. A long, hard war “We must face the fact of a hard war, a 1on1: war, a bloody War, a costly wa ‘ .e “Our enemies are guided by bru- tal cynicism, by unholy contempt for the human race. We are in- spired by a faith which gods back tilrough all the years to t-he first chapter of .I e book of Genesis: ‘God created mall iii his own im- age.‘ "We on our side are striving to be true to that divine heritage. We are fighting, as our fathers have fought, to uphold the doctrine that all men are equal in in sight of Go:l. Those on the n ll-l‘ side are strivitlg» tn destroy this deep belief and to create it world ill the; own image-a world of tyranny and cruelty and serldom. “That is the conflict that day and night now pervades our lives. No COYHDPOIXIlFO can on: that COll- flict. Tilerc never hlls been—:herc never can bc—su<t:ussfui compro- mise between gcod and evil. Onlv total victory can reward the cham- pions of tolerance, and decency, and freedom, and faith." THRON E SPEECH (Continued from page 1) government to compel service in any branch of the war effort at home and abroad, military and civ- Some inkling of these proposals may be given by th Prims Minis- ter in a speech he expected w deliver within the next few days. Even if ‘F0 government program does not prove to contain any plans for alteration of the compulsory service laws it is generally expect- ed that the Issue will be raised in other quarters. In some circles this is lookc-i upon as one oi‘ the most important sessions of the Canadian Parlia- mont. The present administration is pledged never to enact a measure for the mnscription of Cmadiaris for service overseas. But there have been official in- timations of a greatly enlarged form of selective service of all fit Canadians and the foremost ques- tion among Ottawa observers is whether or not this will stop short of compulsory service in whatcver field the need is greatest in or out of Canada. ~ 'I‘llis raises the question of whether or riot Mr. King's adminis- tvition will fool that changed cir- cuimtances now would justify de- parting from the pledge against conscription given before and im- medilitely hfwr the war started in September, 1939. Conservniive Leaderlhlp Conservative leadership in the Senate and House will be ulteml according to nl-esent plans. Rt. Hon. Arthur Meiylen, Senate Conserwi- tive lender, iras appointed last No- vember no notional Conservative leader and he is to be candidate for a Commons seat in the York south by-wle-ctlon called for Fieb. 9. _ This will require selection of a new Stunt» ovinoslrion leader ns man h; Parliament opens. and rc- pn-m-yw in nrfveflc mrniborslllvy oi’ acting l-fcurc Ccliscrvlivve leader, lion, l}. B. Hanson, to make way Soviets Retake (Continued from page i) I the southwestern Crimea, simul- taneously burst out, smashed a ser- ies of German outpost and fortifi- cations and. in ova-operation with the Soviet Black sea fleet, put un- der hcavy assault German col- umns seeking to withdraw from the Sevastopcl area to go to llle hid of the imperilled Nazi forces on Kercll. The Black Sea fleet by all sc- counts was in strong continual ac- tion and appeared to be in full om- TEA Thera's real economy in using MORSi-YS STANDARD TEA, ond the very utmost in flavour cs well. ARDIAN trol of all waters directly associat- ed with land operations. The centre-the Soviet drive con- tinued after the Germans had been routed at Tim, some 40 miles to 1hr» east of Kursk, the latter a strategic point on the Moscow-Kharkov rail- way 280 miles south of the capital. In the Kursk area, 15 miles of bleak road was littered with the bodies of the Nazi dead. (Tire BBC reported that the Russians also had crossed the up- per Donets river. This crossing perhaps was in the region of K115i‘- kov, in the upper Ukraine) The new success beyond Tim a- gain extended the width of a vast thrust apparently converging on tile Rahev-Mozhaiisk-Blyansk Smol- ensk quadrangle with Vyazama at (RAW runs wiuiien Silver Fox skins, Muskrat and other raw furs rc- quired. Highest market prices. Trade demanding quantities. See us now. Peliing and cleaning done by our experienced men. Plant now in operation. FOR SALE Used fox wire, fox houses, cedar posts, lumber and electric motor. G. R. MACQUARRIE Summer-side its centre. Rzehv is some 140 miles north- west of Moscow; Mozhaisk about 57 miles west; Bryansk 220 miles southwest; Smolensk about the same distance ivest-souillivest. ‘BLQOEUNG POINT CONCERT A ‘very large crowd assembled at (Continued from page l) Blooming Poul‘. School oll thr- night Ill. we “brag-ashore, he of Decelnbcr 23rd u-ilcre a very eu- raid. "I went aft to the engine loyflble concert was enioyod by all. The school was tastefully ciecoraied by the tcacher, Miss Helen Mc- Guigali and the pupils. The iliffer- ent numbers WI ch were vcn cut room. The oiler said tho tanks were overflowed. I saw ho water in the stoke hold. In the forward en- gine room I saw water gushing up LESS THAN ONE (Continued from page 1) ___Mj-—_—_.—.->T~—,_ filrough a hole in the coffer dam. . lilo t: c u, claim! by 'o‘n“uie_w'e§tZFh sideol the pen- Tile hole looked as if it had been all lulu m udco the I\»1lo'-\'11'-Qr insula, the outnumbered Blitish put, there for repair purposes. I _ R/W-‘llfilltill, Wcicolne by John forces, fell back on the lcrver Per- didnq, know i; was mere)’ rtoderlck MdcDougull; Chorus. Welcome by school; Recitation, A Little Boy's Prayer by Rcddie P1115 Solo, She Was ak River front beoollbe of l J31)- MacPherson said he remained in anese threat to their left flank- the engine mom a“ the Wam- Con. in the Kuala 591811891" 8W3- tinucd to come up about him. I-Ie ‘Ilieso Jflpflnefc "nits olllllfenlll’ tried to stop up the hoie with a Wolfe DEFT‘ We dwfisllmenlg liiuriin spike but to no avail. Wit. Whlflh IB-Tldifi “km-Z m‘? 13w“ Pm‘ ness said llc then W011i’. up to the ak River 60 miles to the ilcrth and c“. deck 311911 Vgggkggaslggiig 112% nggatlirzkfisli Later the captain ordered him own . - - . l ti .t h i Frequent British collllicr-at- 5° 6x52151313?‘ 5115),?) 111$ 55112531,}; tacks “'9” 531d to ha.“ n-"Qtqctgj silips owners and the C. N. R. Japanese ga-ms t0 a‘ fwQ-mne dam Supcrintcllritilt Hr. Pllsilie at average dunng the l?“ two ‘vCC-kq l-lniifav Mr. Appleton divisional flwpagggew a‘ previous eighmmo manager ordered lilln to send out a y . ' v “P”: “umeri $é§y,§hfi,§'°§l' Xaligwiivhllggwhgodltclllf:rfilirtxligistézhgif figdlfigwevgisvafi {Wm h“, moum itglqggflfie was giver. by the two tains in south central Perck to t-hc l n -~l»~ 1 V.“ U“ L mouth Qf the Seiangir River, file leal ng \\\l con ll c o- Frcm Kuala sfihngcn E3051 roads lllDl‘l'O\V. T. J. _A.i0ll is represent- ,- and Quthwgrd to lug the Canadian Notional Rail- run eastiwa d s v ‘ _ ‘ o‘ Koala Lumpur. Mairiyas second ilays. “men? the ferry- largest, and most important city I I I Clarifies milk .\lilcDoll:ild; No- bcdys i3: Smith; Nictlllg by Monologue, Entertaining Sister: Beau by Gczlevieve AlzlcDollald; Rccunilon by: Vary C. .\lrlcDollald; ‘e One Who Lnvcd Duet, Fallen l Genevieve In My Pocket" b ‘Reuben sir‘. and Clarence Alwrl) mid Chorus CIlll-llnfiS Carol l 0i. . -.. . M Do 11; only 35 miles away. Thee same Ceifgusugiy roads and a. railroad skrt the nlcuniainous backbone in the ceu- V t-rc rl’ the _p(‘2llflSiiifi to lead cn 6hr“ v“ h _ _, . . . dnun to SlflgJfiOlC. Me In Yum P‘ Selangor, a. tin-mining counilyv, also affords open land for tho movement of mechanized equa- merlt and dive-brmbers. It is t e sixth native-ruled sttlte in be en- ick hiacDollgali 1 xii‘; Cilorils. Santa Claus Is Coming, by school. Bonus ruling SAINT JOHN. N. B., Jail. 6 - tered by the Japzlves? on tho pcn- icp, __ J p, N“. Otmwa, insuinl new grip F1122‘ 111*"! OVQF- dairy procillc " fldlllilllelllllOl‘ of Inc . lCS» a c tiara, Y M ,, , d -d >, - run a n uart i pl us 1n tla e ooald Edna MMDO am: D But. the Japanese still must crsss 5am m,“ yomgm mm a gedem, winding hill-flanked roads studded government subsidy {m- mm; p,°_ with Britsh defence pests befoe dual-S would be payable Onyy V; they m" "M" "Pen cmmtrli °h' producers of fluid milk in districts servers PW‘?! 01mg . m W110i‘? thorn hati been no illcrczlsc 5mm‘ o‘ **°-“.“~§°‘ {If} me tntlbb”, in price since Aug. 3i. The dub- ggl-éntgmfrgrfgg‘ ‘~32 lilacs qhgkgv‘ sidv will be 30 cents per hundred- foliage gives protection to ground “erflgrkélwer: m the sum, John t‘? gktfsffiultsvbltbdrawpnq Monet/on and Fredericton areas. for n, exuanfsan ‘ma: ea“; heaped instance, are ineligible for the bon- wgggward acres? I-lelé ‘mountain “5- “Ming Rcewed a“ increase or‘ ranges generating the two fighting fronts. Official quarters said that Japanese infiltrationg inland along this road "interfered" with the withdrawal. Casualties were cul- fered on both sides. John A. Oliver ls committed mas Offerings by Other Lands" by Be Joan and Murrow" . . Kathleen and T Chorus, Good . school. After ii c progrnnl, Sonia Fll'l“.\‘((‘l and distributed the nice prcslnfs from the heavily laden tree to both pupils and teacher. A special feature of the pNIQ-‘IIZI! was a song hr John Joseph blar- Dongnil n Sgvcchcs vcriv made anti a hearty vote of Planks was extended to the teacher for which she ilzankfuily responded. The National Anthem brought the an‘ evening to a close. ... . In other cases where a producer sells milk to a dealer, the lav/tr will pay the subsidy to the pro- ducer and will be reimbursed by the government. In the case o! New Brunswick the reimbursement will be made through the office of H. N. Flewcllillg. Fredericton. secre- tary of the New Brunswick dairy products commission. vvnere the producer himself is also the distributor, the subsidy will that Gclniany- _ toriai mOWS _ ‘ France which \v.u.d forever part.- tion the country. §§§‘y,,e°‘,‘,,,f5h,°,§‘,§§°§',‘f: Qflfiflmdyifiéif As one of the wave in win-ii on ly to the secrclmyrs office. Sbec- ‘p0,, 1W ‘fgflpfiflj lei fogils for those claims will be info! y w advfntme n_ “mi “ 1e soon‘ aizlst Gcrlllan ‘ b\ the French in Mr‘ Nude“ “id me subsidy plan gAfrica uncier a pun which he at- hacl been adopted pending comple- Jna. 6- tlon on o survey of the milk indus- prclinlirlzvry try across Canada. tributed to the United Mates. This was the srcrnd anti-Vichy SAIZNT JOHN. N.B.. outburst» in n< runny" days. Mlrccl (CPi-The one-day hearing of Jchn A. Oitvcl- 63, “_"'_'- Dfip ; (1-1... f Fyerch charged with the murder of' Sgt. I coliabm‘? Li‘ “,3. ,,(,..,,$_ Herbert Lcbb. ended in the East . 0d m“, p, gO._<(.,-,n,q,¢ of 5;.» Saint John Police Court t night w m; o“ me Germans why-g hoping with Magistrate E. N. Heustis ccm- for an Allzefl \I(“.OT_\‘_ He also him. mitting the accused 10f‘ trial. uhich I ed mat, the mnch mjghy, 1059 Wm ‘wen 39x‘ wfgk- _. their African Empire. Much o’. the m“ mm-v c’ 24 ‘Ari’ Both nicn rvctlsfivi Admire‘ Wil- noescs called by tho Prwicililon - linln D. IPIXYLV vim-c. Stun‘: Ani- had brcii ilesrd prcv:ol'sly' at ill!‘ N |,;._=5Mlo, .0 v p1“; n: 1m; duds inquest. o which they claimed are WGLIDLDI They told how the veteran army pa,” ném Gamma sergeant had scen the elderly watchman "culling" a youth whom onoltovs woe-ll} he thou ht had been whistling to __ annoy h m Dec. 2'7. , vlcsfigyavJagwta (Aflcgcpfifia Soon afterwards, according to time“ ‘Mflymgl Pom. .. testimony. Oliver cnllcrl u. the [was [mung w‘, 5e govemlltcllt Lobb residence, told Loch he niver unmd smtcs “nd swims close, w would be a witness to the scuffle m N z;_con._,.ne¢ NAPS _| | 3'5 Wm‘ I!“ my’ “d 511°" u“ ‘ersum’ fifllsmig?’ Nouveeaux aTempd xcoin- Josephine. NHKMG m, f.r=: u-ile, l“ u" 5bd°mm Wm‘ P "vulva" {ended wnlgh was born in Allrtinlquc. lxcivard Oliver allegedly hlcl borrowed for t‘ the announced p‘ ‘pose of "shoctinz ‘ional article‘ a couple of skunks." ‘ The evidence disclcsed that Iobb, first taken to the General Hirpital. vvfls removed to a military hosnixlil before receiving treatment. This was declared in accordance with military regulations. Later he was returned to the General Horbill for transfusions and an operation. Verdict at the inquest was that peritonitis, resulting frcm the wound was the cause of death. 1-1155 sens“ signed Islands. “ZjUE/szvs CANADIAN FUND 001m TIONS i Repeated bombing raids on Bri- use of he: flame in connection with , tilh port. areas and the industrial the Dominion camllfiifllt Whloh if me midlands has attracted fresh ot- officially known n: "i118 Qlvefil tention to the lrlgftfui suffering (inniirilnn Fund for AJ Raid V-c- for Mr. Meighen as lender of official opposition if he is 5119-3955- ful 1n the by-glectlon, of the manv thousands of civilians tlnls’ ‘ _ It is reported also that l-Ion. In Great Britain who are harried Every dlllh" ¢l'l\"~“i’°" '"" h‘ Raoul Dandurand, government from siweltcr to shelter hnd finally Queen‘: (‘amvimn i-‘llllli goo.- wim- leoder in the Senate ond now past . 1.,” m“, m, ooen counlfy by nu! di-u-lrzlon u. m» mm Mzvul h‘! m“ bilmd" "l" "i1" "° W" successive raids Eventually dial-e} 0f London i... filsirflaukun w the n“ memb" may and make lrof df th ll liI"£5 of hrmleles: and Hlmdv why for o younger man to carry w“ °' ‘m1 a p ‘ ‘. , . _ . _ , ., .,,,.., rnlntlve security but their bcionq- Contrblilmls f..m. ll. i - We on as red chamber spokesman for we admmlstmtiolt dntvllid be iilrivurrici‘ to ' c lllval ings of all kinds are destroyed The In the House the trmsury benches task of emergency lcodmq alone is rilst Fomnnnl- (till i- l» l‘ will be without Justice or labor difficult The task of settmz them which repute the ln.lil\\'.l\;; r» mlnistcrs pendln! bv-electicns. Jus- “D Qncg mo“ with some qllrlntxtt cclpis in flair:- tiu min-Filter Innis St. Laurent and of cmhml and mddgnq u, mgmh Labor Minister Mitchell must find mm‘, 11mm“, trrvrlwll 3r I"i'!Il\‘_\"- seats and they are expected lcs- h d‘ Rrv. W. (‘_ Plflifll‘. Muzruv pectivcly to run in Quebec cant T" w“ l B” “mrnmm "m ‘ llofhHlf- $l‘-"i-‘- Tolrl i0 daim-$5,3-f8.57. fund; have been startcd in vilrozls and Welland wlieribls-elections are Mm.“ qyhqdulgd fod- In part; of tho world. Her